photo by Alice Lum |
But when John Lawrence commissioned architect John Kellum to
design a store and warehouse to replace the old Lafayette Hall at No. 597
Broadway that year, he opted for marble.
Kellum’s finished structure, however, featured tall, expansive windows
that flooded sunlight into the upper floors.
The slender pilasters with their intricate carved capitals which
separated the openings were unexpected in a stone structure—making it appear
that Kellum was imitating the new cast iron buildings nearly as much as those
were imitating marble and limestone.
Carved cornices, each supported by a single foliate bracket,
separated the floors. Above it all
Kellum added an attractive overhanging cornice with French Renaissance entablature. The
building ran through the block with entrances on Mercer Street.
The scrolled white marble brackets are artistically carved -- photo by Alice Lum |
The street level store soon became home to Mitchell Vance &
Company, manufacturers and sellers of high-end lighting fixtures, bronzes,
clocks and ornamental metal work.
Established in 1854, it catered to the carriage trade with expensive goods like gilt bronze chandeliers made in its 10th Avenue foundry
and factory.
An advertisement in The New York Tribune in 1872 lists a variety of high-end products. |
Mitchell Vance & Company moved on in 1877, having
erected its own building at No. 836 Broadway.
The store was home to Henry Rogers by 1885 when a small fire broke out
the evening of January 8. As quickly as it
appeared the fire was extinguished and the excitement was over.
Except it wasn’t.
Around 2:00 in the morning the fire reignited and raged
throughout the structure. The New York
Times reported that “at that time it seemed as if the building would be
destroyed.” But although Henry Rogers’
store was wiped out, the white marble building survived.
Kohn & Baer, wholesale furriers, moved in as early as
1899 and would stay for a number of years.
The firm not only imported furs, but manufactured fur neckwear and “a
complete line of carriage and animal muffs” in the building. An advertisement in the Fur Trade Review in
1899 listed no fewer than sixteen different furs—fox, lynx, sable, and marten
among them—which the company transformed into “exclusive French designs.”
Kohn & Baer boasted of its seal jackets saying “There’s
only one way of making a fur jacket right, there are a hundred ways of making
it wrong.”
As the millinery district rapidly overtook the Broadway
area, political organizations moved in as well.
In 1904 a Democratic organization, the Commercial Travelers’ League, was here. Directly across the street
was the Roosevelt and Fairbanks National Commercial League.
Here, on October 30, 1905, Mayor George B. McClellan, Jr.,
raged on about the Republicans. “We have
serious questions to deal with,” he said, “when we find that over $20,000,000
is annually extracted from the people of
this city so as to support the unbridled extravagance of a Republican
administration.” He pleaded with the
members to reelect him with “such a plurality that it will stand as a rebuke to
Republican extravagance and dishonesty and rank hysteria.”
As the Mayor entering his carriage, the Republican meeting
in support of Hearst was ending across the street. A Hearst supporter poked his head into
McClellan’s carriage shouting “Three cheers for Hearst!” By now the Democrats were filing out as well
and the two groups faced off.
“The two crowds, numbering fully five hundred each, met the
carriage, and then, pushing, swearing and shouting, started an incipient
general fight,” reported The New York Times.
In a show of late-Victorian law enforcement “Several policemen stationed
near the carriage clubbed the men nearest them in an effort to clear the way.”
The Mayor, said the newspaper, “smiled broadly and took the
whole affair as a joke.”
Three years later, on October 15, 1908, the Democratic
candidate for Vice-President, John W. Kern, addressed the group. Sounding much like a 2012 Occupy Wall Street
protestor, he lamented the uneven distribution of wealth. He blamed McKinley for undoing 75 years of
the country’s history when “the wealth was distributed evenly among those who
created it and there were few great fortunes.”
Kern accused that because of McKinley the distribution of
wealth had been “taken from the hands of those who created it.” These were, he said, “evil times.”
That same year the Underwriters’ Salvage Company rented the
store and basement of the building. It
was a time when the area being called the “mid-Broadway section” was
experiencing a downturn. One broker,
John Parish, partially blamed the reduction in property values on the buildings
themselves; they were outdated and aging.
“I believe that one of the chief causes for the middle Broadway slump is
due to the lethargy of the owners to make adequate improvements,” he told The
New York Times on October 15, 1911. “The owners have waited too long and the
sudden migration to the fine modern buildings above Fourteenth Street,
especially in the Fourth Avenue section, has taken them by surprise.”
Almost as proof of Parish’s theory, No. 597 Broadway was
sold at auction that year for $102,750.
It was assessed at $130,000.
But the anticipated Broadway subway
line revived the neighborhood and continued to draw millinery and apparel
firms. In November 1915 the Charles F. Noyes Company—a
real estate firm established in 1898--renewed its lease on the entire building;
extending it another five years at $55,000. The New York
Times explained why the hat industry seemed to be staying on in the neighborhood. “One reason for the strength of Broadway in
this vicinity is the fact that the Broadway subway, which is nearing
completion, will have a station at Prince Street, which is in the same block as
597 Broadway.”
In 1922 the street level was home to the bakery and store of
the Broadway Pastry Shop. Davis Weiss
was the “chauffeur” of the shop’s delivery truck and a routine delivery turned
into anything but ordinary on April 14.
As Weiss drove towards the corner of 34th Street and 2nd
Avenue, 58-year old Emma Webb was crossing the street with her granddaughter,
little 8 year-old Madia Pechick.
Seeing the approaching truck, Emma Webb attempted to snatch
the little girl from the path of the vehicle.
Although the girl was knocked to the pavement, she was not severely
hurt. Emma Webb, however, received
internal injuries and a fractured skull and died later that night in Bellevue
Hospital. Weiss was arrested on a “technical
charge of homicide.”
The middle years of the 20th century were unkind
to the Soho neighborhood. Cast iron
masterpieces sat rusting and grimy, their former high-end showrooms now home to
factories and cheap outlet stores. The
store front of No. 597 was brutally altered and the façade was stained and covered in
decades of soot and grunge.
In the 1980s struggling artists discovered Soho where
neglected sun-flooded lofts made for affordable housing and studio space. Soon galleries and trendy restaurants and
shops cropped up. In June 1986 Welsh
geologist Owain Hughes purchased No. 597 for $750,000 with the intention of
converting it to six commercial and nine residential condominiums. The trained geologist scanned the
brown-stained façade and mentally labeled it “sandstone.”
During his $2.5 million renovation, he opened a 15x40-foot court through the middle of the structure, allowing light into the upper
apartments. A skylight admitted sunlight
into the commercial spaces below.
Because by now the neighborhood had been landmarked, part of the Soho
Cast Iron District, rehabilitation of the stone façade was difficult. Landmark law prohibited the use of
high-pressure hoses and chemicals, so cleaning was done by hand; what Hughes
called “men up there with little brushes in their hands, like toothbrushes.”
The geologist was stunned when the cleaning revealed John
Kellums gleaming white marble.
The marble, once so grime-covered that it appeared to be brownstone, gleams again -- photo by Alice Lum |
many thanks to reader MjH for suggesting this post
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