photo by Alice Lum |
Adelaide Townsend Douglas was married to capitalist William
Proctor Douglas. Although he had been a
member of the first American international polo team, he was best known as a
yachtsman. In 1871 he successfully
defended the America’s Cup with his schooner Sappho. But since 1895, according to Jean Strouse’s “Morgan:
American Financier,” Adelaide had been carrying on an affair with Morgan.
Rumors of Morgan’s and Adelaide’s affair never rose above a
whisper. William Douglas moved out of
their home on East 46th Street in 1903. In 1908, after son J. Gordon Douglas married,
William moved again, this time to No. 12 West 76th Street and, finally, the
Social Register listed him and Adelaide separately.
Meanwhile, John J. Murphy had sold his mansion at No. 57
Park Avenue just weeks following the cave-in.
The New York Times reported that it was “one of the houses which was
badly damaged by the subway cave-in” and described it as “four stories in
height…It is understood that before the cave-in Mr. Murphy held the property at
$65,000.” (That valuation would translate to over $1
million today.)
Now, in 1909 with only Sybil left at home, Adelaide laid plans
for a new home—one just steps from the J. P. Morgan mansion at Madison Avenue and
37th Street. On April 8, 1909
The Times reported that “Architect Horace Trumbauer of Philadelphia has filed
plans for the new six-story residence to be built by Mrs. Adelaide L. Douglas
at 57 Park Avenue. It is to be 25.1 feet
front, with a façade of granite and limestone, and will cost $120,000.” It is interesting to note that by now,
although never divorced, the newspapers referred to Adelaide by her own name and
not her husband’s.
The unlivable mansion of John Murphy had been purchased in a
settlement by the Interboro Rapid Transit Company. Now
it was razed to be replaced by an elegant and restrained townhouse in the
French Classic style of Louis XVI.
Apparently Adelaide did not need to worry about the high cost of the
structure—her grandson later reported that Morgan financed it; and nearly half
a century later The New York Times brashly announced that it was “originally
built for J. P. Morgan.”
Construction went on for two years and in 1911 it was completed. Trumbauer managed to ornament the house with
exquisite bas relief carvings, French ironwork and a full menu of window shapes
and dimensions; all the while maintaining calm and elegance.
Urns of full-blown roses and panels depicting children adorn the facade (encroached upon by creeping ivy) photo by Alice Lum |
Guests entered into a marble-lined reception hall. On the first floor was the sumptuous dining
room. Above, where tall French doors
opened onto the Park Avenue balcony, were two salons decorated in the French 18th
century style. Adelaide’s bedroom was on
the third floor, facing the rear, along with the library to the front.
The one guest who did not enter through the double entrance
doors on Park Avenue was J. P. Morgan.
According to family members, the millionaire had a private entrance at
the rear of the house.
If New York society rebuffed those involved in extramarital
affairs, it made an exception for the fabulously wealthy. Dinner parties in the Park Avenue house were
regularly noted in the society pages—and attended.
Adelaide was alone in the mansion following her daughter’s
marriage. Edith—referred to as Sybil by
friends—was married on January 27, 1913 in fashionable St. George’s
Chapel. She was wed to William Fitzhugh
Whitehouse. Although The Sun, cautioned
that “only relatives and a few intimate friends will witness the ceremony,”
those who attended the wedding included society’s elite. The Times listed both Mrs. Cornelius
Vanderbilt and “Mrs. Vanderbilt,” Colonel and Mrs. William Jay, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Iselin, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Iselin, and Alfonso de Navarro among others.
Following the ceremony, Park Avenue was lined with smart vehicles and waiting drivers as Adelaide hosted the reception in the house.
photo by Alice Lum |
Adelaide continued the expected schedule of a wealthy New
York socialite. Each summer her Newport
estate “Cozy Nook” was opened and every fall it was closed. In front of No. 57 Park Avenue, horse-drawn
carriages gave way to shining limousines that dropped guests off for dinner
parties and receptions.
Adelaide made the change as well. In 1932 her chauffeur was 22-year old Servie
Laccesaglio who, with other staff, lived in the house. Apparently Laccesaglio felt his Depression
Era wages and free board were not enough to see him through.
Early on the morning of December 30, 1932 the chauffeur and
two other men noticed Brooklyn restaurant owner Max Advocate emerging from the
20th Avenue subway station in Brooklyn on his way home. The men forced him into their automobile,
drove him several miles then robbed him of $150 in cash, a $25 check and his
bank book.
A passerby had seen the abduction, noted the license plate
and notified the police. Unfortunately
for Laccesaglio and his accomplices, the New York Police Department had recently
installed radios in its patrol cars. The
New York Times credited the technological innovation with their arrests. “The police radio system early this morning
snared three men half an hour after they had released a Brooklyn restaurant
proprietor,” it said.
Adelaide Douglas’s young chauffeur learned that crime does
not pay--and assumedly lost a job and free room.
Three years later, on October 23, 1935, the 83-year old colorful
Adelaide Townsend Douglas died in her Park Avenue mansion. Ironically, her New York Times obituary
related more about her husband’s life and accomplishments than it did about her.
The Douglas mansion sat vacant for a period, then was
leased by Athur Charn in June 1937. Before long, however, the house would be
converted to high-end apartments. Here
in 1940 Maurice and Martha Speiser lived.
The couple auctioned off their
extensive art collection in 1944 at the Parke-Bernet Galleries. Included were 115 canvases by Picasso,
Chagall, Matisse and other masters; 15 sculptures by artists like Epstein and
Brancusi; and 761 books on modern art.
Among the masterworks sold were Modigliani’s Garcon a la Vest Blue and Utrillo’s
Eglise Sainte Marguerite.
In 1942 the Douglas Estate sold the house built for
Adelaide. For a few years it housed the
offices of American British Technology, Inc. and the Welfare League for Retarded
Children, Inc. Then on June 17, 1959 the
United States Olympic Association, Inc. announced that “shortly will have a new
home.” The organization, which had been
operating from the Hotel Biltmore, purchased the house at No. 57 Park Avenue.
photo by Alice Lum |
The Olympic Association remained in the Douglas mansion for
nearly two decades. In 1978 what was now
referred to as the “Olympic House” was sold for $5 million to the Government of
Guatemala as its Mission to the United Nations. As the Landmarks Preservation Commission
remarked the following year, “Despite changes to the interior of the house, the
exterior remains almost entirely intact.
As such it is a reminder of the period before World War I when Park
Avenue was an elegant residential thoroughfare.”
photo by Alice Lum |
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