On June 25, 1908, John Bond Trevor married Caroline M.
Wilmerding in the home of her parents at No. 18 East 77th Street. The social status of the young couple was
evident by those in attendance—Robert Walton Goelet served as best man, and
assembled in the parlors were socially elite names like Mr. and Mrs. Orme
Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, the R. Fulton Cuttings, the
Frelinghuysens, and Mr. and Mrs. Harrison McKay Twombly.
After returning from their honeymoon the newlyweds moved
into the Trevor family home where Trevor’s mother and sister still lived. But it was to be a short-lived arrangement. John Trevor immediately began looking for a
site for a new house for his bride and he found it on what was being called
Carnegie Hill.
Andrew Carnegie’s massive mansion spanning the Fifth Avenue
block front at 91st Street had been completed in 1903. The steel magnate prudently protected his
property by buying the surrounding land as well. With his own home completed, he now carefully
chose his neighbors.
John Trevor purchased the 26-foot wide building plot at No.
11 East 91st Street in February, 1909. On May 22 he took the title to plot, spurring
The New-York Tribune to report “John B. Trevor is going to be a neighbor of
Andrew Carnegie…The façade of the proposed house will be diagonally opposite
the main entrance to the house of Mr. Carnegie.”
The Trevors would be neighbors with Manhattan’s upper
crust. Next door, at No. 9, was the
grand Renaissance palace of John Henry Hammond and his wife, the former Emily
Vanderbilt Sloane; completed the same year as the Carnegie house. The Hammond’s house abutted No. 7, the
mansion of James A. Burden, Jr. and his wife, Florence Adele Sloans, Emily’s
sister. Their house had been finished in
1905.
Now John Trevor had to hold his own among the gargantuan
mansions along the Carnegie block. Two
months later plans were well underway.
The New York Times reported on July 18 that “John B. Trevor is planning
to erect a $100,000 residence.” That
figure would amount to about $2 million today.
Trevor had chosen his architectural firm, Trowbridge &
Livingston, and on September 15, 1909 they filed their plans. The Times offered little hint as to the
outward appearance other than “It will be of brick and limestone ad will
occupy a frontage of 26 feet.”
Construction took two years to complete. Trowbridge & Livingston had wisely chosen
not to compete for attention with the massive mansions of the Carnegies,
Hammonds and Burdens. The Trevor house,
which was a fraction of the width of the other homes, instead showed quiet
restraint. Trowbridge & Livingston
chose a toned-down version of the French Beaux-Arts Classicism style for the
house.
The mansion was marked by a nearly-stark absence of ornamentation. The Times deemed it a “handsome dwelling,”
and opined “With the Carnegie, Hammond, Sloane and Townsend Burden residences
they form a nucleus for a high-grade colony of fine houses.”
Three stories of planar limestone sat upon a rusticated base
where the double entrance doors nestled below a prim cornice on two scrolled
brackets. The welcoming, shallow entrance
stairs gently radiated out to the sidewalk.
Three sets of arched French windows at the second floor created the main
focus of the design. Above it all, the
fifth floor in the mansard sat beyond the bracketed cornice.
The Harvard- and Columbia-educated Trevor had already
established himself as a successful lawyer.
The couple would have two sons in the house—John B., Jr. and
Bronson. Summers were spent at their
country estate, Glenview, on the Hudson River.
Trevor's professional influence spread beyond New York City. In 1919 he was appointed Deputy Attorney
General of the State of New York; a time when anarchists and other radical
groups were responsible for bombings and related terrorism. He worked with the Lusk committee
investigating “subversive activities in the state,” as described by the Yonkers
newspaper the Herald Statesman.
Trevor’s abilities were tapped by the United States
military, as well, and following the end of World War I he was made Captain in
the U.S. Army, working in military intelligence. In 1920 he was associate counsel for the
Sub-Committee of the U.S. Senate on Foreign Relations.
The ardently-patriotic lawyer worked doggedly at uncovering
Bolshevist terrorists in New York.
Because many in that group were Jewish, he was repeatedly accused of being
anti-Semitic. The misinformed rumors
persisted through his life and would result in accusations of his being
pro-Nazi.
In 1923 John and Caroline sold their sprawling country estate
to the city of Yonkers. It became the
largest park in that city, Trevor Park, and the old stone house was converted to
an historical museum. A year later,
Trevor’s intense interest in the “immigration question” came to the forefront
when he was influential in the adoption of the first immigration quota law. He helped to draft the National Origin Quota
System. Three years later he founded a
citizens committee to support and defend the system, known as the American
Coalition of Patriotic Societies.
As the decades passed, Trevor’s focus turned to the Soviet threat. As associate counsel of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to investigate Russian propaganda, he unmasked a soviet agent who was functioning as an Ambassador and had him deported.
The highly influential lawyer died in the house on East 91st
Street on February 21, 1956 at the age of 77.
Caroline would live on in the mansion for another two decades, dying on
October 14, 1975 at the age of 94.
In an ironic twist, the Trevor mansion was
purchased by the Soviet Government in 1978 as housing for its consulate
staff. Only a year later President Jimmy
Carter froze the consulate program after the Soviets intervened in Afghanistan. Along with the Hammond mansion next door, now
the Soviet Consulate, John and Caroline Trevor’s handsome home was shuttered
and dark for over two decades.
The Trevor mansion (right) sat among the most magnificent homes in the City. |
Today the Trevor mansion is part of the Consulate General of
the Russian Federation in New York. Other
than dark green awnings installed at street level, matching those on the
Hammond house, the restrained and elegant residence is unchanged since its was the newest of the "high-grade colony of fine houses."
contemporary photographs taken by the author
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