Winter Park Public Library History and Archives Collection biographies of Winter Park families, the Webster-Wagner home.

The craftsman-style Webster-Wagner home at 433 E. New England Avenue was built in 1905 by Albert Wagner from Pennsylvania as a winter residence for his family, as well as for the families of his two sisters-in-law, Jean Wallace Webster and Katherine Wallace Bradshaw.  Square in its shape, the original home was constructed of pine with clapboard siding; typical of Florida architecture at the time, it also boasted a wrap-around open porch.   It contained five bedrooms and two baths.   In the 1930's, a retired Episcopalian bishop, Bishop Matthews, purchased the home and enlarged it, adding a wood-paneled library, a chapel with stained glass windows, servants' quarters, a sun-room, and a sleeping porch.   The Webster-Wagner home bordering Lake Osceola now has fourteen rooms - five bedrooms and four and one-half baths - and a three-room guest house.

Photo the Webster-Wagner home. Photo the Webster-Wagner home.
The Webster-Wagner home. Black and white image of the Webster-Wagner home.
The Webster-Wagner home chapel.
The Webster-Wagner home chapel.

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