The Cornwall Castle, in good hands now, gets a load of TLC

CORNWALL —The historic Cornwall Castle has sold and is being speedily and thoroughly restored by new owner Russell Barton and his wife, Susi Stone. They are at present living in the pool house, which they have fixed up to a state of delicious perfection. 

They hope to be in the main house by the middle of September. 

Barton and Stone gave a tour of the rambling residence on a recent Wednesday afternoon. 

The Bartons’ new residence is known around the region as the Cornwall Castle; it has also been called Hidden Valley Castle or the Hidden Valley Estate. (For a history of the castle, see the story on this page by Alexander Wilburn.) 

It’s had some notable and colorful owners in the past but the property has to some degree suffered at their hands. The most recent owner, Buddy Fletcher and his wife, Ellen Pao, not only left with the property in foreclosure (after paying $5,925,000 for it in 2001; Chase bank took the property over in early February 2019). They also left the property more or less in a state of ruin. 

Barton and Stone purchased the property from the bank in July for $1,600,000, which is still quite a lot of money for a house — but what a house. The castle is really more like a country chateau, charming and intimate, but with lots and lots of rooms. It is surrounded by 275 acres of forest and stream, with numerous outbuildings that are made of stone, as is the main residence.

Barton said it reminds him of the 1954 film “Sabrina,” in which the chauffeur’s daughter falls in love with first one and then the other son of the family that owns the estate where her father works. 

“I fell in love with Audrey Hepburn when I saw that film,” said Barton, who is in his 60s.

Fall of the house of Fletcher

The fallen fortunes of Buddy Fletcher and Ellen Pao have been covered in great detail in publications such as Vanity Fair and the Wall Street Journal. They are only relevant to the story of the house in the sense that, as the couple struggled with their lawsuits and financial setbacks, they essentially abandoned the property — and committed what Barton calls “the sin”: When they left the property they neither turned off the water nor put antifreeze in the pipes. Which burst. As a result, most of the surfaces in the house were covered with mold; the air conditioning and heating systems were shot; the floors were damaged. 

There were also surprising choices that Fletcher and Pao made in their early days on the property, Barton observed. For example, they put steam showers in every bathroom in the house but never updated the kitchen.

“In a house like this, you’d think they’d make the kitchen a priority,” Barton mused as he walked through the house. 

Fletcher also spent the money to bury all the power lines coming onto the property but he never installed overhead lighting in public spaces such as the dining room.  

Fletcher bought up land surrounding the castle, seeking to protect it and increase his privacy. But, Barton noted, the house is already completely isolated in its snug spot at the end of a dirt road in the Coltsfoot Valley.

“You could have absolute privacy here on 10 acres,” he said. 

In good hands now

It’s that privacy that Barton and Stone say they cherish here at the Cornwall Castle. Barton is somewhat of a serial renovator but he claims that he plans to stay on this property for the rest of his life. 

A Connecticut native, Barton has lived and owned property in several towns in the area, including Lakeville, Falls Village and even Cornwall. He and Stone own two horse farms in Litchfield County (she is an accomplished equestrian and works with trainer Katja Eilers, formerly of Lost Island Farm in Falls Village). 

His most recent big project was the complete renovation and transformation of the former jail in Litchfield, which is now a thriving commercial space with a variety of businesses including the Marketplace Tavern. 

He now has his eye on the Litchfield Courthouse, which has been closed since the judicial center moved to Torrington. He said he’d like to turn it into an “arts emporium, with plays, art shows, music, things people enjoy. Litchfield as it used to be, before the only reason they’d come to town was to go to court.”

Barton has worked in real estate development for his entire life, starting with a few small residential properties and an occasional bar or restaurant, then eventually developing shopping centers. Because of this, he has a dedicated crew of talented workers, most of whom come from Brazil — and who, fortunately, are very familiar with plaster, which is what the walls are made of at the castle. 

Barton and his crew are all over the property, quickly cleaning up the walls and refinishing the floors, installing a new air conditioning system, preserving the dams and other features of the landscape. 

A new kitchen, of course, is on the priority list. Barton notes that for anyone else, it would be prohibitively expensive to repair the damage that has been done to the buildings. Because he’s experienced and has his own crew, it’s relatively affordable. The kitchen, he said, will be the most expensive part of the project. 

Excellent bones

Barton also can tell by looking at a property whether it’s worth saving. The Cornwall Castle, he said, is an excellent building underneath the surface damage. 

“This was built by hand over five years in the 1920s,” he said. “It was built right.”

He pointed out hidden design features such as the exterior gargoyles on the corners of the building. 

“It’s magic. Everything about this building is magic.”

Although he and Stone say they value the solitude the property will offer them, they are nonetheless making efforts to be good neighbors. They plan to protect the land in a conservation easement and they are negotiating with the town right now about taking away the helipad permit that former owner Saul Steinberg fought so hard to get for the property.

And perhaps, they said, when they’re done with the renovation, they’ll host some parties so the community can come in and visit a property that many have heard of over the years but that few people have actually seen. 

Latest News

A new life for Barrington Hall

A new life for Barrington Hall

Dan Baker, left, and Daniel Latzman at Barrington Hall in Great Barrington.

Provided

Barrington Hall in Great Barrington has hosted generations of weddings, proms and community gatherings. When Dan Baker and Daniel Latzman took over the venue last summer, they stepped into that history with a plan not just to preserve it, but to reshape how the space serves the community today.

Barrington Hall is designed for gathering, for shared experience, for the simple act of being together. At a time when connection is often filtered through screens and distraction, their vision is grounded in something simple and increasingly rare: real human connection.

Keep ReadingShow less

Gail Rothschild’s threads of time

Gail Rothschild’s threads of time

Gail Rothschild with her painting “Dead Sea Linen III (73 x 58 inches, 2024, acrylic on canvas.

Natalia Zukerman

There is a moment, looking at a painting by Gail Rothschild, when you realize you are not looking at a painting so much as a map of time. Threads become brushstrokes; fragments become fields of color; something once held in the hand becomes something you stand in front of, both still and in a constant process of changing.

“Textiles connect people,” Rothschild said. “Textiles are something that we’re all intimately involved with, but we take it for granted.”

Keep ReadingShow less

Sherman Players celebrate a century of community theater

Sherman Players celebrate a century of community theater

Cast of “Laughter on the 23rd Floor” from left to right. Tara Vega, Steve Zerilli, Bob Cady (Standing) Seated at the table: Andrew Blanchard, Jon Barker, Colin McLoone, Chris Bird, Rebecca Annalise, Adam Battlestein

Provided

For a century, the Sherman Players have turned a former 19th-century church into a stage where neighbors become castmates, volunteers power productions and community is the main attraction. The company marks its 100th season with a lineup that blends classic works, new writing and homegrown talent.

New England has a long history of community theater and its role in strengthening civic life. The Sherman Players remain a vital example, mounting intimate, noncommercial productions that draw on local participation and speak to the current cultural moment.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

Reimagining opera for a new generation

Reimagining opera for a new generation

Stage director Geoffrey Larson signs autographs for some of the kids after a family performance.

Provided

For those curious about opera but unsure where to begin, the Mahaiwe Theater in Great Barrington will offer an accessible entry point with “Once Upon an Opera,” a free, family-friendly program on Sunday, April 12, at 2 p.m. The event is designed for opera newcomers and aficionados alike and will include selections from some of opera’s most beloved works.

Luca Antonucci, artistic coordinator, assistant conductor and chorus master for the Berkshire Opera Festival, said the idea first materialized three years ago.

Keep ReadingShow less
BSO charts future amid leadership transition and financial strain

Aerial view of The Shed at Tanglewood in Lenox, Massachusetts.

Provided

The Boston Symphony Orchestra is outlining its path forward following the announcement that music director Andris Nelsons will step down after the 2027 Tanglewood season, closing a 13-year tenure.

In a letter to supporters, the BSO’s Board of Trustees acknowledged that the news has been difficult for many in its community, while emphasizing gratitude for Nelsons’ leadership and plans to celebrate his final season.

Keep ReadingShow less
A tradition of lamb for Easter and Passover

Roasted lamb

Provided

Preparing lamb for the observance of Easter is a long-standing tradition in many cultures, symbolizing new life and purity. For Christians, Easter marks the end of Lenten fasting, allowing for a celebratory feast. A popular choice is roast lamb, often prepared with rosemary, garlic or lemon. It is traditional to serve mint sauce or mint jelly at the table.

The Hebrew Bible suggests that the last plague God inflicted on the Egyptians, to secure the Israelites’ release from slavery, was to kill the firstborn son in every Egyptian home. To differentiate the Israelites from the Egyptians, God instructed them to mark their doorposts with the blood of a lamb. Today, Jews, Christians and Muslims generally believe that God would have known who was Israelite and who was Egyptian without such a sign, but views of God’s omnipotence in the Abrahamic faiths have evolved over the millennia.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.