This mansion served as the winter home of Powel Crosley, the American innovator who is known for bringing radio to the masses. Built in 1929 for Crosley's wife, Gwendolyn, the Mediterranean revival-style mansion, named "Seagate," is situated on the water & features a circular tower & a carriage house. Inducted in 2013, Crosley is one of 183 members in the National Radio Hall of Fame. By the time of his death in 1961, he had played a pivotal role in inventing, introducing & manufacturing a myriad of items including the fax machine, the 35mm camera and pioneering WLW Radio/Cincinnati – “The Nation’s Station” – which fed network programming to NBC in the 1930s.