Unlike its near mirror image neighbor at No. 246, it appears that No. 250 always had a full attic floor, rather than the more expected Federal dormers. |
In 1826 Isaac A. Hatfield began construction of a string of
brick-faced homes on West 10th Street, just east of Hudson Street. His brothers, Jonathan and Charles were, like
him, carpenter-builders and the three men had purchased the building plots that
ran from No. 246 West 10th around the corner to No. 510 Hudson Street.
Nos. 246 and 250 were the first to be built. The gap in their addresses was due to the
small building erected in the yard behind, No. 248, and accessed by a “horse
walk” between the two homes. Because No.
250 enjoyed what were essentially air rights over the horse walk, it stretched
four bays wide on the upper stories. The
two houses shared matching Federal-style doorways and mirror-image sideways
stoops; but along with being wider that its next door neighbor it appears that
No. 250 was always a full floor higher than No. 246 as well. Careful inspection of the Flemish bond brickwork
reveals no interruption in the façade one would expect if the floor was
heightened subsequently; and the handsome paneled lintels at the top level
suggest they are original.
No. 250 retains its original doorway. The once-opened horsewalk now has a doorway. The basement entrance is below the stoop. |
Until then Mrs. Tamar Reynolds would be the most interesting
resident. The aging widow moved in with
her daughter and son-in-law, Christopher Shuart. Shuart was in the boot and shoe business and
was highly active in politics. The New
York Times later remembered that he “was one of the earliest Sachems of
Tammany.” Tammany Hall not only took its
name from Chief Tammany, or Tammamend, but named its district halls after
Native American tribes—such as the Pequod and Nameoki Clubs. District leaders were Sachems, or chiefs.
Mrs. Reynolds was born in Sing Sing, New York in 1789 and her family
moved to Manhattan when she was eight years old.
The Times said “In 1804 she was living with her parents at Richmond
Hill, and among her favorite recitals of the past was her story of how, in that
year, her residence was opposite that of Aaron
Burr, whom she remembered well, and how, on the morning of the day upon
which he slew Alexander Hamilton, she opened the gate for him as he rode out
from home to the fatal meeting.”
Tamar Reynolds delighted in sitting in her daughter’s parlor
and retelling stories of the past and the modern technology she had seen come
to pass. She told of the time she was
riding in a sloop on the Hudson River when a newfangled steamboat chugged its
way up stream. No one on the sloop had
seen such a contraption and she described “with zest” the terror of the
passengers and crew as the steamboat drew nearer.
By the 1880s Christopher Shuart had died and the two women
lived alone in the 10th Street house. Her mind still sharp and her memory vivid,
Tamar Reynolds would reminisce to visitors, telling them of the Greenwich
Village she remember as a child, a country place “with villas, gardens and
orchards, which one by one disappeared as the years of her life rolled by,”
said The New York Times.
On Friday December 3, 1886, the 97-year old woman went about
her normal routine, going up and down the stairs and performing her day-to-day
tasks. As evening approached, she complained
that she felt weak and within the hour she was dead.
In florid Victorian prose, The Times reported “In the front
room of the old brick residence No. 250 West Tenth-street lay yesterday the
body of Mrs. Tamar Reynolds…On a chair beside the wasted body hung a dress of
Italian silk, a fabric of rare delicacy and of a fresh and glossy black, that
would seem to question the statement that it was made 40 years ago did not the
unfamiliar tucks and gathers in its skirt and the pieces of whalebone sewed
into the body—the forerunners of the modern corset—sustain its claims to
antiquity.”
At the time of the funeral, held in the house on the evening
of December 6, Mrs. Shuart was 73-years old and a grandmother herself.
By the end of World War I William C. Anoes lived in the
house. Concerned about the rampant
unemployment as troops returned from war and tried to reenter the workplace,
Anoes pushed to have the United States Employment Service made a permanent
bureau of the Department of Labor.
Over the next half century Greenwich Village and West 10th
Street would see drastic change. In 1946
the old house was converted to “furnished rooms.” The Village was, by now, the epicenter of New
York City’s artistic community as artists, musicians, writers and poets were
drawn to its winding streets and cheap rents.
In the second half of the century Greenwich Village was also
the center of the Gay community. It was
nearby at the Stonewall Inn that, on June 28, 1969, the first stand in the Gay
Rights Movement was taken. At the time
the West 10th Street house where Tamar Reynolds had entertained lady
friends had become a gay rooming house with the tongue-in-cheek nickname “Boystown.”
Here in December 1971 Vietnam veteran John Stanley Wojtowicz
“married” Liz Eden. In fact, Liz was Ernest
Aron, a pre-operation transsexual. Among
the witnesses to the mock Roman Catholic ceremony were the groom’s mother.
The main problem in the couple’s relationship was their lack
of money for the highly-expensive operation that Ernest so desperately
wanted. On August 20, 1970 he attempted
suicide by overdosing on sleeping pills, reportedly no longer psychologically
able to live his life as a man.
In a not-so-well-planned act of desperation, the 27-year old
Wojtowicz attempted to get the money they needed by robbing a bank. He would later explain to The New York Times “I
did what a man has to do in order to save the life of someone I loved a great
deal.”
At 3:00 on the afternoon of August 22 he and two accomplices
entered a Chase Manhattan Bank branch in Gravesend, Brooklyn. The heist fell apart nearly before the doors
closed behind them. Speaking on the
telephone to a WCBS reporter from inside the bank he explained “Well, we’re
holding up a bank and we were on our way out when a stupid cop car pulled up.” One of Wojtowicz’s accomplices had bolted at
the appearance of police.
Calling him a “young mop-haired gunman” The New York Times later
explained “It was a crime of passion for Mr. Wojtowicz, who intended to use the
stolen money to pay for a $3,000 sex-change operation for the man he called his
wife.
“Mr. Wojtowicz was separated from his wife, Carmen, with
whom he had two children, Sean and Dawn, but was involved with a tall, wispy
man named Ernest Aron, whom he had married in a lavish ceremony with several
bridesmaids.”
Wojtowicz offered to trade a hostage for a chance to see
Ernest. He “was brought to the scene
wearing a robe from Kings County Hospital, where he had been admitted after a
failed suicide attempt,” said The Times.
The day-long siege, the motivation of which was
heart-breaking, was featured in a human interest photospread by Life magazine a
month later titled “The Boys in the Bank.”
It became the basis for the 1975 Al Pacino film Dog Day Afternoon
directed by Sidney Lumet.
The judge and jury were less moved than Life readers and Wojtowicz
received a 20-year sentence. Of the
$7500 he received for the movie rights, most went to his legal costs. The other $2500 he gave to Ernest for the
operation.
Two decades after the failed bank robbery that dragged No.
250 West 10th Street into the headlines, the house was converted to
three luxury apartments. Then, in 2009,
it was restored as a single family home by interior designer Steven
Gambrel.
Neither Tamar Reynolds nor John Wojtowicz would recognize the interiors today. photo http://www.stribling.com/properties/4003363 |
I wish I have further infos. How can I contact you? my e-mail is
ReplyDeletemaxdegiovanni@libero.it
You should mention this is the house where James Stewart lives in Rear Window, from which he witnesses a murder.
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