photo by Alice Lum |
When Mary Bayard married the socially and politically
important William Houstoun in 1788, her father memorialized the match in an
unusual way. Nicholas Bayard III cut an
east-west road through his country property and dubbed it Houstoun Street. Later, as the city inched further northward,
Houstoun Street was extended eastward and connected to the existing North
Street—once the northernmost boundary of the city’s East Side. There were now an East Houstoun and West
Houstoun Street.
By the 1820s significant development was taking place in the area. Federal-style working class houses appeared; many of them with shops at street
level. Among them was the row along East
Houstoun Street (later the name would take on its repeated misspelling, "Houston Street") anchored by the little house at No. 73. The brick building featured elements expected
of the Federal style—two tall dormers on the peaked roof and simple stone
lintels and sills. Its corner location
on Elizabeth Street offered a bonus—windows to the side for additional ventilation
and light. At the attic floor these took
the form of a centered arched window flanked by two quarter-round openings.
photo by Alice Lum |
At some point a veneer of brownstone was added to the front facade. In the years following the end of the Civil War D. Haase and
F. Koster ran their “horse, wagon, etc.” business here as documented
in 1870. In the meantime, Emma Everett
ran a less upstanding business upstairs.
For at least a decade, the nearby area around Greene Street had
been known for its “disorderly houses”—a polite Victorian term for
brothels. Emma offered the services of “five
young lady boarders” in what A Gentleman’s
Companion to New York City in 1871 called “a first-class place, quiet and
orderly—comfortably fitted up with French mirrors, Brussels carpets, rosewood
furniture and superb bedding.” Emma accepted
clients “by appointment only." A Gentleman’s Guide masqueraded as a
guide book but, as were so many publications, was in reality a source book for
men looking for prostitutes or other seamy activities. No doubt with some financial prompting from
Emma Everett, it described her girls saying “The bewitching smiles of the
fairy-like creatures who devote themselves to the services of Cupid are
unrivalled by any of the fine ladies who walk Broadway in silks and satins new.”
How long Emma ran her brothel here is unclear; however by
the beginning of the 1890s even notorious Greene Street had been cleaned
up. The ground floor in 1894 was home to
William H. Smith’s saloon and restaurant fixtures store. A year later he shared the space with Jennie
Rooney who sold “household furniture.”
The neighborhood by now had filled with Irish immigrants. It would appear that families now occupied
the upper stories of No. 73. In the
summer of 1895 The Evening World initiated a fund-raising drive called the Sick
Babies’ Fund. With the money the
newspaper hired steamboats, calling them “Floating Playgrounds,” and offered
fresh air and amusements to the sickly children of the tenements. On August 26 it described “its distinctive
features for the amusement and entertainment of the little ones, baby scups, swinging
cribs, hobby horses, baby rockers and the like; its first-class orchestra,
under the leadership of Composer Flynn, and its hospital and dispensary service.”
In the same article was published a letter that accompanied
a donation to the fund:
Inclosed [sic] you will find $2.25, the proceeds of a lemonade stand in
front of 73 East Houston street. We hope
it will make some baby as happy as it has made us.
The endearing letter was signed by Tommy Moroney, 5; Marion
Tighe, 10; and Annie Sullivan, age 11.
The saloon and restaurant fixture business would remain in
the retail space through the turn of the century; although by 1897 it was run
by J. F. Reilly and a year later by Thomas McKeos. The entire row of houses from No. 73 through
79 was owned by Howard Conkling and in March 1908 he signed new rental
agreements for each of them. No. 73 was leased
by Michael Casey.
Conkling retained ownership of the string of brick buildings
until October 1920, when he sold them as a package to Vincenzo Cascale. By now the last survivor of the original row
was No. 73. Cascale would be well known
by the neighboring Italian community for his pastry shop, “La Bella Palermo”
for decades.
In 1930 as the Great Depression forced men to stand in bread lines, hundreds were given work with
the ambitious project of widening Houston Street. The humble cross street would become an avenue-wide thoroughfare with a boulevard. The venture required that hundreds of century-old
structures be demolished on the opposite side of the street. Yet No. 73 would continue to endure the immense changes to
the neighborhood that continued throughout the century. In 1944 there were two apartments per floor upstairs.
Unbelievably, the little Federal-style house on the corner
of East Houston and Catherine Streets sits alone among 20th century
structures. Home to a trendy clothing
store at street level, its 19th century store front is relatively
intact with at least one fluted cast iron column and its double shop doors. Upstairs the brick and brownstone have been stuccoed over and
the dormers covered with metal siding; yet the integrity of the original
building shines through.
Much of the 19th century cast iron of the Victorian storefront survives; as do the panels and wonderful double shop doors. photo by Alice Lum |
The alterations to the building make its possible
designation as a landmark essentially non-existent. Nevertheless the little building is an
astonishing relic of a long-forgotten era on Houstoun Street.
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