photo by Wurts Bros. from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York http://collections.mcny.org/C.aspx?VP3=SearchResult_VPage&VBID=24UAYWE8XP7D&SMLS=1&RW=1280&RH=915 |
In 1902 the West 57th
Street block between Fifth and Sixth Avenues had changed. The regimented rows of brownstone homes
constructed a generation earlier were being replaced or remodeled into extravagant
mansions as the city’s wealthiest citizens moved northward up the avenue. Among the millionaires on the block were
Harry Payne Whitney, Mrs. Elizabeth Roosevelt, Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Harriman,
Mrs. Robert B. Maclay, Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Borden.
As the year drew to a close at least one stealthy burglar
found the block to be a lucrative hunting ground. Within two months between November and
January no fewer than ten homes had been broken into and jewelry, silverware
and other valuables taken. Terrifying to
the residents was that the thief always ransacked the upper rooms while the
family was at dinner. The intruder would
enter from the roof; but police were baffled as to how he managed to reach the
roof and escape with his bag of loot.
Among the residents victimized was Charles F. Schmitt who
lived at No. 40 West 57th Street.
The President of Charles F. Schmidt & Peters, a wine importing firm,
Schmitt was comfortable with the house as it was built—a four-story brownstone
that served his family’s wants.
Also in the house were Schmitt’s wife, their four daughters
and one son. The Sun called him “one of
New York’s prominent German merchants.”
He had been doing business in the city for more than half a century
since his arrival in 1852 at the age of 20.
Schmitt’s no-nonsense German approach to his home seeped into his social
life as well. While his neighbors held
memberships in several of the exclusive Fifth Avenue men’s clubs; Charles
Schmitt had time for only one social club—the Deutsche Verein.
At the time of the Schmitt burglary attorney H. Bramhall
Gilbert lived in a fine mansion at No. 826 Fifth Avenue at 64th
Street. With him were his wife Lilla, their
son, Harry, and daughters Florence, Elizabeth and Lilla. Next door lived Mrs. Gilbert’s brother,
William Gould Brokaw, in an equally-lavish home. Lilla Gilbert was born into the massively
wealthy Brokaw family. Many believe her playboy
brother, fascinated with fast cars, would become, the inspiration
for F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Jay Gatsby character.
Lilla Brokaw Gilbert in 1899 -- Cosmopolitan Magazine, (copyright expired) |
In 1903 the Gilberts sold the mansion and, going against the
northward flow of Manhattan millionaires, purchased a house one block to the
south at No. 17 East 63rd Street.
Toward the end of 1905 Charles F. Schmitt became ill. His condition worsened and he died in the 57th
Street house on January 26, 1906. Within
a matter of weeks the house was sold. The buyer was John F. Carroll, a prominent Tammany leader
and influential factor in New York politics.
Carroll had decided to give up politics that same year. He had made a reported $2 million in 1904 on
Wall Street and now turned his attentions to “dealing in ice stock,” according
to The New York Times.
While John Carroll was apparently pleased with the fashionable
location, unlike Charles Schmitt, he was not content with the outmoded
brownstone. On Wednesday, February 20,
1907 the New York Evening Telegram reported on his plans to replace the old
house with an up-to-date mansion.
The newspaper described the proposed six-story home. “It will have a central vestibule entrance
paved with white granite and an entrance hall in the centre of the
building. The first floor will contain a
reception hall and the billiard room, the second floor the drawing and dining
rooms and the third story the library.”
The estimated cost for the new house was $75,000—about $1.5 million
today.
The house, completed nearly three years later, was a stark
departure from the dour brownstone it replaced.
The French Gothic mansion pulled out all the architectural stops. A prominent three story oriel of small-paned
leaded windows was encrusted with exuberant carvings. It supported a commodious balcony protected
by an intricately carved stone railing, above which dormers and spiky finials
exploded upward.
Surprisingly, the Carroll family never moved into
their new mansion. Instead, on July 13,
1910, it was reported that Carroll leased the house to H. Bramhall Gilbert for five
years at an aggregate rent of $100,000.
The Gilberts continued move against the current of the residential flow.
Lilla Brokaw Gilbert threw open the doors to the mansion
soon after the family moved in. The
Gilbert home would appear in the society pages regularly as dinners, receptions
and teas were hosted here. Especially notable
were the entertainments given for young Lilla who was introduced to society
late in the fall that year.
The Gilberts’ lavish lifestyle in their city mansion carried
over to their summer home “Sunshine” at Great Neck. The sprawling estate was a Long Island
showplace and the family’s steam yacht, the Sunbeam, was moored nearby in the
Long Island Sound. The Evening World
mentioned that “The Gilbert houses at Great Neck and No. 40 West Fifty-seventh
street, New York, are among the handsomest maintained by society people.”
The following summer H. Bramhall Gilbert died in
Aix-les-Bains leaving an estate of approximately $15 million. A few months later, on November 17, 1911,
John Carroll died. Lilla and her
daughter continued with their lease of the 57th Street house.
Before the appropriate mourning period had passed, Lilla
Gilbert announced the engagement of her daughter. The Evening World, on July 5, 1912, ran the
headline “Society Surprised by the Betrothal of Miss Gilbert.” The newspaper described the heiress as “a
beautiful young woman, a linguist, a musician, an athlete and with a turn
toward charitable pursuits.” It added “At
Palm Beach she is reckoned one of the best swimmers of her set.”
Lilla’s fiance was the 25-year old Howard Price Renshaw,
the son of a wealthy Troy, New York, inventor and manufacturer. Social page readers were more interested in
his British pedigree, however. The
Evening World mentioned “Mrs. Lily Hamersley, who afterward became the Duchess
of Marlborough, and whose son married Miss Consuelo Vanderbilt, is his aunt.”
The wedding was celebrated in the 57th Street mansion
on the afternoon of April 15, 1913, followed by a reception. If society had been surprised a year earlier,
it would be staggered six months later when the New-York Tribune reported “Announcement
has been made of the engagement of Mrs. H. Bramhall Gilbert, daughter of the
late William V. Brokaw, of this city, to Captain Cyril Patrick William Francis
Radclyffe Dugmore, late of the British Army Service Corps and now on the
reserve of officers.”
The recently widowed Lilla had just returned from Europe
where she and daughter Florence had spent the summer; perhaps getting to know
Captain Dugmore better. Immediately upon
their return Lilla left the 57th Street mansion for good and took an
apartment at No. 903 Park Avenue.
A month before Lilla’s wedding in the Gilbert mansion,
William Ziegler had purchased a building lot from Otto Kahn on 71st
Street on the Lenox Library Block. His new
property abutted the Henry C. Frick mansion currently under construction and
was reported to be the largest plot, with the exception of Frick’s, on the
block. With construction of his planned
mansion expected to last at least two years, Ziegler needed a place to
stay. On September 2, 1913 he leased the
57th Street mansion from Teresa R. Carroll for two years at $20,000
a year (a substantial rent of about $400,000 a month today).
Ziegler, had recently come into possession of the multimillion dollar estate of his father, William Ziegler, a manufacturer and
patron of Arctic expeditions. Ten
months before signing the lease, he had married Gladys Virginia Watson in the
St. Regis Hotel on December 11.
The Ziegler family expanded three weeks after taking the 57th
Street house when a daughter was born in their country house in Noroton,
Connecticut.
When the Zieglers moved into their completed mansion on East
71st Street, Teresa Carroll briefly leased the 57th
Street house to Wendell C. Phillips in 1916.
But by now the neighborhood had drastically changed. Wealthy residents had nearly all fled up
Fifth Avenue along Central Park and their former mansions had either been
converted for commercial purposes or razed.
A year later, on February 13, 1917, Mrs. Carroll leased the
house to Hagop K. Kevorkian who converted the mansion to “The Studios.” An artist himself, Kevorkian ran an art
gallery called “Kevorkian” and rented studios. On May 19, 1918 he showed his patriotism by
hosting an “Entertainment Intime” for the benefit of the smoke and canteen fund
of the Dewey Navy Recreation Committee of the Woman’s Naval Service, Inc. Among the celebrated entertainers were Marion
Davis, the Dolly Sisters, Ann Pennington, Kay Laurel, Ina Claire, and a troupe
from the Ziegfeld Follies who did a number.
Kevorkian’s star-studded benefit was patronized by some of
society’s most elite, including Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish, George Jay Gould, John Wanamaker,
Jr., Reginald Vanderbilt and Anthony J. Drexel Biddle, Jr.
Kevorkian made an unfortunate choice in tenants in
1921. Already in the building was
Adeline D. Cummings who ran an upscale art and antiques shop upstairs. She was highly upset when a new tenant moved
in—Dr. Berthold Baer who ran an undertaking establishment. Hagop Kevorkian was equally upset when she
began moving her inventory out of the building.
The dispute ended up in Supreme Court.
She complained in court that “the injury her business
suffered from the all-pervading, though suave, gloom virtually constituted
eviction proceedings.” She told the judge
“Funeral services were held in the building and there were coffins everywhere.” The New-York Tribune reported “When
prospective customers, seeking antiques, sought to take the elevator to Mrs.
Cummings’s shop they were likely to find the car piled high with coffins, she
said, and redolent tuberoses and resignation.”
The newspaper said lightly, “The coffins were undeniably
modern and utilitarian and did not appeal in the slightest to Mrs. Cummings’s customers. One or two encounters with coffins, she said,
was enough for the hardiest and her business began to languish alarmingly.”
The dispute was worked out, the funerary business left, and
on May 6, 1922 the Real Estate Record and Guide reported that “An antique dealer
who for some time had leased the former fine residence of the late John F. Carroll
at 40 West 57th street, recently bought it.”
Kevorkian would retain possession of the house for years and
in the 1930s and 1940s, in addition to the studios, apartments were leased in the
upper floors to well-to-do tenants. In 1937
one of these was Andy Sannella, a locally well-known radio and dance orchestra
leader. On June 22, 1940 Walter Winchell
hinted at a debutante’s identity without exposing her name. “The pretty gal who tried to wreck the Stork Club last night while cold sober (she bumped over tables, chairs and crockery)
dwells at 40 West Fifty-seventh street. She
was released in the station house after signing a promise never to go there
again.”
Not long after the pretty girl knocked over tables at the
Stork Club, the 57th Street house became home to the American
Friends of Norway. Then, in the late
1950s to 1961 photographer Ray Shorr operated his studio and classroom here. Students learned the art of photography from
the celebrated Shorr. A lingerie store,
the Corsetorium, was on the ground floor.
August 1961 was the end of the line for Ray Shorr’s photography
class here, the Corsetorium, and the French Gothic mansion itself. Alfred Lawrence purchased No. 40 and No. 38
as part of a redevelopment project that replaced the old homes with a modern
business building.
photo http://nyocommercialobserver.files.wordpress.com/2012/10/40-west-57th-street1.jpg |
Wow you can certainly fill a narrow facade with an abundance of French Gothic tracery. Beautiful roofline and multi-storey bay Unfortunately that up ended glass box is quite the eyesore as the replacement of such elegance.
ReplyDeleteAnother cool home that is now an eyesore. Why can't people leave beautiful things alone? Just because it's modern, does not make something good. The craftsmanship that went into the lost mansion won't soon be repeated.
ReplyDeleteOn a side note, did they ever find out who was breaking into all of those buildings, or did I miss that part in the story?
I did not come across any follow up reports that the burglar was ever caught. Gutsy guy, too!
DeleteWhat a magnificent residence this was............inside and out.
ReplyDelete***
completely blown away
ReplyDeleteWhat an exquisite structure - interior as well as exterior. I don't see the name of the architect who indeed "pulled out all the architectural stops". Do you know the designer?
ReplyDeleteThe architectural firm was Kirby, Petit & Green. Sorry for that oversight!
Delete