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Mooreland before renovation

Mooreland after renovation

National Register of Historic Places
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The original property included a working farm and covered over
1,000 acres. The country home, neo-classical in style, was substantially
enlarged in 1906 with Milton Dyer engaged as architect. (Dyer later
designed Cleveland City Hall.) Landscape architect A. Donald Gray
designed the layout of a pool, fountains, rose gardens, and a nine-hole
golf course.
Mooreland was a retreat for wealthy industrialists. Records show
that among the noted guests were Eleanore Roosevelt and Polish
Prime Minister and noted pianist Ignacy Paderewski. After Moore
died in 1928, his family sold their home in Cleveland and made
their permanent residence at Mooreland. The estate remained relatively
intact until the early 1960s when sections of the original estate
were sold.
In 1968, the Lakeland Community College Board of Trustees purchased
approximately 400 acres (which included the mansion) from the Moore
family as the site for the new community college. As part of the
agreement, Edward Moore's daughter, Margaret, was allowed to continue
to live in the 42-room home until her death in 1982, at which time
the mansion became college property.
In 1988, the Lakeland Board of Trustees asked its newly appointed
college president, Dr. Ralph R. Doty, to either find a way to renovate
and use the now delapidated mansion, or recommend its destruction.
After an architectural study verified that the mansion was structurally
sound, community members stepped forward and volunteered to take
on the task of raising the resources for renovation.
In 1993, with assistance from The Cleveland Foundation, the Lakeland
Board of Trustees commissioned a feasibility study to determine
possible public and private uses for a renovated mansion. The study
offered several options, but recommended that the college turn
the mansion into a flexible, multi-use facility that would meet
a variety of college and community needs.
After a great deal of consideration, the Board decided to accept
this recommendation. The college administration appointed a project
team of college and community members to recommend development
and operational plans for Mooreland. Nearly $3 million in state
capital money was used to fund the remaining cost of renovating
and equipping the mansion as a state-of-the-art conference and
community center, while maintaining its historic integrity. Ongoing
operations are funded by revenues from businesses and community
members using the facility, the college's general operating fund,
and volunteer efforts.
The completed facility offers the relaxed atmosphere of an early
twentieth century summer home with the comforts and technology
available today. It is a retreat from the press of day-to-day business
activities with the benefit of being in the backyard of Lakeland
Community College.
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