Idential doorways, one for the restaurant and one for the loft spaces, preserve the structure's symmetry. |
When Christian P. F. Holtz arrived in the United States from
Hamburg, Germany in the mid-19th century, he changed his name to the
more American-sounding Charles F. Holtz.
Unlike so many German immigrants in the 1850s who crowded into Little
Germany on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, Holtz settled across the river in
Hoboken, New Jersey.
By 1859 he had opened the Park Hotel on the corner of 4th
Street and Hudson Street, described by the Internal Revenue Service as a “4th
Class” hotel with three billiard tables.
In 1863, however, he had crossed the river to open a saloon-restaurant
on Duane Street. Trow’s New York City
Directory listed Holtz in 1869 as a dealer in “Havana segars, champagnes,
Bordeaux & Rhine wines.”
For a few years in the 1870s Holtz took on a partner, Henry
Koennecke and the restaurant was coupled with an importing business. The pair imported German and French wines and
champagne, mineral water, “bitter water,” and canned goods. Koennecke and Holtz parted ways in the mid
1880s and a new partner, Bruno Freystedt, joined the business.
Although the restaurant-saloon retained the name of Holtz Restaurant,
the new Holtz & Freystedt partnership would be used for the retail and
import business. In 1896 the elderly
Charles Holtz, now around 70 years old, either died or retired. The company was re-incorporated as “Holtz
& Freystedt Company of New-York City,” with a board of five investors.
That year a second Holtz Restaurant was opened at the corner
of Broadway and Franklin Street. The new
directors aggressively expanded the business.
Six years later in 1902 they renovated the lower floors of the 6-story
building on the corner of Broadway and Houston Street as their third restaurant
location. The Holtz Restaurants had
developed from a single saloon downtown to classy, high end establishments that
catered to businessmen and the well-to-do.
The New York Times called the newest restaurant “one of the finest in
appointments in the city.”
In the cellar of the Broadway and Houston Street restaurant
were stored thousands of cigars as well as the wine and alcohol. Around 4:00 in the morning of June 12, 1904
smoke began wafting from the roof of the building. Firemen were perplexed when no fire could be
found, until they realized it was in the basement. “When they at least discovered that it was in
the subcellar, they lost no time in ripping up the glass sidewalks and
demolishing the handsome stained glass domes over the basement entrance,”
reported The New York Times.
And then came the rush of overpowering tobacco and alcohol
fumes, so strong that “the firemen standing over the openings made in the
sidewalk were toppled over like tenpins.” The cigar smoke blinded the firemen, causing
such pain to their eyes that “it was some time before they could see enough to
make them available for service.”
Several fire fighters challenge faced the smoke and fumes to retrieve ice
and seltzer and set up a make-shift bar on the opposite side of the street where
overcome firemen were treated. Cloths
soaked in ice water were bound around their heads and they were given cold
drinks of seltzer.
When the difficult blaze was finally subdued, the newest Holtz
Restaurant was in ruins.
It would take a year before the restaurant could be
reopened. And shortly thereafter the
directors laid plans for yet another Holtz Restaurant. In 1907 the Fifth Avenue and Broadway area
just south of 23rd Street was a hotbed of development. The staid mansions of a generation earlier
were gone or converted to business as residents moved uptown and commercial buildings
rose. The towering 22-story Fuller
Building, known popularly as the Flatiron Building, had changed the complexion
of the area in 1902. The neighborhood
teemed with businessmen and hotel patrons.
It was an ideal location for the newest Holtz Restaurant.
Philip Braender owned the property at Nos. 7 and 9 East 20th
Street on the short block between Fifth Avenue and Broadway. He commissioned architect William C. Frohne
to design a 12-story loft and store building, with the lower two floors being
specifically customized for Holtz. The
German-born architect had produced handsome gathering spots the German
community like the Bohemian National Hall and the 1889 Schuetzen Hall. But for this building he would turn to France
for inspiration.
The nine-story central arch stressed the building's height at the dawn of the age of skyscrapers. |
Completed late in 1907 the brick and stone structure was
embellished with Beaux Arts carvings of garlands, wreaths, lions’ heads and
scrolls. A central, nine-story arch
flanked by single openings emphasized the soaring verticality of the
skyscraper. An imperious goddess head
looked down on the passersby from below a sturdy cornice.
Banded fasces rise to the haughty goddess. Carved shells terminate the long columns of single windows along the building's sides. |
But the Holtz Restaurant space would grab the
spotlight. Frohne lavished the two-story
space with expanses of glass and at the second floor created a full wall of
French windows. Above, a decorative
medallion announced “HOLTZ, flanked by a pair of odd creatures—part griffin,
part cornucopia. It was Paris on 20th
Street.
The new Holtz Restaurant opened on March 12, 1908 as
commercial tenants filled the upper stories.
A. G. Thienel, manufacturer of ostrich feathers, moved in that year as
did the Daisy Costume Manufacturing Co.
Before long Staheli, Reitmann & Co. would take the 5th, 6th
and 8th floors for their lace curtain factory. Barnard Rapp tried to make a go of his cloak
and suit company, but it did not work.
An advertisement in The Sun on March 12, 1908 promised the same standard of "cuisine and management" (copyright expired) |
The apparel maker began business on July 15, 1912 as a partner
in Rapp & Meyer. The partnership dissolved
only four months later and Rapp continued on alone. A year later, on August 6, 1913, he was
forced to file bankruptcy. That same
year the Holtz Restaurant closed for business.
Lions holding clusters of fruits, garlands and ribbons, and carved scrolls embellish the entrances. |
Philip Braender died in 1917, leaving an estate of just over
$1 million. On January 7, 1920 Meister
Builders purchased the building from his estate, quickly flipping the property
eight days later. In the meantime, the
building continued to attract apparel-related firms. In 1921 the 8th floor was home to
Babash, Kailo & Udoff, and Mendelsohn Brothers took the 2nd
floor. The following year the Belgian
Waist and Dress Company took over the 5th floor.
Perhaps its side street location protected the structure
from the brutal street level modernization that so many buildings in the
neighborhood suffered during the mid- to late 20th century; yet
Frohe’s handsome designs for the Holtz Restaurant, including the cast panel
above the French windows, survive.
In 1987 the upper floors were renovated to apartments, with
the exception of the 10th which became a “studio,” according to
Building Department records. Here the
Castillo Theatre operated throughout the 1980s. Now called the Holtz House, the space where
cloaks, suits, dresses and lace curtains were manufactured is now 14
residences. And where diners once
savored French cuisine and champagne, a kitchen and bath showroom displays
bathtubs and faucets.
photographs taken by the author.
Great post, Mr. Miller and as usual, love the photos of this gem. I am still scheduled to be in NYC tomorrow and if I am far enough south on the island, will have to check this one out!
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