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Lorber Hall, located on the south end of LIU Post Campus, was built in 1927 for H.W. Lowe. Architect John Russell
Pope designed the mansion in a composite of New England and Mid-Atlantic
Federal forms. A corner stone located on an upper section of the
rear of the Lorber Hall declares that the house was built in 1927
after another house in the same location was destroyed by fire in
1926.
Financier William E. Hutton II (second cousin of E.F.
Hutton of Wall Street brokerage fame) purchased the mansion and
its 26 acres in 1940. The Huttons named the estate "Mariemont".
Edward F. Hutton purchased the house directly east of "Mariemont"
(currently the LIU Post Fine Arts Center) after his 1936 divorce
from second wife, cereal heiress Marjorie
Merriweather Post.
Long Island University purchased "Mariemont"
from the Huttons in 1965 for $400,000. The house was renamed Hutton
House by the University and became the home of the Hutton
House Lectures series and the School
of Professional Accountancy. Thanks to the generosity of Howard
M. Lorber, CEO of Nathans Famous, Inc. and Chairman Hallman
& Lorber Associates, Inc., the building was restored to its
original magnificence during a three-year period from 1997-2000.
In 2001 numerous photographic negatives of the house
as it appeared in the 1940s were discovered in the basement of the
LIU Post campus administration building. The views below are a
wonderful glimpse of how the house appeared when it was a private
residence.

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