Brothers Peter and Robert Goelet were two of Manhattan’s
wealthiest citizens in the second half of the 19th century. As the refined residential stretch of
Broadway between Union Square and Madison Square gradually turned commercial;
the men purchased property being abandoned by wealthy residents moving
northward. By either razing or
renovating the homes to business purposes, the Goelet brothers took advantage
of the changes taking place and multiplied their wealth in the process.
Gilbert Coutant had a three-story residence constructed in
1838 at No. 913 Broadway. A wealthy
grocer and lumber merchant who was also known as a “Tammany fixer,” Coutant and
his family would live in the house for only eight years. In 1846 he sold the building to Peter Goelet.
Now the brothers waited for the appropriate time to improve
their property.
Three decades later the time was right. Nearly all the grand homes of this section of
Broadway had been replaced or renovated as commercial buildings (except for,
oddly enough, Peter Goelet’s own mansion on Broadway at 19th Street,
just a block south of the Coutant home).
The brothers demolished the 36-year old house and commissioned architect
Charles Wright to design an up-to-date mercantile building on the site.
Wright turned to the recently popular neo-Grec style in
designing his building, using equally-popular cast iron for the façade. A short flight of steps led from the sidewalk
to the first floor. Above it all an
ambitious cornice with pointed finials announced the address in giant cast iron
numbers.
Immediately upon the structure’s completion the haberdashery
firm Union Adams & Co. took it over.
On November 23 the store opened, a block north of the elegant Lord &
Taylor dry goods store. Union Adams kept
its original store at No. 637 Broadway opened through Christmas, offering
customers the option of either venue for gift buying.
On November 21, 1874 Union Adams & Co. announced its opening "on Monday Next." The New-York Tribune, (copyright expired) |
On December 11 The New York Times opined that “At no
previous Christmas season have the thousands of patrons of Union Adams & Co.
had such an excellent opportunity of making their purchases, for Mr. Adams has
very recently opened his new store, at No. 913 Broadway, between Twentieth and
Twenty-first streets, with the finest stock of gentlemen’s furnishing goods
ever yet exhibited in the City, and the old, well-known store at No. 637
Broadway is still in its pristine glory, and will remain open until after the
holidays. Then Mr. Adams will remove all
his immense stock of wholesale and retail goods to his future business house at
No. 913 Broadway, on what is known as ‘The Ladies’ Half-mile.”
The article praised Adams’ taste in robes and smoking
jackets, focusing on those “made of cashmere, heavily embroidered with silk, in
a variety of patterns in the Indian style.”
Shoppers could browse among driving mufflers, scarves and neckties, silk
handkerchiefs (“now so much used”), hosiery, shirts, gloves, canes, umbrellas,
walking sticks and American and French jewelry.
Calling the store’s stock of hosiery the “foremost in this
department,” The Times writer turned to the shirts. “The same may be said of the shirt and
embroidered shirt bosom department, which has all the marvels of the fine
needle-work of the nuns of France and Italy.”
The gentleman patron could choose among a wide variety of gloves: “kid, castor, buckskin, reindeer, seal, bear,
of even kangaroo skin.”
Despite the newspaper’s glowing reviews of Union Adams
& Co., the store lasted only two years in its new home. In 1876 McGibbon & Co. moved in. Founded in 1866, the firm imported linens and
upholstery goods from European manufacturers.
New York’s Leading Industries remarked that at No. 913 Broadway, “they
carry what is without doubt one of the largest and best selected stock of goods
of their line in the city. It comprises
linen and cotton shirtings, pillow-case linens, linen sheetings of all widths,
table damasks, bleached and unbleached, table cloths in every size, napkins,
doylies, towels, embroidered sheets and shams, quilts, cotton and silk comfortable,
blankets, handkerchiefs, etc.”
An advertisement in The Christian Union focused on the curtain department, December 1874 (copyright expired) |
Among the five floors of fabrics were upholstery goods, as
well. “In upholstery their stock is
equally complete, comprising worsted and silk coverings, woven jute fabrics,
mohair, and all silk plush, all the fashionable tapestry and Turcoman curtains,
raw silk portiers, etc., etc. Their
stock of lace curtains is complete, also table covers and shade materials in
full and fresh assortments.”
For those households lacking a seamstress, the firm would
custom-make linen items and embroider them to order.
McGibbons & Co. employed 75 people and was deemed by Illustrated
New York: the Metropolis of To-Day in 1888 to be “the only exclusive Linen and
Upholstery house in the United States, and has a national reputation.”
The renowned quality of McGibbons goods was enough to cause
Anna Beach Appleton to hatch a scheme in 1894.
She was living in the home of two sisters, Mrs. McDonald and Miss
Maynard, at No. 172 East 74th Street. Realizing that she was unable to come up with
the money for her board, she visited McGibbons & Co. Anna chose a pile of linens valued at $39,
then casually mentioned to the clerk that she was the sister of ex-Judge Beach.
With so reputable a brother, she was allowed to walk out of
the store with her expensive goods (the $39 worth of linens would equal about
$1000 today). Anna went home, paid off
her board bill with crisp new linens, and everyone was happy. Until McGibbons & Co. looked for its
payment.
On January 24, 1894 Mrs. Anna Beach Appleton found herself
in the Jefferson Market Police Court on the charge of obtaining goods on false
pretenses. Her landladies were in court,
as well, to testify about the linens-for-board swap she had concocted.
“Justice Ryan then ordered the women to return the linen to
McGibbon & Co.,” reported The Times.
As it turned out, McGibbon & Co. was the least damaged
in Anna Appleton’s charade. “Mrs.
Apppleton is also charged with obtaining on false pretenses $70 worth of goods
from Adams & Co. and $300 worth from Stern Brothers,” said the newspaper.
New York is a city of change and by 1896 the grand emporiums
of Broadway were already beginning to inch further towards Midtown. That year McGibbon & Co. opened its
second store at No. 9 West 42nd Street in the fashionable area of
mansions and high-end shops. An
advertisement advised shoppers “The latter place will be found very convenient
to ladies residing up town or out of town.”
It was the first hint that McGibbon & Co. was
considering leaving its Broadway building.
Then, on January 10, 1898 the New-York Tribune ran an advertisement that
announced “Our Removal Sale” that “embraces other goods than Linens, which have
been well received by customers.”
By August of 1899 McGibbon & Co. was gone. Louis Cohen & Co., manufacturers and
retail furriers, took the second floor; which, said the Fur Trade Review, “they
have attractively fitted and furnished, for the greater convenience of their
retail department.”
The following month New York society was preparing for the
fashionable Horse Show. Louise Cohen
& Co. advertised “An exceptional line especially gotten up for the coming
event in very smart effects.” The ad
listed “Smart coats in Broadtail, Persian Lamb and Seal, Plain and with
combinations of Chinchilla, Rusisan and Hudson Bay Sable. Plain coats from $120.00 upward, with combinations
from $165.00 upward.”
Advertisement--The Sun, December 3, 1905 (copyright expired) |
Ladies desiring to show off expensive stoles and wraps could choose from “neck pieces in Alaska sable, blue fox, sable fox, blue lynx, black lynx, chinchilla, mink, ermine, Persian lamb, Hudson Bay and Russian sable, and silver fox.”
Peter Goelet had died in 1879, leaving No. 913 Broadway to
his sister, Hannah Goelet Gerry. In 1890
she had the building updated—removing the stairs and installing a more modern
storefront at street level.
By 1902 the high-end millinery importer Florette was also in
the building. The firm also had a Paris
shop and offered stylish headwear to Manhattan’s carriage trade. In offering “model hats, tailored hats and
bonnets” in The Illustrated Milliner in 1902, Florette promised that “individuality
will predominate.”
Hannah Goelet Gerry removed the entrance stairs. By November 20, 1924 when this photograph was taken, a cafeteria was operating at street level -- from the collection of the New York Public Library |
Sharing the building with the other upscale tenants was the
Frederick Jewelry Company.
The high-end retailers would remain in the building for
several years. But by the time of the
Great Depression the exclusive shops had all moved up Fifth Avenue. In 1932 No. 913 was purchased for $30,000—although
it was assessed that year for $82,000. The new owners had a startling renovation in
mind.
Two years later, on November 23, 1934, Charles F. Noyes announced that he had leased the building to gift and novelties merchants Rubenstein Merchandise Company. But there would be changes made. "The property at present consists of a five-story which will be made over into a two-story structure," reported The Times.
Noyes hired architect William F. Staab to alter the building. The top three floors were chopped off, resulting in a stubby two-story structure with little evidence of the original cast iron emporium. Staab installed a single-paneled parapet to cap the renovated building and modernized the sidewalk level.
Noyes hired architect William F. Staab to alter the building. The top three floors were chopped off, resulting in a stubby two-story structure with little evidence of the original cast iron emporium. Staab installed a single-paneled parapet to cap the renovated building and modernized the sidewalk level.
In the 1940s it was home to the Northern Straw Works, Inc.;
manufacturers of “hats.”
By the mid-1980s the neighborhood was reviving and in 1986
the former retail space became a restaurant, Indian Oven II; the first in a series of restaurants. Before the century’s end it would house Bar
Zil, then in 1997 Theodore, a restaurant named for Theodore Roosevelt.
One sliver of Charles Wright's cast iron design survives--somewhat miraculously. |
The first floor is still a restaurant today. At this level any trace of Wright’s emporium where
wealthy gentlemen purchased reindeer gloves and later well-dressed women shopped for
French linens has long ago disappeared. But
above, somewhat miraculously, the 19th century lives on where the
cast iron façade survives nearly unblemished.
non-historic photos taken by the author
non-historic photos taken by the author
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