In 1883 the New-York Life Insurance Company issued a
$36,600 mortgage on the property at No. 1 East 74th Street. Construction started on a residence in what
would quickly become Manhattan’s most fashionable neighborhood. But the builder’s dreams were larger than his
bank account and before the house was completed, the firm foreclosed.
The New York Times reported that “the structure, a small
affair 40 feet by 27, passed into the hands of the company. Another $10,000 was expended in the
completion of the building, making the total cost to the company $46,600.” The amount that New-York Life Insurance had
spent building the house would equate to about $1.2 million today.
Later, in an article complaining about the mismanagement of
New-York Life Insurance, the newspaper grumbled “It proved to be another white elephant
on the company’s hands. Years passed
without renting it, and it was finally sold for $28,000.”
The buyer of the bargain house was wealthy dry goods
merchant James McCreery. He apparently
had no intention of living in a “small structure” and set to work replacing the
never-lived-in home with a more impressive mansion. McCreery acquired the adjoining 60-foot plot
on East 74th Street, demolished the existing house, and began
construction on his new home.
As McCreery’s mansion rose, work was underway on another being built for banker J. H. Schiff, abutting the house to the north. The McCreery residence
would face 74th Street, taking advantage of the 100-foot plot rather
than the 27-foot Fifth Avenue exposure.
The Real Estate Record &
Builders’ Guide noted that these homes, along with “the new houses that are in
construction, make this neighborhood on the avenue a remarkably handsome one.”
By January 29, 1887 the wide and somewhat skinny mansion was
nearly completed. The Record and Guide
said “On the northeast corner of Fifth avenue and Seventy-fourth street,
opposite Mr. Pickhardt’s home on the cross street, is a handsome three-story
and attic brick house with brown stone trimmings, nearly finished, belonging to
James McCreery, the dry-goods merchant.
There is a peaked tower on the street side, and the design has a good
deal of the original and striking character that suits the fashions of the day,
while it is perfectly restrained within the limits of good taste.”
The McCreery family would not stay long in the new
home. By 1891 it appears they were leasing it to the
Keyes family; and on September 12 that year, just four years after the mansion
was completed, James McCreery sold the house to Dr. Edward Loughborough Keyes
for $170,000. The title to the property,
as was common at the time, was put in Sarah I. Keyes’s name. While the McCreerys had been content with using
the address of No. 1 East 74th Street; Sarah would slowly change
over to the more impressive No. 930 Fifth Avenue address.
Dr. Keyes was a highly regarded urologist and surgeon. He served as President of the American
Association of Genito-Urinary Surgeons and routinely published papers in
medical journals. Immediately after
taking ownership of the 74th Street mansion, his father, who had
distinguished himself in the Civil War, arrived for an extended visit.
The Epoch, in August 1891, noted “Mrs. Edward L. Keyes of 1
East Seventy-fourth street, has cards out for Monday afternoons in
January. A special feature of these
receptions will be the presence of Major Gen. Keyes, her father-in-law, who is
spending the Winter with his son, Dr. Keyes.
The gallant soldier represents the best type of courtier and is as
admired and sought after in the drawing-room as he was dreaded and feared on
the battle-field.”
While her husband combated and studied urinary diseases,
Sarah Keyes entertained. Society pages
routinely mentioned her musicales and afternoon receptions. The location of the mansion and the doctor’s
wealth and status resulted in the Keyes rubbing shoulders with Manhattan’s
social aristocracy.
Among them was William K. Vanderbilt. On August 25, 1893 he sailed into New York
Harbor with his Glasgow-built yacht, the Valiant,
described as “the largest and handsomest steam yacht in the world.” The New York Times, the following day, said “The
simple-minded Staten Islanders gazed at her in amazement, wondering at her
being a steam yacht. She looked more
like an ocean steamship, and no small one at that.”
Sarah Keyes may have been a bit jealous of her husband when
three months later Vanderbilt invited him on a 10-month cruise on the Valiant.
On November 23, 1893 the all-male party, with the exception of Mrs.
Vanderbilt, boarded the yacht. Included
in the small, elite group with Dr. Keyes was Oliver H. P. Belmont, J. Louis
Webb, Winthrop Rutherford, and F. O. Beach.
The party was heavily outnumbered by the crew, which numbered 62.
The nearly year-long trip was to take the wealthy passengers
to Gibraltar, Alexandria, up the Nile, then to India, and Ceylon. “It is thought that the Valiant will return
to the South of France in time for the Spring season there,” reported The
Times.
Dr. Keyes and the other guests could anticipate a luxurious
ten months at sea. The day after the
vessel left Manhattan The New York Times
noted “The interior decorations are very elaborate, and the staterooms and
saloons are fitted up with luxurious taste.
The yacht is lighted by electricity throughout, is heated by steam, and
can be cooled by iced air, there being an ice-manufacturing outfit on board.”
But no matter how luxurious the surroundings, and how close
the friendly relationships were; it appears that living for too long in
relatively cramped quarters may have taken a toll. Or, as at least one newspaper hinted, it was
a young American woman, Nellie Neustretter, “who is said to be the cause of the
family troubles of William K. Vanderbilt.”
In either case, just four months into the trip, in March, it “was
curtailed by the breaking up of the Vanderbilt party at Nice,” reported The
Evening World. Marooned in France, the
millionaire guests were left to their own devices in finding their way back to
New York. The first to arrive home was Dr. Edward L.
Keyes.
Reporters descended upon him on April 14, but he was
diplomatically coy. “Not a thing
occurred from the first day to the last to mar our serenity and pleasure. The party broke up at Nice just a month ago,
and I think all can say that the cruise could have had no feature added to make
it more enjoyable.”
The matter was not so quickly put to rest, however. On August 29 a reporter from The Evening
World went to Keyes’s office. By now the
doctor’s patience had grown thin.
“Well, well, what is it?
Talk quick. Something about that
Vanderbilt matter, I suppose. What is
it?” he snapped.
The reporter asked if he were correctly quoted regarding his
initial statement that nothing occurred on the Valiant to mar the guests’
pleasure.
“Anything that I said about that trip is correct,” he
answered.
Then the reporter pressed further, saying “But will you
kindly tell me if you were correctly quoted in that interview,” Dr. Keyes
exploded, firing a profanity at the reporter that shocked the female patients
in the waiting room.
The Evening World quoted him. “’None of your----business!’
shouted the doctor, in a voice which could be heard all over the house. He would say nothing more about the Vanderbilts.”
In the meantime, Edward L. Keyes, Jr. had graduated from
Georgetown University in 1892 and in 1895 received his medical degree from
Columbia University. A urologist like
his father, he would eventually be as well-known and influential. On November 17, 1898 he married Emma Willard
Schudder in a fashionable St. Patrick’s Cathedral wedding.
Edward and Sarah Keyes would remain in the Fifth Avenue
mansion for another eight years. In
November 1906 Keyes purchased the four-story mansion a block away at No. 28
East 75th Street. He hired architect
C. W. Romeyn to do “extensive alterations.”
In January 1907 he sold No. 930 Fifth Avenue to Simeon Brooks Chapin and
his wife, the former Elizabeth Mattocks.
Chapin was a successful stock broker and real estate
investor. He had formed the trading house S. B. Chapin
and Co. in 1901 in Chicago and the year before purchasing the Keyes mansion he
moved its operations to New York City.
Simeon and Elizabeth had four children, Marietta, Elizabeth, Simeon Jr.,
and Virginia.
Like Sarah Keyes, Elizabeth busied herself with
entertainments. In March 1911 she hosted
an afternoon recital by George Barrere, for instance; and on February 29, 1914
she “opened her house, 930 Fifth Avenue, yesterday for the afternoon meeting of
the Thursday Musical Club,” as reported in The Times.
In December 1915 Marietta’s engagement to Harold Hartshome
was announced. The wedding took place on
Wednesday afternoon, February 28, 1916, in the socially important Collegiate
Church of St. Nicholas on Fifth Avenue.
While other Fifth Avenue millionaires spent their summers in
Bar Harbor, Newport and other East Coast resorts, the Chapins held on to their
Midwestern roots. Their country estate was located in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin.
The Chapins's conservative, Protestant beliefs were in
evidence when they sent out more than 800 invitations for an address by evangelist
Billy Sunday in May 1917. The ballroom
of the Plaza Hotel was reserved for the event where the preacher discussed “changing
fashions in woman’s garb, craze for money, and ambition to hold public office.”
By the end of World War I the Schiff mansion next door had been altered and enlarged, overpowering No. 930 -- from the collection of the New York Public Library |
At the time, socialites turned their attention to war
relief. Elizabeth Chapin kept up the
work even after the conflict had ended.
With France devastated, she and her daughter Virginia, worked to help
rebuild; and they turned to an unlikely source.
On January 27, 1922 The New York Times reported that “A children’s
auxiliary of the New York Branch of the American McAll Association was organized
yesterday at the home of Mrs. Simeon B. Chapin, 930 Fifth Avenue. With her youngest daughter, Miss Virginia
Chapin, as hostess, there were seventy-five little girls and boys from the
leading private schools of the city in attendance.” The children voted to “undertake the support
of a number of war orphans in France.”
Elizabeth kept up the work providing aid to France at least
into 1924, when she entertained workers for the “Fresh Air work in France.”
In December that year a 36-inch water main burst at the
corner of Fifth Avenue and 75th Street. The resulting flood poured into the basements
of some of Manhattan’s grandest mansions.
“Valuable antiques, tapestries, rugs and furniture worth thousands of
dollars were ruined by the flow of water into the entrance halls and basements
of homes in the section,” reported The Times.
As well as the Chapin house, the newspaper numbered among the
mansions affected those of Mortimer Schiff, Edwin Gould, Edward Harkness,
Clarence H. Mackay and John Wanamaker among many others. “Nearly a foot of water poured into the
basement of the Simeon Brooks Chapin home, 930 Fifth Avenue, causing
considerable damage,” reported the newspaper.
In 1926 the Chapin children were growing up and leaving the
mansion. Virginia was among the
debutantes that season and in August the engagement of Simeon Jr. to Elisa M.
Bartholomay was announced. Within two
years Chapin conceived of better use for
the valuable property and the out-of-style house.
On March 9, 1928 The New York Times announced that he had
bought Robertson Trowbridge’s house next door at No. 3 East 74th
Street. “He intends to improve the plot
with an apartment house from plans by Electus D. Litchfield, architect.”
The modern co-op building would contain duplex apartments of
“sixteen rooms and eights,” one of which Chapin had reserved for himself and
Elizabeth. But it was most likely the
Great Depression that stalled Chapin’s plans.
The house survived until 1940 when it, along with the Schiff and
Rentschler mansions, was replaced by Emery Roth’s 19-story apartment building.
photo http://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/BN-DO553_NYHODK_J_20140707100625.jpg |
love the replacement ,too bad its neighbors were demolished...but what a weird little mansion
ReplyDeleteWould have preferred that the Schiff mansion had survived, looks very impressive. Also never saw an image of this 5th Ave neighborhood without the presence of the Astor mansion. Strange seeing the temple complete sitting amid an endless row of mansions
ReplyDeleteThis is a very interesting and well researched article, but there is one correction I wold like to make. The Simeon B. Chapin house on the north shore of Lake Geneva, Wisconsin - built in 1898 by Chapin and designed by the renowned Chicago architect Benjamin Marshall (who was also the architect of Chicago's Drake, Blackstone and Edgewater Beach hotels) - never went by the name "Black Point". It was, and still is, named Flowerside Inn, and remains a private residence. Black Point, a Queen Anne style estate on the south shore of Lake Geneva, was built in 1888 by beer magnate Conrad Seipp. Today it is a highly regarded museum, open to the public.
ReplyDelete