Developer Warren Beeman’s ambitious project of 28 brownstone rowhouses on East 74th Street between Park and Lexington Avenues would take four years to complete. Begun in 1871, they were designed by architect John G. Prague in the ubiquitous Italianate style. To fit so many homes onto the block, Beeman skimped on their width—they were 18.9 feet wide as compared to the more expected 20 feet.
Among the row was No. 126 East 74th Street. Home to well-to-do owners from its completion
in 1875, it was owned by Davis Rosenberg in 1905. The neighborhood to the west had become
highly exclusive as the mansions of Manhattan’s wealthiest citizens lined Fifth
Avenue. By now the affluent residential character had spread east. Rosenberg sold the house that
year in June to Nathaniel A. Campbell and his wife, Elizabeth.
Campbell was involved in real estate and more than once
included Selena M. Campbell in the deals.
It is probable that the two were related. Early in 1910 Selena (whose name was often
spelled Selina in newspapers) sold her home at No. 56 East 69th
Street and purchased No. 126 East 74th Street from Nathaniel and
Elizabeth Campbell. The New-York Tribune
made note of her $10,000 mortgage—around $240,000 today.
Wealthy and unmarried, Selena M. Campbell devoted her time
to charitable causes. When she moved
into No. 126 she had been Chairman of Industrial School No. 1 on East 109th
Street for several years. The purpose of
the school was the “Education of poor children not provided for by the public
schools.”
She was also First Vice-President of the Female Guardian
Society and Home for the Friendless.
When it hosted a fund-raising bazaar on November 21, 1913 The Sun
reported that “The society takes care of about 208 derelict children and the
bazaar was held to wipe out a debt of $74,000 incurred during the last year,
which is the seventy-ninth of the society’s work.”
Before Selena moved into the house she renovated the
outdated Victorian interiors. On April
16, 1910 the Real Estate Record & Builders’ Guide reported that she had give
E. Van Houten the contract to make “interior changes” to the house.
Selena Campbell was tireless in her efforts to improve the
lot of the poor. On February 1, 1915 she
spoke at a meeting of the Presbyterian union at the Hotel Savoy. The issue at hand was the ineffective operation
of the Almshouse. Prior to the speeches,
70 children from the Woodycrest Home for the Friendless, of which she was an
officer, “went through a military drill” for the assemblage.
By 1921 the 74th Street house was owned by
Theodore Stanfield and his wife, Cora Leopold Stanfield. Cora had been a leader in the New York
Kindergarten Association since graduating from Teachers College in 1902. She was also highly active in the Children’s
Charitable Union.
Now 40 years old, Cora became ill and after a brief illness
died on January 22, 1921 in the Nursery and Children’s Hospital. The New York Times mentioned that “She had
herself taught for several years in the kindergartens of the city schools and
had urged the founding of a children’s theatre where classics suitable for
young audiences could be performed.”
Theodore was the Managing Director of the American Metal
Company and he, too, was involved with notable causes. That year he served as Chairman of the
Library and Entertainment Committee of the New York Institution for Improved
Instruction of Deaf Mutes. He was a life
member of the American Peace Society and a member of the Williamstown Institute
of Politics.
Nineteen months after Cora’s death, on July 5, 1922, he
married Suzette M. Stanfield. Now
retired, in 1923 The New York Times said “as a hobby [he] devotes a
considerable portion of each year to analysis of world conditions.”
On July 9, 1917 the engagement of Eustace Seligman to Maud
Jaretzki had been made public. Seligman
was the son of esteemed Professor Edwin R. A. Seligman of Columbia University. Educated at Amherst College, Harvard Law
School and Columbia, the young attorney practiced law with Sullivan and
Cromwell. During World War I he served as Judge Advocate, trying cases of conscientious objectors.
In 1925 the Seligmans purchased the house from the
Stanfields. (Theodore Stanfield,
incidentally, would suffer a nervous breakdown two years later and spend the
rest of his life institutionalized.)
Like Selena Campbell, the new owners set out to modernize
their dated home. But the Seligman
renovations would go far behind “interior changes.” Architect Edward I. Shire was hired to
convert the old brownstone into a modern upscale dwelling.
A decade earlier Frederick Junius Sterner made his mark on
New York architecture by transforming Victorian brownstones into Mediterranean and
Tudor fantasies. Now Shire followed his
lead and presented the Seligmans with a stucco-covered Mediterranean villa.
With the stoop removed, the entrance was now at street
level. Between the service entrance and
the main door a window was guarded by an ornate Spanish-style wrought iron
grill. The second floor featured a Doric
loggia with iron railings and three sets of French doors. The upper openings were ornamented with quaint
wooden shutters, and two sloping Spanish-tiled roofs completed the charming charade.
Inside Shire continued the motif with twisted wrought iron
fixtures and balusters, stuccoed walls, heavy exposed beams and baronial
fireplaces.
Although the Seligmans' rear garden was small, it was a
source of pride to Maude. Annually she
opened it to the public for the Garden Tour for the benefit of the School
Nature League. Like Selena Campbell, Maude
was less interested in glamorous dinners and dances than in social reform and
charitable works. Her teas and
receptions most often were in support of a worthy cause.
Such was the case in November 1936 when “a number of
prominent women” met in the house to discuss slum clearance, according to The
Times. Maude was an avid supporter of
public housing projects as a means of providing dignified homes for the poor
and eliminating the crime and disease-ridden tenements. Other meetings Maude hosted in the house in
the 1940s concerned aid to China and to Poland.
On July 20, 1939 200 people filed into the house for the
funeral of Professor Edwin R. A. Seligman.
The 78-year old economist was praised as a “counselor to cities, States
and the United States” and was called “a leader in the field of economic
relations.”
In March 1953 Eustace Seligman’s mother suffered a fatal
heart attack in Daytona Beach, Florida.
Her funeral, too, was held in the 74th Street house.
The Seligmans remained in the home at least through the
1950s. Today it is remarkably
unchanged. Even the original wooden
shutters are intact as is the Spanish grill over the first floor window. It remains a single family home.
non-historic photographs by the author
non-historic photographs by the author
I love the loggia. All it needs now are pots of red geraniums to complete the picture of a Spanish villa.
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