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This Manchester mansion has the world鈥檚 largest private collection of 20th-century Vermont art

Lyman Orton arrived at a local auction six decades ago in hopes of furnishing his first house, only to spy a seemingly simple yet thought-provoking framed landscape.

鈥淭he whole idea that artists fell in love with the state and then painted it was just fascinating to me,鈥 the patriarch of the family that owns the Vermont Country Store recently recalled.

The 85-year-old has since amassed what Yankee Magazine deemed More than 300 works have filled his home, office, touring exhibits 鈥 and starting June 7, their first single, permanent showplace.

The , a 120-acre Manchester campus anchored by the century-old Yester House mansion, is set to open a two-floor, 12,000-square-foot addition as part of a $14.5 million capital project.

鈥淚 feel this has been a hidden gem for 100 years,鈥 Executive Director Amelia Wiggins said in an interview. 鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to unhide it.鈥

The Richmond-based architecture and building company designed the new wing to feature Orton鈥檚 collection, as well as a rooftop terrace and lower-level gallery named for Bob Van Degna, president of the center鈥檚 board of trustees and a top project donor. The expansion includes a climate-controlled storage space for accumulated since the nonprofit鈥檚 founding three-quarters of a century ago.

鈥淲e鈥檙e really trying to develop a cultural destination not only for our local community, but also for folks from major markets like New York and Boston,鈥 center marketing director Sean Osborne said of the 鈥渢ransformative鈥 project. 鈥淲e provide not only exhibitions, but also performances, public events and, for nature enthusiasts, we connect to the . There鈥檚 a lot to this place.鈥

Longtime locals know the West Road property as the former 1800s farm of the late Charles Orvis, founder of his . In 1916, West Virginia timber tycoon , owner of what was once the world鈥檚 largest hardwood lumber company, bought the acreage for $11,000 after seeing Robert Todd Lincoln, eldest son of former President Abraham Lincoln, establish his own nearby summer estate, .

Ritter commissioned the 30-room Yester House, only to lose it upon his divorce. His ex-wife, Gertrude Divine Webster, hoped to turn the mansion into a museum for her vintage furniture and fine art. But she dropped the plans shortly before her death in 1947.

In 1950, a nonprofit group calling itself the Southern Vermont Artists bought the property for $25,000 and began the center, which now includes a 400-seat auditorium and the state鈥檚 largest sculpture garden.

鈥淭aken together, the architectural and landscape resources continue to evoke strongly the historic function and character of the Yester House estate as one of the grandest representatives of its type and period in Vermont,鈥 the states.

Orton appreciates that past. The seventh-generation Vermonter was in his 20s when he bought his first painting, not knowing it would seed a sold and scattered over the past century across the country and around the world.

Orton points to 鈥淢other and Chicks鈥 by the late Rockwell Kent, who鈥檚 represented in the . The 1926 work pictures the Sunderland Union Church that Orton鈥檚 great-grandfather helped build. It鈥檚 unclear when one of Kent鈥檚 ex-wives took the canvas to California. But in 2008, Orton discovered it for sale in San Francisco and acquired it after a year of negotiations.

Orton can tell similar tales about Vermont scenes he owns by Luigi Lucioni, whose oils and etchings appear in the ; Kyra Markham, an actress, painter and printmaker who was part of the 1930s ; and Ogden Pleissner, nationally recognized for his Life magazine work and sporting scenes.

In 2023, Orton began sharing his art through a and touring exhibit. Its initial showing in Manchester set attendance records, spurring him to approach the center about a permanent arrangement.

Orton鈥檚 collection is so big, curators will periodically change which 100 works they spotlight. The art will be surrounded by large-print labels and ample seating.

鈥淥ne thing that strikes me is galleries and museums often don鈥檛 pay attention to comfort and education,鈥 Orton said. 鈥淚鈥檝e set out to change that. We think of this as a gathering place. Artists painted here, sold their stuff and then it scattered. Now it鈥檚 coming home.鈥

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This story was originally published by and distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.

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