In the first decades following the Civil War, Manhattan’s
wealthiest residents commissioned custom built mansions along or near Fifth
Avenue. Recognizing their prospective
customers, even speculative developers were more likely to erect single lavish
homes here than rows of identical structures.
But on the east side of Fourth Avenue (later renamed Park) things
were different. As was the case on the
opposite side of Central Park, developers snatched up stretches of real estate
and erected rows of homes—and while they were not always carbon copies; they were nonetheless harmonious. Such was the case with John and William
Walsh.
On January 29, 1887 the Real Estate Record & Builders’
Guide reported that “William J. and John P. C. Walsh intend to erect twelve
homes on the south side of Ninety-fifth street, 100 feet east of Fourth avenue,
from plans by C. Abbot French.” The newspaper
added that they would be “Queen Anne private residences.”
And indeed they were.
Stretching from No. 116 to 138 East 95th Street, French’s
fanciful homes included all the expected bells and whistles of the Queen Anne
style—offset entrances, stained glass, carved decoration, creative brickwork
and projecting bays. Like so many of the
architects working on the opposite side of the island, French created a unified set of structures
related by visual similarities; yet no two identical.
Among the row was No. 134.
While it lacked some of the more exuberant decoration of its neighbors,
it was nonetheless eye-catching, mostly because of the oval hallway window
above the doorway. Outlined in skinny
brick, it featured the many panes of the Queen Anne style and rested
comfortably in a carved brownstone stand.
French’s use of brownstone and red brick resulted in a
subtle two-tone scheme. His playful
treatment of the stoop resulted in the entrance stairs spilling down to a porch
two steps above the sidewalk, then sweeping to the side in a gentle curve.
The row was completed in 1888 and real estate operator
Martin Disken was quick to swoop in. In
July 1889 he purchased No. 132 for $14,400—about $365,000 today—and in October
he bought up 134, 136 and 138, each for $14,000.
By the turn of the century No. 134 was home to Adell
Hartman. The enterprising woman ran a
hotel and on Sunday, September 1, 1901 her troubles with the
liquor authorities started. Five plain-clothed
special agents entered the barroom and ordered drinks. According to court documents, “but, before
reaching the bar, they were directed to leave the room, and to go out upon the
veranda, where their orders would be taken.”
Excise laws in 1901 permitted patrons who ordered a meal to
have a drink. According to Adell’s
waiter, one of the men ordered a porterhouse steak. But when the steak was brought out to the
veranda, the men had consumed their five whiskeys and left. The agents, on the other hand, “all deny that
they ordered anything to eat, or that anything to eat was delivered to them.”
The State Commissioner of Excise ordered the revoking of
Adell Hartman’s liquor license. After
hearing the testimony, however, the judge highly suspected that the
agents were being underhanded. He
dismissed the case against Adell Hartman saying there was not enough evidence.
Despite her legal victory, Adell Hartman would not be in
business much longer. On February 1,
1904 newspapers announced that she had filed for bankruptcy “as a poor person”
with liabilities of $4,504 and no assets.
At the time Simon Kayton was living at No. 125 East 80th
Street. He sold that house in November
1908 and leased No. 134 East 95th Street from the current owner,
William M. Leslie. Listed as a “liveryman”
Kayton operated a high-end stable far downtown on Chambers Street, where
vehicles were leased and private carriages were garaged. Simon’s income was enough to afford the rent for the
upscale home. His wife, Bella, busied herself with benevolent causes such as
the Emanuel Sisterhood of Personal Services.
One of Kayton’s wealthy clients was Mrs. Jeannette P. Goin
of No. 4 West 55th Street.
Years earlier, in April 1902, she took her carriage to Kayton’s stable
for storage. Hers was an unusual style
for New York, called a vis-à-vis in
which the passengers sit facing one another, and was therefore easily
identified.
Now, on May 24, 1909 she was riding in Central Park in an
electric cab with her daughter, Ellen, and Mrs. Thomas H. Baskerville. According to Mrs. Goin, she was shocked when
the cab was passed by her own carriage with three occupants.
She had the driver follow the carriage for a short distance,
then ordered him to drive to Kayton’s stable where she demanded to see her
carriage. The New York Times later
reported “Kayton first said that the elevator was out of order. The woman said they would walk to where the vehicle
was. According to Mrs. Goin, Kayton then
told her that a lamp had been broken and he had sent the carriage to be
repaired.”
Not believing that an entire carriage would have to be sent
away to repair a lamp, the three women went back to Central Park “to see if
they could get another look at the vehicle.
A little later it passed.” The
amateur detectives tried to tail the carriage.
“The women attempted to follow, but the power in their automobile gave
out. Miss Goin and Mrs. Baskerville
returned home and Mrs. Goin went back to the stable to see Kayton, but did not
find him.”
A week later Mrs. Goin’s attorney, Ernest G. Stevens,
appeared at the Kayton livery stable. It
was all too much for Simon Kayton and he sent a letter to James D. Goin,
Jeannette’s husband saying that the carriage was taking up too much space and
requesting him to remove it. The Goins
responded by suing Kayton for $1,400, saying the carriage “had been used and
badly worn, instead of being kept in careful storage.”
On January 25, 1909, seven years after the vehicle had been dropped
off, jurors heard testimony from the involved parties. Ellen corroborated
the story of her mother, and James Goin swore that the carriage had been repaired
“and was as good as new in 1902 when taken to the livery stable.” Kayton testified that on the day Mrs. Goin
had demanded to see her carriage, it was out for repair. “It had not been outside the stable up to
that time.” He said the damage to the
lamp was through a collision with another vehicle while in the stable.
The judge gathered up the court and they went to the
Chambers Street stable to inspect the Goin carriage. An “expert” witness, carriage dealer Donald
Dyer looked over the vehicle. On January
26 The Sun reported on his testimony, which was devastating to the Goin case. He said “the Goin coach to-day, in view of
the rapid inroads automobiles had made, was worthless. He said that the signs of wear the vehicle
showed were due to its being stored. He
said that the damage had come from the ammonia fumes in the livery stable. Vehicles which get washed regularly, the
witness testified, don’t suffer that sort of damage.”
The jury was convinced that the carriage had been used for a
“joy ride” but felt that the $1,400 value the Goins placed on it was
excessive. They delivered a verdict of $275
against Kayton.
As Donald Dyer had pointed out in court, the automobile was
rapidly overtaking the horse as the preferred means of transportation. By 1911 Simon Kayton had established the
Kayton Taxicab and Garage Company. His 40
smart taxis were black “with a maroon running gear and a “K” on the right side
of the radiator,” according to The Sun.
Kayton set up stands at the Metropolitan Club, the Savoy Hotel, and other
hotels and restaurants. But even with
his cabs transporting wealthy riders, Kayton and other taxi companies were in
trouble.
The cost of running motorized cabs was high, they quickly
depreciated, and companies paid for “dead mileage”—traveling to pick up
passengers and returning empty. Kayton’s
payment to the Savoy alone was $3,000 a year for the privilege of parking
there. The overhead was reflected in high fares. Customers paid 80 cents for the first mile—over
$20 today. Kayton told reporters on
December 22, 1911 “The taxicab condition in New York is abominable. Out of the twenty hours we keep cabs on the street
we get pay for an average of only four hours actual work.”
When one of the Kayton Taxicab Company’s directors took one of the cabs to Brooklyn for business, spending about three hours, his fare was $16. “He sent for me and told me if that was the regular rate it was no wonder people did not use taxis more and why the companies were losing business,” said Kayton.
When one of the Kayton Taxicab Company’s directors took one of the cabs to Brooklyn for business, spending about three hours, his fare was $16. “He sent for me and told me if that was the regular rate it was no wonder people did not use taxis more and why the companies were losing business,” said Kayton.
So the Kayton Taxicab Company embarked on a risky
experiment. Between the hours of 8 a.m.
and 6:30 p.m. the fare was reduced to half price. Other cab companies warned him “that it would
end disastrously,” according to The Sun on December 22, 1909. Kayton partially agreed. “If it doesn’t work out all right we are in
for an enormous loss.”
It did not work out all right. On June 29, 1912 Kayton filed for
bankruptcy. He blamed the problem on
the dead mileage and the hotel stand privileges; the latter costing him $22,000
a year. Even with the night fares
remaining at 80 cents a mile, the dead mileage was fatal to the firm. “For instance,” he told a special committee
of the Board of Aldermen, “at 10:30 at night there are about 1,000 calls for
cabs at theatres and these all go to Harlem pretty nearly without return fares
for 75 per cent of them.”
The Kayton family was able to stay on in the 95th
Street house for another year; then in March 1914 it was leased to Mrs. John
King Van Rensselaer “of Philadelphia.”
Mrs. Van Rensselaer was born Maria Denning King, although she later
changed her name to May. The daughter of
Archibald Gracie King, both her husband’s family and hers traced their American
lineage back two centuries. She
disdained the flashy ostentation of the nouveau riche and was the author of
what The Pittsburgh Press in 1915 called “that disturbing genealogical study, ‘New
Yorkers of the Nineteenth Century,’ which caused a panic in the ranks of the
Four Hundred.” She wrote in her The Social Ladder “Society once
connoted, first of all, family; its primary meaning at present is fortune. Years ago, it stood for breeding; now it
represents, instead, self-advertisement.”
With the arrival of Mrs. John King Van Rensselaer to New
York, society was about to deal with a formidable force. While she was deeply rooted in social
tradition—in 1905 she had written Newport—Our
Social Capital—she was at the same time concerned with the women’s movement
and with the underprivileged.
A year after moving into the house, on Saturday, January 17,
1915 Mrs. Van Rensselaer hosted “an evening of Oriental Divination” in the
house; exemplifying her up-to-date interests.
As the summer season approached that year, her health failed and she was
unable to open her Newport cottage. On
November 7, 1915 The Pittsburgh Press noted “Mrs. Van Rensselaer was forced to
stay in town this summer. Illness kept
her from the country and chained her to her home at No. 134 East Ninety-fifth
Street. It proved a bad hospital.”
The problem was children.
“All day long there was noise, shouting, cat-calling, roller-skating.” Her nerves frayed, May Van Rensselaer “issued
a courteous call for calm” and the street noise abated. But as she thought about her new-found peace,
she was disturbed. Obviously the
children had no playground other than the street and she had taken that from
them. From her window she could see the
children busily playing on various stoops.
Then she had an idea.
The doyen of New York and Philadelphia society invited the
children to her library. She intended to
teach them about American history. “You
have a picture of these youngsters entering that library, every book and ornament
of which breathes association with the past…And there sits that erect and
white-haired gentlewomen ready to mould them for her country,” said The
Pittsburgh Press.
It was the beginning of a long series of classes in the
house. Mrs. Van Rensselaer's instructions were not stuffy or boring; including, for instance, historic
tableaux in which the children dressed in period costumes and played out important
American events.
Along with the weekly group of children in Mrs. John King
Van Rensselaer’s library, the house was the scene of events both social and
otherwise. On a Sunday afternoon in
November 1916 she hosted a reception “for Miss Sylvia Van Rensselaer;” and on
April 9 the following year a meeting of the First National Scientific
Registration Society was held here.
Brooklyn Life pointed out “This society was organized for the protection
of the life and property of individuals by means of Sir Edward Henry’s system
of finger printing.”
It was that sort of forward thinking that brought May Van
Rensselaer to her feet at a meeting of the New York Historical Society on
January 2, 1917 and caused many gasps among the exulted group. The following day The New York Times reported
that “Mrs. John King Van Rensselaer, member of one of the oldest Knickerbocker
families, rose unexpectedly at the annual meeting of the New York Historical
Society last night” and addressed “its staid, and afterward startled,
representatives.”
She told the Society that in the past three years she had “not
heard one new or advanced scientific thought, although many distinguished
scholars have visited the city.” She
said that as a life member she should be proud of the organization, but was
ashamed of it.
“Mrs. Van Rensselaer, who has snow-white hair and looks like
a Duchess of the Victorian period, paused to scan the paper from which she was
reading and to permit the full meaning of her words to sink in on her audience.” Having accused the Society of no new ideas
and of being “in the rear” of similar organizations in the United States, she
dropped what The Times called “a verbal bomb.”
“And instead of an imposing edifice filled with treasure
from old New York what do we find? Only
a deformed monstrosity filled with curiosities, ill arranged and badly
assorted.”
Mrs. John King Van Rensselaer’s tirade was the first step in
a reorganization of the displays and a rethinking of the operation of the New
York Historical Society.
Two weeks later Admiral George Dewey died, triggering a wave
of tribute nationwide. On January 20 The
New York Times reported on the activities in the Van Rensselaer house. “Commemoration exercises for Admiral Dewey
were held yesterday afternoon at the home of Mrs. John King Van Rensselaer, the
author, 134 East Ninety-fifth Street. She is the member of the New York Historical
Society who…told the society it lacked animation. The principal participants were a dozen boys
and girls of 12 and 15 years of age, members of Mrs. Van Rensselaer’s city
history classes.
“The idea of the exercises occurred to her when the children
requested that they be permitted to drape with mourning and flags the
photograph of the Admiral hung at the head of the stairway in Mrs. Van
Rensselaer’s home. They did this, after
which Mrs. Van Rensselaer told several anecdotes in which the Admiral figured
and which, she said, had escaped the biographers.”
The vibrant author and socialite left East 95th
Street in 1918 and the house was leased to Mrs. Morton Taylor. Unlike many of the homes in the area, it
managed to survive through as a single family home through even the Depression
years. In 1954 it was purchased by
Harley Rogers, who sold it in 1958 to architect David Todd and his wife
Suzanne. In reporting on the sale The
Times noted “He plans to alter and occupy the house.”
And alter the house he did.
While Todd later said there was not much woodwork left in the house, he removed walls to
create a mid-century version of what designers today call “an open concept.” Sleekly modern, it reflected the tastes of
the 1950s and of an architect who thought forward rather than back. One wonders, however, if May Denning King Van
Rensselaer would have approved.
Born in Middletown, Ohio in 1915, David Fenton Michie Todd would go on to design several university buildings and, beginning around 1965, became an advocate for improving conditions in public housing. In 1967 his architectural firm became David Todd & Associates. His most memorable creation was the Manhattan Plaza complex, constructed in the 1970s. He served as chairman of the Landmarks Preservation Commission from 1989 to 1990.
Todd’s chairmanship was controversial and he admitted he was
not an “ardent preservationist” by the common definition. Focusing on what he termed “architectural
quality,” he was less interested in the historical importance of a
structure. “The historical or cultural
sides can be stretched, strained and rationalized. To my mind, too many things can fit under
those headings,” he told reporters in a 1989 interview. That attitude was perhaps reflected in his interior
renovations of his own home on East 95th Street.
As Todd aged, he and his wife spent about half of each year in
Venasque, a village in Southern France.
When in town, he loved puttering in his garden, described by The New
York Times as “of his own design.”
The 93-year old architect died on March 31, 2008. Nineteen years earlier, when he was named
landmarks chairman, he had remarked “One thing that concerns me now is, who is
going to keep up the house?”
Still a private home, the house was placed on the market in
2014 and reduced in price in 2015 to just under $6.4 million.
non-credited photographs taken by the author
non-credited photographs taken by the author
Hi from Singapore! The Google rabbithole led me here while I was searching for information on Mrs. Van Rensselaer. The little biographies of these people's lives in relation to their environment were so interesting and well-written. Thanks for putting this on the Internet!
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