They reflected the reserved architectural character—later termed dreary—of their more sumptuous 5th Avenue neighbors. New York’s wealthiest citizens settled in the area. Industrial titan Jay Gould and his family would live at the corner of 5th Avenue and 47th Street, just one half block away from No. 33 West 47th.
The brownstone rowhouse at No. 33 was built in 1868 for
dentist Charles E. Francis. Restrictions on the block required that all buildings be set back nine feet from the property line; giving the neighborhood a spacious, non-claustrophobic feeling. Although
Francis and his family were obviously well-off enough to afford a fine home in
the most exclusive neighborhood of Manhattan, he took in boarders. William Carr listed his address here in 1875
and James B. Day was here in 1891.
Like Francis, they practiced dentistry and it is possible that the
established doctor helped young dentists just starting out with a place to
stay.
A few blocks to the south, at No. 17 East 38th Street
lived Dr. William Benjamin Wood, his wife Frances, and their infant son, Eric
Fisher Wood, born in 1889. Both Dr. Wood
and his wife were well regarded in the community. He was a member of the University Club, the
Lotus Club, the Williams Club of New York and the Society of Colonial Wars. His well-educated wife, Frances Fisher Wood, had
graduated from Vassar College, founded the Hathaway Brown School for Girls
in Cleveland, and was a founder and one of the original trustees of Barnard
College.
By the turn of the century the family moved into the former Francis
house at No. 33 West 47th Street with a staff of four, including a
Japanese butler, Hiroishi Sakamine. It
may be assumed that it was the butler who influenced Frances Wood’s interest in
Japanese color prints; but within the next decade she would become a noted
collector of the artwork.
As World War I raged in Europe, son Eric was in
France. Having been educated in private
schools, then earning his PhD in civil engineering from Yale and doing
post-graduate work in architecture at Columbia University, he was studying at the
Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris when the war erupted. Eric Wood volunteered as an attaché in the
American Embassy; then joined the American Ambulance Corps. In 1915 he published his journal in book form
as “The Note-book of an Attache: Seven Months in the War Zone.”
Eric Wood would go on to an amazing and far-reaching career
and life. On April 20, 1918 he married
the Baroness Vera du Ropp. He would go
on to write several books, retire with the rank of Brigadier General in the
U.S. Army, earn the Legion of Honor from the French Government, co-design the
President Warren Harding Tomb in Ohio, help found the American Legion in 1919
and conduct a highly successful career as a civil engineer.
A year before their son’s wedding, the Woods sold No. 33
West 47th Street for $60,000, a full $10,000 below the assessed
value. In 1917 private homes in the area
were becoming less desirable as the wealthy residents moved northward away from the
encroaching hotels and shops. The Sun
noted on October 16 of that year that the four-story brownstone house was
purchased “for investment.” The remark
hinted that the new owners intended to renovate
the house as commercial space.
The side was to be improved, but not for trade—at least not yet. Not all the millionaires had left the 5th
Avenue neighborhood and there were still those who lusted after the
once-exclusive address. Among these was
the somewhat flamboyant Burton S. Castles who would make No. 33 West 47th Street his home.
Castles had made his fortune in a variety of ways—he was a real estate
investor and Wall Street speculator.
Born in Texas, his flashy lifestyle and demeanor earned him the nickname
“the Beau Brummel of Wall Street.”
Middle-aged persons and buildings sometimes feel a
professional make-over is necessary and such was the case with No. 33 West 47th
Street. The dour brownstone architecture
of the post-Civil War era had long been out of style and along Riverside Drive
and upper 5th Avenue more ebullient styles were appearing. Among these was the French Renaissance
architecture seen in the Riverside Drive mansions of Morris Schinasi and Charles M. Schwab.
Burton Castles immediately commissioned architect Charles E. Birge to remodel the Wood
House. Birge transformed the dark façade
into a gleaming limestone showplace. The
house was now accessed through the American basement, slightly below street
level. French doors decorated with a delicate
Francis I surround opened onto a Juliette balcony with an ornate iron railing
at the fourth floor. Above it all a
highly-carved leafy stone balustrade capped the structure.
photo by Alice Lum |
The old houses of West 47th Street fell
one-by-one until in 1988 only No. 33 was left standing. The first two floors had, by now, been
obliterated; built out to the sidewalk with a garish commercial addition. A store sat at street level, a restaurant took
the second floor and a jewelry manufacturing firm was on the third. The top floors sat vacant.
Two decades later not much has changed. The handsome French Renaissance façade that
Burton Castles applied to the old brownstone is untouched above the second
floor. Squeezed in between soaring
commercial buildings, the old house survives as nearly the last remnant on the
block of an elegant time when Japanese prints and Corot oil paintings graced
the walls within.
In 2012 scaffolding partially obscures the altered lower floors while the upper section, including the leaded casement doors, survives -- photo by Alice Lum |
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