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This comfortable house with a capacious porch and the aspect of a country inn is unassuming architecturally. From its founding, however, it became the elite club in Newport, its cachet uncontested until the building of the nearby Newport Casino. Originally designed in a simple Federal style as a residentially scaled hotel, it was renovated for use as a private men's club in the mid-1850s when the porch was added. It was here that a socially prominent but devil-may-care guest of James Gordon Bennett rode his horse into the members' lounge on a dare. When Bennett was reprimanded, he retaliated by commissioning the casino, taking with him many of the younger members of the Reading Room and giving to fashionable Newport a more active and public center for summer recreation. George Mason, who designed the spacious, two-story, monitor-roofed billiard room addition, was one of two nineteenth-century architects to be a member; Richard Morris Hunt was the other.