photo by Alice Lum |
In 1871 developer James E. Coburn commissioned J. W.
Marshall to design a long row of ten such homes along East 73rd Street, stretching from No. 13 to 31. The five-story residences featured
attractive details like bay windows at the parlor level and incised window
enframements.
The merchant class neighborhood began changing as the turn
of the century neared. Fifth Avenue along the park saw
the arrival of the grand limestone and marble mansions of New York’s wealthiest
citizens.
One by one the brownstone homes of a generation earlier on the side
streets were either razed or converted to fashionable showplaces for the rich.
In 1908 Nicholas Fletcher Palmer, president of both the
Leather Manufacturers National Bank and N. F. Palmer & Co., a shipbuilding
firm, purchased No. 19. The Palmers
chose what was by now an impressive residential block. Five years earlier publisher Joseph Pulitzer
had commissioned Stanford White to erect a Venetian Renaissance palace on the
site of five brownstone houses just east of the Palmer House. Next door to them at No. 17 was Pulitzer’s
son, Ralph who had renovated the outdated house to a neo-Renaissance
mansion. Other millionaires on the block
would include Albert A. Berg, Robert Cuddihy, president of Funk & Wagnalls;
George Doubleday, chairman of Ingersoll-Rand; and Albert Blum.
The Palmers put architect F. H. Dodge to work on transforming
their somewhat stuffy brownstone into a socially-acceptable home. Dodge had recently returned to New York after
having designed a servant quarters and laundry building for the massive Henry
M. Flagler mansion in Palm Beach. For
the Palmer house he would turn to a variation of the newly-popular Federal
Revival style.
Dodge removed the brownstone façade and dropped the entrance
to street level. A formal, Ionic
portico sheltered the centered entrance in the rusticated limestone base and provided a small balcony at the second story.
Here three limestone arches framed delicate multi-paned windows capped
with fanlights. French doors opened
onto the miniature balcony. Above red
brick contrasted with white limestone as the house rose to the dignified
mansard roof with segmental-arched dormers.
Before long Nicholas and Laura Palmer moved into a home down
the block at the corner of Fifth Avenue with the
even more impressive address of No. 922 Fifth Avenue. Stock broker son Francis F. Palmer and his wife,
the former Isabel Fowler, took over the house at No. 19. Francis was a member of the stock brokerage firm Palmer & Co., with offices at No. 40 Wall Street. During
the summer season the close-knit extended Palmer family—Nicholas and the two
sons Francis and George—spent their time in separate residences on their
sprawling 500-acre estate at Port Chester, New York.
photo by Alice Lum |
When Francis and Isabel would close the 73rd
Street house for the season, their long-term butler, August Miller, would travel
with them to The Alden, their Port Chester mansion. Early in August 1915 the family left for a
jaunt to the White Mountains, leaving Miller in charge of the staff and the
house. Their absence apparently seemed
to be an opportunity to Miller.
On August 16 Miller entered a pawn shop at No. 1137 Second
Avenue lugging a suit case filled with cut glass and silver. The pawnbroker examined the goods, noticed
that most of the silverware bore the monogram FFP and called the Third Branch Detective
Bureau. Miller explained that he
needed “a little ready money on account of the illness and death of my wife,”
and was unable to get in touch with Palmer.
Miller’s wife had died ten days
earlier and he insisted that he intended to pawn the items only for a few days
until he could collect on his wife’s insurance policy. “Some of my creditors were pressing me for
money.”
Detectives found checks for eight trunks in his clothing;
and he admitted he had been pawning Mrs. Palmer’s items since August 7. The silverware and glass in the suitcase alone
was valued at around $1,500—or about $25,000 today. The detectives were hard pressed to believe
that Miller needed that much ready cash to satisfy his creditors. Instead, they suspected the 43-year old was
poised to take the money and return to his home country of Sweden.
Miller’s story continued to unravel when it was discovered
the Francis Palmer had paid for all the hospital expenses of the butler’s wife
and for her funeral.
By the following season the Palmers were considering a new
city home. On December 30, 1916 The Sun
reported that Palmer had filed plans for a $100,000 house on the northwest
corner of Park Avenue and 93rd Street, to be designed by Delano
& Aldrich. Like the 73rd
Street house, this would be “in the Colonial style of architecture.”
Palmer held on to the house on East 73rd Street
for a few years, leasing it to wealthy New Yorkers during the winter seasons. In 1918 the esteemed architect John Russell
Pope and his wife took the house, after summering in their estate in Jericho,
Long Island. Eventually, in January
1921, Palmer sold the house with its “electric elevator” for around $130,000.
Howard White Starr, retired vice-president of Theodore B.
Starr & Co. took up residency in the house. Starr’s exclusive jewelry store on Fifth
Avenue at 47th Street had catered to the carriage trade. Like its competitors such as Tiffany &
Co. and Dreicer & Co., it offered “diamonds and pearls of exceptional
quality, jewelry, watches, silverware, clocks, bronzes, stationery, and leather
goods.”
photo by Alice Lum |
Unlike the Palmers,
the Starr family would make No. 19 East 73rd Street home for
decades.
The family included six children—V. Rosamond, Natalie, Theodore,
H. Danforth, Louis and Malcolm. V. Rosamond, the elder daughter, was
introduced to society in 1926 at a dinner dance at Pierre’s given by her
father. Four years later her wedding
reception was held in the house which “was decorated with butterfly roses and
Southern smilax.”
Howard and Susan lived on in the house as their children
grew, married and left. In 1945 the
aging couple moved to an apartment at No. 800 Park Avenue. Here Howard died on November 29, 1946 at the
age of 74.
That year the house on 73rd Street was converted
to apartments—one per floor. Over sixty years later it remains an upscale,
multiple-resident dwelling, with still just one apartment to a floor. On the exterior, little has changed since
the Palmers sheared off the brownstone front and created their Colonial-inspired
mansion.
photo by Alice Lum |
Just to add to your history -- I and two friends lived in the 3rd floor apartment during the summer of 1964 when we were working at the world's fair. I do not think we fully appreciated the wonderful history of the house. There was an embassy or consulate on the first floor and Bernard Baruch's nephew lived on the fifth floor.
ReplyDeleteWas that the apartment featured in the movie, Ciao Manhattan, featuring Andy Warhol muse Edie Sedgwick? (I believe the footage was shot in early 1967).
DeleteYes. Edie Sedgwick appears in a seen on the second floor balcony.
DeleteSo, what happened to August Miller?
ReplyDeleteHe went to jail
Delete