The projecting bay windows of the Sherman mansion would result in a court battle with neighbors -- photo by Byron Co. from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York, http://collections.mcny.org/C.aspx?VP3=SearchResult_VPage&VBID=24UAYWLX6GWQ&SMLS=1&RW=1366&RH=579 |
William Watts Sherman was born in 1842 in Newport, Rhode
Island and his New England roots were deeply planted. Philip Shearman, on his father’s side, arrived
in Roxbury, Massachusetts in 1633; and his mother’s first ancestor arrived in
the new world around the same time. Both
of Sherman’s wives would have colonial pedigrees.
When Sherman was 9 years old, the family moved to New York to
a mansion on Fifth Avenue at the corner of 22nd Street. One of eight children, William Watts Sherman left
the family home in 1871 when he married the much older Annie Derby Rogers
Wetmore in Newport. Her English ancestors had
arrived in New England in 1635.
The newlyweds built a mansion at 24 East 55th
Street; but it was their Newport estate that would stand out. In 1875, Sherman commissioned noted architect
Henry Hobson Richardson to design the house which was completed a year later. The result was a magnificent conglomeration
of American colonial, English Renaissance and medieval European elements
melded together to form what is considered to be one of Richardson’s
masterpieces and the prototype for the Shingle Style movement in American
architecture.
The Shermans' Newport "cottage" was an architectural masterwork -- photograph from the collection of the Cornell University Library |
The exuberant, ground-breaking and masterful design of the
Newport house would later be starkly contrasted in Sherman’s new Fifth Avenue
mansion.
William Watts Sherman poses for a studio portrait with silk hat and cane -- photo from the collection of the Salve Regina University |
Sherman and Annie had two daughters, Georgette and
Sybil. In 1884, the 66-year old Annie
died of pneumonia and a year later Sherman remarried. Sophia Augusta Brown was the daughter of the
immensely wealthy John Carter Brown. She
was descended from Chat Brown, one of the original proprietors of Rhode Island
and the pastor of the First Baptist Church in 1642. Her family’s financial support of Brown University resulted in
the school's name.
William and Sophia would have two additional daughters—Irene
and Mildred. While he was listed as a “banker,”
Sherman was mostly interested in social involvement and philanthropy. Among his numerous club memberships were the
Metropolitan, Knickerbocker, Century, City, Colony, Calument, Coaching, Riding,
Racquet and Tennis and St. Nicholas Society.
His deep interest in the family’s colonial history led to his active
involvement in the Sons of the Revolution, and Colonial Wars of New York.
In 1892, the Shermans began construction of their new mansion
at the southeast corner of Fifth Avenue and 65th Street. Unlike most Fifth Avenue mansions which were
built with the husband’s money then deeded to the wife; this house was all
Sophia’s. According to The New York
Times, “The house which Mr. and Mrs. Sherman are to occupy is being built by
John Nicholas Brown, Harold Brown, and G. W. R. Matteson as trustees for Mrs.
Sherman under a marriage settlement.”
The hulking, double-wide structure would rise five
stories. Generally Italianate in design,
its two-story base stretched deeply back along 65th Street. The prominent features of the Fifth Avenue elevation were two aggressive bays which projected beyond the property line. If New Yorkers were expecting a masterwork
like the Newport mansion; they instead got a hip-roofed brownstone cube with
the rather ungainly bay windows that successfully diminished the entrance.
Next door to the south was the mansarded mansion of Simon
and Isidor Wormser at 836 Fifth Avenue.
Directly behind the Sherman property, at 2 65th Street, was the home
of another Wormser—Louis.
For several years the various Wormsers had enjoyed the air
and sunlight afforded by the vacant lot where now the Sherman mansion was
rising. To make tensions worse, Louis
Wormser had intended to make “some alterations” to his 65th Street
home which now could not be accomplished.
The last straw came in the form of the two bulky bay windows
of the Sherman house. The New York Times
commented on December 20, 1892 “Simon and Isidor Wormser used to have poetical
thoughts as they gazed from the windows of their Fifth Avenue residence up the
avenue and toward the upper end of Central Park. But their view and their poetical thoughts
were interfered with by the building of bay windows on the new house of Mr. and
Mrs. William Watts Sherman.”
Simon, Isidor and Louis Wormser went to the Park
Commissioners and protested that the bay windows extended onto public property
and should be removed. When the Commissioners decided in favor of the windows, the Wormsers
went to court.
As the case was being heard by Judge Lawrence, the Shermans’
lawyers Strong & Cadwalader brought in big guns to testify. Stanford White, who had done renovations to
the Newport mansion in 1881, testified that “the bay windows are essential to
the appearance of the Sherman residence, and that they are less objectionable
than the Wormser porch." (What the Wormsers neglected to note in their complaint
was that their own stoop projected beyond the Shermans’ bay windows—making
them worse violators than their new neighbors).
Architect James Renwick stated “that
the windows are made necessary by the plan of the house.”
If the Wormsers’ attorneys, Vedder Van Dyck and Edgar M.
Johnson, chose to overlook their clients’ offending porch, the Sherman lawyers
did not. They argued that “there is a
porch to the Wormsers’ Fifth Avenue house which projects beyond the street line
and is fully as much of an obstruction to light and air as the Sherman bay
windows.”
The Shermans won the case and the Wormsers’ poetic thoughts from
their own windows were forever quashed.
The Sherman family moved into the new mansion and a flurry of
entertainments began that would continue for decades. The women of the house were a bit eccentric;
a matter which was mostly overlooked in light of their millions of dollars. Although Irene and Mildred were born a year apart,
they insisted on being treated as twins.
In 1906, they were given a double debutante ball “in their beautiful
New York house on Fifth Avenue,” as reported by The Scrap Book. The publication noted that “Miss Irene is a
year older than her sister, but the resemblance between them is so marked that they
are generally spoken of as the Sherman ‘twins.’
As they always dress alike, it is not difficult to believe this, despite
the slight disparity in their ages.”
The girls wore “pink, lavender, and blue…to the exclusion of
all other shades.” The Scrap Book made
note of the girls’ impending wealth. Saying
that their mother was “the heiress to a large portion of the Brown fortune, of
Providence,” it went on to note, “There is a saying in New England that the
Browns and the Goddards own all of Providence and a good part of Rhode
Island. The Misses Sherman, being the
only children, will inherit all of their mother’s fortune, which should go far
toward making them rank with the great heiresses of America.”
The same year that the girls came out in society, Sophia exhibited
a bit of her own eccentric behavior. The
Evening World wrote, “Society sat up and took notice when Mrs. Sherman and
her daughters led the ‘sterilization cult’ in 1906, and this came about through
the discovery of a live fly in the household.”
When Sophia found a fly buzzing around the mansion she went
into a panic. According to the
newspaper, the fly was “slain forthwith” and “a regime so strict as to defy
even the tiniest microbe began.”
Sophia insisted that all the water in the house be distilled. She and her daughters wore gloves indoors and
out; only removing them to bathe. They
carried “dainty tongs” with them with which to pick up small objects so their
hands would not come in contact with germs.
Sophia had vacuum machines brought into the mansion to clear away any
hint of dust. The World added that “cats
were as much tabooed as mice, and kissing was abolished. Even cheeks could not be permitted to bear
the imprint of the most highly sanitary lips and telephone receivers were
cleansed antiseptically twice a day.”
Sophia Sherman had been ill for a considerable time prior to
her obsessive behavior; and she considered the “robust health” of the entire
family ever since as proof of her wisdom.
In February 1909, Sophia’s mother died, leaving society to
wonder what would become of the $30 million estate. The Evening World suggested that “it now
turns out [the estate] will go in large part to Mrs. William Watts Sherman, one
of the most beautiful women in Newport.”
The newspaper’s prediction was a bit premature—the final disposition of
the Brown fortune would drag on for years.
In the meantime, the Shermans were major players in New York
and Newport social life. On March 3,
1909 The Evening World commented that “Mrs. William Watts Sherman has been a
brilliant figure in New York and Newport society…and the entertainments by the family
both here [in Newport] and New York have been brilliant.”
In January 1911, after a long bout of “stomach trouble,”
William Watts Sherman underwent an operation.
On February 2 The New York Times noted that he “was reported as resting
comfortably last night.” No one
suspected that it was the first development leading to the millionaire’s death.
Sophia, deemed one of the most beautiful woman in Newport, is dressed for a ball. photograph from the Library of Congress |
Earlier that winter, society had taken notice when 27-year old
Ralph Francis Julian Stonor, Lord Camoys of England arrived to act as usher at
the wedding of Vivien Gould and Lord Decies. “For several months after the Decies-Gould wedding
he remained in New York and was entertained a great deal,” said The Sun.
Early on in his visit, the charismatic Lord Camoys confessed
that he found New York society girls attractive. “I’m going to be here until May and the
greatest difficulty will be not to become engaged,” he told reporters. “Your girls here are so charming.”
The ears of wealthy socialites perked up when, shortly
before he sailed home to England, he stood on the New York pier watching the
departure of the Mauretania and remarked that “the most beautiful girl in
America was sailing on that boat.”
Society columnists scurried to pour over the passenger lists. “There were three prominent New York society
girls aboard her,” reported The Sun.
They were Olga Wiborg, Catherine Hamersley and Mildred Sherman.
Two months later rumors still raged and a report from
Newport on July 15 regarding the supposed engagement of Mildred and Lord Camoys
provided no answers. “Mrs. Sherman was
not approachable to-day, but Mr. Sherman said that he had no information upon
the subject to give out. The reported
engagement formed one of the chief topics of conversation in social circles
here to-day.”
In Edwardian New York, marrying one’s
daughter to a fortune was less important than marrying her to a title. Sophia Sherman’s greatest social coup came
when, on August 13, 1911, she and her husband formally announced the
engagement.
The wedding was scheduled to take place in the Sherman
mansion on December 2, 1911. It would be
one of the most talked-about and lavish mansion weddings Fifth Avenue had seen
in some time. Four hundred invitations
were sent out and preparations were begun months in advance. But as the date neared, William Watts Sherman’s
health continued to decline.
Hints of the gravity of the situation first arose in November
when Lord Camoys canceled his bachelor dinner.
That was followed on November 24 when Mildred’s brother-in-law, Lawrence
L. Gillespie, recalled the invitations to a dinner for that night at the Union Club
in the groom’s honor. Mildred canceled a dinner for the same night which she had planned for some of her
friends.
The New York Times noted on November 24, “It was reported
yesterday that the wedding would take place to-morrow, and that all of the
invitations to the reception, about 400 in number, would be recalled.” The newspaper added “In this case there will
be no reception, and only the close relatives of Miss Sherman and Lord Camoys
will witness the ceremony.”
Sherman’s condition did not improve and on November 25 the
wedding was held in his bedroom suite in the Fifth Avenue mansion. The 69-year old was propped up in a chair to
witness the ceremony. What was
anticipated to be one of the most lavish weddings of the season was, instead, a
subdued, bittersweet affair of only a few family and guests.
Newspapers closely followed Sherman’s condition. On December 9, The Evening World said he “is
reported in critical condition at his home;” on January 22, 1912, The Sun reported “His
condition took a change for the worse on Saturday and while he was conscious
yesterday it was feared that he might not live through the night;” and,
finally, the following day, the papers announced his death.
William Watts Sherman’s body was taken to his beloved
Newport for his funeral and burial.
At the time of William W. Sherman's death, the block was lined with grand mansions -- photograph from the collection of the New York Public Library |
Sophia continued to live on alone with her staff in the
Fifth Avenue and Newport mansions. In
1914 the immense Brown estate was finally settled, adding approximately $15 million to
Sophia Augusta Brown Sherman’s already substantial fortune. The windfall would amount to about $250
million today.
Sophia Sherman’s millions were a comfortable buffer against
the Great Depression, and when Louis Wormser’s house on 65th Street became available in January 1930, Sophia bought it. Wormser’s widow, Anna, who was living in Hamburg,
Germany had offered the property for sale.
Sophia’s purchase was most likely prompted to protect her
property. Already the grand mansions of
the neighborhood were being razed for modern apartment buildings. Such a building would not only increase
traffic, but would block light to the rear of her mansion.
By 1938 Sophia Sherman's hulking mansion was the last private home on the block -- photograph from the collection of the New York Public Library |
Seventeen years later both Sophia Sherman and her home were relics of a bygone
time. In 1947 motorcars buzzed along the
avenue she remembered as being trafficked with smart broughams and liveried
coachmen. She had entertained
pearl-draped socialites wearing diamond tiaras both in Newport and New York. She had seen two world wars and the invention
of the telephone and the airplane. Her
house at 838 Fifth Avenue was a time capsule of a gilded age long
forgotten.
Terrific story. I would love to see some interior photos. Have a wonderful Christmas!
ReplyDeleteI love what replaced these mansions even though it was one of the most varied blocks and very new homes.
ReplyDelete