photo by Alice Lum |
In 1898 the estate of John H. Mohlmann commissioned civil
engineer and architect C. Wilson Atkins to design an ambitious six-story loft
building. Construction began in 1899
and was completed a year later. Atkins’
building was the result of a happy marriage of Renaissance and Romanesque
Revival styles. A chunky cube of buff-colored
brick trimmed with brownstone, its utilitarian function played second stage to
its handsome design.
The Jay Street side stretched 78 feet, three feet shorter than
the Greenwich Street façade.
Nevertheless Atkins somewhat surprisingly made the Jay Street
elevation more imposing. Here three
grand arches, four bays side, create a near-monumental look to the
structure. Passersby on the wider,
busier Greenwich Street saw three arches, half as large, flanked by long
rectangular bays finished with brownstone corbelling. A
fixed metal awning wrapped the structure at the truck level to protect
deliverymen and products from the elements.
photo by Alice Lum |
The Mohlmanns used the new building for its wholesale
grocery business and leased out space to other wholesalers. One of
the first tenants was not in the dairy or produce business at all. Tarrant & Co. was a wholesale druggist
firm. Just as the Mohlmann building was
being completed Tarrant & Co. met with misfortune. The New York Times reported that its “store
was completely wrecked by fire and explosion at the corner of Greenwich and
Warren Streets on Oct. 29, 1900.” The
wholesalers recovered and leased space in the new building.
A similar fate struck another non-food related firm three
years later. Telephony magazine reported
in January 1904 that “James S. Barron & Company, New York, dealers in
general electrical supplies, were burned out on April 8 [1903], suffering a
loss by fire upon building and contents of $185,000, fully covered by
insurance. This enterprising firm immediately opened up headquarters at 339-343
Greenwich street, where it will conduct its business until the completion of
its handsome new building on the old site, which will be about May 1, 1905.
The firm was a substantial dealer in supplies for the
growing electrical industry—everything from hardware for power lines and poles
to battery-powered flashlights. In 1904 James
S. Barron & Company advertised the newfangled flash lights in Business, the
Magazine for Office Store and Factory.
Full-size flashlights sold for as little as 30 cents, and “baby flash
lights” for 25 cents. The “Ever Ready” electric
flash lights were advertised with “no chemicals, oil, smoke or odor. No heat, matches, trouble or danger. No wire to go wrong. Useful for Clergymen, Farmers, Plumbers, Miners,
Railroad Employees, Bookkeepers, Bank Employees, Hunters and Travelers…Can be
carried into cellar of leaking gas, or put into keg of powder. Wind or storm will not effect [sic] the
light.”
Although the Mohlmann family stayed in the building, they
leased the entire structure to the Central Consumers’ Wine and Liquor Company
in 1904. Despite the change in
management, business continued uninterrupted for the various tenants.
One business that was interrupted, however, was that of
Henry Sloane Company. The firm conducted
a wholesale business in canned and frozen eggs, landing the lucrative contract
for supplying the National Biscuit Company with its preserved eggs early in
1907. The business came to a sudden halt
on July 18, 1907 when owner Henry Romer was arrested for “conducting his
business under an assumed name and for not registering his business name with
the County Clerk.”
Romer was no stranger to time behind bars. He had been arrested in Boston two years
earlier by Federal authorities and extradited to Minnesota, “charged with
swindling farmers in egg purchases,” according to The Sun on July 19,
1907. The newspaper said “Romer is said
to have started the Henry Sloane Company in Boston several years ago, but his
partners didn’t like his business deals and got rid of him.”
Romer’s mother, Mrs. Emma Jaegers, expressed her surprise as
her son’s arrest. She explained the
difference in their surnames saying that “about three years ago he changed his
name to Sloane, simply because he didn’t like his own name.” She apparently had no explanation of the name
he was currently using.
In 1912 Goode Brothers & Kiefer Co., was here, dealing
in butter. Towards the end of 1911 District Attorney
Whitman eyed the noticeable rise in the prices of butter and eggs with
suspicion. In January 1912 he launched
a Grand Jury investigation to look into possible price fixing on the part of
wholesalers. Whitman put Assistant
District Attorney Deford “in charge of the butter investigation” and on January
31 P. H. Keifer of Goode Brothers & Kiefer was subpoenaed to testify before
the Grand Jury.
From around 1918 through the 1920s J. W. Meloney Co. was
here, wholesalers in “fancy white eggs” and the sole distributors of Meloney’s
Coast to Coast Egg Containers. Meloney
boasted it was “one of the largest dealers of white Leghorn eggs in New York.” Other butter and egg companies included Nathan
Brothers, George M. Rittenhouse & Co. and Gudekieffer & Co.
In addition to "fancy eggs" J. W. Meloney offered its own containers -- American Poultry Journal, January 1921 (copyright expired) |
The food-dealing tenants experienced labor problems in 1920 when the Food
Teamsters went on strike. The union men,
not content with picketing, resorted to violence and destruction of
property. United States District
Attorney Francis G. Caffey promised prosecutions when strike leaders threatened
to destroy $1 million worth of food. He
said that every man should have “liberty of employment. But if there is a conspiracy to destroy food,
that is another matter and action must follow.
No body of men can threaten to starve a city and get away with it.”
At 11:30 on the morning of April 15, 1920 a horse-drawn wagon
owned by Goode Brothers & Kieffer Co. was attacked by about thirty-five
strikers. They slashed the ropes holding
the cargo and followed the wagon with its terrified driver to the Jay Street
warehouse. Police were, fortunately, on
hand to disperse the mob.
The company was obviously undaunted, for a month after the
attack, on May 20, 1920, the New-York Tribune reported that Mrs. H. J. Mohlmann
had leased the building to the Goode Brothers and Kieffer Company.
In 1943 the building was purchased by the Bazzini Family,
processors and wholesalers of dried fruits and nuts. The A. L. Bazzini Company operation remained
at Park Place where it was founded in 1886 and continued leasing the Greenwich
Street building to wholesale food firms.
Evelyn Packing Company was here at mid-century, dealing in pickled fish;
while various dairy wholesalers continued to fill the building.
The Washington Market was demolished in the late 1960s when
the wholesale produce industry moved far north to Hunts Point in the
Bronx. Rather than follow, the Bazzini
Brothers moved into their building at No. 339-343 Greenwich Street. They affixed large metal letters over the
central arches of both elevations announcing “Bazzini Brothers” and the date of
the company’s founding, 1886—understandably mistaken by many for the date of
the building’s construction.
The Bazzini Bros. founding date is often mistaken for the building's construction date. photo by Alice Lum |
By November 1999 the building had been converted to just ten
luxury residential rental spaces. The $7
million project resulted in units ranging from 2,000 to 4,500 square feet with
monthly rents in 1999 at between $7,200 to $17,000.
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