Born in Sherman, Connecticut in 1855, Franklin Henry Giddings joined the faculty of Columbia University in 1891. Three years later he was appointed the chair of sociology there. By the early years of the 20th century, the recognized sociologist, journalist and economist lived in an upscale, high-stoop rowhouse at 150 West 79th Street.
At the time, developers on the Upper West Side were replacing private homes with multi-family buildings. It appears that when the Vadrick Realty Co. approached Franklin Henry Giddings with an offer for his rowhouse in 1910, the educator pushed back. Almost certainly included in the sale, Giddings would be among the initial residents of the projected building.
On August 20, 1910, the Record & Guide reported that Schwartz & Gross had filed plans for a "12-story brick and stone apartment house." The building would replace five rowhouses, including the Giddings home. The article projected the cost of construction at $375,000--a significant $12.4 million in 2025 terms.
The Dorset was completed in September 1911. An advertisement in The New York Times called it "high class" and offered seven, nine or ten-room apartments with "very large rooms and 3 baths." Rents ranged from $2,600 to $3,000, or about $8,375 per month today for the most expensive.
Schwartz & Gross's neo-Renaissance tripartite design included a three-story base with a stone balcony supported by massive carved brackets at the third floor. The seven-story midsection was faced in Flemish bond brown brick and terminated with impressive limestone brackets with floral garlands that upheld the intermediate cornice. They were echoed with the capitals of the two-level piers on the top section, below the copper cornice.
A massive banner advertised the apartments in 1911. The five brownstones that sat here were identical to whose on either side of the new building.
photograph by Wurts Bros. from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York.
By the time Franklin Henry Giddings moved into his apartment, he had published several books, including Democracy and Empire, Inductive Sociology, and Descriptive and Historical Sociology. He is remembered today for the concept of "consciousness of kind," by which persons recognize and associate with like-individuals, establishing "group self-consciousness" as opposed to individual self-consciousness.
Frank Henry Giddings, from the collection of the Library of Union College
While Giddings's name appeared in newspapers for his thoughts about political and social-economic issues, other initial residents regularly appeared in the society columns. On January 14, 1912, for instance, The New York Times reported, "Mr. and Mrs. Edgar A. Levy, 150 West Seventy-ninth Street, will give a dinner party this evening for Miss Marjorie and Walter Klee, who have just announced their engagement." A month later, the newspaper announced, "Mrs. L. L. Warshauer of 150 West Seventy-ninth Street will give the second of a series of bridge parties on Friday."
Among the first entertainments in the building was Mrs. Nathaniel Arnold's "bridge party and tea with music at her home," as noted by the New York Herald on December 21, 1911. Mrs. Arnold's daughter from her first marriage, Madelaine Ethel Sylvester, lived with the couple. The family's country home was in Woodmere, Long Island.
Madelaine was a subject of social chatter in 1912 when she was wooed by the internationally famed explorer, photographer and inventor, Russell Hastings Millward. The handsome 35-year-old would later claim the world record for trekking by foot through "unexplored, uncharted portions of Africa, South and Central America and Mexico."
Socialites were atwitter when newspapers reported that Millward took out a marriage license on December 10. But almost immediately, puzzling developments ignited a flurry of rumors. On December 12, The New York Times reported, "No announcement was made yesterday to clear the secrecy which surrounds the plans for the marriage of Russell Hastings Millward, the young American explorer, and Miss Madelaine Ethel Sylvester...although two days have now elapsed since Mr. Millward took out a marriage license." According to scuttlebutt, the article said, "he had left for British Honduras." Another rumor said the couple had already been married. At the Dorset apartment, a family member declined "to confirm or deny the marriage."
The following day, The Syracuse Herald raised doubts that the marriage would happen. "Deep-dyed mystery surrounds the hasty exit from this city made on Tuesday evening by Russell Hastings Milward [sic], a young explorer and archaeologist, only a few hours after taking out a license to wed Miss Madeline [sic] E. Sylvester." The article said Madeleine "declares that her fiance has merely 'run out of town' for a few days to attend to business matters." Millward's friends, however, "say that Millward is now on his way to Central America for a three years' stay."
A detail in The Syracuse Herald proved a significant hint. Millward's mother told a reporter that she was "greatly disturbed and puzzled" regarding the engagement. She was under the impression her son was engaged to Grace Rucker of Washington D.C. As it turned, neither of the recent debutantes snagged the intrepid explorer. Millward married Edna Pearl Boyden of Boston on August 27, 1914.
Madeleine E. Sylvester, New York Herald, June 23, 1911 (copyright expired)
Madeleine beat her former fiancé to the altar, however. On June 25, 1913, she entered the newsroom of the New York Herald and declared she had eloped with Charles Everett Doll. She explained that while dining at Delmonico's two weeks earlier, "Charlie" dared her to marry him. "Away we went in an automobile--it must have been after nine o'clock at night--got some one that looks after the marriage licenses, you know, and he promised to keep it a secret. We were married that night."
Not surprisingly, other wealthy residents at the time were less colorful than Madeleine Ethel Sylvester. Among the Arnolds' neighbors were Hermann Runkel and his wife, the former Victoria Lopez. Born in New Orleans in 1853 (where he and Virginia married), Runkel arrived in New York in 1869. The following year he and his brother, Louis, founded the candy and chocolate manufacturing firm, Runkel Brothers. Hermann was highly involved in Jewish charities and was a director of the Hebrew Infant Asylum.
Around the outbreak of World War I, Runkel fell ill. The 65-year-old died here on March 29, 1918 "after a long illness," according to The Evening Post. Later, the New York Herald reported that Victoria inherited most of Runkel's estate, "estimated at close to one million dollars."
Residents of the Dorset maintained a small staff, as reflected in a help-wanted ad in the New York Herald on January 23, 1921:
Cook--Good cook wanted, cooking and light housework; French butler kept. Call Monday or Tuesday, 9 to 10 or 5 to 6, at 150 West 79th st., sixth floor.
The mention of "French butler kept" meant that he lived with the family.
Living here at the time was the Frederick Gerken family. Gerken was a real estate developer, perhaps best remembered for erecting the Gerken Building in 1895 on Chambers and West Broadway, designed by George Edward Harding & Gooch. Following his father's death in 1920, Frederick Gerken, Jr. remained here with his mother. Gerken, Jr. had graduated from the Columbia Law School in 1914. Despite his law degree, in 1918 he was made president of The Derf Manufacturing Company, Inc.
Harry A. Cohen and his wife suffered an unspeakable tragedy on March 29, 1923. The couple had a 20-month-old son, Kenneth. On that afternoon, Mrs. Cohen left the Dorset with Kenneth's "nurse girl," as described by The New York Times. The article said Mrs. Cohen, "planned to take the bus across town to visit friends, but she walked south on Amsterdam Avenue as far as Seventy-eighth Street, playing with the child."
Mrs. Cohen waved to her son as she stepped onto the bus. At that instant, the horse attached to a Sheffield Farms Company at the curb, "became frightened and, despite the chained wheels, started forward," as reported by The New York Times. It crashed into the wagon of the New York Pie Baking Company. As Mrs. Cohen looked on, the second horse, "became unmanageable and started for the sidewalk. The baby still was waving its good-byes when shrieks of others gave warning of the danger." The nurse tried to swing the baby carriage out of the way, but it was too late. The article said, "The carriage was overturned, throwing the baby to the street and an instant later the hoof of the horse crushed his skull."
Among the Cohens' wealthy residents were Maurice W. Levy and his wife, the former Sarah Kohn. Levy's biography reads like an adventure novel. Born on September 16, 1845 in Alsace-Lorraine, he came to America at the age of 11. The New York Times recalled, "He went to California by sailboat and across the Isthmus in the first year the railroad was opened." He studied at the University of California, and in 1889 moved to Kansas "where he became a pioneer in the Arkansas Valley at Wichita," said the newspaper. There he became president of the Wichita National Bank and the first president of the Kansas Bankers' Association."
While in Kansas, Levy was active in politics, partners with Jay Gould in the building of Kansas railroads, and was president of the Wichita School Board. He relocated to New York City in 1905. He and Sarah maintained a summer home in West End, New Jersey.
Kansas was never far from the minds of the Levys. On March 9, 1923, for instance, The New York Times reported, "A card party for the benefit of the Kansas dormitory in the National Navy Club...will be given by the Kansas Women's Club next Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. M. W. Levy, 150 West Seventy-ninth Street."
The Levys were at the New Jersey residence when Maurice W. Levy died on July 11, 1929. Living in the Dorset apartment at the time was one of the three sons, Guy W. Levy. The New York Sun reported that Maurice left Sarah "an estate of $1,022,827." (The figure would translate to more than $18 million today.)
In the meantime, Herman Plaut was the president of L. Plaut & Co., Inc., which manufactured electric lighting fixtures. He was a director in numerous other corporations, as well. His wife was the former Laura Wile.
Laura employed a new maid in the spring of 1924. The girl arrived on May 31, dropped her suitcase in the maid's room at 8:00, and started to work, not taking time to unpack. Soon afterward, Herman left for work and the Plaut's daughter went shopping. Laura walked into the bedroom and immediately noticed that her jewel case was missing from her dressing table. The New York Times said it contained, "several valuable diamond rings, a lavaliere, bar pins, watches and bracelets." The article explained, "She had worn some of her jewelry at a dinner the night before and expected to use it again that night."
Laura rang the bell for the maid, but there was no answer. "She then called for the cook. But the cook had not seen the maid either." After having been in her new position only for an hour, the maid and the jewels "valued at more than $25,000" were missing. Detectives said, "A black hat, a coat, and a suit case filled with clothes were found in the new maid's room." The girl, who had no criminal record, had spirited away with jewelry worth $445,000 in today's terms. Detectives believed that, "the jewels, within easy access, were too great a temptation for the young woman," reported The Times.
In 1937, during the midst of the Great Depression, the esteemed architectural firm Boak & Paris, Inc. was commissioned to remodel the Dorset. The renovations resulted in six apartments per floor.
One hundred and fifteen years after Franklin Henry Giddings swapped his Victorian brownstone for a luxury apartment, little has changed to the exterior of the Dorset.
many thanks to historian Anthony Bellov for requesting this post.
photographs by the author