7 Gilded Age Things to Do in Newport RI

Most of the things to do in Newport RI are quite dramatic, as the town is both paean to the America’s Cup Yacht Race and the conspicuous consumer lifestyle of the Gilded Age. Newport was considered the “Sailing Capital of the World” when it hosted the America’s Cup twelve times from 1930 until the 1983, and, amazingly enough, you can sail on one of those regal racing boats.

Elaborate black iron gate entrance at the Breakers Mansion in Newport RI.

This former playground of filthy rich Victorians now makes Newport, Rhode Island a perfectly posh weekend getaway destination, replete with great restaurants and luxe-cool places to bed down.

Need more ideas of where to go in-state with your honey? Check out our Best Romantic Getaways in Rhode Island.

Things to Do in Newport RI

Entrance to Cliff Walk Newport RI

STROLL: Cliff Walk

Take a bracing walk on the dramatic 3.5-mile Cliff Walk that provides unobstructed views of both the back lawns of incomprehensibly large Gilded Age “cottages” and the Atlantic Ocean. On summer weekends, you might encounter gridlock on the Walk, so it’s best to come early morning or off-season. 

The Breakers Mansion Newport RI

TOUR: The Newport Mansions

Blue Blood society is tough to penetrate, but you’ll get a good idea of what it was all about during the Downton Abby era by visiting these grandiose residences: the Newport Mansions managed by the Preservation Society of Newport County.

Conceived as a summer playground for New Yorkers trying to outdo each other, Newport and these “cottages” along with the elaborately engineered rituals that accompanied them, were defined and run largely by women.   

The double whammy of the Depression that began in 1929, and the Hurricane of 1938 demolished this unsustainable lifestyle. By the 1940’s these mansions were just too costly for individual families to run. The Preservation Society now manages these monoliths and offers nicely produced audio tours of eleven historic properties. 

Check the website for programs, self-guided and docent-guided tours, Private Tours, and special events.

Breakers Mansion

The Breakers

Inspired by the Paris Opera House and New Renaissance Style, The Breakers is just one example of the outrageous splendor of the late 1800’s.  Built by Cornelius Vanderbilt strictly to entertain during 10 weeks of summer, the Breakers was the epitome of the lavish consumption decried by Mark Twain, who coined the not-meant-to-be-complimentary phrase, “Gilded Age”.

Breakers Dining Room
The Dining Room at the Breakers.

You can launch a rocket in the Dining Room, with the Goddess Aura “Bringing in the Dawn” emblazoned on the ceiling 50 feet above.  Electric Baccarat Crystal chandeliers, walls of 24 carat-embossed leather and platinum, mosaics, marble slabs, over a dozen bathrooms; architects and interior designers wove old imagery of the classical world with new technology.

Typical for these pleasure palaces, main floors were designed to impress “The 400” on the Social Register, but most bedrooms on the second floor were so simple and understated, they wouldn’t even pass muster on today’s TripAdvisor.

Rosecliff, Newport RI
Rosecliff, Newport RI

Rosecliff

Before Robert Redford skulked the halls while filming The Great Gatsby, and Arnold and Jamie Lee Curtis were locked in an athletic tango for the movie True Lies, Nevada silver-mine heiress, Tessie Olrichs, hired Sanford White to build this excessive cliffside “cottage” specifically for entertaining.

Adhering to the unwritten rule that to remain atop the Social Register one had to throw six dinner parties for 60 people or more in season, Olrichs spent seven million dollars (in today’s dollars) on entertaining every ten-week summer season in the French Renaissance ballroom at the center of the home. Men retired to smoke or play billiards away from what they must have considered frivolous drama. 

Besides the parties, society women were pressured to change clothing seven times a day – morning, sports, meals and even for cruising down mansion-lined Bellvue Ave. During the 1920’s Jazz Age, entertainment became less formal: when frequent guest, Cole Porter, wrote most of his hit musical, “Anything Goes” at Rosecliff, a ping-pong table had replaced the elaborately set tables in the ballroom.

Like the rest of these preserved homes, Rosecliff was donated to the Preservation Society in 1971.

Marble House exterior

Marble House

Build between 1888 and 1892 as a summer cottage for the grandson of steamship tycoon, Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt. The younger Vanderbilt built the mansion as a 39th birthday gift for his wife, Alva, who was renowned for her social affairs.

The extravagance is almost impossible to comprehend–over  $7million spent on 500,000 cubic feet of marble, just for starters. 

Chinese Tea House at Marble House in Newport RI

The Vanderbilts eventually divorced, and it wasn’t until after her husband’s death that Alva reopened Marble House. It was her “temple to the arts;” and later, she added a Chinese Tea House that became the site of suffragette rallies.

International Tennis Hall of Fame Newport RI

TOUR: International Tennis Hall of Fame

The first US National Men’s Tennis Championship was held right here in Newport in 1881, and now this former McKim, Mead and White designed Casino (not a gambling hall, but a Victorian-era Club), once used for horse-shows and garden parties, comprises the International Tennis Hall Of Fame. Plan on an hour or more to make your way through the well-conceived museum that is actually a lot larger than it looks.

Read up on every tennis great from the 1850’s on, learn about the origins of the game and now this new “bouncing ball” changed everything. According to historians, Hollywood and the sport of Tennis grew up together. Charlie Chaplin imparted West Coast glitz to the game, and even now, you’ll find movie-stars in attendance at the US Open and Wimbledon.

If you thought that the competitive Williams sisters are unique, consider Lillian and Maud Watson, who competed against each other the first year that women were allowed to compete at Wimbledon in 1884.  The HOF gives women players their due, from the Watsons to Helen “Poker Face” Wills, who, between 1923 and 1938 “played like a man” and was significant enough to make the cover of Life Magazine in 1939.

Even Billie Jean King gets to weigh in on her dainty pink rhinestone outfit, “girly” being de rigueur for women before tennis attire became badass. All the while, watch iconic games on videos throughout the museum, and then roam six acres of grounds. Stay to watch (or play) a game on grass or go up to the “Royal Court” observation galley to watch players bat a felted cork ball across the net. Check website for museum and court availability hours.

Touro Synagogue built in 1763 Newport RI

VISIT: Touro Synagogue

America’s oldest Jewish house of worship, Touro Synagogue, was the impetus for George Washington’s famous letter “To the Hebrew Congregation at Newport.” After visiting in 1790, Washington wrote, “every one shall sit in safety under his own vine and figtree, and there shall be none to make him afraid. For happily the Government of the United States gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance.”

Now a National Historic Site, The Touro Synagogue is both an operating House of Worship and Museum of Religious Liberty. Consult website for operating and visiting times.

Bannister's Wharf Newport RI Historic District

DO: Walk the Wharfs

Meandering Bannister’s and Bowen’s Wharves is among the best things to do in Newport Rhode Island for shoppers. Once the stomping grounds of America’s Cup crews, these piers are now chockablock with chain and souvenir stores. With one exception.  

Bowen’s is home to Newport Scrimshanders where Owner/Artist Brian J. Kiracofe has been carving scrimshaw on ancient ivory for over 30 years. Bannister’s Wharf is also the departure point for harbor tours (see Rum Runner below).

Rum Runner II siteseeing cruises Newport RI

TOUR: Rum Runner II

Learn about “hooch” smuggling during Prohibition on the swift Rum Runner II, a restored 1929 Elco Motor yacht, aka a “bootlegger.” When the legal reach of Prohibition was moved from three to 12 miles offshore, boats like this were built for speed (originally three 500 HP Packard airplane engines, now two 350 turbo-charged) to outrun the law.

Ninety-minute narrated historical tours of Narragansett Bay and Newport Harbor leave four times a day from Bannister’s Wharf. You’ll hear about the first officially appointed female lighthouse keeper, Ida Lewis, who served here in 1854.

Castle Hill Lighthouse from water, Newport RI

You’ll see the evidence of massive but fleeting Victorian-era and Roaring 20’s wealth gleaned from Worcestershire Sauce (of all things), railroads and banking lining the shoreline now gone museum or condo, and pass “Daisy’s Dock” from the Robert Redford version of The Great Gatsby. Learn the history of Goat Island, where the Newport Harbor Island Resort now stands, which once housed a torpedo production facility that supplied over 60% of all the torpedoes used during WWII.

America's Cup yacht at sail in Newport RI harbor.

If you’re lucky, you’ll see a fleet of former America’s Cup yachts at sail. Heritage, Columbia (the 1958 winner), American Eagle, and several others are available for charter. There’s nothing more beautiful than seeing these graceful and elegant gals in the foreground of the Newport Bridge. Check website for cruise times.

Rum Runner II is one of the Getaway Mavens’ quirkiest places to propose in Rhode Island.

Historic Fort Adams Newport RI

TOUR: Historic Fort Adams

Jutting out into Newport Harbor, Fort Adams was built in 1857 as a precautionary measure. Though it never saw battle, the fort is open for tours, and you’ll find other places of interest on this most picturesque of Newport promontories. It’s also the site of President Eisenhower’s Summer White House (now rented out for weddings) and the venerable Newport Jazz Festival (where Bob Dylan “went electric” in 1965, disappointing many fans).

Restaurants in Newport RI

EAT: Castle Hill Dining Room

The setting at Castle Hill Dining Room is exquisite – a conservatory with floor to ceiling windows overlooking Narragansett Bay. At dusk, you’ll watch yachts sailing back to port as the blinking lights of two nearby lighthouses take over the dark.  Food is seasonal and on the experimental side for a hotel: and a joy to behold and eat. Vidalia Onion Soup, poured at the table into a shallow bowl of mix-ins, creates a textural, mouthwatering ensemble.  

The popular Rabbit Confit rolled “en croute” – though more like a large spring-roll – is a gamey and toothsome alternative to the raved-about Lobster Poached in Butter. But I was impressed, both aesthetically and gastronomically, by the Salmon with Smoked Beets. Laid atop sautéed escarole, on a swath of fusia beet puree, it was an edible modernist painting; the fish and smoked beets – perfection.

Nothing stuck me for dessert, so I chose Milk Chocolate ice-cream as default. It proved to be a diet-dangerous choice  – as luscious as a creamy, frozen melted Toblorone bar. I could have eaten a few pints of the stuff.

EAT: Locals Recommend

Newporters in the know recommend Dining Room at Vanderbilt Hotel for the height of fine dining, and The Mooring – on Bannister’s Wharf for seafood.

Hotels In Newport RI

Castle Hill Inn - exterior

STAY: Castle Hill Inn

Exclusive, highly luxurious, exceptional service, and three miles removed from the madness of town, the Inn sits on headlands, making it the perfect vantage point to watch boat traffic coming in and out of Newport Harbor. For more on this first-rate inn, read all about it in our Castle Hill Inn review.

STAY: The Attwater

Just a five minute walk to downtown and eight-minute stroll to the beach, The Attwater is one of the latest in Newport Boutique hotels. Highly lacquered furniture and high-gloss hardwood floors lend a nautical element to each of eight breezy rooms and four suites, with color palettes in beachy sea-foams, whites, sands, golds and rusts.

Beds are pillowtop, barn doors slide open to pea-sized retro black and white tile bathrooms, and each room features an I-Pad that acts as both a hotel directory and temporary perk for guests. Although parking in downtown Newport can be a nightmare, the Attwater has its own parking lot. And it’s free. 

Rose Island Lighthouse Newport RI harbor

STAY: Rose Island Lighthouse

Out in the middle of the harbor, you have to arrive to Rose Island Lighthouse by boat. Expect to make your bed every morning (it’s a museum.) Pack a cooler with food (no restaurant.) You will share a pump-toilet. And if you sign up to be a Lighthouse Keeper for the night or week, you might do chores.  But, oh, the view.

Weekend Getaways In Rhode Island

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Author

  • Sandra Foyt - Malerie Yolen-Cohn

    Travel experts Malerie Yolen-Cohen and Sandra Foyt share all-in-one destination guides for the best romantic getaways. Although they generally publish independent articles, this is their collection of collaborative posts. Malerie’s focus and specialty is the Northeastern USA, and she is the Author of the cross-country travel guide, Stay On Route 6; Your Guide to All 3562 Miles of Transcontinental Route 6. Originally from the Caribbean, but based in New York's Capital Region for over twenty years, Sandra specializes in warm-climate destinations.

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2 thoughts on “7 Gilded Age Things to Do in Newport RI”

  1. Hi Slumber – thank you for pointing that out. It was the Volvo Ocean Race, and I made corrections already. Thanks for reading and commenting! Malerie

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