Edna Y. Schwartz created a performing arts summer program for women at Belvoir Terrace in 1954. Her daughter, Nancy Goldberg, and granddaughter, Diane Goldberg Marcus, are the current directors/owners.[2]
Belvoir Terrace was built by Rotch & Tilden between 1888 and 1890 for Morris K. Jesup. Its landscape was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted.[a] In the early 1920s, John Shepherd purchased and renovated the property as a summer retreat.[2]
^Morris K. Jesup died in 1908 and left Belvoir to his wife. Upon her death in 1914, the house was left to a niece, Eleanor DeGraff Cuyler. In 1924, Cuyler sold the house to Howard Cole, the Palm Beach developer who snapped up Wyndhurst, Coldbrook and Blantyre for bargain prices and created the Berkshire Hunt and Country Club.[2]