photo by Alice Lum |
In 1881 the southwest corner of Beekman and Nassau Streets
had seen buildings come and buildings go and was about to see yet one
more. The first production of "Hamlet" in
America was staged in the theater built on the site in 1751. Fourteen years later a meeting of early
patriots was held in the theater that resulted in “empathic disapproval” of the
1764 Stamp Act.
Later the dual-purpose building housing Clinton Hall and the
Clinton Hotel was erected. “The Clinton
Hotel was one of the best of its time and the table was particularly pleasing
to old-fashioned New-Yorkers,” remembered King’s Handbook of New York
later. Clinton Hall was built to house
the Mercantile Library which became a fundamental part of the Astor Place
Library.
Now banker Eugene Kelly laid plans to replace the old hotel
and hall with a modern law office building.
He called upon the architectural
firm of Silliman & Farnsworth to design an up-to-the-minute structure with
the latest amenities and handsome façade.
Although it was known as the Kelly Building, it was also called (perhaps
to attract the desired legal firms and attorneys as tenants) Temple Square—a purposeful reference to the Temple Bar area of London.
King's Handbook of New York City published a sketch of the building in 1892 (copyright expired) |
Perhaps coincidentally, architectural historian James
Fergusson had restored, on paper, the Temple of Jerusalem in 1878. Intentionally or not, the architects closely
mimicked Fergusson’s twin pyramidal peaks of the temple in their own Temple
Square.
James Fergusson's vision of Herod's Temple included twin pyramical towers -- American Architect & Building News October 5, 1873 (copyright expired) |
When the architects revealed the plans in April 1881 at a
projected cost of $400,000, The New York Times promised the new building would “be
one of the finest in the lower part of the city.”
Completed two years later in 1883, the office building rose
ten stories including the mansard roof and towers. The façade was a combination of
limestone imported from Balinasloe, Ireland; red brick, and terra cotta.
King’s Handbook of New York called it “quite stately.”
The architects drew on the Queen Anne and Aesthetic Movement styles, using motifs
like ferns, sunflowers and waterbirds, while splashing a bit of Romanesque
Revival into the mix. The pointed
towers could be seen for blocks and prompted King’s Handbook to say “The quaint
towers of Temple Court, with their high pyramidal roofs, are unmistakable
land-marks in the heart of New York, and point the way to the scenes of vast
and momentous transactions in business and finance.”
To guarantee that the structure was “fireproof,” the walls
were constructed of hollow bricks “and all the safeguards for the prevention of
fire were utilized in its construction,” assured The New York Times.
Cast iron knee braces took the shape of fierce winged creatures -- http://tribecacitizen.com/2013/01/03/a-long-deep-look-inside-temple-court/ |
The interior outshone the impressive exterior. Inside was an enormous central court that
rose through the center of the building to a glass skylight. “This gives light and ventilation, and a
pleasant effect to the interior rooms,” said King’s. Ornamental railings of cast iron erupted in
Aesthetic Movement designs. Minute
details included openwork cast iron knee brackets in the shape of phoenixes and
scenic Asian-inspired bas-relief wall panels of storks and rushes.
Aesthetic Movement interior decorations, now covered in layers of paint, were up-to-the-minute style-wise --http://tribecacitizen.com/2013/01/03/a-long-deep-look-inside-temple-court/ |
“Some of the offices have open fire-places with mantels and
grates, and the trim is in hardwood finish throughout,” said the Guide. Kelly intended that his building be
ultra-modern. King’s Handbook of New York City announced “Temple
Court is a modern building in every sense, it is thoroughly equipped with all
the latest improvements. It contains
five fine passenger elevators, which give quick and easy access to all the
floors; Worthington pumps for supplying water; and other modern conveniences.”
Not everyone was as glowing in their description as was King’s
Handbook. Building News called it “nondescript”
and referred to the corner towers as “donkey’s ears.”
photo by Alice Lum |
Nonetheless the building quickly filled with law and other
professional offices. The entire ground
floor was taken over by the banking rooms and safe deposit vaults of the Nassau
Bank. Within ten years Kelly was ready
to expand. An western annex was designed
by Benjanmin Silliman, Jr. in 1890 and completed three years later. The two buildings were connected by
passageways and the united structures created one of the largest office
buildings in the city, with frontages on Beekman Street, Nassau Street and
Theatre Alley (which owed its name to the original 18th century
building).
Among the first tenants in the new annex, even before it was
completed, was Margaret S. Powers who opened her typewriting office in Room
725. On the same floor were the
advertising offices of George C. Pease; the office of architect Arthur D.
Pickering in Room 728, and Frederick K. Goodwin and Gustavus C. Henning in
Rooms 726 and 727.
Other tenants in the partially finished structure were the
American Association of Public Accountants; attorney George Gordon Battle; City
Marshalls Cornelius Farley and Charles A. Farley; lawyers D. J. Newland, Joseph
P. Mullin, Knight Brothers law firm; and M. W. Russell and J. H.
Glover, publishers of the Telegraphic Age.
On the top floor was the apartment of janitor Frank Leslie
and his wife. At 6:30 on the morning of
April 2, 1893, the night watchman left for home.
An hour later Leslie woke to find his apartment filling with smoke. He and his wife attempted to rush down the
ten flights of stairs, but were turned back by the smoke and headed out to the
roof.
The following day The Times reported “No other persons were
in the building, but meantime the fire had been noticed and an alarm sent
out. The Leslies were soon released
from their uncomfortable position.”
Nearby on Beekman Street the old World Building had caught
fire. Sparks landed on the cotton
screens of the uncompleted Temple Square, setting the new structure
ablaze. Inside, freshly-varnished pine fed the fire. The flames were fanned by high winds which
created havoc in the still-windowless courtyard.
“Fire wrecked a considerable portion of the annex. Water, in its combat with the flames, did
considerable damage on its own account.
Then the wind took a turn, and, careening wildly around the doorless and
windowless building, caught hold on all conceivable kinds of papers which had
escaped burning and scattered them in all directions,” reported the newspaper.
The Times took advantage of the disastrous combination of
fire, water and wind to sarcasticly say “The elements caused havoc yesterday in
Temple Court, the big so-called fire-proof office building.”
By 9:00 the fire had been put out, not before extensive
damage had been done. The “fine library
of many thousand law books” in the offices of attorneys Knight Brothers was
practically destroyed. The tailoring
store on the first floor, Burnham & Phillips, suffered $10,000 loss to its
stock (about $230,000 today), the accounting offices of Henry R. M. Cook was gutted
and “a couple of wrecked typewriting machines completed the recognizable
remnants of Miss Power’s office.”
The original building was relatively untouched by the fire, “but
on four floors of the western block very few offices escaped,” reported The
Times.
At the time of the fire architect George H. Edbrooke had
been a tenant for over six years. His suite of offices included Numbers 300, 301
and 302. The Evening World noted that “When
he took the offices first he was regarded as being wealthy, and for a long time
his practice was of the most extensive kind.”
Indeed it was, for Edbrooke was responsible for notable buildings such
as the Brooklyn Savings Bank and the Real Estate Exchange of Brooklyn.
photo by Alice Lum |
But the same year as the fire Edbrooke had “speculated
unfortunately” according to the newspaper and he sustained substantial
financial losses.
The new year did not improve his circumstances and on
January 26, 1894 The New York Times noted “His business until recently had been
very good, but dull times made the architect very despondent.” The Evening World agreed, saying that “Usually
he was of the most cheerful disposition, but during the past few days even the
elevator man noticed a change in his demeanor…the change was also noticed by
the clerks in his office.”
Because of that, when the architect entered the office
around noon on January 25 looking particularly downcast, no one paid much
notice.
After half an hour of quiet, broken only by the sound of
rustling papers from Edbrooke’s office, the staff was alarmed by the sound of
two pistol shots in rapid succession.
They found the architect in his desk chair with two bullet wounds in his
temple.
In 1900 a near-catastrophic elevator accident was caused by a
pesky rodent. As elevator attendant
Alexander Lundeen was moving some “well-known citizens” between floors the car
suddenly ascended rapidly to the roof, then dropped to the basement. “Through Lundeen’s work and the air cushion
the lives of four men were saved,” reported the New-York Tribune.
“A rat coming out for his morning meal had been attracted by
the odor of the lubricating oil and had gone to the pulley,” explained the
newspaper. “Just as he was about to
enjoy his breakfast the elevator started up, and his body was pulled between
the cable and the wheel. The obstruction
offered by the body of the rat was sufficient to throw the cable out of place,
and the accident followed.”
The safety of the passengers was attributed to Lundeen’s “cool-headedness
and courage,” notwithstanding “the terrible condition of his hands,” said the
paper.
Eugene Kelly sold Temple Court for $1.325 million in
1907. Five years later the Nassau Bank,
still in its old headquarters, expanded.
In July 1912 it took the ground floor of the annex and took part of the
second floor for its bookkeeping staff.
It was about time, according to The New York Times who said “The
queue of depositors during busy periods has so crowded the old banking room as
to become an embarrassment.”
photo by Alice Lum |
The bank would not be in its new space for long. In 1914 it consolidated with the Irving
National Bank. After more than three
decades in the corner space, the bank was now gone. On April 14, 1915 The Times reported that “The
space is now being converted into seven stores, three of which have already
been rented.” Among the new first-floor
tenants was The New York Times’ downtown office.
“The heavy granite piers are being replaced by structural
steel,” said the article.
Twenty years later, on August 19, 1934, the same newspaper
would casually note that Temple Square “for many years was pointed out as the
finest example of modern office building construction in this city.”
Just six years later the magnificent 1881 central court
below the skylight was walled up to meet new fire code. The fine Victorian railings and brackets
were covered over, to be forgotten by subsequent generations of businessmen and
tenants.
Then, around 2000, the last tenant left and the doors of the
once-grand Temple Court were chained shut.
A decade of neglect resulted in the paint and plaster inside to peel and
crumble. The hulking abandoned beauty
sat ignored.
Finally in 2012 Commune Hotels & Resorts acquired the
property and announced plans to convert the vintage structure to a 297-room boutique hotel with 90
residences. As demolition started
inside, entombed magnificence (albeit faded) emerged.
After more than a century behind false walls, the central court reappeard -- http://tribecacitizen.com/2013/01/03/a-long-deep-look-inside-temple-court/ |
The project is scheduled to be completed in 2014, including
Silliman & Farnsworth’s wonderful resurrected and restored interiors.
Thanks for another great post. What a jewel this building is. I can't wait to see it in its reborn glory!
ReplyDeleteIncredible building - can't wait to see the finished product!
ReplyDeletethis is great, where did you find all this info?
ReplyDelete