Early in 2014 a construction shed engulfs the street level. |
There was some unpleasant business at City Hall in
1883 when it was discovered that city clerks and a few wealthy New Yorkers had
committed fraud. John B. Carroll lined
his pockets with graft while about $12,000 of taxes and water rents went unpaid. Another of the moneyed
businessmen indicted was John C. Ely.
The New York Times reported on September 29 that year that “Mr.
John C. Ely, who is mentioned in the indictment, is a large real estate owner
in the north western part of the City.
He has an office at No. 191 Broadway, and resides at No. 242 Fifth-avenue,
a handsome brown-stone residence, near Twenty-eighth-st.”
The “handsome brown-stone residence” was typical of the
neighborhood near Madison Square. Soon
after the park opened in 1847 high-end homes began lining the surrounding
streets. By 1870, when the park was
re-landscaped, the northward-flowing tide of mansions had reached 28th
Street. Frederick C. Colton, treasurer
of the New York Bible Society lived in No. 242 at the time.
But now, in 1883 Manhattan’s millionaires had continued
inching up the avenue and commerce was beginning to engulf the area. It would seem that the tax-evading Ely leased
the house from Lucy Slade; but in any case soon after his name appeared in the
newspapers he was gone.
The Presidential Election pitting Democrat Grover Cleveland
against James G. Blaine was nearing and on June 26, 1884 The New York Times
noted that the Republican National Committee had leased No. 242 Fifth Avenue
the day before. The newspaper said “the
building will be opened for the campaign as soon as possible. It is four stories in height and spacious
enough to accommodate the army of clerks and employes which will be required to
aid the committee. It is within easy reach
of the hotels which cluster around Madison-square."
The new committee headquarters was opened, symbolically no
doubt, on the Fourth of July. Two weeks
later the zeal of the Republicans caused no small bit of annoyance and
inconvenience to neighbors. B.F. Jones
decided that a huge banner with the portraits of Blaine and his vice-presidential
candidate, Logan, should be stretched across the avenue for all to see. The owner of the house directly across the
avenue refused to allow the banner to be bolted to his mansion; so it had to be
erected diagonally across the thoroughfare to an apartment house.
On July 28 The Sun reported that “At 8:35 last night a
sudden gust of wind slapped the Republican candidates in the face, pulled the
iron fastening of the banner out of the apartment house wall, and brought
things down with a crash on the electric light wires that cross the
street. Mr. B. F. Jones’s wire cut half
through the electric line. The cut wire
sputtered like a blue light an instant, and then all the tall globed burners in
the avenue from Madison square up to Forty-second street went out with a puff,
and left the street nearly pitch dark.”
An engineer from the electric company worked on the dynamos
until around midnight trying to correct the problem; then sent out an
inspector. The cut wires could not be
repaired until morning. “Meantime
policemen did patrol duty in the dark, and pedestrians couldn’t make out any of
the house numbers,” complained The Sun.
When the election was over and the committee gone, the estate
of Lucy Slade conceded to the commercialization of the district and hired
architect George Harding to convert the mansion for business. The brownstone façade and stoop were stripped
off to be replaced by an up-to-date Queen Anne cast iron front.
Completed in 1885, Harding’s handsome design focused on appropriate
space for the high-end retailers now filling this section of Fifth Avenue. The street entrance featured modern multi-paned
arcade windows below a deep panel of glass tiles. Immense expanses of glass, made possible by
the cast iron, flooded the showrooms of the second and third floors with
sunlight. Above a small cornice and arcade
of five openings sat an exuberant parapet featuring a deep pediment
filled with intricate ornamentation tied up with a cast iron bow.
The building would become a favorite with exclusive
decorating firms, art dealers and auction houses. On March 25, 1886 The Times reported that “Several
windows and other pieces of stained glasswork, designed and manufactured by Mr.
John La Farge, are on exhibition at No. 242 Fifth avenue. The fine effect of color in these pieces are
evidence of progress in America in this branch of art.”
The exclusive antiques and decorating firm of H. B. Herts
& Son moved here from the Washington Square area. Stanford White would visit the store as he
was furnishing the Metropolitan Club, completed in 1893. Among his purchases were several clocks and a
sideboard that came from the Newport cottage of E. D. Morgan.
Around the corner, at No. 6 West 28th Street, was
another high-end antiques dealer, E. J. La Place. Two years before Stanford White would shop
for the Metropolitan Club’s furnishings, both stores were hit by a smooth jewel
thief.
Nettie Kirby Hamburger was the wife of alleged diamond thief
Ralph Hamburger, alias Robert Howe, alias De Ford. While Ralph Hamburger was locked up awaiting
arraignment in 1891, his wife was busy on her own. Nettie browsed through the expensive items in
the shops on Fifth Avenue and the neighboring streets. The well-dressed woman then dropped by
pawnshops with valuable jewelry and other items as merchants realized they were
missing stock.
A suspicious Detective Cottrell shadowed Nellie and
recovered thousands of dollars of stolen merchandise including diamond
earrings, a diamond brooch, two silver-mounted cologne bottles, a heart with
nine large diamonds and other pieces.
Among the loot was a gold chatelaine watch for which H. B. Herts &
Son had paid $900—over $22,000 today.
The Sun reported on July 29, 1891 that E. J. La Place was among the
merchants who identified Mrs. Hamburger.
By now H. B. Herts & Son was operated by brothers
Maurice A. and Jacques H. Herts.
Upstairs architect Charles De Rahm had his offices.
In April 1901 H. B. Herts & Sons advertised “A Great
Public Sale” at the American Art Galleries on Madison Square South. The firm had signed a lease for a smaller
space which would not be ready until the fall “and being compelled to vacate
their present building on May 1st” had to liquidate their entire
stock.
The inventory list hinted at not only the firm’s expensive
stock; but at its carriage trade customers.
Included were Chippendale, Adam, Empire, Louis XV and XVI, Sheraton,
English, Dutch and Colonial furniture; “rare old tapestries, English and Dutch
silver, ivories, enamels, bronzes, beautiful clocks and clock sets, silks and
brocades.”
For several years, at least from 1902 through 1909, Rupert
A. Ryley “men and women’s tailor,” operated from the building. Tailors on Fifth Avenue in 1902 catered only
to the upper classes and Ryley and his wife summered in their own Newport
cottage. The “merchant tailor” held
memberships in the Manhattan, Democratic and New York Athletic Clubs and was
active in Republican events.
A dashing Rupert A. Ryley (upper left) was possibly wearing a suit he created -- photo from "The Great Sound Money Parade," 1897 (copyright expired) |
In May 1902 as his customers prepared for the warmer months,
Ryley advertised “golfing, sporting and outdoor costumes. Riding habits and suits for men and women a
specialty.”
Interestingly, in 1903 Auctioneers James P. Silo and A. W.
Clarke advertised their sales here as being in the “Rupert A. Ryley Building.” At the same time The Yale & Towne Mfg.
Co. opened its showroom in the building.
The firm dealt in “artistic hardware of higher grades.” In 1903 it invited is customers, “especially
architects and their clients,” to avail themselves “of the improved facilities
thus offered for the selection of locks and hardware for buildings of all
classes.”
The fashionable address may have been ill-fitted for a
hardware showroom, for Yale & Towne seems to have quickly moved on.
Haberdashery Dobbs & Co. moved into the building in
1908, taking the ground floor retail store. Best known for their gentlemen’s hats, the firm offered
items like “silk hats, opera hats, caps, canes and umbrellas.” In the fall of that year Dobbs & Co.
promised in an advertisement “The quality is superb and the styles are of
unquestionable taste and propriety.”
A Dobbs & Co. advertisement in the New-York Tribune on September 30, 1911 shows the arcade entrance -- copyright expired |
As automobiles began replacing carriages and the wealthy
accepted the new trend, Dobbs & Co. was quick to cash in. On April 19, 1909 an advertisement in the
New-York Tribune offered “Owners’ watertight cloth coats and chauffeurs’
complete outfits, together with many practical novelties in Automobile Apparel.” But it reminded customers of what had made it
so successful: hats. “Derbies and Soft
Hats $6, $4, in a variety of smart shapes in exquisite taste and of superb
quality.” The $6 derby would cost about
$150 today.
Dobbs & Co. moved next door to No. 244 Fifth Avenue
around 1914. In its place, Edmond P. La
Place, who, with Herts & Son, had been robbed by Nettie Hamburger years
before, moved in. In announcing its new
home, E. P. La Place listed “period furniture and faithful reproductions, Sheffield
plate, antiques, interior decorations—curios, prints, period mirrors, oriental
porcelain, tapestries, etc.”
E. P. La Place antiques would remain here until Edmond La
Place’s retirement in 1921. The entire
collection was auctioned off on Wednesday, April 13 of that year.
In the meantime, Darling & Co. auctioneers was operating
from the building. The firm was renowned
for liquidating the estates of the wealthy and famous. On May 27, 1919 The Evening World reported
that “Thousands of dollars’ worth of gifts, including rare bronzes curios and
period furniture, as well as diamonds and other jewels, belonging to the late “Pommery”
Bob Vernon, sportsman, horseman and champagne agent” would go under the hammer
here the following day.
The first day of that auction netted $11,698 and the Tribune
noted that “Evelyn Nesbit Thaw bought several Chinese vases, silver, rugs and
trophies.”
A month later Darling’s prepared to auction the estate of Princess
de Chimay (who was Clara Ward of Detroit before her marriage). The princess had married violinist Rigo “who
was dear to the princess after she fled from her prince husband,” explained the
Washington Times on June 27. Rigo was
the beneficiary of her estate and “it was announced that he will play his
fiddle on the last day of the sale.”
The auction included about $200,000 of the princess’s
personal effects, including furnishings from her “splendid home in Paris and in
Egypt on the Nile.” But it was her
portraits that got Darling’s into trouble.
The Washington Times reported “Half a dozen portraits in the
nude of the late Princess de Chimey…were placed on sale at auction yesterday…Louis
Van Brink, the auctioneer, was quite unhappy because he could not exhibit these
works of art in the window and draw a larger crowd.”
When the auctioneer had placed one of the portraits in the
window (which Van Brink complained was “not so very nude either, for the
princess was wearing a green girdle”) the vice society agents made a
visit. The auction house was informed
that the painting would have to be removed from public sight if the managers
“wanted to avoid trouble.”
In 1920 playboy millionaire Joseph Browne Elwell, whist
expert and turfman, was found murdered in his home. A pistol was found at the scene, along with a
woman’s kimono. Elwell’s housekeeper told
detectives that the kimono “was the property of a woman who made occasional
visits to the Elwell house.” They were
also interested in a life-sized painting of a “beautiful woman” that hung in
the house who was unidentified.
The furnishings, artwork and personal effects of the Elwell
mansion were auctioned at Darling’s in October 1920. Somewhat astoundingly, at least to 21st
century minds, the evidence in the still-unsolved murder mystery was included
in the sale.
On October 2 the New-York Tribune reported “A high-backed
upholstered chair and a silk kimono, embroidered in blue and black after a Chinese
design, made their appearance yesterday in the show window of Darling &
Co., auctioneers, 242 Fifth Avenue, and of all the hastening thousands who
glanced casually at the rugs and porcelains and figures that formed the
remaining decorations of the window there were few who even noticed that the
chair and the kimono had been added to the collection.
“Fewer still knew that they constituted chapters in a murder
mystery which set New York by the ears less than four months ago—perhaps the
opening and the closing chapters.”
The chair was the one in which Elwell had been sitting when
a bullet was fired into his head. The
Tribune mentioned both the kimono and the revolver, as well. “The identity of its owner is as much of a
mystery as that of the owner of the revolver with which Elwell was shot. It was found in a room reserved for women who
came to visit Elwell. No one ever has
claimed it and it is listed among his belongings which Darling & Co. are to
sell at public auction.”
Although the Elwell auction included priceless items, like a
Rembrandt, it was the evidentiary pieces that drew attention. Following the
auction the New-York Tribune reported that the kimono had sold for $423.50, and
the painting of “the woman in gray” was sold to a man from Fort Worth, Texas for
$335 (about $3,300 today).
Following the death of Oscar Hammerstein in August of that
year, his widow placed an enormous amount of furnishings and artwork in the
hands of Darling & Co. Along with “magnificent
home furnishings” were Carrara marble statuary, sterling silver tea and coffee
services, Napoleonic drawing room furnishings and rare bronzes and works of
art. Mrs. Hammerstein included some of
her husband’s invaluable possessions. “Among
the articles on view will be a score of ‘Lucia’ in manuscript form, said to be
a copy penned by the composer, Donizetti; an old violin, a Chinese vase eight
feet tall and a life size bronze statue of Faust and Marguerite, listed as
having won first prize at an exhibition at Le Brousse,” said The Sun on August
11, 1920.
A year later more of the impresario’s collection was
auctioned here. The Evening World
reported on September 14, 1921 “A Steinway concert grand opera piano is one of
the relics that are to come under the hammer.
It may have been the instrument upon which Mr. Hammerstein once composed
an entire opera at a single sitting.
“A gold watch presented by the attaches of the Harlem Opera
House, on May 8, 1890, has a catalogue number in the same sale.” There was a massive two-handle sterling
silver cup that had been presented to Hammerstein by the Manhattan Grand Opera
Company on April 20, 1907. It bore the signatures
of the most illustrious opera figures of the day. Included in the 28 signatures were those of
Campanini, Melba, Calve, Bassi, Giaconia and Muzzio.
By now the high-end jewelers and art dealers had moved
further north; taking over Fifth Avenue’s grandest mansions and pushing its
millionaires even further up along Central Park. The days of expensive antiques and artwork
were coming to an end for No. 242 Fifth Avenue.
In 1922 the G. L. B. Manufacturing Company was operating here,
manufacturing dresses. Three years later
the ground floor was updated and the charming arcade windows were removed. The second floor was slightly altered at the
same time.
Further ground floor alterations would occur in the 20th
century and in the 1980s Bank Leumi operated a branch here. Then around the turn of the 21st
century the building was boarded up. For
a decade the structure sat empty and neglected.
Finally, in 2012 a group of investors, “the Pan Brothers,”
purchased the building and announced intentions to convert it into four
luxurious residential units above the first floor commercial space. Work commenced in 2013 when the boards were
pulled off and the rusting cast iron façade was restored.
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