photo by Alice Lum |
As commerce inched closer to the fashionable residential
neighborhoods of Manhattan in the first half of the 19th century,
developers rushed to create new ones further north. By the 1840s what had been the farmland of Robert Murray, roughly running from 33rd to 39th
Street and from Lexington to Fifth Avenue, had been cut into building
plots. There was no longer any trace of
the old Murray estate.
In 1847 the Murray heirs placed restrictions on the building
plots, forbidding all but residential construction and ensuring a high-end
neighborhood of genteel homes. Among the
first to build speculative homes here was attorney Henry H. Butterworth.
Butterworth owned the four plots stretching from No. 105 to
No. 111 East 35th Street. In
1853 he contracted builders Washington A. and Samuel W. Cronk to erect
nearly-matching brownstone-fronted residences.
The houses were completed a year later—handsome four-story
structures in the latest Anglo-Italianate style. Although they sat above English basements
(accessed from the outside), the entrances were nearly at sidewalk level
unlike their Greek Revival counterparts with the high brownstone stoops. The bases were attractively rusticated and
elaborate wrought iron balconies hugged the second floor windows.
Upon their completion, Butterworth sold the string of homes
to the builders. But the Cronks’ timing
could not have been worse. Simultaneously
the national economy was hit with the Financial Panic of 1854; a depression
that sent the new housing market into a plummet. Although the Cronks managed to sell No. 105
to Charles B. Pratt; they were in serious financial straits and in 1857 both
were sued by the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New-York.
Pratt lived in the house only until 1859. It was most likely at some point in the second
half of the century a modest mansard roof was added.
By 1885 the house was owned by lawyer Francis Key Pendleton
and would be scene of tremendous sadness.
The Ohio-born Pendleton came from an illustrious family. His mother was the daughter of Francis Scott
Key, author of lyrics to the “Star Spangled Banner,” and the niece of Chief Justice
Roger B. Taney. Pendleton’s father,
George H. Pendleton, had served several terms as Representative in Congress,
had been candidate for the Vice-Presidency on the McClellan ticket in 1861, and
was a United States Senator from Ohio from 1879 until now. He currently held the position of Minister to
Berlin.
In June 1885 Francis Key Pendleton married Sallie Marie,
whom the Belmont Chronicle in St. Clairsville, Ohio called “the descendant of
an aristocratic French family.” Indeed,
Sallie was from a wealthy family of French planters in the West Indies who
arrived in New York in 1811. Her father
was Camille Marie and her uncle was the fabulously wealthy Peter Marie. (Sallie’s
uncle was a committed bachelor known for his collection of rare books and art
objects. He collected miniatures of the
beautiful society women with whom he became acquainted. Upon his death the Metropolitan Museum of Art
refused to accept the miniatures, deeming them “unsuitable.”)
The Washington Critic called Sallie “a leading belle in New
York society.” Along with the 35th
Street house the Pendeltons owned a cottage in Newport. A few months after the wedding Sallie became ill. Francis Key Pendleton’s mother and 22-year old sister sailed from Germany to help
nurse her. It was a magnanimous gesture; but nine months
after her wedding, Sallie Marie Pendleton died on March 3, 1886.
New York society was understandably shocked; but Francis
Key Pendleton, known as Frank by friends, was emotionally devastated.
His mother and sister remained on in the house for two months to provide support; but
by the end of May were preparing to return to Germany. Then things got even worse for Pendleton.
On May 20 Alice Pendleton and her daughter, Jane Frances,
left the house to take a drive in Central Park.
They walked to Bowles & Co.’s Albemarle stables at Lexington Avenue
and 33rd Street and hired a driver and Victoria. Hugh Reilly, the driver, had his hands full
with the spirited black horse and on Sixth Avenue, under the elevated railroad,
the animal was frightened by a locomotive overhead. The Sun said he “jumped, jolting the ladies
on their seat, but they were in no way alarmed by the occurrence.”
When they arrived in Central Park the horse was spooked
again and galloped away, taking the women on a treacherous ride. Hugh Reilly was dragged, still holding the
reins, and the panicked women jumped from the carriage. Jane Frances landed on the grassy slope where
she lay unconscious. Her mother, whom a
newspaper said “was very stout, failed and fell heavily on the concrete curb
not a few feet from her unconscious daughter.”
The Sun reported “Mrs. Pendleton had been taken up quite
dead on the gravel and laid on the grass by the roadside.” Her body was taken to the Arsenal in the park
and an ambulance removed Jane Frances to the Presbyterian Hospital.
In the meantime, Frank Pendleton was concerned
that his sister and mother were gone so long.
He went to the livery stable where he learned of the accident. Still in mourning over his wife, he arrived
at the Arsenal at the same time as the coroner.
Two days later the open coffin of Alice Pendleton was still in the
parlor at No. 105 East 35th Street.
The Sun explained “In the overwhelming grief in which young Mr.
Pendleton is plunged by the recent loss of his young wife and by the shocking
death of Mrs. Pendleton, no preparations whatever have been made or even
considered for the funeral of Mrs. Pendleton.
Everything in the household is made to depend on the directions expected
to be given by Minister Pendleton by cable.”
The newspaper noted that “Many carriages stopped at the door
of 105 East Thirty-fifth street, and calls were made by sympathizing friends.”
Doctors readied Jane Frances Pendleton to leave the hospital
and return to her brother’s house that day.
She suffered a concussion and “Her nose is broken, but this, it is
believed, will not result in a disfigurement,” said The Sun. The newspaper noted that she had not been
informed of her mother’s death yet.
Finally on May 23 a cable was received at the house from
Berlin. George Pendleton gave
instructions for a funeral service in Zion Protestant Episcopal Church on
Madison Avenue and 38th Street.
Alice’s body was to be buried in Woodlawn Cemetery, next to Sallie. The Sun reported that “A special train will
leave the Grand Central Depot after the church service." Despite her concussion, Jane would be
attending the funeral.
The Sun also noted that in Berlin George Pendleton had
received condolences from the Crown Prince and Princess.
The shock of his wife’s death affected George Pendleton as
well. Two years later when Frank
Pendleton was asked by reporters about his father’s health following a heart
attack, he said “My father’s health has been better during the past winter than
at any time since the terrible shock caused by the accident which resulted in
my mother’s instant death in Central Park two years ago. He has never entirely recovered form that
shock, but a letter from my sister, dated April 5, just as she was leaving Berlin
for Rome, spoke of him as in excellent health.”
In 1890 rumors swirled in the drawing rooms of New York regarding
an impending engagement of Frank with Lizzie La Montagne. Society was first introduced to the Parisian
belle in 1886 when “with her mother and sister, spent the season at Newport and
during the following winter was seen much in society in town,” according to The
Sun later.
The newspaper reported that “She has spent most of her life
in Paris, where her parents have a handsome residence on the Avenue Kleber.” The rumors were “almost immediately afterward
denied,” said The Sun.
The love-stricken couple was waiting to announce their engagement
until Peter Marie could first be informed.
That delicate task having been accomplished by cable on December 2,
1890, the engagement was made public.
The new Mrs. Pendleton was well-received in New York social
circles. The Saint Paul Globe made note
of it. “Really pretty women in society
are few. Many women possess the knack of
babbling amusingly about So-and-So’s silly hat or ‘that funny little
experience on shipboard.’ Mrs. Francis
Key Pendleton is building up a reputation as a woman of unusual cleverness, and
hostesses are beginning to appreciate her.
She keeps the dullest dinner party in good humor and at house parties
she is equally desirable…She is of French descent, and her brothers, the La
Montagues, are known well in the polo field.
Mrs. Pendleton is dark and bright-eyed.
Her face is intellectual, rather than handsome. She has the advantage of being tall and shows
excellent taste in dress.”
The New York Times reported that on April 14, 1894 “Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Pendleton will also travel abroad during the Summer, and will probably
not return until late in the Autumn.” In their absence the house was leased to James V.
Parker. Parker might well have saved
his money, though. The same article in
The Times noted that he “will soon close his home at 105 East Thirty-fifth
Street for the Summer. Mr. Parker will
travel on the Continent until the Autumn.”
The Pendletons rubbed shoulders with the top shelf of
Manhattan society. When Mrs. John Jacob
Astor gave an intimate dinner on December 20, 1897 the Frank and Lizzie sat
down with names like Belmont, Baylies, Whitney, Gerry, Van Rensselaer and Fish.
In 1899 Pendleton sold the 35th Street house to
Willard S. Brown. The wealthy Brown was
an insurance underwriter practicing in partnership with Francis P. Burke. Mrs. Brown, the former Gertrude Williams of
Staten Island, quickly informed newspapers that she was “at home;” the
Victorian announcement informed society that afternoon guests would be welcomed for tea.
In July 1903 Francis Burke died and Willard S. Brown took
over the practice. Next door, at No. 107
lived another attorney, James Marshall.
The next-door neighbors apparently got along quite well and on July 1,
1905 they formed the partnership of Willard S. Brown & Co.
The Browns had a minor scare on September 17, 1907 when they
were awakened around 2:00 at their Newport summer home. Two men were discovered trying to open a
door with a heavy chisel. The New-York
Tribune reported that “A quick flash of electric lights in the house and on the
piazza served to frighten the men away.
The police have found no trace of them.”
Gertrude Brown continued the tradition of upscale
entertainments in the 35th Street house. On December 10, 1912 the Browns “gave a
dinner dance for some of their young married friends,” said The Sun the
following day. “During the dinner and
dance that followed there was music by an orchestra of negro players.”
With the war raging in Europe in 1916 the couple’s son,
Vernon Howland Brown, joined Company H of the Fourth Training Regiment. While Brown was training in Plattsburg, New
York for possible deployment abroad, his squad was locked down in quarantine
because of a measles outbreak in July.
Earlier that year, in January, his mother had continued her
stream of entertainments with a dinner and dance at the house in honor of
Dorothy L. Norris of Philadelphia.
Late in December 1920 Willard Brown purchased the house next
door from his partner, James Marshall.
The business deal provided Brown with a rental property.
Vernon Howland Brown was married to Vouletti T. Proctor on
June 9, 1921. Now alone in the house, the Browns
continued their upscale entertainments, including dinners, dances and musicales. Repeated house guests
were Mr. and Mrs. Harry M. Hart of Philadelphia who were often the guests of
honor at dinners here.
Willard S. Brown sold the house on May 25, 1931 to the 105
East Thirty-fifth Street Corporation.
The house was divided into luxurious apartments and among the tenants
was, interestingly enough, Willard and Gertrude Brown.
Also in the house was the owner of Triest Contracting
Corporation, W. Gustav Triest, and his wife and sons. On January 7, 1932 their son, F. MacDonald Triest,
married Eugenie Quist in St. Bartholomew’s Church Chapel. Young Triest had recently graduated from
Princeton and had worked in his father’s company for about a year.
The newlyweds honeymooned on the West Coast and then set off
on a cross-country automobile trip back home to New York. On the night of February 7, exactly one
month after the wedding, 21-year old F. MacDonald Triest was killed when
another car forced them off an embankment on the Tucson-Nogales highway. Triest’s skull was fractured. His wife, though suffering from shock, was
otherwise uninjured.
The corporation that now owned the Victorian house gave it a
major update. The façade was covered in
stucco, obliterating the first floor rustication. New entrance and window enframements included
foliate keystones. But the most dramatic
change came in the form of sculptural plaques and statuary that lent an
eccentric Mediterranean feel to the structure.
With its 1930s facelift No. 105 stood out on the reserved block. Note the ornate window guards at the second floor. photo NYPL Collection |
On November 29, 1940 Willard Brown died at the age of 70. His firm had become the Northern Insurance
Company of New York. His nearly half
century of living in the neighborhood was reflected in his position as
treasurer of the Murray Hill Association as the time of his death.
Marble plaques of frolicking cherubs adorned the facade -- photo by Alice Lum |
Although in 1947 the Department of Buildings still listed
the property as a “one family dwelling,” it was most certainly not. In the late 1940s through the ‘50s Picture
Magazines, Inc. was here, publishers of pulp magazines like Hit, Laff, Mr. and
Famous Police Cases. Laff Magazine
advertised in 1947 for “photos of girls or photos of unusual new interest for
which they pay $5.00 each upon acceptance.”
photo by Alice Lum |
From May 1951 through September 1953 BIP Comic publishers
was in the building, during which time it produced comic books like Atomic
Attack, Gunsmoke and Youthful Romance, among others. At the
same time the Advertising Club had its offices here.
There were still apartments on the upper floors and newspaper
man Robert B. Parker lived here in the early 1950s, until his heart attack and
death in an East Side restaurant in 1955 at the age of 48. At the time of his death the veteran foreign
correspondent was United Nations bureau chief for The New York Daily News.
In 2005 the house was converted to four apartments. The unconventional 1930s façade with its
plaques and amazingly-surviving statue is delightfully out of place and
eye-catching.
Among the row of once-identical homes, No. 105 begs for the spotlight with its unusual 1931 makeover -- photo by Alice Lum |
A beautiful piece of architecture -Hanna Marie
ReplyDeleteLizzie la Montagne was grand-daughter of Thomas E Davis and Anne Power. Thomas E Davis was a property developer in New York from about 1830. Created New Brighton, and Federal style houses on East 8th Street, called St Mark’s Place. Others included Carroll Place, on the block from Thompson Place to Laguardia Place. Lizzie's cousins included playboy Frederick Gebhard (lover of Lillie Langtry) and his sister Isabelle Neilson. Her daughter married Reginald Claypoole Vanderbilt II. Many other cousins married into European aristocracy. An uncle of Lizzie was John F A Sanford, involved with landmark court case Dred Scott v Sandford [sic].
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