photo by Alice Lum |
That year the company purchased the five-story building at
Nos. 451-453 Broadway which had been home to Loeb & Schoenfeld, embroidery
importers, for years. Globe-Wernicke announced
it would spend approximately $75,000 to renovate the property for use as a central
distribution point to be solely used by the firm. “It will contain the most extensive line of
furniture equipment ever shown in America,” promised The American Stationer.
The New York manager, Lester S. Woodward, explained that the
choice of the 60,000 square foot building had to do with location. “We desire a permanent central home, and
after careful analysis we are convinced that this is the most central location
for our permanent display room. One
reason why we reached this conclusion is the fact that Canal street is the only
point on Manhattan Island where all four subways, present and proposed, will
have stations parallel to each other, and I thoroughly believe in
Broadway. When all is said and done,
Broadway is Broadway…The name ‘Broadway’ is synonymous with New York City’s
trade and commerce.”
A 1921 advertisement shows a college man studying at a modular desk/bookcase. His roommate strums a ukelele either as entertainment or simply to be annoying. |
The architects brought the Victorian building into the
Edwardian Age. A soaring first floor
showroom, nearly double-height, joined the second floor display rooms as a
single expanse of glass and cast iron framed in terra cotta. A polite line of egg-and-dart molding
supported a Greek key freize that separated the upper office floors from the
showrooms below. The entire façade was
blanketed in flat, white terra cotta tiles.
At the top-most floor, each of the three sets of paired, arched windows
had a centered, semi-engaged Doric column.
A bas-relief terra cotta globe logo decorated the hefty
parapet and a round plaque with G-W along with a broad terra cotta ribbon embellished
the fourth floor.
photo by Alice Lum |
The president of another office furniture manufacturer, James
H. Rand, Jr. was on his way to nearly monopolize the business in 1925. That year his company, the Rand Kardex
Bureau, Inc., acquired control of the Library Bureau. Within a few months, in January 1926, it
took over the Globe-Wernicke Company. Rand
called the Globe-Wernicke firm at the time of the sale “one of the largest and
oldest manufacturers of office equipment in the country.”
This Gibson Girl-looking housewife is overjoyed with her new sectional bookcases. |
According to Rand, the merger would make Rand Karcex Bureau,
Inc. “the largest distributor of business equipment in the world, both in sales
volume and the number employed.” Annual
sales volume of the concern was expected to exceed $40 million.
Before long James H. Rand, Jr. would have his fingers in
many more corporate pies, however. A year later Remington Rand was formed when
the Rand Kardex Company merged with Powers Accounting Machine Company and the
Remington Typewriter Company. Rand
vacuumed up other firms and in 1928 The New York Times announced the
consolidation of the executive offices of “Remington Typewriter Company, the
Dalton Adding Machine Co, the Powers Accounting Machine Co., the Rand Company,
the Kardex Company, the Line-a-Time Company, the Kalamazoo Loose Leaf Company,
the Safe Cabinet Company and the Baker Vawter Company.”
Although the conglomerate assured that the headquarters would
be in the Graybar Building as well as “three entire buildings at 451 Broadway,
374 Broadway and 126 Centre Street,” the gleaming white terra cotta building
would not display sectional bookcases and desks for much longer.
On February 12, 1929 the property was sold to the Goldrin
Realty Corporation “for investment.”
Interestingly, a full decade later when the building sold again, The Times still
reminisced that it “for many years was the New York headquarters of the
Globe-Wernicke Company, manufacturers of office equipment.”
For the rest of the century the antiseptic-looking terra
cotta building would be used by a variety of tenants. Then in 2007 the large plate glass windows
that once displayed Mission oak bookcases were showing furniture again.
CB2, the Chicago-based store that retails updated furniture,
lighting and accessories, moved into the 14,000 square foot space. Today
the clean lines of Starrett & Van Vleck’s 1916 design are essentially
intact – a timeless re-do of a Victorian loft building that still works today.
I love your enthuiasm and writing style. I am looking forward on reading the next hub. Rated up.
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