photo by Alice Lum |
At the time of the Civil War, as the Fifth Avenue
residential district inched ever northward, the block of West 44th
Street was developing into a “stable block.”
The offensive smells and noises that emanated from the private carriage
houses and public livery stables often resulted in their being relegated to
designated blocks. In 1865 Andrew Luke
and Benjamin Jones built four side-by-side stables at Nos. 43 through 49. By the last decade of the century the block
would be lined with such structures.
In 1904 The New York Times reported on the lease of “65 West
Forty-fourth Street, a private stable, to John Wanamaker.” By now Mr. Wanamaker’s newly-leased stable was among
the last of the old structures still standing.
The block was undergoing significant change to one of upscale hotels and
clubs.
Seven years earlier the high-class Royalton Hotel had opened
at No. 44, in 1903 the Hotel Mansfield was completed at No. 14, and right next
door to the Wanamaker carriage house the magnificent Algonquin Hotel opened its
doors in 1902.
Being sandwiched between two stables posed a problem to the luxury hotel. The Algonquin would solve that problem in a surprising way—rather than
purchase and demolish the structures, it renovated them as annexes. John Wanamaker’s lease would not last long
and by the spring of 1906 the little carriage house at No. 65 had received a
startling makeover.
At street level the carriage doors and openings were
replaced with a café front and the upper floors were transformed with a Mediterranean
touch. A hooded oriel projected above
the first floor cornice, and tall grouped windows clustered below a
deeply-overhanging cornice at the top story.
Where horses had recently munched oats, the hotel installed its Pergola Café.
Reflecting the Algonquin's name, Native American faces adorn the pilasters -- photo by Alice Lum |
The little stable building got a significant make-over from the hotel -- photo from the collection of the New York Public Library |
Just about a year after Mrs. Judge’s innovative luncheon, on
January 20, 1907, the Rocky Mountain Club was incorporated. New York City was home to more and more
wealthy men from the West—many of them involved in mining and railroads. The newly-organized organization sought to
bring together the western men with similar interests, both socially and
politically.
The club used the Hotel Knickerbocker on West 45th
Street for a few years, then in 1913 renovated the upper floors of No. 65 West
44th Street as its clubhouse.
On December 28 the organization held its housewarming of the space it
called the “Eastern Home of Western Men.”
At the ceremony, President John Hays Hammond explained the
purpose of the new quarters. “We desire
to provide a home or clubhouse for men who have lived in the West and have an
interest in the West who are now living in New York, or for men who come to New
York and want the advantages of a club where they can meet their friends. We have all the Western papers on our files,
and we try to keep the home atmosphere.”
The New York Times noted “The clubhouse has been made by
remodeling what formerly was the annex of the Hotel Algonquin. The restaurant and café of the Algonquin,
called the ‘Pergola,’ still occupy the ground floor, but there is a separate
entrance for the clubhouse leading to the second floor of the building, where
are the lounging room, reading room, and café.”
The third floor housed the game rooms—pool room, card parlor
and billiard rooms. The opening between
the hotel and the clubhouse on the second floor was retained. Western-inspired artwork hung throughout the
new clubhouse. The café and dining room
exhibited paintings of Glacier Park by John Fery, and paintings of the Arizona
desert by Albert Lorey Groll. Upstairs
paintings by William R. Leigh hung in the pool and billiard room, including his
“The Stampede,” “Sunset Over the Bad Lands,” and “The Poisoned Pool.” A collection of related paintings by Edwin
Willard Deming in the card room depicted the “passing of the Indian and the
buffalo.”
The Rocky Mountain Club held monthly meetings and lectures
here. The high-powered men from the west
often had more significant issues in mind than card playing and Western fraternity.
On April 9,1914 with the Mexican Revolution raging, American
citizens with interests in the Mexican oil fields were endangered when all diplomatic relations between Mexico and the U.S. broke down. American warships were posted in the area to
protect American citizens and property around Tampico, Tamaulipas. When Mexican soldiers raised rifles at
American sailors, things got dangerously tense.
On May 24, 1914 The Times reported that “In order to afford
a comfortable home to refugees from Mexico, the Rocky Mountain Club, at 65 West
Forty-fourth Street, has offered the hospitality of its clubhouse to them. Many of those who fled from Tampico and other
danger zones in Mexico are already in the clubhouse.”
In March 1915 the steamer Falaba was torpedoed and sunk by a
German submarine. On board was American
mining engineer Leon Chester Thrasher. “There
is reason to believe…that Mr. Thrasher’s death will be made the basis of a
vigorous protest to Berlin and a demand for prompt reparation to the victim’s
relatives,” said The Times.
That was not good enough for the politically-active men of
the Rocky Mountain Club. The members
would remain highly critical of President Woodrow Wilson for dragging his feet regarding the United States’ entrance into the war.
When Theodore Roosevelt initiated plans to organize a volunteer Army to
aid France, the Rocky Mountain Club energetically worked to recruit troops in
the Western states. Wilson rejected
Roosevelt’s plan and disbanded the volunteer Army; and once again club members were vocally
disgruntled.
The club members by now had started a building fund for a $1
million clubhouse and in January 1917, just four months before the nation would
enter the war, more than $500,000 had been collected. But the members were distracted by the suffering
of thousands in Belgium and Northern France.
On the evening of January 29, 1917 the club held a dinner in
honor of Herbert C. Hoover, the Chairman of the Commission for Relief in Belgium. John Hays Hammond stood before the assembled
members and announced that the entire building fund would be donated for war
relief efforts.
Hoover was himself a member of the Rocky Mountain
Club. He told the group, which that
night included millionaires like August Belmont and Otto H. Kahn, of the plight
of the 10 million people in Belgium and Northern France. “The feeling that the food supply of the
community may cease at any moment; that your women and children are in
jeopardy, and the feeling of every thinking man that a disturbance by the
population only means blood in the streets; that there is no possible salvation
or solution; a population which shivers at rumors; it goes beyond the ability
to describe.”
In donating its half a million dollars, Hammond stressed
that “While the Board of Directors have not given up the plans for a new home
for the club, they have unanimously decided to co-operate with Mr. Hoover.”
Following the war the club turned its focus to helping war-weary
soldiers from the Western states reincorporate into American society. The Rocky Mountain Club never got its $1
million clubhouse and on March 4, 1928, it disbanded.
The Hotel Algonquin retained
ownership of the little building and it was in the Pergola Café that the famous
Algonquin Round Table group first began meeting in 1919.
The clubhouse upstairs was taken
over by the Beethoven Association, a group which, as the name suggested,
focused on the music of Ludwig von Beethoven and provided “beneficient
activities,” as described by The New York Times.
The association hosted receptions
and concerts, such as the dinner for about 50 guests given in honor of Gunther
Ramin on January 11, 1933. Ramin was the
organist at Bach’s historic St. Thomas’s Church in Leipzig and was in the
United States doing a three-month concert tour at the time.
In April 1934 the Beethoven Association leased the
magnificent Henry Seligman mansion at No. 30 West 56th Street as its
headquarters. The Algonquin retained
possession of the little building as an annex to the hotel.
Today a bar-restaurant occupies the former Pergola Café space;
however the century-old renovations made by the hotel remain essentially
unchanged. It is a quaint relic of the
first stage of development of the block; and a charming solution by a high-class
hotel of an annoying problem of an abutting stable.
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