When the cardinal's residence was built in the 1920s atop a hill in the leafy, most western outpost of Boston, it was modeled after an Italian palazzo. The grand mansion, replete with ornate mahogany and marble appointments, stood as a testament to the Boston Archdiocese's stature in the very Catholic city of Boston. Political candidates — local and national — would come calling, and even the pope came to visit.
When Cardinal Bernard Law took up residence in the Renaissance Revival mansion, Boston's Roman Catholic movers and shakers would flock to the backyard for his garden party fundraisers.
https://www.npr.org/2017/12/23/572945832/fallen-kings-how-cardinal-laws-reign-cemented-the-church-s-fading-power
https://www.npr.org/2017/12/23/572945832/fallen-kings-how-cardinal-laws-reign-cemented-the-church-s-fading-power