Iranistan

Iranistan
Iranistan, Residence of P.T. Barnum, 1848
General information
Architectural styleByzantine, Moorish, Indo-Saracenic architecture, and Turkish
Town or cityFairfield and Iranistan Avenues
Bridgeport, Connecticut
CountryUnited States
Completed1848
Demolished1857 (fire)
Cost$150,000
ClientP. T. Barnum
Design and construction
Architect(s)Leopold Eidlitz

41°10′26″N 73°12′07″W / 41.174°N 73.202°W / 41.174; -73.202 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" Barnum played host to such famous contemporaries as the Hutchinson Family Singers, Matthew Arnold, George Armstrong Custer, Horace Greeley, and Mark Twain. The grandiose structure survived only a decade before being destroyed by fire in 1857. It was one of five such fires in the showman's life that "burned to the ground all his accomplishments".