photograph by the author |
By 1855 what had been Manhattan’s most exclusive residential
areas—St. John’s Park and the Bond Street section—were being abandoned for new
upscale neighborhoods. Wealthy residents
erected fine mansions around Washington Square, lower Fifth Avenue and Murray
Hill. Upscale businesses followed the
migration.
One of these was Madame Bergier’s Boarding and Day School
for Young Ladies. The daughters of the
city’s social aristocracy were instructed in private schools. Successful entry into society would require a
command of French, knowledge of music and literature; and, equally important, a
thorough education in deportment, etiquette, and poise. The schools were run in a domestic rather
than school-house setting. The women who
ran them—most often martinets with no patience for giggling and
nonsense—frequently purchased or leased large mansions for the purpose.
Madame Bergier’s was located at No. 300 Second Avenue in
1855. But following the close of that
year’s term she moved to No. 132 Madison Avenue—one block east of Fifth Avenue
and near the lavish Madison Avenue mansions of millionaires with names like
Phelps, Dodge, and Havemeyer.
The impressive Italianate style mansion featured elliptical
arched openings and wide stone stoop. A
rusticated brownstone English basement provided a base for the brick-faced
residence. It was the type of home over
which Madame Bergier’s young pupils would one day hold sway.
Classes opened on Monday May 5, 1856. Young ladies were not expected to be
inconvenienced, and the school owned its own coach for their
transportation. “A stage is attached to
the institution for pupils at a distance,” mentioned an advertisement in the
New-York Daily Tribune on May 3.
The girls enrolled here could receive instruction in French,
English and Spanish. Madame Bergier realized
that parents would be wary and on September 16,
1857 let prospective clients know “Madame Bergier will be at home to receive
Parents and Guardians who may wish to confer with her, on and after Aug. 20.”
Young women who had already been introduced to society were
also welcome here for a sort of brush-up.
For $15 per quarter there was a “French Class for grown-up Young Ladies”
that met from 9:00 to 11:00 a.m. That
fee would translate to a rather reasonable $450 today.
By the time the first shots were fired in the Civil War,
Madame Bergier’s Boarding and Day School for Young Ladies was gone. The large mansion seems to have been operated
as a high-class boarding house in August 1863 when resident R. S. Walter was
drafted into the Union Army.
Residents moving into No. 132 may have paid more than those
in average boarding houses; but an advertisement in 1888 reflects the luxurious
accommodations they received. “Suite of
apartments, with excellent table, in a handsomely furnished house.”
Among these was Cuban-born Aurelio Arango who lived here
with his wife and son by 1892. The New
York Times said he was “well known in business circles, particularly by those
engaged in Cuban and Spanish-American enterprises.” When the Edison Spanish Colonial Light
Company was organized around 1887, Arango was appointed Treasurer and general
manager.
On the morning of December 22 he “left his home at the usual
hour and apparently in his usual good health, and rode down town on the
elevated railroad en route to the office of the company in the Edison Building,
44 Broad Street,” reported The Times the following day. As the train reached the station at Rector
and Church Streets, Arango was suddenly taken ill and lost consciousness.
The 60-year old Navarro would never return to No. 132
Madison Avenue. “He was carried into the
waiting room at the station, an ambulance was summoned, and the suffering man
was taken to the Chambers Street Hospital,” said the newspaper. “He died soon after reaching there.”
Also living in the house at the time were Dr. Gideon E.
Moore and his wife, Marie, and James T. Kilbreth. Kilbreth was well-known in New York as a
judge in the Court of Special Sessions who had “introduced immediate and
radical reforms” upon his appointment. He retired from the court in January 1893.
In July that year, Marie L. Moore endured insufferable public
humiliation. The doctor’s wife, described
by The New York Times as “a woman of medium height and slender build,” left No.
132 Madison Avenue on Tuesday, July 18, 1893.
It was her first time out of the house following an illness of nine
weeks that had kept her in bed. Along
with Marie came her little 21-ounce Dandy Dinmont terrier.
Before the day was out, both Mrs. Moore and the dog would be
in trouble.
Having finished her errands, Marie Moore boarded the Madison
Avenue street car. When the conductor,
John Hodgkins, noticed the pet, things quickly got out of control.
“I was bringing home this tiny dog in my pompadour bag,”
Marie later recounted. “It was concealed
until the conductor came to get my fare.
Then it pushed its nose out and the conductor saw it. ‘Get off this car,’ he said in a gruff,
brutal way. ‘You and your dog get out of
here.’
“I remonstrated with him, and being excited, I declined to
go. He had no more right to interfere
with the dog in the bag than he had to open my purse and see what was in it,
and I told him so.”
According to Mrs. Moore, Hodgkins “savagely” grabbed
her dress and began to drag her to the door.
She said passengers protested, but he ignored them. Once he had her off the streetcar, Hodgkins
turned her over to a nearby policeman.
“This man was even worse than the conductor,” exclaimed
Moore. “He seized my arm and dragged me
a block and a half. I was crying and
almost hysterical.”
According to her version of the story, when she asked the
policeman to allow her to get a cab, he responded “No, you can’t have a cab;
you’re no better than anybody else, you and your dog. You’ve got to walk, so none of your nonsense.” Her melodramatic rendition continued. “My right arm is black and blue and terribly
sore, and my body is racked with pain from the terrible ill-treatment he gave
me. I fell to the ground, and still the
policeman refused to let me get a cab, and grabbing me around the waist hurried
me along.”
The conductor and the police officer had a different version
of things. “Conductor Hodgkins says that
Mrs. Moore struck him on the head with an umbrella and used violent language
when he ordered her to leave his car Tuesday afternoon,” reported The
Times. The policeman told the judge that
he witnessed the assault and that Moore called the conductor “a brute and used
violent language.”
The judge was no less harsh on Marie Moore. When she complained that she had been
roughly-handled, the judge responded “You didn’t expect to be handled with
gloves, did you, you and your dog? You
had no right to carry a dog in a street car.”
She was scheduled to appear in the Yorkville Police Court on
charges of disorderly conduct on July 19, 1893; but was too shaken to show
up. A reporter from The New York Times
went to the Madison Avenue house and “found her in great pain, and distress of
mind bordering on hysteria.”
Marie L. Moore pleaded “I want to see if there is any
justice in this city to protect a poor, weak woman from the savagery of such
men as these.”
Ten days later Judge James T. Kilbreth was reportedly
greatly surprised when President Grover Cleveland appointed him Collector of
the Port of New York. The appointment
was not well received by Kilbreth’s former Tammany adversaries.
“Some of the politicians were not too well pleased,” noted
The Times, “but they all admitted the excellence of the appointment, and none
of them questioned Mr. Kilbreth’s ability to administer the important office.”
Kilberth and his wife endured some public humiliation of
their own in August 1894 when the Collector’s 18-year old niece, Caroline
McLean, arrived in the city from Cincinnati.
The Evening World reported that “the young woman is stopping in this
city at the home of her uncle, Collector Kilbreth.”
There would be little reason for newspapers to be interested
in a niece visiting her uncle normally; but Caroline McLean had announced to
the world that she intended to be an actress.
The Evening World said she was “beautiful and the possessor of a rare
and highly trained voice. It is added
that she became fascinated with the stage and had secured the promise of an
engagement with Seabrooke’s company.”
James Kilbreth had no intention of being associated with an
actress.
“Mr. Kilbreth lives at 132 Madison avenue, and the French
servant who answered the door at ‘The Evening World reporter’s call this
morning had evidently been instructed to know nothing.”
The dogged reporter tracked Kilbreth down at his
office. The exasperated Collector made
his thoughts perfectly clear. “I know
little about this girl and care nothing about her venture. She may go on the stage if she wants to for
all I care. I did not meet her at the
train; she is not at my house, and I do not know where she is.”
While well-to-do residents like the Moores and Kilbreths
remained for years, vacancies prompted advertisements for the “handsomely
furnished” rooms (with or without board) in the “splendid location.”
As they did every year, in 1897 James Kilbreth and his wife
left Madison Avenue to summer at their country home in Southampton, Long Island. Around the middle of June Kilbreth
contracted pneumonia. “To this was added
stomach and liver trouble,” said The New York Times.
On June 22 he “passed a poor night,” but seemed to rally in
the morning. The Times reported “He then
began to sink again, and at 6 o’clock hope was abandoned.” James T. Gilbreth, called “one of the ablest
judges on the bench,” died thirty minutes later.
Although at the turn of the century the grand old mansion
was still being operated as an upscale boarding house (a 1901 advertisement
offered “handsomely furnished, sunny front and hall rooms, every convenience,
superior table); that would all come to an end very soon.
Mrs. Russell Sage, the wife of millionaire financier and
railroad tycoon, was frustrated with “the servant girl question.” The problem of finding good domestic help in
the first years of the 20th century was coupled with the rising cost
of staff. “The wages of servants are
steadily rising, while the efficiency of service, if not actually declining on
the whole, is at least not advancing at the same rate with the pay,” noted The
Times on October 11, 1903. The newspaper
felt that a novice chamber or kitchen maid could make a comfortable living.
A “'greenhorn,’ at the prevailing rate of wages, should find
no difficulty in dressing herself even handsomely and yet putting by at the
rate of $100 a year.” The annual salary
which the newspaper found so generous would amount to about $2,730 today.
So in 1903 Mrs. Sage helped found the Women’s Domestic
Guild. The organization, which was part
employment agency and part occupational training center, moved into rented
space at No. 27 East 21st Street.
The Guild provided staff to households, while instructing potential
hires in the “raw material” of general housekeeping. A clever method of helping assure clients
that the servants would stay on was the Guild’s offering them a $1 reward each
year they remained in a position.
The Guild provided meeting places for servants on their
nights off. “No provision is now made
for such a meeting place,” said The Times, “and to friendless girls the evening
off must be a period of acute boredom.”
The newspaper felt that “The aims of the institution it will be seen,
are entirely laudable” and “Its manager will have the sympathy of all
housekeepers in their endeavors.”
By May 1904 the Guild had secured positions for over 5,000 servants and severely outgrown its space. It announced that “The crowded condition of the Guild Rooms…has interfered with the comfort of patrons and at times made their transaction of business difficult and unsatisfactory. Now there will be ample space for all who wish to secure employment and for those who require help.”
The special improvements were due to the Guild’s move to 22
rooms in No. 132 Madison Avenue. Here “cooks,
waitresses, chambermaids, laundresses, parlor maids, and kitchen maids” were
interviewed and trained. Later that
year, in September, the Women’s Domestic Guild found itself sorely short of a
particular kind of help. An
advertisement in The Sun on September 11, 1904 read “Fifty French Servants
wanted at once in the Department of French Service.”
Within only a few years the former mansion became a hub of firms
involved in the architectural business.
Architect Aymar Embury moved into the building in March 1912 and would stay
for years. He would be joined by
architects Oscar C. Hering and Douglass Fitch, and Alfred Busselle. Related companies like general contractors J.
H. L’Hommedieu’s Sons Co. and the Lighting Studios Co. also took space in the
pre-World War I years.
By the 1920s the millinery and garment districts had moved
northward, engulfing the area. On March
26, 1921 The New York Times announced that J. W. Bell, the building’s owner,
had commissioned architect A. A. Hopkins to convert No. 132 Madison Avenue into
“four-story offices.” The $5,000
renovation corresponded with the city’s widening of Madison Avenue that same
year. The result was the removal of the
grand stoop (the arched entranceway was converted to a window), and the
lowering of the doorway to ground level.
A vast show window was installed on the former parlor floor. On the 31st Street elevation,
shallow Corinthian pilasters that once most likely supported a long cast iron balcony
were allowed to remain.
For over a decade, before the garment district moved north
of 34th Street, No. 132 Madison Avenue was home to children’s wear,
lingerie companies, and manufacturers of dresses and women’s suits. Then, in 1959, the house where wealthy girls
read French poetry and swept up the mahogany staircase in antebellum skirts,
was converted to a restaurant.
Department Buildings documents noted that the kitchen and one dining
room were in the basement; the dining room, bar rooms, coat check room and
office were on the first floor, and that all the upper floors were “to remain
permanently vacant.”
Only three years later another conversation resulted in
offices throughout. Today Madame Bergier’s
Boarding and Day School retains its sober countenance despite its many uses and
several alterations. Yet few passing can
imagine the history of the venerable old mansion.
UPDATE: The vintage mansion was demolished in 2016 to make room for a 47-story apartment building.
UPDATE: The vintage mansion was demolished in 2016 to make room for a 47-story apartment building.
Thanks for putting this bit of history on 132 Madison Avenue together. I was just wondering what the history of this building was, when I saw that this bit of land has been totally grazed over to make room for glass & steel retail center. Glad you got images before it went down.
ReplyDeleteYes unfortunately this quirky mansion with the exterior pilasters fell victim to this part of Madison Avenues current building boom. Would have loved to have seen an original view with the iron balcony or porch intact.
ReplyDelete