In 1867, New York State Supreme Court Judge Joseph H
In 1867, New York State Supreme Court Judge Joseph H. Potter (1821-1902) purchased (from Melancton Wheeler) the property on which Skene Manor stands. This land had previously been owned by Philip Skene, founder of Whitehall (formerly Skenesborough). Judge Potter built a Victorian Gothic-style mansion, which he called “Mountain Terrace,” on the property. The mansion was designed by Philadelphia architect Isaac H. Hobbs, and constructed by local contractor A. C. Hopson. Construction took place from 1872 to 1874 at a cost of approximately $25,000. The building was constructed of gray sandstone quarried from Skene Mountain by stone cutters from Italy.
In 1906, Potter’s widow, Catharine, sold Mountain Terrace to Edgar Lowenstein, who had come to Whitehall in 1892 to manage his brother-in-law’s Champlain Silk Mill. Mr. Lowenstein changed the mansion’s name to “Lowen’s Castle” and added a carriage house to the property. In addition, he installed gas fixtures and a heating system.
In 1917, Mr. Lowenstein’s daughter-in-law sold the mansion to Dr. Theodore H. Sachs (1876-1939), an optometrist, jeweler, and clock expert from Prattsville, New York. Dr. Sachs had moved to Whitehall in 1913, and he specialized in checking watches for railroad men. A tall man, Dr. Sachs had been seeking a home in which he could move about without bumping his head.
For many years, a wooden clock had been in the tower of the Presbyterian church. The clock was given to Dr. Sachs in 1920, and he installed it in the manor tower in 1922. The clock had two 100-lb. weights that extended to the cellar, and a railroad bell served as the chimes. Each week, Dr. Sachs’ two oldest daughters had the job of winding the clock.
After Dr. Sachs’ death in 1939, the manor was left vacant for several years. In 1942, with patriotism running high, the lead from the tower clock and the copper from the attic cistern were removed and given to the World War II effort. As a result, the tower clock was rendered inoperable.
In 1946, the manor was purchased by Clayton Scheer, a retired state trooper from Schenectady, New York, and his wife Pauline, a beautician. They renamed the mansion “Skene Manor” in honor of Whitehall’s founder, Philip Skene. The Scheers transformed the first floor into a bar/restaurant and lived upstairs. To attract customers, the Scheers created the legend that the body of Katharine Skene, wife of Philip, had been found in the cellar of Skene Manor after being interred there for 100 years. Mr. Scheer placed an imitation grotto of garnet stone in the corner of the bar, and a lady’s hand rose out of the grotto. Mr. Scheer told patrons that this was the hand of Katharine Skene. He claimed to have carried Mrs. Skene’s coffin from the basement and used it as a base for a stone waterfall in the corner of the taproom. Although this story wasn’t true, it did make for interesting conversation and is part of Skene Manor’s history.
The Manor was sold again in 1951 to Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Reynolds, who continued the restaurant business. The business grew over the next 17 years until the death of the general manager, Richard Reynolds, the son of the owners. Ownership again changed hands to Leo Mulholland, who lived in the manor and ran the restaurant along with his nine children.
In 1983, Mr. Joel Murphy purchased the manor from Mr. Mulholland and continued the restaurant business. After Mr. Murphy retired, the building changed hands several more times, but subsequent owners were unsuccessful at maintaining the restaurant business and allowed the building to fall into disrepair. Fortunately, Skene Manor Preservation, Inc. was organized in the mid-1990s and took on the task of restoring and maintaining Skene Manor.
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Free tours at certain time
Gift shop