In the second half of the 19th century
German-born brothers Gustave and Christian Herter set the standard of
excellence in home furnishings and interior design through their firm Herter
Brothers. They not only designed
high-end, fashion-setting furniture, but entire rooms including lighting
fixtures and hardware, stained glass, paneling, plasterwork and carpeting. Millionaires throughout the country sought
the services of Herter Brothers to decorate and outfit their mansions—including
William H. Vanderbilt, Mark Hopkins, Darius O. Mills and J. Piermont Morgan.
In 1870, Christian Herter met another German cabinetmaker,
William Baumgarten. Baumgarten had been
in the country five years and was working for J. Ziegler & Co., another furniture
and decorating firm. Before long
Baumgarten left Ziegler to assist in the Herter Brothers operation.
After Christian Herter’s retirement in 1881, William
Baumgarten took the helm of Herter Brothers, preserving the firm’s prestige and
unsurpassed excellence. But a decade
later, in 1891, Baumgarten struck out on his own, partnering with his brother
Emile to form William Baumgarten & Company.
From their prominent showroom at 321 Fifth Avenue they continued to
cater to wealthy clients.
Just two years after opening his operation, Baumgarten
scored a coup among American decorating firms.
He negotiated the manufacture of Gobelin tapestries domestically,
recreating the famous tapestries for the interiors of America’s millionaires at
a time when period recreations were all the rage. Baumgarten started out by bringing four
French weavers to the United States; a number that would eventually grow to 80.
William Baumgarten’s personal life mirrored the success of
his business and financial life. On May
7, 1887 he married Clara Frankel and they began a family that would include
three sons and a daughter.
In the meantime, a far-reaching project was underway along the Hudson River to the north.
In the meantime, a far-reaching project was underway along the Hudson River to the north.
In 1873 Frederick Law Olmsted had proposed an ambitious
plan to transform the scenic countryside along the Hudson River into a park and
drive. Starting at 72nd Street and
stretching north to about 129th Street, Riverside Avenue (later renamed Riverside Drive) and its companion park followed the cliff-top topography. Developers saw the drive with its
breathtaking views as a potential rival to the crowded, commercially-threatened
Fifth Avenue.
Before long exquisite mansions began rising along the new
Drive—some thirty of which were free-standing.
Developers hired the most esteemed architects to design stretches of
abutting residences marketed to the very wealthy. Other millionaires purchased their own
building lots and commissioned their own architects in order to produce custom-designed
mansions in line with their specific personal wants.
Among these was William Baumgarten.
Baumgarten already knew William Schickel through the
architect’s collaboration with Herter Brothers.
He commissioned Schickel & Ditmars to design a rowhouse at 294
Riverside Drive between 101st and 102nd Streets. Construction began in 1900 and was completed
a year later, resulting in a eye-catching, asymmetrical Beaux Arts mansion.
Clad in white limestone, the five-story house was just two
bays wide despite its generous 25-foot lot.
The offset entrance was a few steps above the sidewalk through a
handsome columned portico. The
rusticated base supported a balcony with an elegant cast iron railing that
stretched the width of the mansion. Two
smaller balconies at the fourth floor echoed the design. The fifth floor mansard was ornamented by a
withdrawn, copper sheathed dormer to the north contrasted by an exuberant
carved limestone dormer to the south.
It is safe to assume that Clara Baumgarten did not have to
worry herself with the interior decoration nor furnishings for her new home.
The architects stepped away from Beaux Arts briefly enough to include the marvelous art nouveau window grill. |
The Baumgarten family settled into their new home and young Paul
was enrolled in the prestigious Browning School. On April 16, 1904 he was participating in
the annual interscholastic games on the grounds of New York University. Among the 16-year-old’s teammates was Fahys
Cook, the son of the wealthy Henry F. Cook.
The team was practicing for the
upcoming shot put competition .
Cook, who was a year younger than Baumgarten, made his throw
then walked out onto the field to recover the ball. He was unaware that Paul Baumgarten was
poised for his practice throw. Just as
Cook stooped over to pick up the shot, Baumgarten tossed the twelve-pound iron
ball. It hit the Cook boy squarely in
the head.
Cook’s skull was fractured and he was taken to St. Luke’s
Hospital where an operation was performed “as the only means of saving the boy’s
life,” reported the newspapers. Paul
was overcome with grief and guilt. “Baumgarten was completely prostrated by the
serious accident which he had unwittingly caused and retired from all contests
and went to his home,” reported The New York Times.
Two years after the unfortunate incident, William
Baumgarten, now 61 years old, was traveling in Washington D. C. There on Thursday April 26, 1906 he died
suddenly. On May 1 at 10:00 in the
morning his funeral services were held in the Riverside Drive house.
Clara Baumgarten died in the house on October 6, 1909 at
only 55 years old. Her funeral services,
too, were held here two days later.
After only 13 years in the mansion, the Baumgarten family sold
it to Emery Ferris in 1914. Unbelievably,
the costly residence with its superb interiors almost immediately became an
upscale rooming house. Among the first residents
were 54-year old Julius Brehmer and Miss Elsie Ferguson.
In 1925 retired army captain Thomas Hayes and his wife lived
here, as did Otis Morrill. Hayes
entertained a group of Argentine army officers on the night of March 18. The following morning Mrs. Hayes was downstairs
in the dining room chatting with another resident, Mrs. Zarr, while her husband
was in their rooms talking to Morrill. While the men talked, Hayes cleaned his four revolvers.
Morrill left the room and, as he closed the door, he heard a
shot. The women downstairs also heard
the report and rushed up. When Morrill
re-entered the room he found Hayes slumped in his chair with a bullet wound to
the chest. Mrs. Zarr entered the room
before Hayes’ wife and the wounded man told her he had accidentally shot
himself, and pointed to the rags and a bottle of oil on the table.
The former captain never lost consciousness. A doctor was called who did his best to treat
the wounds. Perhaps Hayes realized his
death was imminent, for as the physician worked on him he “talked with his wife
about business matters up to within a few minute of his death,” said a
newspaper.
Playwright Boris de Tanko lived in the house in 1931. During his residency he wrote a three-act
drama, The Red Swan. At the time the
proprietor of the rooming house was Madeline Tully. Mrs. Tully would bring far more drama into
the house than would the playwright.
In the spring of that year, the preparations for the sensation
trial of ex-convicts Harry Stein and Samuel Greenhauer (also known as
Greenberg) were underway. The two were charged with the murder of Vivian Gordon. Miss Gordon had been scheduled as an
important witness in another trial, but was murdered before she could testify.
By the time Madeline Tully was hobnobbing with gangsters, the block had seen tremendous change -- photo NYPL Collection |
Detectives had reason to suspect that Madeline Tully had
valuable information. But she was not interested
in talking to them. Fearful that she
would flee the state, she was held on $12,500 bond. Chief Assistant District Attorney I. J. P.
Alderman called her a stubborn witness and said she “had refused to give
information of importance and that he had reason to believe that she would not
be available for the trial…if released.”
He went so far to tell the judge “the woman is accessory to the fact.”
During the salacious trial another mobster, Harry Schlitten,
admitted to his part in the murder. He
was the driver of the automobile in which Vivian Gordon was strangled to
death. He told the jury that Stein had
informed him “If I don’t get a certain party out of the way, a friend of mine
is going to jail.”
He admitted to the
court that the following day that he had received $212 from Stein from the sale of
Gordon’s diamond ring that he had sold for $600. He also testified that after the
strangulation Stein had uttered “She’s done now; she’s finished.” After they dumped the body in a ditch in Van
Cortlandt Park, Schlitten was directed to drive to 294 Riverside
Drive. Stein dropped off Vivian Gordon’s
expensive fur coat there.
Madeline Tully’s dalliances with mobsters perhaps laid the
trend for tenant Edward Burke who lived here at the same time. On August 9, 1933, the 31-year old was
arrested along with four others in a police raid of an apartment at 222
West 84th Street. Burke was
arrested for violating the Sullivan Law (a gun control law in New York State)
and anti-narcotic laws. The New York Times
reported that “five pistols, more than 100 rounds of ammunition and two opium
pipes were seized by police” in the raid.
But the tenant list was not all gangsters, opium users and other
seedy characters. In 1937 the anthropologist
Louise E. Bisch lived here.
In May 1940, Emery Ferris sold the former Baumgarten mansion
after 26 years of ownership. The New York Times
reported that “A doctor bought for remodeling into small units the five-story
elevator dwelling at 294 Riverside Drive.”
A year later the conversation was complete. There were now three apartments on the first
floor and four each on the upper floors.
Among the first renters was the colorful Soviet Nicholas D.
Avxentieff. He had been President of the
Council of the Russian Republic of 1918 and Minister of the Interior during the
Kerensky government. During the chaos of
the Russian Revolution, he had been a member of the All-Russian Constituent
Assembly (which lasted only 24 hours) and had been repeatedly arrested. He was twice imprisoned by the Bolsheviks and
was arrested by the White Russian Admiral Kolchak in Siberia.
He arrived in New York in 1921 as a refugee from the
Communist regime and became president of the New York group of the Russian
Socialist Revolutionary Party. He was
chief editor of the monthly Russian language magazine For Freedom. He fervently decried the Nazi attacks on
Russia and issued a statement saying “the interests of the democracies as well
as of the Russian people demand the defeat of the Nazi invaders of the U.S.S.R.”
Avxentieff died in his apartment here on March 4, 1943 at
the age of 64.
The grand mansions along Riverside Drive in the immediate
neighborhood were razed for modern apartment buildings through the 20th
century. Today, only the Baumgarten residence
and two houses next door remain on the block.
photographs taken by the author
no permission to reuse the content of this blog has been granted to LaptrinhX.com
No comments:
Post a Comment