photo by Alice Lum |
Joining the trend was Edward Nathaniel Herzog and his
wife. Herzog was a partner in Johnson,
Cowdin & Co., a silk ribbon manufacturer.
The highly-successful firm ran a silk mill at 25 Grand Street, another
in the silk mill town of Paterson, New Jersey and one in Norwalk. The New York mill alone employed about 125
workers, including fifty weavers.
The Herzogs purchased a brownstone at No. 22 East 73rd
Street and began planning their new home.
They had to plan carefully. In 1900 the city had a number of extremely
wealthy Jewish families—the Kahns, the Loebs, the Schiffs and the Guggenheims
among them. But the undercurrent of
anti-Semitic prejudice was a constant consideration. According to Kate
Simon in her “Fifth Avenue, A Very Social History,” an unspoken rule was “live
and comport yourself at the height of respectability so that ‘they’ might have
no handle for criticism.”
Two years earlier Felix Warburg had announced his plans to
erect a gargantuan French Gothic palace on the corner of Fifth Avenue and 92nd
Street, a block from Andrew Carnegie’s mansion.
His father-in-law, Jacob Schiff, was aghast. He warned Warburg that the ostentatious
style would spur anti-Semitic criticism and urged him to build a more
restrained Italian Renaissance mansion.
Warburg pushed on with his plans and as the Herzogs met with
architect George I. Heins, his monumental chateau rose (and would continue to for
another eight years). The Herzogs had
neither the immense wealth of Warburg nor his grandiose ambitions for their home. What Heins produced for them a year later,
however, was a magnificent Beaux Arts mansion in the latest fashion. The grand brick and limestone structure did
not apologize for the owners’ wealth; but simultaneously melded comfortably
with the homes of the millionaires that surrounded it, calling little overt
attention to itself.
photo from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York |
The second floor salon was furnished with antique French furniture and tapestries -- photo from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York |
The south bedroom included decorous single beds --photo from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York |
In April 1919 the Metropolitan of French Art included her
collection in its exhibition of antique fans.
The Sun noted that the exhibition “discloses the fact that democratic
America is exceedingly rich in the possession of these splendid emblems of the aristocratic
past.”
In the meantime, Herzog’s firm was in the forefront of
innovative workplace practices. It held
annual “socials” for the hundreds of mill employees and was the first in the
industry to hire a full-time osteopath to tend to injuries or illnesses.
In 1904 Edward Herzog recognized a problem in the ribbon
producing industry. American workers had
become complacent. In addressing the
annual meeting of the Silk Association of America that year, he sounded the
alarm of foreign imports taking over.
“We do not pay sufficient attention to details. In sacrificing quality to yards we must not
forget that the consumer demands perfectly woven and finished goods, no matter
how low the article may be sold in the market.
The reason that foreign cheap ribbons are getting a strong foothold here
is because they are better made than ours and more satisfactory to the buyer.”
A century later Herzog’s words could still be considered
current.
Following Edward Herzog’s death, his wife lived on alone in
the handsome mansion until her own death in 1939.
A shining limosine waits just down the block from the Herzog mansion in 1935 -- photo NYPL Collection |
The New York Post, on Saturday March 25, noted “The
furniture is in the style of the French eighteenth century and includes
occasional tables, commodes and writing desks beautifully inlaid with marquetry
and a suite of four chairs and settee covered in eighteenth century Aubusson
tapestry.
“The sale also includes Oriental carpets and rugs, Chinese
porcelains, table glass and porcelains, silver and silver-plated ware including
tea and coffee services, bronze ornaments, tapestry and brocade cushions,
beadwork and embroidery, carved ivories, French engravings, and English
mezzotints. The library includes sets of
the works of eminent English and American authors, memoirs, biographies and
books on art.”
Ornate French iron grillwork protects the entrance -- photo by Alice Lum |
Although the Great Depression was still
in its final year, the first day of the auction alone grossed $14,865—about a
quarter of a million dollars today.
Two decades after the Herzog Estate sold
the mansion, the Republic of Cameroon became a member of the United
Nations. The fledgling country
purchased the Herzog mansion and today it is home to the Permanent Mission of
the United Republic of Cameroon to the United Nations. With only minor, expected changes, the Herzog
mansion is beautifully preserved, both inside and out. A striking monument to a ribbon manufacturer
who announced his arrival in society.
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