| Bogheid | |
|---|---|
Southern façade | |
![]() Interactive map of the Bogheid area | |
| Former names | Cashelmara |
| General information | |
| Type | Mansion |
| Architectural style | French manor |
| Location | Glen Cove, New York |
| Coordinates | 40°53′37″N73°37′22″W / 40.89361°N 73.62278°W /40.89361; -73.62278 |
| Completed | 1938 |
| Owner | Helen Porter Pryibil (originally); Private Owner (current) |
| Technical details | |
| Structural system | Masonry load bearing walls |
| Material | Brick |
| Floor count | 2.5 stories |
| Design and construction | |
| Architecture firm | Delano and Aldrich |

Bogheid is a historic Gold Coast mansion inGlen Cove, New York.
It was built in 1938 forHelen Porter Pryibil, daughter ofWilliam H. Porter, a partner atJ.P. Morgan & Co. It was designed byDelano and Aldrich in the French Manor style.[1]
TheFrench manor style mansion is located on the north side of Lattington Road in Glen Cove with views of theLong Island Sound and Connecticut.[2] The estate also contains a barn and a greenhouse, and is connected to a large tennis house.
The house was built on the site of her father's former mansion, also known as "Bogheid," that was demolished in 1930.[3]
At some point Prybil sold the 120-acre estate to the City of Glen Cove for $325,000.[4] The surrounding estate was converted into a municipal golf course, with Prybil retaining a life estate in the house, until her death in 1969. The city then sold the house toArthur Young Associates, which returned it after a few years.[1]
In 1981 it was sold toMartin T. Carey, brother of New York GovernorHugh Carey, who renamed it Cashelmara. In 1985 it was the site of the Designers' Showcase event for interior decorators.[4] However, it afterwards became vacant and was left in disrepair.[1] In July 2021, the house was sold to a new owner who plans to rehabilitate the property.
The Society for the Preservation of Long Island Antiquities placed it on their list of endangered historic properties in 2010, but it has not been given a "landmark" designation by the City of Glen Cove.[5] While the mansion was inventoried by the New York State Parks and Recreation Division of Historic Preservation, in 1983, there has been no attempt for listing by the National Register of Historic Places.[1]