The Mansion at Linden Hall

Listed on the National Register of Historic Sites and a AAA Attraction, Linden Hall's elegant English Tudor Mansion was built by Sarah B. Cochran, widow of coke and coal pioneer Philip Cochran, at a cost of two million dollars. Dedicated on Christmas day in 1913, this turn-of-the-century mansion contains 35 rooms, 27 fireplaces, and 13 baths, with 8,720 sq. ft. on each of its four floors. This Victorian home features rooms profuse with baroque woodcarving, marble, crystal and gold leaf; an oval dining room with its light fixtures of sterling with wedgewood inserts; elaborate period pieces, oriental carpeting, and original paintings. An Aeolian pipe organ, one of only three in the world, occupies a corner of the Great Hall and can be heard throughout the Mansion via pipes on the first and third floors. Linden Hall derives its name from the Linden trees brought from Berlin by Mrs. Cochran and planted throughout the grounds. Find out more about our heritage.