When William Brady began construction of the three-story
Italianate rowhouse at No. 11 East 20th Street in 1852, he was a
little late to the party. By now
businesses were infiltrating the residential neighborhood between Madison Square
and Union Square along Broadway. No
sooner had the brick-faced house been completed in 1853 than tax documents
reveal that it housed small shops.
In 1865 the firm of Locke & Craige owned the
building. A year earlier U.S. Congress
House Documents documented that the government had paid the firm $721.10 “for a site and
building for a post office in the city of New York.” With the money from selling its building, the
company apparently bought No. 11 East 20th.
At some point around 1870 the building got a facelift with
neo-Grec lintels over the openings, a pedimented cornice, and a two-story shop
front. By 1900 the neighborhood had
become a major shopping district. That
year owner Sarah Hale Witthaus hired contractor James Waddell to install a
modern storefront with expansive windows at the second floor. It attracted a new tenant, furrier Robert
Arnold. On July 1, 1902 Fur Trade Review
noted “Mr. Robert Arnold, importing and manufacturing furrier, has removed to
exceptionally desirable premises at 11 East Twentieth street, near Broadway.”
The building was sold in 1906 to “an investor.” Soon Arp Laue signed a 15-year lease on the
building for an aggregate rental of $75,000.
The quiet existence of No. 11 East 20th Street was soon to
change.
The following year, next door at Nos. 7 and 9, Holtz &
Freystedt built an impressive 12-story Beaux Arts building. The restaurateurs reserved the lower two
floors for its French-inspired restaurant.
In the meantime, German immigrant William T. Ockendorf ran
his own restaurant on West Third Street.
Known as “Billy the Oysterman,” he started out small, opening an oyster
stand in a basement at Wooster and West Third Streets. Oysters sold for “a cent a-piece.” Later he moved his restaurant with its
sawdust-covered floors upstairs on West Third Street.
Later The New York Times would reminisce “’Billy the Oysterman’ became
an institution known throughout the city.”
In 1910 the man who had started his new life selling oysters
for a penny personally walked into the Albany Statehouse to incorporate his
business. He had big plans.
A year earlier Holtz & Freystedt expanded its
restaurant, breaking through the wall to No. 11. The plan would be short lived, however. By 1912, with business failing, Holtz &
Freystedt abandoned the expanded space.
A year later it closed its doors for good.
As quickly as Holtz & Freystedt evacuated No. 11, Billy
the Oysterman moved in. The New York
Times said “The present restaurant of ‘Billy the Oysterman’ offers a sharp
contrast with the saw-dust covered floors of the earlier places It has tiled floors, mounted fish on the
walls and expensive furniture.”
Billy the Oysterman took up the lower two floors and the top
floor was leased to various businesses throughout the years. Katz & Co., owned by Phil Katz, was here
in 1915, according to The American Cloak and Suit Review; and Baumann-Marx
Realty Co., Inc. had its offices in the building in 1918.
William T. Ockendorf died on January 20, 1914. He had amassed an estate equaling over $1
million today “mainly accumulated in the oyster business,” said The Sun on
February 1. Ockendorf left the business
to his three sons, George, Harvey and William.
George Washington Ockendon, the eldest son, took on the
sobriquet of Billy the Oysterman. Like his
brothers, he had a public school education and learned the business
first-hand. Despite his sometimes
rough-edged demeanor, he was a consummate host.
The New York Times remembered on December 11, 1928 “With his brothers,
he would personally greet the prominent guests.
Among those who came frequently were Governor Smith, Jack Dempsey, Gene
Tunney and leaders of sport, politics and the stage.”
Business flourished, requiring additional staff. On a single day in 1918 two
advertisements appeared in the New-York Tribune. One read “Kitchenmen Wanted—No Sunday work,”
the other simply said “Oysterman—No Sunday work. Billy the Oysterman.”
George Ockendon not only had a
large personality, he had a large physique.
The Sun took the opportunity to poke fun at Ockendon’s girth on April 5,
1919 following the auction of actress Marjorie Rambeau’s furniture.
“The big thud on Broadway’s
consciousness occurred when Billy the Oysterman, who looks as though he carries
a large part of the stock of his restaurant on Twentieth street concealed on
his person, bought a huge mahogany chair, formerly the property of Grover
Cleveland, with compartments that might be useful before prohibition sets
in. It was whispered that Billy went to
the chair—or vice versa—not because he bid $23, but because he was the only one
present who could fit its dimensions, Billy breaking the scales at something
like 300 pounds.”
The newspaper’s mention of
hidden compartments and Prohibition was somewhat foretelling. The Ockendon brothers had no intention of
letting Prohibition put an end to their selling alcohol. The restaurant’s first brush with dry agents
ended with a lucky break. On April 23,
1921 The Times reported that “Policeman George Chaffers of the East Twenty-second
Street Station said he had found three sealed bottles of whisky in a handbag in
the apartment of Ockendon at the East Twentieth Street address.”
The policeman did not have a
search warrant and Judge Thomas J. Nolan begrudgingly discharged George
Ockendon. Nolan was not happy. “This testimony opens up another angle of the
situation. The policeman acting under
orders is not to be criticised, but the orders seem to be absolutely contrary
to law and repulsive to the Constitution.”
Jacketed waiters serve in the handsome downstairs room. The staircase to the second floor dining room can be seen behind the oyster bar. photograph Gas Logic magazine, June 1918 (copyright expired) |
Billy the Oysterman would not
continue to be so lucky. George used the
third floor and basement to warehouse liquor and established a “private bar” in
his office for trusted patrons. On
October 24, 1922 Prohibition agents purchased drinks served by waiter Otto
Seidt. The following day they returned,
this time with a search warrant.
Eight agents descended on
Billy the Oysterman at noon and swarmed over the restaurant. According to The Evening World later that
day, “They discovered ten cases of whiskey and several barrels of bottled beer
and ale of unauthorized but strongly verbalized authority.” The New York Times reported “The total value
of the seized goods at the current bootleg prices was given at $5,000” and
increased the number of cases of whiskey to 25.
When the agents crashed into
the private bar, according to The Times, “A patron…was about to place a glass
of whisky to his lips. The agent
snatched it away from him and placed it with the other seized stuff.”
The Evening World said “The
patrons of the place showed strong indignation.
Some were unhappy because ‘so much good stuff had to go to waste;’
others were incensed against the management because they had never learned that
forbidden beverages were to be had in the place.”
According to the New-York
Tribune “A crowd gathered and watched the agents load cases and barrels on a
big warehouse truck.” The newspaper provided
a more detailed inventory of Billy’s stash. “In the seizure were cases of wines, gin,
whisky and cordials. The beer alone was
reported to be worth $5,000. The
liquors, including choice wines, were worth probably $5,000 more.”
By now Billy the Oysterman had
taken over the former Holtz & Freystedt space as well. The brothers--perhaps in part because they ignored Prohibition--were doing quite well for themselves. The restaurant’s 1921 Profit and Loss
Statement disclosed that George was earning $19,500 a year, and his brothers
$12,000 each. Those figures would equal
about $240,000 and $150,000 today. George’s
salary was of intense interest to his wife, Florence, who began divorce
proceedings in 1922.
Despite Federal raids,
Billy the Oysterman continued on with relative normalcy. The same year that agents made their noon
raid, the Upholstery Association of America took over the second floor for its
annual elections. “Following the
election of officers a beefsteak dinner and smoker will be provided by Billy
the Oysterman,” announced The Upholsterer and Interior Decorator.
The Ockendons would not surrender
in their battle against Prohibition. In 1926 the restaurant donated $50 to the
Association Against the Prohibition Amendment.
And two years later George’s brother William got even with one government
agent.
William was in the restaurant in
June 1928 when undercover agents Palmer F. Tubbs and Samuel Kupferman ordered a
drink. When they were served, they
identified themselves. But Kupferman
took William Ockendon aside and said he would “fix things up” for $500. Ockendon paid the bribe. Then immediately went to authorities.
On August 2 William Ockendon
took the stand to testify as a witness for the Government before a Grand
Jury. In return for his testimony
against the corrupt agents, he received immunity for the liquor sales.
George W. Ockendon died four
months later in December, never to see the repeal of Prohibition. The hard-edged and feisty restaurateur got
the last word at least in one respect.
The divorce initiated by Florence was not yet finalized. When George’s estate was filed he had cut her
out of the will, leaving her a meager $500.
The title of Billy the
Oysterman passed to William Thomas Ockendon, now the oldest brother. The fame of the restaurant only
increased. In 1934 William Ockendon
estimated he had sold 41,693,063 oysters; later putting the estimate into the
context of a barrel a day—upwards to 1,400 oysters daily. In 1935 Cole Porter wrote “A Picture of Me
Without You.” The lyrics included Billy
the Oysterman:
Picture H. G. Wells without a brain
Picture Av’rell Harriman without a train,
Picture Tintern Abbey without a cloister,
Picture Billy the Oysterman without an
oyster
William continued the family’s
attention to fresh food and good service.
On November 19, 1934 his passion would nearly require that he be
physically restrained. The following day
The New York Times wrote “An ultramarine-finned sailfish and a lean-jawed barracuda,
both safely stuffed, stared fixedly last night from the walls of Billy the
Oysterman’s…as the Society of Restaurateurs debated the merits of the table d’hote
and the a la carte meal.” The newspaper
said “William Ockendon—Billy the Oysterman himself—was regarded as having
struck the most telling blow”
The restaurant owners had come
to decide whether offering limited menus of ready-made items would save them “from
financial ruin.” The very idea incensed
Ockendon.
Standing before the
association he said “I am 100 per cent opposed to the table d’hote meal. I think it’s a joke—“ He was interrupted by an owner who said “It’s
no joke; we use the same food for the table d’hote as the a la carte meal. We—“
Now Ockendon interrupted in
what The Times called a roar. “There was
never a roast chicken roasted at 11 o’clock to serve at 12 o’clock, that was
good at 2 o’clock.”
When the debate between the
two men verged on verbal violence, William Zelser of the White Horse Tavern “struck
a conciliatory note.” He soothed the men
saying “There is room for both types of restaurant in this city.”
The Times ended its recap of
the evening saying “Finally the echoes of the debate died away and the sailfish
and the barracuda stared down upon empty tables and well-filled ash trays.”
Billy the Oysterman opened a
second restaurant at No. 10 West 47th Street in 1938. By now the restaurant was known
nation-wide. Forbes Magazine had
commended two years earlier “Billy the Oysterman, like Oscar of the Waldorf,
has become a national institution, foodwise.”
In 1938 the New York City Guide, published by the
Federal Writers’ Project, listed the prices at Billy the Oysterman as “lunch
from 85 cents, dinner $2.00.” By 1946
when No. 11 East 20th Street was sold by the Fifth Avenue Bank of
New York, the 47th Street location had become the main
restaurant. No. 11 was termed “a branch.” Four years later Billy the Oysterman closed
the 20th Street restaurant after nearly half a century of business. The 47th Street operation closed
in 1953.
When William Ockendon died in
October 1961 at the age of 80, The New York Times fondly reminisced of his
passion for serving good food; and it
brought up the heated debate of 1934. “He
once confessed that he himself was not fond of oysters and added that, perhaps,
he had seen too many. He was, however, a
champion of the casual manner of dining and once lectured the Society of
Restaurateurs on the beauties of the table d’hote and the evils of the a la
carte fashions.”
The restaurant tradition at
No. 11 East 20th Street continued when Miriam Novalle purchased the
building in 1996. She told a Times
reporter ”I just want to be in the tea business.” With Rhode Island restaurateur Hank Kates,
she opened her tea shop, salon and mail order company called T Salon.
The centered entrance created
in 1900 was moved to the side before the shop opened later that fall. T Salon would remain in the space until the
early 2000s. It was replaced by ‘Wichcraft,
a trendy sandwich shop that remains there today. In 2009 owner Tom Colicchio expanded to the
second floor, where dinner was now served with waiter service and wine.
Once a destination so well
known that Cole Porter’s mention of it was universally understood, the little
building at No. 11 East 20th is a bit sorry looking and mostly
overlooked today. Squashed between two
towering buildings, it was the home of an important page of Manhattan’s
culinary and social history, now forgotten.
photograph by the author
This reminds me of "Lundy Bros." that use to be in Brooklyn. Use to go with my father all the time for oysters and clams. Miss it.
ReplyDeleteAnother fascinating post. Thanks.
ReplyDelete