photo from the Auction Catalogue of Collection of Charles T. Yerkes, New York, 1910 (copyright expired) |
When Charles Tyson Yerkes decided to leave Chicago for New
York City in 1895 he had everything he wanted—a staggering fortune and successful
career as a financier and street railroad titan. Three years earlier he had donated nearly
$300,000 to the University of Chicago to build the Yerkes Observatory in
Wisconsin which included the world’s largest telescope. The only thing he could not achieve was
acceptance into high society.
Charles Tyson Yerkes -- Catalogue of paintings and sculpture in the collection of Charles T. Yerkes, New York, 1904 (copyright expired) |
Yerkes had started out in the brokerage business in
Philadelphia, where he also began developing traction and street railways. As his fortune increased, the married Yerkes
noticed the 16-year old Mary Adelaide Moore.
Mary, called Mollie by her friends, was one of nine children of a
chemist and before long was Yerkes’ mistress.
Charles Yerkes was more ambitious than scrupulous and in
1871 was sent to prison for embezzling $400,000 in city money. His teen-aged mistress faithfully visited
him there, earning her the nickname “prison angel” by the prison officials. Yerkes discovered upon his release that both his
and Mary’s reputations among society were irreparably ruined—he was seen as a
scoundrel, she as a home wrecker.
He divorced his wife and in 1880 took Mary to Chicago where
they married. Mary failed utterly as a
hostess, partly because of Yerkes’ merciless business tactics. By 1896 when the Yerkes New York mansion was nearing
completion at No. 864 Fifth Avenue the robber baron had taken a new teenaged
sweetheart. Emilie Grigsby was exactly
the age that Mary had been when he met her—just sixteen. When Yerkes and his wife moved to New York,
Emilie would not be far behind.
The mansion on Fifth Avenue was called by a Chicago
newspaper “a palace.” Designed by R. H.
Robertson, the brownstone pile rose five stories and stretched 100 feet along
Fifth Avenue—four times the width of an average rowhouse—and 153 feet along 68th
Street. The Yerkes mansion announced that he and Mary had arrived.
The house was called “not only one of the handsomest in New York, but
it is one of the most extensive.”
The house next door and the lot behind the mansion would become art galleries--photograph by Byron Company, from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York -- http://collections.mcny.org/C.aspx?VP3=SearchResult_VPage&VBID=24UP1GG3PPFF&SMLS=1&RW=1366&RH=603 |
The outer entrance doors were framed in bronze and the inner
doors were platinum-plated bronze. Upon entering the vestibule, the visitor was
surrounded in marble of various shades and colors. The walls were clad in polished red
marble. Pilasters separated panels of
different colored marble, the floor was inlaid black and sienna marble and even
the ceiling was marble in “a richly coffered design.”
The two-story entrance hall, like the vestibule, was
completely constructed of marble. “Just
beyond the door are two columns with pilasters of rich purple marble, with Ionic
capitals of white marble and bases of Istrian marble,” as described by Barr
Ferre later. Yerkes apparently felt
that marble was reflective of success and taste and even the Drawing Room was
clad in the stone. “The walls, from
floor to ceiling, are wholly encased in Cipollino marble,” said Ferre.
The entrance hall. Mary Yerkes would address reporters from the second floor here in 1905 --Auction Catalogue of Collection of Charles T. Yerkes, New York, 1910 (copyright expired) |
The grand marble staircase rose to the second floor loggia
and “serves as a monumental approach to the Italian Palm Garden,” wrote
Ferre. “It is a spacious and delightful
place, having the true character of an indoor, or winter garden…All of this
interior is of white marble, save the cornice, which is copper.”
As with most lavish homes of the 1890's the Yerkes mansion
held period rooms. The music room was
Louis XV in style with frescos by Will H. Low.
The dining room was Elizabethan with highly-carved quartered oak walls
and a vaulted ceiling. There was an East
Indian Room, an Empire Room, and a Japanese Room—a near requirement of the time. The library was finished with antique 16th
century paneling.
The main bedrooms, dressing rooms and bathrooms on the
second floor were sumptuous. The
fireplace of the Charles’ bedroom was black onyx and the “adjoining
Dressing-Room is trimmed with rosewood and has a gold-leaf frieze and
ceiling. His bed had once belonged to
King Ludwig of Bavaria and sat upon a dais with two steps covered in green
velvet. The Bathroom has a polished
marble floor and wainscot, above which is a gold frieze and ceiling with a
silver cornice. The bathtub and basin are
of marble and a shower is enclosed within a marble screen.”
Mary’s oval boudoir was pronounced “one of the most charming
[rooms] in the Mansion.” Her bed had belonged to King Leopold of
Belgium.
Below ground were the billiard room, a bathroom for guests, and
the wine cellar. The walls of the
billiard room were covered in leather with patterns formed by brass-headed
nails.
Although he had failed in Philadelphia and Chicago, Yerkes
attempted to push his way into New York society. He dressed Mary in the most expensive
fashions and jewels. But again she
fell short. Wealthy New Yorkers already
knew of their reputations and Mary’s heavy drinking and clumsy manners added to
the problem. She made public scenes, once interrupting a
play by loudly announcing that the “Lady Teazle” on stage was incorrect—the actress
was wearing pink whereas a portrait in her husband’s collection proved that
Lady Teazle wore yellow.
Mary’s fury over her husband’s flagrant affair with Emilie
Grigsby intensified when he built her a magnificent Park Avenue mansion not far
away. The younger woman was banned from
the Fifth Avenue house where Mary more-and-more lived in isolation. According to The Evening World, “Mrs. Yerkes barred
her doors to Miss Grigsby the moment she discovered the truth, and the
estrangement of husband and wife dated from that moment, although to the outer
world they continued to appear as before.”
While Mary drank and sulked, her husband collected. The house filled with irreplaceable artwork
and statuary as he spent freely at the auction houses of Europe. The valuable items in the mansion were
tempting targets for accomplished sneak thieves. One of them was the cultured and educated
Elijah C. Harvey.
The New York Times described Harvey on May 12, 1899 as “a
mulatto, thirty years old, who is a graduate of an educational institute at
Andover, Mass., and who afterward studied for the ministry.” As spring weather that year induced
housekeepers to open mansion windows, Harvey took advantage of the
opportunity. He would brazenly climb the
brownstone stoops and enter the homes through the windows. On the morning of May 3 it was the Yerkes
parlor he entered.
For months the East 67th Street Police Station
had been receiving complaints from residents of “a burglar who was making
extensive depredations,” said The Times.
Just two days before the Yerkes break-in, the night watchman at the
George Crocker mansion at 64th Street and 5th Avenue had
nearly captured the crook.
Now this morning housekeeper Mrs. Margaret Fitzpatrick
walked into the Yerkes parlor just in time to see Harvey slipping out the
window with a silver basket valued at $1,000.
The openwork basket was easily identifiable; on one side was Mary’s
monogram and on the bottom her full name: Mary Adelaide Yerkes.
Two days later when Harvey was detained by Policeman Cornelius
Glynn, the burglar put on his best cultured act. “Is it not possible for you to be mistaken in
your identification? I never committed a
felonious act in my life,” he said. “I
protest against this outrage. You must
have something more than mere surmise on which to take me into custody.”
When that tactic did not seem to be working, Harvey pulled a
razor and lunged at the officer. He was
arrested and among the pawn tickets in his pockets was one for the silver
basket which he pawned for $30. “Nearly
all the articles were pawned in the name of Yerkes,” reported The Times.
Even though Charles and Mary were essentially estranged—he spent
most of his time in hotels—he kept her in high style. When Emily Grigsby acquired a new Columbia Hanson
automobile in 1903, Mary got a custom vehicle.
“One of the handsomest of the electrics ever built is the special Victoria,
owned by Mrs. Charles T. Yerkes, of No. 864 Fifth Avenue,” said Automobile
Topics.
By 1904 Yerkes’ art collection had become so great that it
required a separate building. The millionaire purchased the mansion next
door at No. 860 Fifth Avenue and filed plans to convert it to a gallery. On April 21 The New York Times reported that “The
house will be converted into a one-story building, 40 feet front, 100 feet
deep, and 41-1/2 feet high, with a façade of carved brownstone and brick. The interior is to be finished in carved
marble, decorated with ornamental columns to harmonize with the Winter garden
which it will adjoin. It is to have
ornamental doorway opening into the present picture gallery.”
Two art gallery annexes, one to the rear on 68th Street, and one replacing the mansion next door at No. 860 held Yerkes' massive collection -- photo Library of Congress |
Architect Henry Ives Cobb designed the annex which cost
$20,000—or about $425,000. Shortly
thereafter a second gallery was added to the rear of the mansion on 68th
Street, also designed by Cobb.
The gallery was a virtual museum -- Auction Catalogue of Collection of Charles T. Yerkes, New York, 1910 (copyright expired) |
Yerkes would not enjoy his new art galleries for long. Before
the 68-year old traveled to London in 1905 with Emilie Grigsby he discovered that
Mary had found a paramour—a 29-year old fortune hunter named Wilson
Mizner. Prior to his voyage, Yerkes
pressured Mary for a divorce and tried to get her to leave the mansion,
threatening to leave her out of his will.
She refused but was left seriously concerned about her security.
While in London Yerkes became seriously ill. Emilie nursed him for five weeks until he was
well enough to sail home. In the
meantime, Mary did some snooping. Later,
in 1909, The Federal Reporter would say “In October, 1905, when Mr. Yerkes
was in London, Mrs. Yerkes had his safe in 864 Fifth avenue, the combination of
which was known only to Mr. Yerkes…drilled open, and she found in it, among
other things…a bill of sale dated Mary 24, 1896, assigning to her ‘her
executors, administrators and assigns, all and singular the furniture and
household goods together with each and every painting and picture now contained
in the house, No. 864 Fifth avenue.”
As long as Charles Yerkes died before he had a chance to
change the will, Mary was in good shape.
Yerkes arrived in New York in November and went directly
from the steamer to the Waldorf-Astoria.
Had he gone home, he would have found that Wilson Mizner was living in
his mansion. Instead, doctors and nurses
crowded into his suite in the hotel and tried to save him. Rather than asking to see Mary, he repeatedly
called for Emilie. The beautiful young
mistress stayed by his side, in obvious despair, while doctors advised “against
the visit of Mrs. Yerkes,” according to newspapers.
He died on December 29, 1905 with Mary and her sister in an
adjoining room. Mary briefly considered going into
the room to reconcile; then told her sister “It is too late now,” and after his
death commented “I think I did right. He
treated me shamefully.”
Charles T. Yerkes’ body was removed from the Waldorf-Astoria
in a wicker basket and taken to the mansion on Fifth Avenue where it was
transferred into a rich wooden casket.
Mary had the house protected by a team of detectives to keep unwanted
interlopers—presumably including Emilie Grigsby—away from the funeral. Roundsman Sheehan told reporters “We have
orders to shoot any one who tries to go up those steps. And we’ll carry out orders.”
Yerkes's coffin, draped in black velvet and dripping with
purple orchids, was carried down the brownstone steps to the hearse by six
detectives. The Evening World reported “Only
six carriages followed the hearse, and neither Miss Emilie Grigsby nor any
member of her family was in the cortege.”
New York society waited to hear if Emilie would be
beneficiary to any of Yerkes’s millions.
But he had died before he had time to change his will and on January
3, 1906 the terms were publicized. The will, according to The Ottowa Free Trader on January 5, “leaves
practically all the vast estate, estimated at $15,000,000, to Mrs. Yerkes and
the two children for their life use…After the death of Mrs. Yerkes the family
home and its magnificent art collection, supported by an endowment of $750,000,
becomes a public gallery.”
The newspaper added “Whatever provision was made for Miss Grigsby…if
any, evidently was made by gift before the magnate’s death. It is reported that Mr. Yerkes, only a few
days before his death, gave Miss Grigsby a check for something like $250,000,
which was dated ahead, and therefore is worthless, as the magnate died before
the date of the check.”
Emilie Grigsby, however, had nothing to worry about
financially. Charles T. Yerkes had left
her quite well taken care of.
If Mary Yerkes still had any aspirations of social climbing,
they were dashed when the newspapers reported of her marriage to Wilson Mizner less
than a month after her husband’s death.
On February 1, 1906 The New York Times said “Mrs. Mary Adelaide
Yerkes, the widow of Charles T. Yerkes, and Wilson Mizner were married at the
home of Mrs. Yerkes at 864 Fifth Avenue, at 8:30 o’clock on Tuesday evening.” The newspaper added “Mrs. Mizner is 45 years
old. Mr. Mizner is not yet 30.”
The Times shocked proper readers by saying “Wilson Mizner
has been in town for several weeks. He
has bene stopping at the Hotel Astor, and has received many telephone messages
from Mrs. Yerkes. Immediately after the
receipt of every message Mr. Mizner went in a cab to the Yerkes residence.”
Mary quickly denied the story until it was no longer of any
use. On February 3 The Sun said “Mrs.
Mary Adelaide Yerkes-Mizner owned up yesterday.
Yodled to on the white marble balcony of her house at 864 Fifth avenue
by young Wilson Mizner of California, Alaska and elsewhere, she admitted she
had fibbed from dread of premature and unpleasant publicity.”
Mizner had promised reporters that morning that his wife
would see them. “In front of the Yerkes
mansion at 864 Fifth avenue there were more reporters,” said The Sun. “The newcomers piled out of their rigs and
banked up around the bridegroom, who towered above them.”
Mizner spoke in a street dialect normally unheard on refined
Fifth Avenue. “I am going in to see my
wife. You’ll hear something in fifteen
minutes. That’s on the square. You can take it from me.”
When the butler begrudgingly admitted the horde of reporters
into the Japanese Room, Wilson addressed them.
“Mrs. Mizner doesn’t exactly care to make a formal statement about our
marriage, but she does want to let all her fiends know that the marriage took
place just as I have said…Now, fellows, just step this way and Mrs. Yerkes
herself will appear and confirm the marriage.”
Mary finally appeared on the marble balcony above the
reporters. She wore a silk kimono,
apologized for the “miscommunication,” and said she was happy she had
married. “I hope you will all get
married, too, if you are not already,” she said. And then she excused herself.
Mizner told reporters “I suppose some of Mrs. Mizner’s
relatives are sore, but you can bet your last dollar Mrs. Mizner is happy.”
Before long it was Mary, more than her relatives, who was
sore. She realized that Mizner was only
after her millions and shortly after the wedding she told a reporter “Just
another idol shattered. That’s what all
this money has done for me. Robbed me of
all my real friends, made me doubt them all, suspect and fear them.” She divorced Wilson Mizner in May 1907 and
arranged to take back the name Yerkes.
Even with Wilson Mizner out of the house, Mary’s life did
not get easier. Days after
the divorce, Joseph D. Redding appeared.
Redding was the lawyer Mary had hired in 1904 when her financial security seemed tenuous. The lawyer
was retained to “obtain for her a share of the property of Yerkes including a
share of his bonds, stocks, and all securities.” He claimed she agreed to give him twenty
percent of whatever she received. Then,
the day following Charles Yerkes’ death, he received a letter from Mary
dismissing him. Redding now brought
suit against her for his twenty per-cent commission.
Her troubles continued.
Within a month she was riding down Jerome Avenue in her automobile with
two other women “when the party ran foul of Policeman Silverbaur,” reported The
Sun on June 10. Mary’s chauffeur, Edward
Roshing, was arrested for speeding despite her protesting that they were indeed
not going fast. In order to get home
Mary gave her house as security so her chauffeur could be released.
On June 25, 1908 Mary was once again riding in her car
chauffeured by Roshing. Also in the automobile were Catherine Manack and Mary A. Fitzpatrick and
Mary’s footman. As the car entered
Washington Square Park from West 4th Street, 11-year old Dominick
Pasquale ran in front of it.
Little Dominick was struck and the footman, Edward Hurley,
grabbed the boy in his arms. “Mrs.
Yerkes threw open the door of the tonneau, and, reaching her arms out to the
lad, said to the foorman: ‘Give him to me and then drive to St. Vincent’s
Hospital,’” reported The Times. On the way to the hospital Mary comforted the boy “with
promises of baseballs and bats and all sorts of other things if he would only
be brave and try not to cry.”
At the hospital it was determined that the boy had severe
internal injuries. Mary asked the
physician to “do everything in his power for the boy.”
Once again Edward Roshing found himself under arrest and,
once again, Mary Yerkes was without a ride home. She asked Lt. Noble to send a policeman with
her chauffeur so he might drive her home before being arrested. Despite her pleas, she was compelled to send
to a nearby garage to hire a driver to take her home in her car.
Mary’s greatest problems were to come. The will was contested. Later The New York Times explained “When a division of
the estate was attempted, the widow maintained that the Fifth Avenue house and
the art collection was her property under deeds of assignment made by her
husband. This was not upheld by the
probate courts of Cook County, Illinois, where Yerkes had his residence.” Mary was forced to give up the Fifth Avenue
mansion and the art collection, all of which was sold at auction.
An advertisement in the New-York Tribune on February 20,
1910 listed part of the “very important collection of exceedingly valuable
ancient and modern paintings.” Included
were works of art by Rodin, Houdon, Falconet, Boucher and Van Loo. Antiques included Renaissance and Flemish
tapestries, Persian rugs of the 15th and 16th centuries
and paintings of the great masters.
There were four Rembrandts, four works by Franz Hals, and paintings by
Boucher, Breughel, Holbein, Raphael, Rubens Watteau and many others.
The auction lasted for days and newspapers reported the
staggering amounts paid for rare items.
A sword owned by Oliver Cromwell and dated 1650 sold for $1,500. A life-sized bronze sculpture of Diana by
Houdon brought $51,000; two Carrara marble sculptures by Rodin were purchased
by an anonymous donor as gifts to the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
If Manhattan’s elite never passed through the Yerkes
doorways for social functions, they did for the sale. Among the buyers were Mrs. Cornelius
Vanderbilt, Mrs. Cooper Hewitt, Seth Milliken, Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, Mrs.
Herman Oelrichs, and Mrs. Samuel Untermyer.
Charles T. Yerkes fabulous mansion became home to Louis
Terah Haggin. Haggin had started out
life as a lawyer; but with the death of his father in 1914 he took over the
presidency of the Cerro de Pasco Copper Corporation. Of his father’s $20 million estate, Haggin
had inherited nearly $4 million, which was quickly increased with the
directorships in other companies he took over from his father.
The widowed executive lived alone in the massive mansion
with his staff of servants. His
daughter, Eila, who was married to Robert Tittle McKee, lived nearby at No. 136
East 79th Street. A tireless
worker, he was still going routinely to his office in 1929 at the age of 81.
In the middle of March that year, however, Haggin contracted
pneumonia. He was confined to his bed in
the mansion for ten days until he died there on March 26.
Prior to July 1937 the Yerkes mansion and galleries had become a garden to Thomas Fortune Ryan's home -- photo NYPL Collection |
On December 13, 1925 The New York Times reported that neighbor Thomas Fortune Ryan had purchased the house and galleries for $1.1 million. The buildings, it reported, were "to be torn down to enlarge the flower garden of Thomas Fortune Ryan...which will probably be the most valuable garden site in the world." In July 1937 a modern apartment building was erected on the site.
photo by Alice Lum |
If I'm not mistaken, Wilson Mizner was the brother of famed Palm Beach architect Addison Mizner. Wilson went on to play a part in as a huckster in the great Florida land boom- and bust of the 1920's. it is said that he was being cross examined by the attorney of a man he had defrauded. " Did you, or did you not tell my client that he could grow nuts on the land you sold him?", the attorney demanded. Mizner supposedly replied, "No. I told him he could go nuts on the land".
ReplyDeleteMary seems to have had "a thing" for shysters.
Mr. Miller, your columns are most interesting and your knowledge of Manhattan architecture is formidable. However, I believe that the current building at the site of the Yerkes mansion was designed by Sylvan Bien, not Candela/Carpenter. creation.
ReplyDeletethanks for catching that. There was apparently a Candela-designed structure slated for the site; but it was either never built or had a short existence.
DeleteThanks for highlighting yet another very little known Fifth Avenue mansion. Could have been upper Manhattan's version of the Morgan Museum but unfortunately it was not be.
ReplyDeleteTe last picture is wrong. Rosario Candela and James Carpenter never designed anything look like that. It is a post war building.
ReplyDeleteI love your blog! I just wanted to let you know that a large part of L.T. Haggin's art collection is on display a the Haggin Museum in Stockton, California. They were a gift from Eila and Robert McKee, made in Louis Terah Haggin's name. The collection consists of over 240 works.
ReplyDeleteThe interesting part is that many of these paintings had been originally hung in the Haggin's San Francisco home, but were moved to New York in the 1890s. If they had remained in San Francisco, they would have been destroyed during the earthquake and fire of 1906.
There is also a mantel in the atrium of the museum that says it is from the Haggin's Fifth Avenue mansion. I suspect there may have been more than one Haggin Fifth Avenue mansion, but it's possible this one came from the Yerke's Mansion.
A great post on one of the more obscure New York mansions. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteI believe that there was a house owned by Ben Ali Haggin on the site of the present Rosario Candela designed 834 Fifth Avenue.
ReplyDeleteThe Yerkes mansion was demolished by make way for a garden , that picture is of a garden built I believe by Thomas Fortune Ryan and he used 3 marble columns from the Yerkes mansion in his garden. Then the whole site was demolished for the apartment building.
ReplyDeleteChauncy -- thanks for that clarification!
Deletesorry i meant 32 marble columns and yes it was set that low at basement level. there is a picture of it in "the great houses of new york" book
DeleteI do believe that the modern building took over .... H.O. and L. Havemeyer's mansion and collected property from their children. see: "The havemeyers: Impressionism comes to America". Frances Weitzenhoffer. 1986 Harry N. Abrams, New York. The demise of the house is explained in Andrew Alpern's book about the Rosario Candela, and the Carpenter designed apartment buildings. In my own words: the Havemeyer house on the corner and at least two other properties adjoining, were demolished to make way for an apartment building. The "depression" put a halt on the building, and the space was used as a parking lot, sometime after W.W. II, this building was created.
ReplyDeleteThis was indispensable in acquiring the exact date of the Mizner-Yerkes fiasco wedding date. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteHighly recommended: Alva Johnston's The Legendary Mizners (1953), a biography of the two brothers. You will have to travel to Pluto to find a funnier (wit) book. Ignore the horrible illustrations.
I am playing the role of Mary Yerkes (Myra in the show) in the Stephen Sondheim musical, Road Show, based on the life of Addison and Wilson Mizner. Thank you for so much information on who she was! I was actually worried that I was too old for the actor playing Wilson before reading this... we are actually perfect! This was such a great read... I appreciate it! - Kitty
ReplyDeleteThat's great! So glad the article was of help!
DeleteDo you know if the Yerkes mansion was ever published in periodicals at the time of its construction? I'd love to see the floor plans of it.
ReplyDeleteYou site is great!
Sadly, not that I know of. Glad you are enjoying the posts.
DeleteReally enjoyed this. The novel The Titan by Theodore Dreiser is based on the life of Yerkes. I first read it at the age of 14 and have re-read occasionally since. It's the best novel about business ever written (there is a lot of sex too but all left to the imagination). Cowperwood's (Yerkes') great mansion in NYC figures prominently at the end of the novel. I always wondered where it was. Now I know. Rather sad really.
ReplyDeleteAlso bidding at the 1910 Yerkes auction was William Randolph Hearst who was a major purchaser.Many of his buys are at the Hearst Castle in California. Before he died, Yerkes was in London supervising the company he organized there to build 3 of the major London Tube lines-Bakerloo, Northern and Picadilly.
ReplyDelete