photo by Alice Lum |
By the 1880s the area around the Washington Market was home
to New York’s wholesale and retail food dealers. The district
now known as Tribeca filled with brick loft and store structures, often built
for the prevalent dairy and produce businesses centered here – the “egg and
butter” trade.
In 1867 a handsome five-story structure was completed at No.
73 Hudson Street. Four floors of red
brick sat upon a cast iron base with fluted Corinthian columns. Thirteen years later developer David Martin
hired Amzi Hill to design a loft building next door at No. 71. The architect’s job was simple: reproduce No. 73.
Like its next door neighbor, the new Italianate-style building
stretched through the block to Staples Street.
The cornices, stringcourses and
openings lined up so perfectly that the passerby, in 1880 or today, would
hardly suspect the two buildings were not built simultaneously as a pair.
Five years after construction, the building was purchased by
merchant William T. Coleman. Coleman
had fronted the funds to established William T. Coleman & Co. on New
Year’s Eve 1883. His year-old firm now
had its own building.
Coleman had other tenants, as well. In 1888 Delafield, Morgan, Kissell & Co,
dealers in canned fish and canned fruit, operated from here. The firm was also an agent for a more unusual
product—the “Downie Eucalyptus Boiler Scale Preventive and Remover.” The company’s advertisements touted “This
extract, from the leaves of the Eucalyptus tree, has been adopted and is now in
use by most of the American S.S. lines, the U.S. Navy, and the largest
stationary plants in the country.”
That same year William T. Coleman & Co. was sued by the
Bank of British North America for $25,000; a problem that may have contributed
to Coleman’s selling No. 71 Hudson Street.
Prior to the Civil War in Wolcottville, Connecticut, Gail
Borden established a small factory to produce his invention—condensed milk. In 1858 Jeremiah Milbank financially backed
his operation and the New York Condensed Milk Company was formed.
The once-tiny operation, boosted by the convenience of condensed
milk during the war, was a thriving business in 1889. The company purchased No. 71 Hudson Street
as a milk warehouse for its product and that of its related company, the Borden
Condensed Milk Company.
In the last years of the 19th century Flemish
Revival-style structures began dotting Manhattan—a nod to the city’s Dutch
roots. The New York Condensed Milk Company joined the
trend when it commissioned Dehli, Chamberlin & Howard to add two stories to
the building in 1896. The architects
transformed the Italianate structure to a Flemish one by the addition of a
curving two-story gable.
The brick façade was painted a light color, as was No. 73,
and decorative iron masonry supports were added to update the design. An early photograph shows wide panels,
stretching the width of the structure, affixed below the third, fourth and
fifth floors.
Seen next to the right of the House of Relief at the turn of the last century, the gable of the renovated No. 71 is still intact. The building is painted and its details highlighted. Unidentifiable panels -- possibly advertising--run the width of the facade. photo by Wurtz Bros. from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York http://collections.mcny.org/C.aspx?VP3=SearchResult_VPage&VBID=24UP1G31WP45&SMLS=1&RW=1280&RH=915 |
In 1899 the New York Condensed Milk Company was succeeded by
the Borden Condensed Milk Company which continued to expand. On August 1, 1902 the New-York Tribune
reported “By the purchased of the American property of the Anglo-Swiss
Condensed Milk Company, the Borden Condensed Milk Company of No. 71 Hudson-st.,
has added another important establishment to its organization.”
At the same time the company supplied the United States Navy
with condensed milk—a lucrative contract that would last several years.
Decorative urns flank the curving Flemish gable of No. 71 -- photo by Alice Lum |
Also in the building in 1905 were the James M. Bell Company,
wine importers, and F. O. Boyd & Co., dealers in California wines. Gustave F. Speckel and his 28-year old son,
Henry George Speckel, were involved with both companies; Gustave being vice-president of James M. Bell
and Henry being secretary.
Things seemed to be going well for Henry Speckel. He was married in
August 1905 and he was earning an enviable salary. But in November he contracted typhoid fever,
a condition that threw him into depression.
At 4:45 on the evening of November 20 Mrs. Speckel noticed
her husband’s overcoat and black derby were missing from the hallway rack. Concerned, she telephone her father-in-law
and after a visit to several neighboring houses, Speckel notified the police.
Mrs. Speckel said her husband was “in a disturbed condition
of mind,” and described his dark suit and tan shoes. He had, she said, no money when he left home.
Six days later Gustave Speckel offered a $250 reward for
information leading to the discovery of his son. But despite earnest attempts the young man
could not be found--until May 8 the
following year.
The New-York Tribune reported that “The body of the man
found in the Hudson River, near the Spuyten Duyvil Bridge, on Sunday, was
identified yesterday as that of Henry George Speckel, a wine merchant,
twenty-nine years old, of No. 856 Riverside Drive.”
The newspaper added “An attack of typhoid fever had left him
subject to melancholia, and his father says he must have drowned himself while
insane.”
Until 1896 the two buildings were identical -- photo by Alice Lum |
For two hours on August 21 firemen battled the fire. NYFD Captain Augustine O’Connor of Hook and
Ladder Company No. 1 suffered what The New York Times called “an apoplectic
stroke” while directing his men. He “was
removed to Beekman Street Hospital where it was reported that he was paralyzed
from the waist down and unable to speak.”
Two other firemen were slightly injured in fighting the blaze.
In 1937 Joseph J. Herold, Jr., purchased the building from
the Carnation Company for just $23,000—less than half of what it had cost to
repair the damages from the fire six years earlier.
As the 20th century drew to a close, the Tribeca
area changed from one of warehouses and small factories to a trendy
neighborhood of upscale restaurants and luxury apartments. In 1984 No. 71 Hudson Street was converted to
“loft dwellings,” one enormous residence per floor. In was here, in August 1989, that John F.
Kennedy, Jr., lived in a sub-leased apartment.
The nearly $2 million apartments were once packed with crates of condensed milk. photo http://www.elliman.com/new-york-city/71-hudson-street-unit-4-manhattan-yqwrfek |
Although the Flemish gable has been slightly
decapitated, the rest of No. 71 is astoundingly intact—right down to the original
cast iron base. The 1896 renovation that
took the building from handsome to picturesque still makes it a standout on an
architecturally-interesting block.
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