The Lost Houses
1755 - 1756
1757 - 1855
1856 - 1865
1866 - 1875
1876 - 1885
1886 - 1895
1896 - 1910
Bateman's Hotel (c. 1755)





This large mid-eighteenth-century country estate built for the prominent Collins family of Newport was acquired in the 1840s by Seth Bateman, who by 1860 encased the original house in additions and operated it as Bateman’s Hotel.  A favorite excursion spot for coaching meets, formal picnics, and rustic dances, Bateman’s became synonymous with the Newport lifestyle.  Acquired around 1893 by Edmund W. Davis, the property was sold only in 1947 to Newport preservationist John Perkins Brown.  With funds provided by the Misses Wetmore of Château-sur-Mer, a restoration was planned to return the Bateman Hotel complex back to its eighteenth-century core.  J. Perkins Brown however sold the property, before work was much advanced, to local developer Louis Chartier for $13,000 in 1957.  The Bateman Hotel burned mysteriously on February 24, 1959 and the ruins were cleared for the Chartier Circle subdivision.


John Bannister House (c. 1756)

  • John Bannister House
  • Architect: Unknown
  • West Main Road
  • Located just north of the Newport-Middletown city line
  • Demolished: c. 1955

            This distinguished mid-eighteenth-century rusticated Georgian country house was built for Colonial architect Peter Harrison's brother-in-law and was long thought to be by Harrison.  The house was demolished between 1953 and 1955 for an elementary school.  Salvaged interiors and the main staircase were purchased by Henry Francis du Pont for his Winterthur Museum.
NEWPORT MANSIONS is a registered trademark of The Preservation Society of Newport County. Our tickets should not be presented at any other mansion in Newport except The Breakers, Chateau-sur-Mer, Chepstow, The Elms, Green Animals Topiary Garden, Hunter House, Isaac Bell House, Kingscote, Marble House, and Rosecliff.