Marilyn Monroe once spent time in this Hamptons windmill, which is now on the market for $12.5 million

Marilyn Monroe once spent time in this Hamptons windmill, which is now on the market for $12.5 million

In the summer of 1957, newlyweds Marilyn Monroe and Arthur Miller, like many artists and literary figures of the time—such as Edward Albee, Jackson Pollock, and Truman Capote—escaped to the Hamptons. The couple reportedly stayed in a humble cottage at historic Stony Hill Farm in Amagansett, which is partly owned by Alec and Hilaria Baldwin today. To evade the press, they often retreated to a secluded windmill on nearby Quail Hill, a unique residence that was hidden from view.

A long drive snakes through a rolling landscape as it makes it way to the house.
The updated bathroom.
The octagonal second-floor bedroom.
The windmill’s original mechanical equipment is still in place in the third-floor closet/storage area.
The windmill’s tiny front porch opens to a large brick patio.
The property’s rolling acreage provides tranquil privacy.
An aerial view of the property looking toward the Atlantic Ocean.

This charming hideaway, known as The Windmill House, is now on the market for $12 million. Set on nearly 5.5 acres of mostly wooded land, the property offers complete privacy, bordered by protected land owned by the Peconic Land Trust. The windmill, built in the mid-1800s, originally pumped water for the farm for about a century before being transformed into a rustic guest house around 1950 by Samuel Rubin, founder of Fabergé Perfumes.

The 19th-century windmill was added on to and converted to a residence in the 1950s.

The property was later acquired in 1967 by philanthropic heiress Deborah Ann Light, who donated adjacent land to the Peconic Land Trust. The approximately 1,300-square-foot home features a cozy sitting room, a compact kitchen with a small dining area, two bedrooms—including an octagonal room upstairs—and a bathroom. The third floor remains unfinished, retaining the windmill’s mechanical equipment.

The cozy living room.

Outside, a large brick patio offers a spot to enjoy sea breezes, along with a detached two-car garage and a small accessory building previously used as an art studio. Over the years, The Windmill House has also hosted various decorators, designers, English actor Terence Stamp, and satirical novelist Kurt Vonnegut.

The kitchen is simple and small but fully equipped with a dishwasher and microwave.

Listing agent Bobby Rosenbaum of Douglas Elliman described the property’s surroundings as a place where you can truly feel the power of nature. Despite its storied past, the property’s true value lies in its potential for development, with the possibility of building a residence of up to 20,000 square feet that offers distant views of the Atlantic Ocean and Montauk/Napeague Bay.

The main-floor bedroom.

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