Minnie Quinn Gassaway designed this 40-room stone mansion herself after taking a correspondence course in architecture, and her husband Walter, a Greenville banker and textile executive, built it between 1919 and 1924, partly from stone salvaged from the old Vardry McBee grist mill on the Reedy River. At 22,000 square feet it remains the largest private residence in the Upstate, and it was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. The building has lived several lives since, including fifteen years as the Greenville Art Museum's first home, before becoming the event venue it is today.
Weddings spread across the mansion's eclectic interiors, with mahogany and cherry woodwork, Waterford crystal chandeliers, Italian tile, and a grand staircase, then out onto three acres of landscaped grounds with a garden, courtyard, and fountain. The venue operates on a largely inclusive model, folding catering, bartending, and event fixtures into its packages, and a lighted reception tent beside the house extends capacity for larger parties.
The mansion sits on Dupont Drive about a mile from Main Street, with free on-site parking, and can host events of up to 400 guests. Tours are arranged through the venue's contact form or by phone.