Whyte's Restaurant as it appeared in 1910, one year after opening -- Architecture and Building (copyright expired) |
At Nos. 143 and 145 Fulton Street in Manhattan’s busy
financial district sat an old printing house building which was available for
lease. On New Year’s Eve, 1908 Edward
White signed a 21-year lease on the property and The Sun announced that he
would “tear down the present structures and erect on the site a three story
building which he will occupy as a restaurant.”
It would not be just a restaurant, however. The Whites envisioned a high-class eating
establishment on a par with the nearby Delmonico’s. They hired architects Clinton & Russell
to design a building with character and charm that would attract notice.
On May 8, 1909 The Sun reported on the filing of the plans “of
modified old English design” at a projected cost of $50,000. In 1909, with modern skyscrapers rising skyward all around, the short, quaint cottage would, indeed, be
eye-catching. The owners modified their
name with a “Y” to be more in keeping with the old English theme.
The building was completed within the year and Architecture
and Building called it “a quaintly attractive little building, designed in
extremely good taste.”
Architectural Review 1913 (copyright expired) |
Inside, the main floor featured the gentlemen’s dining room
with the long oak bar and its well-shined brass spittoons. The
Times would later recall that “Whyte’s strove to retain an Old-World aura, with its dark
paneling [and] gilt-framed portraits.
The main dining room in 1913 -- Architectural Review (copyright expired) |
The nearly-male only
population of the daytime Wall Street area resulted in few feminine
patrons. Decades later a manager would
insist that women were never banned “unlike other restaurants of its type.” He added “I think it was the bar right in the
dining room that may have discouraged them.”
The Ladies' Dining Room on the 2nd Floor -- Architecture and Building 1910 (copyright expired |
The New York Times remembered, decades after the opening,
that “The restaurant’s specialty of the house was finnan haddie, but some
long-time aficionados said that the homemade rum-raisin ice cream was Whyte’s
chef d’oeuvre.”
Judge Edward Weinfeld might have taken issue with that,
however. In his autobiography he
reminisced “We would leave and go over to Whytes, a famous restaurant on Fulton
Street. I remember exactly what I would
have. I think Lillian did, too: the most delicious cold salmon you ever tasted,
the finest blueberry pie just oozing with blueberries and juice—no gelatin or
anything like that—and iced coffee.”
1918 was not a pleasant year for Whyte’s restaurant. With the war raging in Europe and rationing in
effect, the Federal Food Board instigated a ban on wheat flour. Restaurants were required to use a wheat
substitute known popularly as “Victory Mixed Flour.” Whyte’s didn’t.
On June 6 the restaurant was found in contempt of the ban
when it was found using wheat flour in its Vienna and French rolls. A violation notice was posted on the
restaurant.
When investigators returned they found that Whyte’s
continued to use the banned flour. The
New York State Food Commission ordered the bakery portion of the restaurant to
be closed for three days and gave an ultimatum:
close the restaurant for seven days or pay a fine of $1500, payable to
the American Red Cross.
Frank White blamed the violation on “an Austrian baker” whom
he had subsequently fired. The baker
contended he had never been instructed to use the substitutes. On June 10 Frank White made out a check to
the American Red Cross for $1,500 to keep his business open.
That same year Edward White died. The ownership of the restaurant went to his
widow, Mary, and her four sons, including Frank.
The restaurant had another turbulent year in 1920. It started in February when J. J. Mullan walked
into Whyte’s for lunch. Passing the hat
check boy, he was escorted to a table and one of the “captains” helped him
remove his overcoat and hat. The waiter
then hung them on a hook nearby.
When Mullan was finished with his meal, he asked the waiter
for his hat and coat. Only the hat was
still hanging on the hook.
The enraged diner insisted the restaurant was to blame. The restaurant insisted that it was
not. The issue ended up in court.
Happily for Whyte’s the judge ruled in its favor. “We are dealing with a subject that is a
matter of everyday experience with most of us, a commonplace of life in a large
city, and we know that restaurant managers do not, and in the nature of things
cannot, station employees to stand guard over coats and hats, unchecked, and
hung on hooks about the room. Even if
there were such watchers, they would not know which coat belong to a given guest.”
The judge added that coat checks were there for a purpose;
one which Mr. Mullan chose not to use.
Later that year Frank White had his fill of his union wait
staff. In addition to their average wage of $50 a week, the waiters were given three free meals per day. And yet on August 17 they threatened to strike.
So Frank White fired them all.
“I will not be run by Bolsheviki,” he told a reporter from
The New York Tribune. “These men have
been trying to run the restaurant for a year.
They wanted us to take back one of the men and we agreed to do
this. They wanted us to discharge our
head waiter and we told them we’d keep him and let them go.”
White added “The men seemed to be swayed by the advice of
some Bolshevik Russians among them.”
In March 1929 the Whites decided to move the restaurant
uptown. “On March 23,” reported The
Times, “The Whytes, Inc. proprietors of the Fulton Street place, will open a
new modern restaurant at Fifth Avenue and Forty-third Street, where they will
introduce dancing at the dinner hour.”
The mammoth Waldorf-Astoria Hotel on Fifth Avenue was slated
for destruction in May, to be replaced by the Empire State Building. A group of its employees banded together to buy
the Fulton Street restaurant.
The Times said that Whyte’s, “for many years the dining
place of businessmen and city officials of downtown New York, is not to pass
out of existence, as recently reported, but will be continued under the name of
Woolley’s.” The three top managers would
be Sherman E. Woolley, the steward and purchasing agent of the Waldorf; George
Lucas, the Waldorf’s assistant manager; and head waiter Theodore Meyer of the
Waldorf’s men’s café.
Despite the vast experience of the managers, the venture
failed. On August 17 that same year
Woolley’s sold its lease. Before long,
Whyte’s Restaurant was back on Fulton Street.
Although Frank H. White—the real force behind Whyte’s
Restaurant—died on Christmas Eve 1943; the restaurant kept on. It was by now a Wall Street institution and The New
York Times raved about its mince pie in 1957.
The food critic called it, in mouth-watering terms, “a triumphant of
bakery, full of apples, currants, fruit peels and spices as well as raisins.”
Unbelievably, however, in April 1971 Whyte’s was out-bid for
its space and was unable to renew the lease.
“We were outbid so fantastically we just didn’t have a chance,” manager
George Macris told reporters. After 66
years in business the quaint chalet that offered superb food to Wall Street
moguls, politicians and regular Joes, was forced to shut its doors. A few of the 150 employees had been with the
restaurant for 38 years. “Some of them
cried like babies,” said Macris.
The most regular of customers received a letter or telephone
call notifying them of the closure.
Others found a note on the door explaining that a chapter in New York social history had ended.
Clinton & Russell’s charming three-story building was
not demolished for a high-rise office building.
Instead the street level was obliterated and today accommodates a discount
electronics store and a fast food fried chicken outlet. The wonderful multi-paned casements were
replaced by plate glass sheets and the interiors were gutted for a women’s
health spa. A coat of industrial-colored
yellow paint covered the picturesque exterior panels and half-timbering.
Deplorably abused, the little building is barely recognizable today -- photo by Alice Lum |
All of this makes the case for saying that, if the building
was not demolished, it was quite certainly destroyed.
When will we learn that even secondary structures can be rich with history and experiences that make ones city a better place. The closing of the restaurant, by then a local institution was tragic enough, but further indignity occurred when the structure was modernised for the cheap retail/commercial establishments now located there. Another piece of the cities soul was destroyed.
ReplyDeleteMy great grandfather was a chef in that restaurant.
DeleteFrank White was my great grandfather--he died before I was born. His wife, Gertie was her nickname I think, I called her Nana, passed in the the 1950s. I remember her. My mother was their granddaughter.
ReplyDeleteWe used to get food from the restaurant for dinner and such that my father used to bring home from the city. We live in Short Hills, NJ at the time.
My brother's middle name is White, named after the family.
My grandfather who was a senior partner at H Hentz &Co would routinely bring me a scrappy six year old out to dinner here I was treated like a prince. The space was grand and the waiters were fastidious and kind. The food was superb.
ReplyDeleteMy Grandfather was a chef at the restaurant for many years.
ReplyDeleteMy grandfather, who I was named for, used to bring rhubarb pies from Whyte’s when he’d come to dinner. I believe it was apple and rhubarb. Sometimes other pies but always one rhubarb and one other. My father and grandfather were law partners and would eat there with clients. I ate there once when I was about 4. My mother was giving birth to my sister and my grandparents had us for a couple of days. My grandfather was an Irish immigrant who had just retired as Chief Justice of the NJ Supreme Court. He was handsome, tall and thin and wore bespoke suits. He couldn’t have been more Irish.
ReplyDelete