The block between Broadway and Fifth Avenue, 25th
to 26th Street got its odd trapezoid shape from Broadway’s diagonal,
northwest bearing. When the three
commissioners laid out the grid plan for Manhattan’s streets and avenues in
1811, they simply laid the grid over the ancient thoroughfare. The result was a series of bow tie
configurations and geographical headaches for architects and real estate
developers.
After the Civil War the neighborhood was replete with mansions and fashionable hotels. The house
at No. 206 Fifth Avenue, owned by the Perry family, sat just above the
narrowest point of the block. A 40-foot
rear yard extended to Broadway—the plot being too narrow to accommodate another
house on that street.
In the meantime firm, Starr & Marcus was selling jewelry
and silverware at No. 22 John Street to New York’s wealthy carriage trade. Founded in 1864 it had established a
reputation as one of the city’s finest jewelry stores. In 1877, just as commercial interests were
inching northward along Fifth Avenue, Theodore B. Starr bought out his partner
and moved the operation to the Perry family’s mansion.
It was a brilliant move for Starr. No. 206 Fifth Avenue faced Madison Square and the still-intact residential façade melded unobtrusively with the mansions around it. An employee, William H. Jennings, described it as “a four-story, high stoop, brown stone residence, running back to a court yard on Broadway.”
The rear “courtyard” at No. 1126 Broadway faced two blocks of Manhattan’s most fashionable and expensive hotels—the Fifth Avenue Hotel at 23rd to 24th Street, the Albermarle Hotel at northwest corner of 24th and Broadway, and the Hoffman House which consumed the rest of that block to 25th Street. The exclusive nature of the neighborhood was reflected in Starr’s annual rent. In 1877 he was charged $10,000—over $200,000 today.
It was a brilliant move for Starr. No. 206 Fifth Avenue faced Madison Square and the still-intact residential façade melded unobtrusively with the mansions around it. An employee, William H. Jennings, described it as “a four-story, high stoop, brown stone residence, running back to a court yard on Broadway.”
The rear “courtyard” at No. 1126 Broadway faced two blocks of Manhattan’s most fashionable and expensive hotels—the Fifth Avenue Hotel at 23rd to 24th Street, the Albermarle Hotel at northwest corner of 24th and Broadway, and the Hoffman House which consumed the rest of that block to 25th Street. The exclusive nature of the neighborhood was reflected in Starr’s annual rent. In 1877 he was charged $10,000—over $200,000 today.
William Jennings said of the location, “Our customers are
wealthy and fashionable people who purchase expensive luxuries in the way of
diamonds, jewelry and plate, and this is an excellent location for that
business.” The store offered “fancy
goods” as well. Jennings explained the
term: “that means bronzes, paintings
furniture, etc., and things of that sort.”
Before moving in Theodore Starr built an extension to the
house, described by Jennings as “a corresponding building in brick to match,
making it all one floor.” Starr’s
addition, which cost around $60,000, was a handsome red brick building with a cast
iron store front. Expansive windows
allowed ample sunlight into the sales rooms.
The architect deftly used brick to create most the decorative elements –
pilasters, pseudo-rustication and an attractive blind arcade above the topmost
floor.
Theodore B. Starr rivaled the other exclusive jewelry
establishments like Tiffany & Co. and Dreicer & Co. On December 20, 1890 The New York Times
remarked on the store and its offerings.
“All that refined taste can do has been done to make the place
attractive. The appointments are in
keeping with the character of the goods, for which this store is well known,
and the articles are shown in a way that makes it a real pleasure to examine
them. Those who stop with[in] the first
floor, where the silverware is shown, really fail to get beyond the vestibule
to the store.”
The second floor was devoted to porcelains, jewelry and
precious gems. On the third floor were
bronzes, clocks—from desk clocks to tall case clocks-- and statuary. The Times article pointed out “Two valuable
pieces of marble statuary by Prof. Cambi of Florence, entitled, ‘The Shepherd
Boy’“ and ‘The Spring of Life,’ are on this floor.”
The writer was also taken with a particular necklace. “Among the unique articles of great value to
be seen here is a necklace made of pearls alternating with Rondelles diamonds
that have been cut flat and perforated.
A pair of earrings made of giant pearls goes with this necklace.”
An 1885 advertisement lists the extensive selection -- (copyright expired) |
The Times article concluded, rather editorially, that “Starr’s
establishment, which has no duplicate in this country, and probably not in the
world…would be a delightful place for those who have never explored its
mysteries to spend a quiet half hour.”
Before the 1897 fire the upper floors of Theodore B. Starr's Fifth Avenue entrance (with the large, folded awning) still retained their residential facade--photograph NYPL Collection |
Business was interrupted when a fire broke out in the
building on December 30, 1896. The
jeweler was forced to close for four months while “repairs and alterations”
were made to the building and showrooms.
It was most likely at this time that the old brownstone façade was
stripped off the Fifth Avenue side and replaced with a modern commercial front.
The Holland House Hotel was a favorite among the city’s
Democrats, while the Fifth Avenue Hotel attracted the Republicans. A year after Starr reopened for business the
Democrats got on his nerves. The
Democratic State Committee erected two large poles on either side of Broadway,
directly in front of Starr’s entrance. A
political banner was stretched between them that spanned the avenue.
Theodore Starr protested to the Commissioner of Highways,
arguing that if the Committee wanted a banner, they needed to erect it in front
of the Holland House, where its headquarters was located, and not in front of
his business.
The neighborhood was thrown into confusion and excitement
when a chase involving a dozen policemen and “several hundred other persons” took
place on July 16, 1900. A few days earlier
two men, Frederick Titus and Ethan Obadisk, had stolen a valuable camera from
Kotchkiss & Reynolds at No. 416-1/2 Sixth Avenue. The dim-witted thieves then returned to the
scene and tried to sell Reynolds a $40 lens for $12.
Reynolds recognized the men and his brother rushed out to
summons a policeman. When the thieves
saw Policeman Evans approaching, they rushed out of the store, up 25th
Street towards Broadway where they separated.
The New York Times reported “A crowd of 100 men started
after the fleeing suspects…Cable cars were stopped by the crowd which joined in
the pursuit, wagons pulled up, Policeman Evans knocked over two women carrying
baskets, another policeman stepped on a dog which tried to bite him and then
stole into an alley, policemen came up on every side to join in the chase, and
Broadway and Fifth Avenue were in a state of excitement for some minutes.”
Titus ducked into Starr’s through the Broadway entrance and
was found “under a lot of women’s clothes in a closet” on the second
floor. It was the sort of stimulation Theodore
B. Starr’s sober customers were unaccustomed to.
The year 1905 initiated a series of substantial changes to
the building. In January that year the
estate of Adeline Perry sold the building.
The Times noted that “The parcel just sold has been held in the Perry
family for over fifty years.” Two years
later the sons of Theodore Starr incorporated the business and In 1911, after
more than three decades here, moved to a new building at Fifth Avenue and 47th
Street.
The following year Elmer A. Darling bought the
building. Darling already owned the
adjoining Lincoln Trust Building that stretched through the block from No. 208 Fifth Avenue to
No. 1128 Broadway. The building where Theodore Starr had displayed
silver tea services, diamonds and bronze clocks was now home to a United States
Army surplus store. Goods “from U. S.
Government Arsenal” were advertised with creative uses.
An advertisement in The Evening World on December 16, 1912
suggested converting “Rifle Barrels into Smoking Tables; Rifle Bayonets into
Candelabra; Carbine Sockets into Cigar Holders; Rifle Bayonets into Scones;
Revolvers into Paper Weights; Rifles into Hat and Coat Racks; Projectiles into
Mantel Ornaments.”
The imaginative advertiser envisioned turning “cannon
projectiles into flower vases.”
The government surplus store closed on January 11, 1913 and
by 1920 the building was home to a new-fangled fad—the phonograph. The Emerson Phonograph firm announced that “Within
this handsome, modern building stand the various models of the new Emerson
Phonograph—all waiting to delight you with their full, clear, round tone.” The store—which called itself the Fifth
Avenue Exhibition Shop—offered records and a variety of phonographs. The machines were priced from $80 for a table
model to $1000 for a “luxuriously handsome Period Piece.”
A parapet announces "Emerson" on the Fifth Avenue facade in 1920--The New-York Tribune, Sept. 19, 1920 (copyright expired) |
While the Emerson company was demonstrating its phonographs
here, Charles H. Weeghman was suffering a reverse of fortune in Chicago. Born in Richmond, Indiana, he had traveled to Chicago
after graduating high school and got a $10-a week waiter job in King’s
restaurant. Within a few years he had
saved enough money to open his own restaurant.
The far-sighted young man sought to serve as many customers
as possible and as quickly as possible. So
he devised the “one armed restaurant”--lunchrooms with one-armed chairs. The gimmick made him a millionaire and earned
him the nicknames “Lucky Charley” and the “Quick Lunch King.” But in 1916 he purchased the Chicago Cubs
(who won the pennant the following year) and began funneling his money into
baseball.
The New York Times later noted that “During the time he was
occupied with the baseball teams and spending a large part of his fortune on
them, his restaurant finances were said to have become disordered.” In 1919 William Wrigley Jr. acquired the
controlling interest in the ball team and a year later Weeghan’s restaurant
chain went bankrupt.
Now known as “Unlucky Charley,” Weeghan moved to New York and
in October 1921 signed a 21-year lease on the old Theodore Starr building for
$1 million. The deal gave the Emerson Phonograph
Company the top three floors. The
New-York Tribune said that Weeghan intended to start a new chain of restaurants
in New York with this being his first location.
Within the year Unlucky Charley’s
new venture failed.
The building was home to a
variety of small showrooms and offices throughout the rest of the century. Today a tawdry souvenir business engulfs the
Broadway street level where Theodore Starr‘s expansive silver services were
displayed. No. 1126 Broadway, which
bears no architectural similarity to its Siamese twin on Fifth Avenue, is somewhat
neglected; but the distinguished façade erected by Theodore B. Starr in 1877 survives
beautifully intact under a layer of grime.
non-vintage photographs take by the author
I hadn't associated T.B. Starr with women's clothing before, but perhaps the story used to prop mannikins displaying scarfpins and chatelaines? Thanks, as always, for a great post. Laura @gustavmanz.com
ReplyDeleteI had wondered about that too. My thought is possibly it was a clothes closet for the female workers either in the manufacturing shop or in the store proper. It is possible that the shop girls wore uniforms of a type; and the same with the women upstairs. So the pile of clothing could either be what they wore to work and changed out of; or the aprons and such that they put on at work. It's an interesting mystery.
DeleteI arrived here through a search on "Theodore B Starr" silver. Fantastic story and research. Absolutely top notch and very nice that you included pictures of the actual building as it looks today. I have bookmarked your site to come back for more reading on historical NYC buildings.
ReplyDelete