The Wit
& the Whim of Oatsie Charles
Set on a
spit of Atlantic-lapped land, the celebrated socialite and philanthropist’s
famous house welcomes back her daughter and family to continue their tradition
of Newport summering
Photo by
Mick Hales and Nick Mele
https://flowermag.com/oatsie-charles-newport-home/
A special
Newport, Rhode Island house named The Whim will happily come full circle when
Victoria Mele moves back and calls it home after almost 50 years. “I came to
this property when I was 2 years old,” says Victoria. That was in 1952, when
her mother, prominent Washington socialite Marion “Oatsie” Leiter Charles,
bought the famous estate called Land’s End. It consisted of a main house, a
gardener’s cottage, an eight-car garage, a greenhouse, and vestiges of previous
owner Edith Wharton’s gardens.
Designed by
architect John Hubbard Sturgis in the 1860s for Samuel C. Ward, brother of
writer and activist Julia Ward Howe, the sprawling shingled house on 8.5
oceanfront acres was purchased in the 1890s by Edith Wharton, who worked with
architect and interior decorator Ogden Codman to remodel it and create the
magnificent gardens. It was here that the two began writing Wharton’s famous
treatise, The Decoration of Houses.
The property
passed through several owners before Oatsie and her first husband, Thomas
Leiter, bought Land’s End as an escape from the Bar Harbor scene, where
“everybody went off on boats and there was no one to talk to,” said Oatsie.
Once in Newport, Oatsie plunged into the lively social scene, and by the time the couple divorced in 1954, she was a fixture in the glamorous summer colony. In 1957, after she sold Land’s End to prominent Philadelphian George Widener, she and Victoria moved into the gardener’s cottage. Eleven years later, she connected the tiny cottage she named The Whim with the cavernous garage, creating a charming complex with two libraries, entertaining spaces, and seven bedrooms.
“She had a
biting wit. And her confidence! She once told me when she entered a room, she
assumed everyone was thrilled to see her. And they were! What she also taught
me was, it was not about how much money you had but whether you were
interesting.”
— Nick Mele,
Oatsie’s grandson
A year
later, in 1969, Oatsie married Bob Charles, assistant secretary of the Air
Force, and they became one of Newport’s most popular couples. After parties at
night, her days were dominated by philanthropy. She was one of the founders of
the Newport Flower Show and Newport’s Secret Garden Tours, was a patroness of
The Preservation Society of Newport County, and was original trustee of Doris
Duke’s Newport Restoration Foundation.
“At home,
she put flower beds and sculpture in the original foundations of Wharton’s
greenhouse that blew down in Hurricane Carol in 1954, and she designed steps
down to lower gardens that united the scheme in a major way,” says
horticulturist Jerica Michaud, who oversees the gardens.
“I never saw
her on her hands and knees, but she knew what she wanted and had talented help
like Wiggy Brown, of the local landscaping family T. J. Brown, who was always
wandering around. Eventually, the gardens had a little bit of everything,
because she liked unusual plants.”
If summers
overlooking the tempestuous Atlantic were exciting and fun, Washington’s
whirlwind dominated her winters. A lifelong Democrat, she frequently said that
she “would rather party with the Republicans.” So it was not surprising that
when Nancy and Ronald Reagan arrived in town in 1980, Oatsie was one of the
first to welcome Nancy. In fact, the two enjoyed a lifelong friendship she
described as “love at first sight!”
Prince
Charles enjoyed regaling her with plans for the gardens of Highgrove, after she
had greeted him saying, “Prince Charles, you are one hell of a prince!” Ian
Fleming was also a great friend and was grateful to Oatsie for telling JFK that
she was currently reading one of his books.
When Kennedy
later named Fleming his favorite author in a Life magazine interview, the
writer’s work shot to the top of every best-seller list, and his James Bond
movies became blockbuster hits.
“She was a
wonderful mother. Never boring. Wherever we went anywhere in the world, she
knew somebody. She often said to me, ‘You know people other people only read
about in books,” Victoria recalls. “Although we lived in Land’s End next to
Mother for many years, we are so happy to be returning to The Whim, where my
mother’s gardens will remain exactly as she envisioned and memories of her
linger in every corner of the property.”
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