Iranistan | |
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General information | |
Architectural style | Byzantine, Moorish, Indo-Saracenic architecture, and Turkish |
Town or city | Fairfield and Iranistan Avenues Bridgeport, Connecticut |
Country | United States |
Completed | 1848 |
Demolished | 1857 (fire) |
Cost | $150,000 |
Client | P. T. Barnum |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | Leopold Eidlitz |
41°10′26″N 73°12′07″W / 41.174°N 73.202°W Iranistan was a Moorish Revival mansion in Bridgeport, Connecticut commissioned by P. T. Barnum in 1848. It was designed by Bohemian-American architect Leopold Eidlitz. At this "beautiful country seat"[1] Barnum played host to such famous contemporaries as the Hutchinson Family Singers,[2] Matthew Arnold, George Armstrong Custer, Horace Greeley, and Mark Twain.[3] The grandiose structure survived only a decade before being destroyed by fire in 1857.[4] It was one of five such fires in the showman's life that "burned to the ground all his accomplishments".[5]