
 By Rob Bear | Curbed – Tue, Nov 20, 2012 12:20 AM EST
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↑ Should there ever be such a competition, the prize for best heiress name might very well be won by Dodo Hamilton. She might be nicknamed after an extinct bird, but there's nothing extinct about her billion-dollar fortune, which she inherited from her grandfather, the man behind Campbells Soup. Philadelphia-based Hamilton is getting on in age and has decided to part ways with her longtime summer home, the Irving Gill-designed "cottage" that was featured as a House of the Day in September. Listed for $15.75M, the 8,200-square-foot mansion, known as WIldacre, was restored to its Gilded Age glory by the soup heiress.
↑ Newer money food heiresses also seem to have a taste for large and extravagant homes, like the over-the-top mansion purchased by In-and-Out Burger owner Lynsi Martinez from major league slugger Adrian Beltre. Located in Bradbury, Calif., east of Los Angeles, the 16,000-square-foot Mediterranean features "basketball and tennis courts, a small golf course, a putting green, a 1,300-square-foot pool cabana with its own kitchen, a tricked-out home gym, a 20-seat outdoor movie theater, and, naturally, a batting cage." Beltre made out quite well in the deal. He bought the house for $3.425M in '06 and sold it to Martinez for a whopping $17.4M.
Photo via Mansions and More
↑ Papa John's founder and CEO John "Papa" Schnatter has taken a political stand, claiming that Obamacare would cost his company 15 to 20 cents more per pizza. While that might be a convincing argument from a business perspective, he's not going to be winning any popular support once the public catch wind of his massive mansion. The 40,000-square-foot pile sits on 16 acres in Kentucky, with a 22-car garage, a limo turntable, and a carriage house that's more than twice the size of the average American home.
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