photo by Alice Lum |
The gilded 1890s saw the construction of ornate marble or
limestone palaces along the east side of Central Park. But as the decade wore on, interest in a less
fussy form of architecture and residential decoration caught hold. Rooted in America’s early Georgian or Federal
styles, it took the form of red brick and limestone residences like the Andrew
Carnegie mansion, completed in 1903.
Across the park on the Upper West Side, among the more
eccentric rowhouses and mansions, the style appeared as well—as reflected in
the Charles Rich house at No. 225 West 91st Street, erected in
1896. Twelve years later Dr. H. F. L.
Ziegel and his wife, Beatrice, would join the trend.
On February 28, 1908 The New York Times reported that the
Ziegels had filed plans for a four-story residence to be built at No. 8 West 86th
Street. “The house will be of Colonial
design,” said the newspaper, “with a façade of brick and limestone.”
The Ziegels commissioned the architectural firm of Taylor
& Levi to design their home which was completed a year later at a cost of
$20,000—about $500,000 today. The result
was a charming neo-Georgian home that recalled the pre-Revolutionary streets of
Philadelphia, Boston or New York.
photo by Alice Lum |
The dark red brick was accentuated by gleaming white
limestone. Two bandcourses, above the
first and third floors, broke the visual weight of the structure. A handsome columned portico supported the
focal point of the home—multi-paned French doors opening onto a wrought iron
balcony and capped by an delicately carved tympanum. A gently-curved mansard punctuated by
three dormers finished the motif.
The French doors and carved tympanum steal the show -- photo by Alice Lum |
As was most often the case with high-end residences at the
time, the deed was put in the wife’s name.
The couple, it seems, held a deep affection for initials; for the title
was held by Beatrice S. B. Ziegel. The
highly-esteemed Dr. H. F. L. Ziegel was the house physician at Mount Sinai
Hospital and routinely wrote articles published in medical journals.
The house was completed and the Ziegels moved in just in
time for a house wedding. Dr. Ziegel’s
cousin, Helen Wile, lived in Rochester, New York. Her finance, Reuben Mills, was a resident of
Nashville, Tennessee. Perhaps the two
families felt it most convenient to hold the ceremony somewhere geographically
in the middle and on December 17, 1909 the ceremony took place in the Ziegel
home.
Splayed lintels and a graceful broken pediment add to the 18th century motif -- photo by Alice Lum |
After the Ziegels left No. 8 West 86th Street the
medical tradition continued as Dr. D. M. Kaplan moved in by 1921; followed by
Dr. M. Herman. Unlike Drs. Ziegel and
Kaplan, Dr. Herman’s time in the spotlight was for less-than-respectable
reasons.
With Prohibition in high swing, Dr. Herman discovered a way
to make easy cash—“prescription bootlegging.”
Often forgotten today is the fact that not all alcohol was banned by the
Volstead Act. Six distilleries were
allowed to manufacture “medicinal whiskey.”
They were permitted to sell it to licensed pharmacies which, in turn,
could fill prescriptions signed by a physician.
The legally distilled whiskey was highly prized for its
quality—not to mention its safety--when compared to bootleg liquor. It made for an alluring proposition for
physicians like Dr. Herman who was arrested on March 17, 1926 along with 26
other physicians, six druggists and four distillery owners. The New York Times explained how “prescription
bootlegging” worked.
“The physicians, two of whom are women, are charged with
having sold their prescription books at $125 to $150 each to distillery
salesmen, who in turn sold them to druggists.
The books, it is alleged, were signed in blank so that the druggist
could fill them out whenever he sold whisky to a customer.”
On February 11, 1945 the house, still a private home, was
leased to Dorothy Jewson. But its status
as a single-family residence would not survive into the second half of the
century. In 1953 the house was converted
to apartments, two per floor.
A few years later Martha J. Black moved into one of the
apartments. Known as Jo Jo to her
friends, she was a psychiatric social worker at Mount Sinai Hospital; coincidentally the same hospital where Dr. H. F. L. Ziegel had practiced. A graduate of Swarthmore College and the New
York School of Social Work of Columbia University, she was perhaps better known
as the daughter of Associate Justice Hugo L. Black of the United States Supreme
Court. In 1959 while living here she
married Dr. Mario Lewis Pesaresi, a resident psychiatrist at Mount Sinai.
Dr. Ziegel’s medical tradition in the house continues
today, in a manner of speaking--a veterinary clinic operates on the first
floor. A spacious duplex apartment
engulfs the second and third floors; while the fourth story still contains two
apartments.
photo by Alice Lum |
Taylor &Levi’s handsome neo-Georgian home survives
beautifully intact; a delightful
surprise just steps from Central Park.
Looks like a Georgian/Federal sandwich!
ReplyDeletesounds yummy
DeleteI love this blog. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteWow!
ReplyDeleteThank You, GOD.
ReplyDeleteI have been going through your blog making a list of houses to see next month when I visit NYC. I am on a neo-Georgian binge and love this house and would like to point out that the title and one place in the body says Ziegler and the rest say Ziegel, which I believe is correct. I love your blog and am sorry to be picky but I can't help myself! Is the email address tmiller632@aol.com still valid? Thanks.
ReplyDeleteThanks, as always, for catching the two typos. And yes the email address is still valid.
DeleteI lived in the top floor rear apartment for most of the 1980s. It was a one bedroom with a huge step down terrace. Small ornate birdcage elevator that at best held two people. Impossible to get a queen size mattress/box spring or sofa in elevator or up the stairs. We froze every winter as the vet who owned, worked and lived in the building controlled the heat. In all the years I lived there I only met one of my neighbors who lived across the hall. He was a Broadway actor who was on the road nonstop we saw him maybe twice a year. Owner lived on second floor and third floor had two apartments. I loved the place it was the most incredible New York apartment.
ReplyDeleteBest time
Delete