photo by Alice Lum |
Purchasing the small buildings at the corner of Fulton and
Nassau Streets, he hired architects De Lemos & Cordes to design an office
building with restaurant space on the first floor. Theodore W. E. De Lemos and August W. Cordes had
been in partnership only four years and their robust design would foreshadows
the grand office buildings and department stores to come; among them the New
York County National Bank and the department stores of Siegel-Cooper, Adams and
Macy’s on Herald Square.
Early in 1889 the Real Estate Record & Builders’ Guide
remarked on the new structures appearing along Nassau Street. “Another Nassau street building, on the
southeast corner of Fulton street, is being put up for Frank Raub, who will
have a café and restaurant on the first floor and rent out the offices
above. It is up to the roof and will be
completed, so the architects, De Lemos & Cordes, say, about November.”
Using buff-colored brick with limestone and terra cotta
trim, the architects created a refined 6-story structure in five sections,
ending with a complex cornice. Cast iron
enframements enabled spacious window openings that allowed exceptional sunlight
into the office spaces.
No. 90 Nassau Street shortly after completion -- American Architect & Building News, October 6, 1889 (copyright expired) |
Gyulo Armeny had arrived alone in New York from
Austria-Hungary at the age of 19. After
learning the jewelry trade in the Bronx, he started his own business at No. 75
Nassau Street. When he met pen-maker
William Clayborn Marion his life would change.
Gyulo Armeny -- The Jewelers' Circular April 14, 1920 (copyright expired) |
The Jewelers’ Circular noted that “This business grew to such
proportions that in 1890 it was moved to 90 Nassau Street.”
Advertisement in The American Stationery (copyright expired) |
In the building with Armeny & Marion was the prosperous watch
dealer Charles D. P. Gibson. The
interesting Gibson had served in the Civil War and for about 25 years was
connected with the United States Secret Service. But Gibson’s viewpoints on religion were
extreme.
The New York Times noted on June 28, 1894 that “On ordinary
questions he seems to think pretty much as other people, but in regard to his
Roman Catholic fellow-citizens he entertains sentiments that would have seemed
impossible even in the dark ages.”
Mercury, the Roman patron of commerce, peers out from above the fourth floor -- photo by Alice Lum |
When a reporter for The Times asked the jeweler “What would
you do with these millions of people whom you condemn simply on religious
grounds,” he answered “I wouldn’t do anything with the ___. I’d simply drive them out and make it impossible
for them to live here, where they are a curse to good people who love the
American institutions.”
Happily the rest of the tenants in the building drew less
negative press. Jacob Horowitz quietly
dealt in diamonds and Rudolph F. Albrecht sold rare stamps.
In 1893, with the building fully-leased, Raub commissioned architect
A. L. C. Marsh to enlarge it. The handsome
cornice was removed and two stories were added.
Although Marsh attempted to meld the architecture with banded piers
and terra cotta trim, the proportions were somewhat skewed.
The 1893 upward addition upset the attractive proportions -- photo by Alice Lum |
In 1900 the National Loan Association took space in the building,
about the same time that Raub hired a new cashier, the 21-year old Martin J.
Tighe. Tighe, whom The New York Times
described as “an inveterate cigarette smoker,” was abusive to his young wife. In the Fall of 1900 he threatened to kill his
17-year old wife and her father, but when police disarmed him he “promised then
to do better and was not arrested,” said the newspaper.
In April 1901 the couple had a baby boy and when the abuse
continued, the young mother left Tighe to move back into her father’s
home. Tighe stalked the building and on
June 11, finding the door unlocked, he went up to the apartment. When his wife opened the door he grabbed her
by the hair, dragged her into the hall and beat her with his fist. The enraged man bit his wife’s wrist until
blood ran.
Although he was arrested, his father signed his bond and he
was released. It was a move that would end the 18-year old mother’s life.
The girl returned to her father’s apartment and so too did
her husband, who loitered around throughout the afternoon. Around 9:00 that evening with the protection of her aunt, Margaret Schaffney, Mrs. Tighe went back
to the former apartment she had shared with her husband. She hoped to get clothes for the baby. After only a few minutes of their being in the apartment,
Tighe burst in and threw Schaffrey out, locking the door.
When the aunt failed to find a policeman, she rushed back to
the apartment and broke the door down with her shoulder. Tighe flew past her and into the street. The
young wife was on the kitchen floor slashed in several places by a razor.
As the 18-year old mother slowly died, Tighe slit his own
throat then, bleeding, sat smoking cigarettes and playing the piano in his
father’s saloon awaiting police. Tighe’s
father blamed the tragedy on the girl’s family interfering “with the household
affairs of the young couple.”
photo by Alice Lum |
By 1917 Raub’s Saloon was gone and in its place was the
liquor store owned by Joseph Varon.
Varon would remain here for at least two decades.
On March 9, 1920 Gyulo Armeny was at his home in West Bronx,
New York, suffering from gangrene poisoning as workers prepared an improvement
to the building on Nassau Street. At
5:00 in the afternoon—the peak of rush hour—construction workers maneuvered an
800-pound cast iron flagpole base into position high over the sidewalk. Hundreds of businessmen and secretaries
rushed along the sidewalk below.
Suddenly the rigging broke.
The giant iron base held for a second by a portion of the rigging, long
enough for workers to shout a warning.
The crowd below scattered in all directions not knowing exactly what
the danger was. The Times reported that “In a second or two
the 800-pound weight snapped the remaining ropes and shot downward…The
cast-iron base broke, and the street was filled with huge fragments of iron and
broken lumber.” Only three persons were
injured.
A month after the accident, Armeny succumbed to his 11-week
illness. The sons of William Marion
continued the pen manufacturing firm.
Within a year The United Happiness Candy Store was here. The store had several branches, along with a club. “The purpose of the United Happiness Candy Club is to introduce our various kinds of Candy, and have the story of their goodness spread by all the members. Everybody who buys automatically becomes a member," promised an advertisement.
Within a year The United Happiness Candy Store was here. The store had several branches, along with a club. “The purpose of the United Happiness Candy Club is to introduce our various kinds of Candy, and have the story of their goodness spread by all the members. Everybody who buys automatically becomes a member," promised an advertisement.
Not all the jewelry firms left No. 90 Nassau Street and they proved to be a temptation for thieves. Charles Kresney ran his jewelry manufacturing shop here in 1924. On April 28 the cleaning woman walked in on a robbery by four gunmen and was immediately taken captive. The four bandits made off with $125,000 worth of jewelry. Kresney and the scrubwoman were found bound and gagged later.
A year later, two days before Christmas in 1925 the jewelry manufacturer Folmer Pripp was robbed by stepbrothers Jacob and Leon Kraemer, along with gunman Milton (Shuffles) Goldberg.
The boys were members of the notorious Whittemore gang, led by Richard Reese Whittemore. Goldberg was, according to newspapers, "the closest lieutenant" of Whittemore. A year later the robbers were sentenced; Goldberg getting 20 to 40 years in Sing Sing prison. His attorneys pled for a reduced sentence because he had an advanced case of tuberculosis.
Judge Koenig, however, was unmoved. The New York Times reported that he "rebuffs plea of mercy based on his weakened physique."
In 1955 jeweler Charles Krensky operated his business
in the building. That year three hold-up men barged
into the shop. Before they fled Krensky
lay dead.
A year later, two days before Christmas in 1925 the jewelry manufacturer Folmer Pripp was robbed by stepbrothers Jacob and Leon Kraemer, along with gunman Milton (Shuffles) Goldberg.
The boys were members of the notorious Whittemore gang, led by Richard Reese Whittemore. Goldberg was, according to newspapers, "the closest lieutenant" of Whittemore. A year later the robbers were sentenced; Goldberg getting 20 to 40 years in Sing Sing prison. His attorneys pled for a reduced sentence because he had an advanced case of tuberculosis.
Judge Koenig, however, was unmoved. The New York Times reported that he "rebuffs plea of mercy based on his weakened physique."
Dripping garlands, radiant discs and lions' heads are among the lavish ornaments -- photo by Alice Lum |
By 1975 the street level housed a restaurant and bar, but the
upper floors had been vacant for over a decade.
Then in 1999 the building was renovated, creating residential space on
the floors above the restaurant.
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