photo by Nicolas Lemery Nantel / salokin.com |
In 1888 the jewelry store of I. Lewkowitz had stood at the
corner of Grand and Eldridge Streets for 28 years. Squarely in the midst of what had become the
center of Manhattan’s Jewish community, its high-quality merchandise earned it
the nickname “the Tiffany of the east side.”
At the same time, far to the north, the Harlem neighborhood
was developing as a vibrant suburb. By
now other Jewish merchants like Louis Blumstein, who moved his Blumstein’s Department Store to 125th Street in 1886, recognized the area’s
potential. On June 9, 1888 The Engineering & Building Record
reported that I. Lewkowitz planned a brick “flat and stores” building at No. 26
East 125th Street. Designed
by architect W. Graul, the ambitious project was to cost $38,000.
Something delayed the plans and the lot sat unimproved for
three years. Then in 1891 The Engineering & Building Record
updated its readers. The architect was
now Richard Berger and the plans were for a three-story “brick, iron, stone and
terra cotta building.” Lewkowitz
apparently scaled back the designs, for the projected cost was now $30,000—in
the neighborhood of $800,000 today.
On May 23, 1891 The
Real Estate Record & Builders’ Guide chimed in, noting “the building will
be finished in ash throughout, supplied with elevator, steam heat, and electric
light and other improvements.” The
modern amenities would make the structure the last word in up-to-date
commercial spaces.
Berger’s completed structure was light and airy. His use of cast iron to support the upper
floor openings resulted in near walls of glass; the windows separated by
delicate pencil-thin columns with delicate foliate capitals. The beige brick was relieved with white bands
of limestone, intricate terra cotta panels, and a row of deeply-molded fans below the cornice.
photo by Nicolas Lemery Nantel / salokin.com |
At the time of the building’s completion Croft Bros. was one
of Manhattan’s prominent carpeting dealers.
The firm had been based at No. 2161 Third Avenue, but now moved into the
commercial space in the East 125th Street building. One of the founders, Silas C. Croft, was
highly active in Republican politics and was a favorite among the Tammany Hall
bosses.
The firm offered floor cloths and window shades as well -- Harlem of Today -- 1893, copyright expired |
Silas C. Croft cut a dashing 1890s figure -- The Carpet & Upholstery Trade Review, January 1, 1896 (copyright expired) |
When Mayor Lafayette Strong offered the already high-powered
Croft the position of Commissioner of Charities in 1895, reformers licked their
lips. His connection to Croft Brothers, a firm widely
known for participating in graft, could result in a failed civil service
certificate. The crafty Croft was one
step ahead of them, though.
On New Year’s Day 1896 The
Carpet & Upholstery Trade Review reported that reformers “have been
kicking, but unfortunately for them Silas C. Croft is said to have retired from
the firm of Croft Brothers a week before he was appointed a Charities
Commissioner, and there is no evidence before the Comptroller that S. C. Coft
has sold any carpets to the city through Captain Graham’s bureau since he
became a Commissioner, and consequently has not violated the Consolidation act.”
The building suffers neglect--wood rot, rust and cracks threaten the facade. photo by Nicolas Lemery Nantel / salokin.com |
By the turn of the century The Trow Directory listed only one brother, Charles P. Croft,
involved in the carpeting firm. Nevertheless,
Silas’s association with the building seems to have survived in Tammany meetings
in the upstairs meeting rooms. But at least once, in 1906, the Lewkowitz
family stepped in.
A turbulent rivalry was playing out between John F. Cowan
and Percival E. Nagle for the Tammany leadership of the 13th
Assembly District. The Lewkowitzes were
nervous about the safety of their chairs and tables when a meeting was planned for October 4.
The New-York Tribune
reported “Trouble is looked for to-night between the Nagle and Cowan factions
at the assembling of the 21st Senatorial District Tammany
convention, which has been called to meet at No. 125 East 125th
street. The owner of the hall sent word
to leaders of the factions that he would not allow them to use the premises, fearing
that damage would be done to the furniture.”
By 1911 Croft Brothers had moved out. In its place was Fisher Furniture which would
remain here for years. Little changed
at No. 125 East 125th Street until 1926 when the aging building was
updated. The main floor and mezzanine
remained store space while the second floor was used as a stock room. The former meeting rooms on the top floor
became a showroom.
In 1945, after 54 years of ownership, the Lewkowitz family
sold the building which now stood in a much-changed neighborhood. The new owners, the 26 East 125th
Street Corporation, converted much of the interior space to light
manufacturing.
Then 14 years later another renovation resulted in a “dance
hall” on the second floor. Called the
Tusken Ballroom, it was used at least once as a meeting place by Malcolm X
and his recently-formed Muslim Mosque, on June 22, 1964.
photo by Nicolas Lemery Nantel / salokin.com |
For years the first floor, where Croft Brothers once sold
carpeting in shady Tammany deals, was home to a Salvation Army Thrift Store;
while upstairs the Tusken Ballroom became the Trowel & Square Ballroom, a nod
to the Masonic Lodge that shared the space.
The façade at sidewalk level was covered over with flimsy siding; hopefully preserving at least
some of Berger’s original design beneath.
The building was put on the market in 2014 for $8 million, “delivered
vacant,” opening the door for possible restoration or brutal abuse.
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