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Beginning in 1931, architect John F. Staub (1892-1981) designed and constructed a Chateau style house in River Oaks for James Robert Neal (1894-1939), coffee magnate and vice president of Houston's Second National Bank, and his wife, Marian Holt Seward Neal (1897-1957). James Frederick "Fred" Dawson (1874-1941), senior associate of the Olmsted Brothers landscape architecture firm of Brookline, Massachusetts, designed the accompanying garden. The Staub and Olmsted complementary designs allowed Neal to transform his 3.75 acres adjacent to the River Oaks Country Club into an American interpretation of Louis XV's chateau in Versailles, France. Together, Neal and Staub intricately designed every aspect of the interior and exterior of his new house, creating cobblestone courts and French architectural touches to the exterior. In planning the ornate garden, Olmsted Brothers included native plants, reflecting an extensive understanding of Texas soil and climate, and arranged for Teas Nursery in Bellaire to supply and plant them. From the garden's initial planning stages in 1931, through Neal's untimely death in 1939, Neal and his wife oversaw every aspect of its design. Throughout the 1930s, national and state magazines featured the impressive garden in their publications. The garden is still intact from its original Olmsted Brothers design. The J. Robert Neal Olmsted Brothers garden is the only private estate homestead project the firm completed in Harris County and its is one of six in the state of Texas. The Neal House is the only structure John F. Staub designed in a French Chateau style. (2018)