photo by Alice Lum |
In the first years after the end of the Civil War, before
the arrival of the marble and limestone mansions of the city’s wealthiest
citizens, developers lined the blocks off upper Fifth Avenue with rows of
carbon-copy rowhouses. Central Park, now
nearing completion, was a selling point for the potential merchant class homeowners.
Winters & Hunt were among the speculators transforming
the rocky landscape into regimented blocks of homes. In 1870 they commissioned brothers David and
John Jardine to design a row of eleven Italianate brownstone-clad houses—Nos.
30 through 50 East 74th Street.
The firm, D & J Jardine, was busy at the time designing similar
groups of homes throughout the city.
This row, a block away from the park and just east of
Madison Avenue, was not exceptional.
Four stories tall above high English basements, the houses shared the
unremarkable architectural elements of hundreds of similar structures built around
the same time. One of them, however,
would flex its individuality a few decades later.
Anchoring the western end of the row was No. 30. By the 1890s it was being operated as a
boarding house for upscale, respectable residents. It was
owned by the retired manufacturer and dealer of knit goods, Martin J. Weil. The German-born immigrant had arrived in New York in 1852 at the age of 14. Weil and his wife Malvina, had six children
and the aging couple lived here with their boarders.
In 1895 The Chironian, a newsletter published by students of
the New York Homoeopathic Medical College, announced that graduate Dr. H.
Everett Russell had moved into the house along with his practice. The well-heeled physician would live here
through the turn of the century and his comings-and-goings during the summer
social season would be noticed. In 1902
The North American Journal of Homoeopathy reported that “Dr. H. Everett
Russell, of 30 East 74th Street, will be at Squirrel Inn, Haines
Falls, NY from July 1 to September 25.”
Another boarder at the time was Miss Josephine E. Stone, a
teacher in a nearby public school.
On October 7, 1901 Martin Weil died in the house at the age
of 63. Two months later, on December 11, Malvina sold
the house. Sometime before the house
changed hands again, in 1905, Dr. Russell moved to the northeast corner of
Bedford and Morton Streets in Greenwich Village.
The newest owner was George E. Marcus. Marcus was a partner, with his father and
brother, in the exclusive Marcus & Co. jewelers at No. 544 Fifth Avenue
that The Sun deemed “a famous jewelry house.”
The newspaper noted that “His knowledge of art was used to great
advantage in the business.”
Marcus & Co. created high-end items like this art nouveau wine cooler. |
The days of taking in boarders were over. Marcus moved into the house with his wife, Anna, and their
son Herman (who would later be better known as Peter). By now the neighborhood was one of high-end
residences and modern mansions. Wealthy
homeowners often either razed their Victorian brownstones to replace them with
more stylish residences; or simply remodeled them to reflect the current
architectural fashions.
On September 8, 1906 The Sun reported that Marcus had filed
plans for “a two story bay extension in the colonial style for the four story
residence…at No. 30 East Seventy-fourth street.” The newspaper noted that the cost would be
$5,000—about $95,000 today.
Marcus hired architect George A. Glanzer to design the addition
which in no way could be described as “colonial.” Unlike most renovations in the neighborhood
which obliterated the old brownstone facades; Glanzer left the top two stories
untouched. He lowered the stoop and disguised the first two floors with a neo-Gothic addition. Red brick laid in Flemish bond was trimmed
with brownstone quoins, carved eyebrows terminating in gruesome faces, and
bandcourses. Apparently both the
Marcuses and their architect hoped no one passing by would look up.
Brownstone quoins and trim accented the red Flemish bond brick, creating a charming update -- photo by Alice Lum |
The Marcus family summered at the fashionable cottage
community at Moose Head Lake, Maine and entertained through the winter season
in the 74th Street house. In
April 1909 Herman’s engagement to Francesca Steele Butler of Washington D.C.
was announced. Soon George and Anna
would be alone in the house with their staff of servants.
In 1911 the Marcuses completed another renovation when they
added the picturesque second floor oriel with its intricately-designed multi-paned
windows and quatrefoil-carved brownstone panels. The artistic addition greatly improved the
visual appeal of the house—although the starkly incompatible upper floors
continued to be the house’s sore thumb.
The delightful oriel window was a second thought. The original Victorian facade looks down from above. -- photo by Alice Lum |
“To George E. Marcus of New York belongs the honor of
breaking the amateur 18 hole record for the Kineo links, a seventy-five made in
a medal play competition. A crowd
watched the hardest struggle ever seen in match play on these Northern links.”
The summer resort where he enjoyed his golfing triumph would
become the scene of his death three years later. George went to Moose Head Lake alone “for a
short vacation” on Saturday July 28. Three
days later he decided to take a swim in the lake. “It is supposed that while swimming he was
seized with an attack of heart trouble and drowned before help could reach him,”
reported The Sun on August 3.
Violent storms that rolled in later that day took down the
telegraph lines, so the family could not be informed of the tragedy until two
days later. At 9:00 in the morning on August 3 Marcus’s
body arrived in New York by train and his funeral was held that afternoon at
the Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church.
His obituary reflected Herman’s name change, “he is survived by his
wife, who was Miss Anna R. Hand, and one son, Peter.”
Somewhat fearsome faces flank the entrance and parlor window -- photo by Alice Lum |
Anna left the 74th Street house, leasing it with
all her artwork and furnishings for the winter season to Henry R. McLane, of
Millbrook, New York. She would continue
leasing the residence, and the following year Mrs. Warren Kinney used it for
the season.
Before long son Peter Marcus lived in the house. An
established artist, while here he endeavored to execute a series of paintings
of Manhattan buildings which he brought together in a book titled New York The
Nation’s Metropolis. In its
introduction J. Monroe Hewlett, the President of the Architectural League of
New York, said “Peter Marcus is a painter not an architect, but he is also a
designer experienced in the goldsmith’s craft and there is evident in these
charcoal studies a pleasure in the delineation of the tracery of bridge cables
and trusses, derricks, scaffolding and electric signs, that in contrast with
his broad and greatly simplified expressions of architectural form and detail,
adds vastly to the eloquence of his work.”
The year that the book was published, in 1921, Peter moved to
Stonington, Connecticut where he died of a heart attacked on June 8, 1934 at
just 44 years old.
On January 18, 1923 banker S. Barton Chapin purchased the
Marcus home for $61,500. He quickly
turned a profit on the property, selling it in November for $70,000 to Colonel
Lloyd C. Griscom “for occupancy,” according to The New York Times.
Griscom came to East 74th Street with a broad and impressive
political background. He had served as
Secretary of the United States Legation at Constantinople at the turn of the
century; held the posts of American Ambassador to Italy, Minister to Persia,
Japan, and Brazil, and in 1910 was the President of the New York County
Republican Committee. In 1919 he was
made Knight Commander of the Order of St. Michael and St. George at Buckingham
Palace by King George for his service in World War I as liaison officer on the
staff of General Pershing. His far-flung
interests by now included publishing several Nassau County Long Island weekly
newspapers, studying painting with John Singer Sargent, and within a few years he
would collaborate with John McGowan on a play, Tenth Avenue.
On September 17, 1929 the widowed 56-year old announced his
engagement to Audrey Margaret Elizabeth Crosse, daughter of Marlborough Crosse
of Southsea, England. The wedding took
place on October 3 at Marston Trussell Hall, Leicestershire.
photo by Alice Lum |
In March 1950 the Harab Realty Corporation purchased No. 30
East 74th Street and two months later announced plans for altering
it into apartments. Before the end of
the year there were eight apartments in the building as well as an office.
photo by Alice Lum |
While the rows and rows of 19th C. brownstones which occupied street after street in Manhattan are often referrred to as endless boring rows of dull brown row houses, one only has to venture to Brooklyn neighborhoods like Clinton Hill, Fort Greene, Bedfird Stuyvesant, Carroll Gardens, etc, to see how beautiful a neighborhood can be which mostly consists of rows and rows of uniform brownstones and row houses.
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