photo circa 1898 by Byron Company, from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York http://collections.mcny.org/C.aspx?VP3=SearchResult_VPage&VBID=24UAYWC07UT&SMLS=1&RW=1280&RH=894 |
In 1896 two of Manhattan’s most fashionable eating and
catering establishments, Delmonico’s and Sherry’s, were feeling the pinch of
competition. The elegant Waldorf Hotel,
opened three years earlier conveniently close to the mansion district on the
corner of Fifth Avenue and 33rd Street, was the newly favored spot
for cotillions and dinners. To make
matters worse, the Astoria Hotel (at the time temporarily called the
Schermerhorn) was under construction and the combined Waldorf-Astoria would be
a formidable threat.
In response both restaurants made plans to move upward along
Fifth Avenue—a full ten blocks above the Waldorf. The rival caterers acquired large plots diagonally
across from one another on Fifth Avenue and 44th Street. On May 3, 1896 The New York Times recognized
the intended moves as part of a trend.
“As significant moves as have been made in recent years are
those on the part of the restaurant men, Delmonico and Sherry, who have secured
corners on Fifth Avenue at Forty-fourth Street for their future places of
business. They are trying to follow the
northward movement of what may be termed the night life of the city—the life of
after the opera and the theatres. Both,
too, apparently feel the need of providing for their patrons more elegant and
sumptuous surroundings, so as to meet the competition of the Waldorf and the
new Schermerhorn Hotel now constructing.
Another purpose is probably to be nearer the homes of those to whom they
cater. The two establishments right at
the edge of the new club centre will help to change the character of the
neighborhood most thoroughly.”
Over a year later, on March 17, 1897, architect James Brown
Lord filed plans for the new Delmonico’s.
Lord had recently completed the monumental Beaux Arts-style Appellate Court
building and he was riding a wave of favorable press. The plans called for an eight-story structure
of brick, Indiana limestone and terra cotta that stretched 140 feet back along
44th Street.
“The entire front on Fifth Avenue will, on the ground floor,
be devoted to the dining room,” advised The New York Times. “Above will be the ballroom. In the rear of the dining room will be the
palm garden, encased by glass partition walls, and back of this, separated only
by glass, is the café proper, with a separate entrance on Forty-fourth
Street. The main entrance is also on the
side street, where there is a private entrance to let into an elevator to the
ball and assembly rooms, which may be cut off from the rest of the house.”
Six floors of the building were devoted to the
restaurant. The top two floors were
income-producing bachelor apartments.
Above it all was a roof garden (so popular in days before air
conditioning) that would be enclosed by a vault of glass 30 feet high in the
winter.
The roof garden was covered during the cold months -- photo by Byron Company from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York http://collections.mcny.org/C.aspx?VP3=SearchResult_VPage&VBID=24UAYWC0C0C&SMLS=1&RW=1280&RH=894 |
The land on which the new building would rise was leased to
Delmonico by the Havemeyer family. As
the building neared completion in 1897, family patriarch Theodore Havemeyer
died; throwing into question whether the family would be present at the
restaurant’s opening. The New York Times
mentioned on October 31, 1897 “Mr. and Mrs. Havemeyer are in mourning, but
their appearance at the public christening of the really beautiful building
which that clever young architect, Mr. James Brown Lord, has given New York in
the new Delmonico’s, and in which the late head of the Havemeyer house, Mr.
Theodore Havemeyer, was so peculiarly interested, would certainly be pardonable
and would seem most fitting.”
The New-York Tribune published a sketch of the new building (copyright expired) |
The Astoria Hotel and the new Delmonico’s were neck-and-neck
as the finishing touches were completed and openings planned. But, although the Astoria beat Delmonico’s by
about ten days; the elaborate interiors previewed by reporters promised stiff
competition. The New York Times said “It is too
early for any predictions to be made as to the probably effect upon New York
society life of the opening of the new Astoria.
Delmonico’s new building, which is now understood will be quietly opened
at Fifth Avenue and Forty-fourth Street on or about Nov. 10, without any
flourish of trumpets, may compete in the matter of drawing fashionable
patronage with the Waldorf-Astoria more than is at present expected, and with
music and the permitting of smoking in the palm garden at the dinner hour the
new establishment may prove so attractive as to win back the favor which
Delmonico’s once held in New York society.”
The kitchen staff (above) and the wait staff posted in 1902 -- photograph by Byron Company, from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York http://collections.mcny.org/C.aspx?VP3=SearchResult_VPage&VBID=24UAYWC0C0C&SMLS=1&RW=1280&RH=894 |
The “informal opening” was held on November 15. Nearly 1,000 guests strolled through the
various period rooms. On the ground
floor the ladies’ restaurant was paneled in oak and “upholstered in green” and
was deemed by a newspaper as “a dainty room.”
Also on this floor were the palm garden and the Elizabethan-style café.
The cafe was done in the "Elizabethan" style -- photograph by Byron Company from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York http://collections.mcny.org/C.aspx?VP3=SearchResult_VPage&VBID=24UAYWC0C0C&SMLS=1&RW=1280&RH=894 |
On the second floor were the private dining rooms “artistically
decorated in quiet effects,” according to The New York Times. The Louis XVI ballroom engulfed the eastern half
of the third floor and was “lighted by electroliers, screened by a mass of
small glass beads.” The woodwork in the
71 by 60 foot room--designed to accommodate 600 persons--was stained green and the walls were covered with rose-colored
silk. On the Fifth Avenue side of
this level was the “supper room.”
The kitchens, larders, refrigerating rooms, butcher shop and
other culinary departments were housed in the two floors below street
level.
Below street level workers in the confectionery department (above) fashion compotes from spun sugar. An army of chefs prepare gourmet foods. photograph by Byron Company from the Collection of the Museum of the City of New York http://collections.mcny.org/C.aspx?VP3=SearchResult_VPage&VBID=24UAYWC0C0C&SMLS=1&RW=1280&RH=894 |
The New-York Tribune said “The new building, which stands at
Fifth-ave. and Forty-fourth-st., beautiful and impressive in its architectural
outlines and furnished within on a lavish and costly scale, is a monument to
the wise and successful business management which has directed the affairs of
this famous eating institution.”
On reporting on the opening of the new building, which it
deemed “a good example of the Italian Renaissance,” The New York Times opined “The
opening of the new house marks another epoch in the social history of New York.” The newspaper was correct.
The ornate banquet room featured two lofts for musicians -- photograph by Byron Company from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York http://collections.mcny.org/C.aspx?VP3=SearchResult_VPage&VBID=24UAYWC0C0C&SMLS=1&RW=1280&RH=894 |
A week later the first ball was given in the sumptuous new
ballroom. A subscription dance, the
first of four, it was under the patronage of six prominent socialites who dared
not to engage the ballroom of Caroline Astor’s new hotel. If there was a question of Delmonico’s
holding its own against the mammoth Waldorf-Astoria, the November 25th
ball set the matter to rest.
A full orchestra played following the 11:30 supper and a
reporter commented that “The dance was most successful, and instead of the 150
guests expected, 190 were present.”
Across the street to the south were the butcher shop and tavern, the presence of which on 5th Avenue mightily annoyed several New York socialites -- photograph by Byron Company from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York http://collections.mcny.org/C.aspx?VP3=SearchResult_VPage&VBID=24UAYWC0C0C&SMLS=1&RW=1280&RH=894&PN=1#/SearchResult_VPage&VBID=24UAYWC0C0C&SMLS=1&RW=1280&RH=894&PN=1 |
On December 9 Mayor Strong held a dinner here to discuss “the
funeral of Old New York.” With the
merging of Brooklyn, Manhattan and the Bronx scheduled to go into effect on
January 1, 1898; he sent invitations to about 100 prominent citizens, neatly
engraved on official stationery, to lay plans for a memorial service to be held
in the Metropolitan Opera House.
Reflecting the morose attitude of Manhattan residents
concerning the consolidation, he planned a “solemn service.” “In the language of the Mayor,” said The New York Times, “it will be ‘the funeral’ of the old city, whose life is then to be
terminated, not as a result of the ravages of old age, but by legislative
enactment.”
Stenciled, beamed ceilings adorn one of the private dining rooms -- photograph by Byron Company from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York http://collections.mcny.org/C.aspx?VP3=SearchResult_VPage&VBID=24UAYWC0C0C&SMLS=1&RW=1280&RH=894&PN=1#/SearchResult_VPage&VBID=24UAYWC0C0C&SMLS=1&RW=1280&RH=894&PN=1 |
A year later, on Christmas Eve 1898, the New-York Tribune
considered Delmonico’s move uptown. “Time
has demonstrated, however, that the step was a wise one. Society folk took kindly to the change of
site, and with the new building offering exceptional and unusual attractions
for dinners, both big and little, it became almost immediately a fad.”
Earlier that year wealthy debutante Josephine W. Drexel had
proven that when she raised social eyebrows by throwing herself a lavish
ball here. Five hundred invitations were
sent for the affair which was held on February 8, 1898; despite Josephine’s
formal coming-out in December hosted by her mother.
“The ball was rather unique among the social events of this
city,” said The New York Times, "as it was given by a debutante of the season, and not,
as usual, by her mother or other relative, in her honor. Miss Drexel, who conducted the management of
the affair herself, was formally introduced to society at a large reception
given for her at her mother’s home some weeks ago.”
Josephine booked the 20-piece Lander’s Orchestra and invited
the cream of New York and Philadelphia society—“chosen almost entirely from the
younger set.” The cotillion began
directly after the 12:30 a.m. nine-course dinner. The guest list read like the Social Register,
including “Mr. and Mrs. James Abercrombie Burden, Sr., Mrs. William Astor, Mr.
and Mrs. John Jacob Astor, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Orme Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. De
Lancey Nicoll, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Livingston; who danced among Dahlgrens,
Beekmans, Mortons, Kernochans and Schieffelins.
Meanwhile, the Church Temperance Society parked its coffee
van outside in the freezing February night air to offer comfort to the rows of
coachmen sitting in the vehicles of their wealthy employers.
The bachelor apartments on the upper floors were reserved
for only the most fashionable young unmarried men. Among its first residents was the 34-year old widower
Thomas Henry French. A dramatic agent
and publisher of plays, he took a suite of rooms. Although the often-elitist Manhattan society
normally looked askance at theater types; French was a member of the New York
Yacht Club, the Manhattan Club, the New York Club and the Lambs. He had managed Madison Square Garden upon its
opening and later built the Grand Opera House and the Broadway and American
Theatres. The representative of the
Theatre Royal in Drury Lane, London; he also managed the Lillian Russell Opera
Company.
In November 1902, after living here two decades, French
became ill. At 7:35 p.m. on December 1
he died in his bedroom crowded with his business manager of 30 years, his
secretary, Dr. J. H. Emerson, personal friends, and the entire staff of his
publishing office.
Wealthy diners were frightened just before midnight on
August 2, 1903 when the cry of “Fire!” was heard in the corridor. A small electrical blaze had burned for about
20 minutes in the basement engine room before being noticed and by now the
faint smell of burning wood was reaching the dining rooms.
“There were 150 men and women in the large dining room on
the first floor, and in the café were a number of men,” reported The New York Times. The guests rushed to the doors; “Many
of them did not go through the formality of getting their hats, coats or wraps.”
Although the fire was small, at the height of the confusion
it crippled the electrical system, plunging the building into darkness. The tony patrons filed across the avenue to
Sherry’s for shelter while the fire department responded.
When the fire was extinguished, some of the customers
returned for their belongings and more than 30 waiters scurried about to light
candles which they carried in the silver candlesticks of the dining room.
Apparently unperturbed by the excitement, some of the
patrons went back to their plates. “By
the light of these [candles], the guests who had returned, sat down and
finished their dinners,” said the newspaper.
In 1908 the restaurant was incorporated for the first time
since its establishment in 1827 by brothers John and Peter Delmonico. Now sisters Josephine and Jeanne Delmonico
ran the business. Three years later, as
the lease on the Havemeyer land neared expiration, rumors spread that Delmonico’s
would move once again.
On August 5, 1911 The New York Times noted “Delmonico’s has always
moved with society as is evinced by the fact that the great-grandmothers of the
present social leaders dined at the restaurant in Beaver Street.” However the newspaper put to rest any
thoughts that the grand Fifth Avenue building would be abandoned. “But the uptown march of the famous
restaurant has been retarded now for at least sixteen years,” it said, and
reported that a new lease had been signed.
Earlier that summer, as Manhattan’s millionaires abandoned
the city for Newport, Bar Harbor and Long Island, management began redecorating
the interiors. Patrons returning for the
Winter Season of 1911 would find refurbished dining rooms and new culinary
offerings. Managing Director Taupier had
spent the summer in Europe “looking up novelties for the coming season of
banqueting.”
Tragedy visited Delmonico’s during the parade for the 165th
Infantry returning from action in Europe on Monday, April 28, 1919. Bartender Robert Provenzano went to a fifth
story window to watch the parade high above the throng that crowded Fifth
Avenue. Several bystanders in the crowd
looked up to see Provenzano leaning far out of the window, then losing his grip
and falling. Shouts of warning went out
to those directly below.
Among the parade-watchers was 65-year old Grace Laflin
Whitehead of Chicago who was accompanied by her daughter and a friend. “Mrs. Whitehead either was too intent upon
the marching columns to heed the cries or did not suspect their portent. Provenzano’s body came down squarely upon
her. An ambulance surgeon declared she
had been killed outright,” reported the New-York Tribune the following day.
The bartender suffered internal injuries, a fractured skull
and broken legs; which proved fatal as well.
It was not the uptown movement of society nor the aging
structure that tolled the death knell for Delmonico’s—it was Prohibition. As with so many other hotels and restaurants,
the loss of income once provided by the sale of wine and liquor was
debilitating. More than once the classy
restaurant was raided by Dry Agents in the first years of the 1920s. Finally, on May 20, 1923, nearly a century
after its founding, Delmonico’s announced that it would close. The New York Times ran a sub-headline that
read “Famous Fifth Av. Restaurant Succumbs to Prohibition.”
“At Delmonico’s last night,” the newspaper reported, “it was
said that the lease, which was to run until July, 1927, had been canceled by
agreement. The Harriman National Bank,
it was said, now located on the opposite corner of Fifth Avenue and
Forty-fourth Street, plans to erect a bank and office building on the site of
the famous restaurant.”
The New York Times was acerbic in its assigning blame. Two weeks later it wrote “Prohibition,
however, was the finish of the venerable establishment. The typical Delmonico frequenter regarded
dinner as a rite and the drinking of choice wines and liqueurs as a semi-public ceremony. The old guard at Delmonico’s was composed of
wine connoisseurs. To those who went
there it meant something to have a dusty, cobwebbed bottle of Pontet Canet or
Chateau Yquem brought on in a little straw basket with its neck tilted at just
the right angle and the contents exactly at the temperature of the cellar. The Delmonico patron beamed when he saw a
champagne cooler visibly alongside.
Delmonico belonged to the days when sauterne or chablis stood guard over
the oysters; when ruddy wine came with the redhead duck; and champagne was due with
the dessert, and port and cordials or fifty-year-old brandies were borne in
with the coffee pot.”
On May 21, 1923 Delmonico’s served dinner guests for the last time. At 9:00 that evening the orchestra struck up “Auld
Lang Syne” and the doorman was told to close the doors and admit no one
else. One exception was made.
John Lynn had been a patron of the restaurant for decades,
since it was located at Fifth Avenue and 26th Street. The 73-year old was determined to be there
for the last night and so he laid down in the afternoon for a long nap in his
apartment in the Hotel Ritz-Carlton. He overslept.
When the elderly gentleman knocked on the doors of Delmonico’s
he was let in. Newspapers reported that “there
were a few moist eyes among the diners,” many of whom were prominent in New
York society. Talk centered around the
long history of the restaurant, which over the decades in several locations had served Louis Napoleon,
later Emperor of France; Abraham Lincoln, Charles Dickens, Whitier, Longfellow,
William Cullen Bryant and Ralph Waldo Emerson.
Political and military figures included Ulysses S. Grant, General
Winfield Scott, William Seward and Andrew Johnson.
When the lights were turned out that night, it would seem to
have been the last entertainment held in Delmonico’s. But there was one more in the future.
When the above photograph was taken in 1924, the end of the line for Delmonico's was near-- photograph by Wurts Brothers, from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York http://collections.mcny.org/C.aspx?VP3=SearchResult_VPage&VBID=24UAYWC0C0C&SMLS=1&RW=1280&RH=894 |
In the summer of 1925, as the building was reduced to a pile
of bricks and dust, a workman found a rare bottle of wine in a subterranean vault that had been a
cellar. The “honest
workman,” as described by The New York Times, turned over the dusty relic.
On August 19 a nostalgic group of stalwart men dressed in
dinner clothes gathered in the ruins to consume one last meal at Delmonico’s—including
the vintage wine recovered from the cellar.
“While bricks and lumber crashed within a few feet of them, fifty men
sat down to luncheon yesterday in the ruins of Delmonico’s, at Fifth Avenue
and Forty-fourth Street, the last meal under the arrangement of a family which
has catered to New York palates for 100 years,” reported The New York Times.
Among the diners was E. H. Nies, who had started out as a
boy in one of the downtown Delmonico restaurants and had risen to assistant
manager by the time of its closing. For the
occasion he had written a poem, the first verse of which read:
No more the grape with fire divine
Shall light the torch of pleasure gay,
And where the gourmand paused to dine
Hot dog and fudge shops have their day
Despite the demolition going on around the table, the
luncheon was served with all the propriety and embellishments of the restaurant’s
glory days. “The tables were ornamented
with candy made in the shape of flowers, the fruit was served in dishes made of
ice with ferns frozen in them, there were plates of dainty sweetmeats, and the
soup and chicken and ice cream and coffee were worthy of the name of Delmonico,”
said The New York Times.
When the last sip of champagne was gone the 50 gentlemen
left the ruins of Delmonico’s. The “social
epoch in the history of New York” that began with the opening of the restaurant’s
doors 28 years earlier was over.
photo by Alice Lum |
An end of an era indeed, Along with the demise of the 12 course dinners went the elegant dress and manners, civility, grace and a sense of over the top wonderment that such places embodied before the day of the drive-thru window, chinese order by number menus and the now all to commonplace pizza delivery.
ReplyDeleteamen
DeleteGreat write up w/awesome collection of pix found. Tnx for this entry on such a historic building and eatery.
ReplyDeleteIn my collection of NYC ephemera I have 3 Sherry's menus and an invitation, which includes a menu, to a private anniversary dinner held at Delmonico's in 1904. The art work on all of these items is amazing. Minor masterpieces.
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Don't worry Delmonico in New Orleans (1895) is still going strong as it was purchased by Emeril Lagasse in 1998
ReplyDeleteWhich is sadly closed in 2022
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