There is little visual evidence that the building started life an early 19th century residence. |
In the mid-19th century hordes of immigrant Jews from Central Europe entered New York Harbor fleeing economic hardship and social upheaval. But the ancestors of Napthali Phillips had already been in America for generations. His great-grandfather had escaped the
Portuguese Inquisition to become one of Savannah’s first Jewish settlers. Naphtali’s father was a well-to-do
merchant, educated in London.
Born on October 19, 1773, Naphtali was one of 21 children
born to Jonas and Rebecca Phillips. When
he was three years old, the family fled to Philadelphia following the Battle of
Washington Heights in 1776. Jonas
Phillips was a staunch patriot and served in the Revolutionary army and was an aide de camp to General George
Washington. When Washington was inaugurated
in New York City in 1789, young Naphtali Phillips, at just 16 years old, was
chosen to accompany the procession that escorted him from Philadelphia to New
York for the ceremony.
On July 5, 1797 Naphtali married Rachel Seixas, daughter of
Moses Mendez Seixas, a prominent banker and merchant in Newport. The couple moved permanently to New York in
1801 and not long afterward Naphtali became owner of the National Advocate, one of the city’s leading newspapers.
The couple, who would have 11 children, took a two-and-a half story
house at the corner of Rivington Street and the Bowery. Faced in brick, its Rivington Street side was wooden. The neighborhood, north of the busy
commercial district, was just seeing development. As the name "Bowery" suggested, since the 17th
century the road had connected the old Dutch bouwerij’s, or farms.
Directly across the Bowery stood a weathered stone mile marker,
which indicated to the traveler that he was just one mile from City
Hall.
Moses Seixas was staying with the family in 1809 when he died in the house. In writing to George Washington years earlier he included the phrase "to bigotry no sanction; to persecution no assistance." Washington repeated the words in his reply and is normally given credit for the quotation. His letter to Seixas, according to Adam Woodward, is "a seminal document in American history and is considered by many to be his most important written piece."
Moses Seixas was staying with the family in 1809 when he died in the house. In writing to George Washington years earlier he included the phrase "to bigotry no sanction; to persecution no assistance." Washington repeated the words in his reply and is normally given credit for the quotation. His letter to Seixas, according to Adam Woodward, is "a seminal document in American history and is considered by many to be his most important written piece."
The family was still at No. 213 Bowery in 1812 when son
Isaac was born; but before long they would move to No. 98 Greenwich
Street. Their relocation to the more
crowded district would end in tragedy.
On July 30, 1822 they moved once more, to the corner of Broadway and
Chambers Street.
Yellow fever had broken out in downtown Manhattan a few days
before. It quickly spread, becoming an
epidemic. Two days after moving into
their new home, Rebecca fell ill. The
1822 book An Account of the Yellow Fever
in the City of New York documented “At a meeting of the Board, on the 5th
of August, the Resident Physician reported that Mrs. Naphthali Philips…had been
sick of Yellow Fever…Mrs. P. sickened on the evening of the 1st
inst. And died on the 5th.”
The Phillips house on the Bowery became home to Dr. Thomas
Pitts by 1834; and to Dr. Peter B. Guernsey by 1837. At this point the house was still a private
home. Directories noted that Dr.
Guernsey’s office was at No. 53 Houston Street.
But by 1840s the house was heavily altered. What had earlier been
described as a two-story frame dwelling now had commercial space at street
level with living space above. At some point attic was raised to
a full third floor. Richard Fisher advertised
his grocery here and his residence upstairs in 1840.
Fisher advertised in A. E. Wright's Commercial Directory in 1840 (copyright expired) |
In 1843 Fisher seems to have expanded and added John W.
Salters “butcher” at the Bowery address.
Salters lived nearby at No. 85 Second Avenue. Fischer’s corner grocery would remain here
throughout the 1840s.
By the time the Civil War broke out in the South, A. Gavron
made and sold sausages here; but in 1865 Pincus Leon listed himself in city
directories as a “segar dealer.” That
year C. Smith, living upstairs, was inducted into the Union Army.
Things were changing in the Bowery neighborhood. As the Civil War drew to a close immigrants
poured into the area. Saloons and music
halls opened and the once-respectable residential street began earning a
less-than-respectable reputation.
John Steiger opened a “liquor-saloon” in the ground floor
space where Richard Fisher had once sold groceries. At 2 a.m. on November 16, 1867 a fight broke
out in the basement of the saloon.
Steiger was shot in the right side of the chest and taken to New-York
Hospital. “The victim of the affray was
able to give a full description of the person who shot him,” reported The New
York Times, “but as yet no arrests have been made.” The bar owner lingered until December 1, when
he died of his injuries.
William B. Hanson took over Steiger's saloon. Across the Bowery was another, owned
by Tom O’Hara. The tavern was named the
One-Mile House, after the granite mile marker standing outside. In 1872 the Germania Bank purchased and
demolished O’Hara’s property. Hanson pounced, taking the name for his saloon at No. 213.
Hanson was a shrewd businessman. Perhaps to get around the excise laws, his
liquor license listed the One-Mile House as a “hotel.” Liquor laws prohibited the sale of alcohol
on Sundays, excepting restaurants and hotels where it could be offered with
meals. And, indeed, Hanson installed a
hotel counter and hired a counter boy to rent rooms.
Hanson paid a hefty fee for his liquor license here, amounting
to just under $2,000 today. But he grew
wealthy from his enterprise. He was also
politically active and in 1884 when Senator James G. Blaine battled Grover
Cleveland for the Presidency, Hanson was there to support his favorite.
On September 18 that year The New York Times reported on
Hanson’s gala politicking at No. 213 Bowery.
“A few weeks ago the William B. Hanson Association organized a Blaine
and Logan club. The club unfurled a
handsome banner at its headquarters, No. 213 Bowery, last evening. Many fireworks were discharged as the banner
was stretched across the Bowery, and the band played ‘The Star Spangled Banner.’ From a stand which was illuminated by
Japanese lanterns, addresses were delivered.”
In 1882 James D. McCabe wrote a scathing description of the Bowery. “Wretched transparencies mark the entrances
to the low dives, in and out of which a steady throng pours. The pavements are full of abandoned women,
boldly plying their trade, regardless of the police, who are out in force along
the thoroughfare.” It was the sort of
environment William Hanson dealt with both in the saloon and with his roomers
upstairs.
On May 29, 1889 The Evening World reported that “Joseph
Goldschmidt, of 213 Bowery was held for trial at the Tombs Police Court this
morning, charged with stealing a package from the letter-box on the corner of
Broadway and Chamber street.” And four
years later John Lanz attempted a foolish scam.
In July 1893 he sold grocer Morris Lahr, of No. 91 Cannon
Street, two barrels of sugar for $12. “But
when the grocer opened the barrels he found that they were filled with ashes
instead of sugar,” reported The Evening World on July 28. Lanz was arrested and held on $500 bail on
the charge “of swindling.”
Earlier that year the 47-year old William B. Hanson had traveled
to Washington DC to participate in the second inauguration ceremonies of Grover
Cleveland. On March 9 the New-York
Tribune reported “With several other members of the association he left the
Masonic Hall in Washington on Saturday morning, and walked for two hours in the
rain and snow before he reached the point where his association was to fall
in. It was another two hours before the
line started, and when the parade was finally ended, Mr. Hanson was suffering
from a heavy cold.”
Hanson returned to New York on March 4 and was diagnosed
with pneumonia. He died four days
later. Called by the newspaper a “wealthy
liquor merchant in the Bowery,” his worth was estimated at about $100,000 (over
$2.6 million today). Running a Bowery
saloon had been profitable for Hanson.
He “was known in the racing world as the owner of several horses,” said
the article.
The One-Mile House continued to operate under John D.
Hanson. But he quickly
realized that his father’s political ties had fringe benefits that he
lacked. On August 14, 1894 The Evening
World reported on raids on establishments that sold alcohol on Sunday. “Saloon-keeper Hanson, of Rivington street and
the Bowery, promptly went on his bail bond.”
That same month Hanson filed for $500 in “alterations” to
the building. Unfortunately records do
not reveal what changes he had in mind.
George Dougherty was living upstairs that year. On the morning of July 6 Eddie Meyer was
murdered in his home at No. 1503 Avenue A.
George Dougherty was arrested for the crime. John Wakefield, a clerk in the One-Mile
House, was a star witness in the trial on March 21, 1895. He swore “that Dougherty went to bed in his
house at 1 o’clock in the morning, less than an hour after the murder was
committed. The hotel register was
produced to prove this fact,” reported The Evening World. The newspaper added “his testimony was clear
in every respect, and Mr. Weeks failed to break it down.”
While customers of questionable repute came and went through
the doors of No. 213 Bowery at the turn of the century, two men tried their
best to make an honest, if scant, living. Alfred
Disbecker ran his “newspaper stand,” out front and Felice D. Angelo operated his
bootblack stand here.
In the meantime, others were less upstanding. Roomer George Walters was
arrested on August 6, 1903 with his cohort, Henry J. Bennett, charged “with
obtaining money by false pretenses.” The
men sold tickets for a fictitious excursion of the Seneca Association. Unfortunately for the gullible purchasers of
the tickets, there was no such club.
“As they were well dressed and drove about with a stylish
horse and buggy, they made a good impression and sold a good many tickets,” said
The New York Times on August 7. Their audacity
apparently had no bounds, for among their victims was Father Smythe, Rector of
St. Joseph’s Roman Catholic Church, who bought ten tickets for $10. Police found out later that the “stylish
horse and buggy” had been stolen from Manders Brothers on East 11th
Street.
The One-Mile House would be entangled in another murder case
when Fritz Nitschke was found dead in the Puritan Hotel at No. 183 Bowery on
August 11, 1907. “The coroner believes
the man was murdered for $2,000 in cash and $13,000 worth of deeds which he was
said to have had in his possession.” The
investigation turned up a puzzling clue when Louis Holland, a bartender at No.
213 Bowery, said Nitschke “had left deeds on the bar” two days prior to his
murder. On August 29 the New-York
Tribune said “other papers of the dead man were found in the One Mile House, at
the corner of Bowery and Rivingston [sic] street. These were turned over to the coroner, but
the deeds for the property were not among them.”
A year later Louis Holland was talking to police again; but
this time for selling alcohol on Sunday.
On November 23, 1908 The Sun reported “Detective Vrawley of the Eldridge
street station bought a glass of beer in John Hanson’s place at 213 Bowery, and
arrested the bartender, Louis Holland.
There was an arrest in Hanson’s last Sunday, too.”
But Holland’s run-in with the law was less substantial than
that of another bartender that year.
John McManus not only tended bar here, but lived upstairs. He also went by the name of John
Sweeney. A convicted felon, he had been
in the State Prison three times, always for housebreaking.
“One morning not long ago Detective Reilly found him coming
out of the hallway of the apartment-house at No. 8 West One hundred and Second
Street with a jimmy and a bunch of skeleton keys in his pockets,” reported The
Evening World on Friday, September 18, 1908.
Judge Malone had lost patience with the repeat offender and sentenced
him to seven years in Sing Sing.
Wealthy brewer George Ehret had held a $6,000 mortgage on
No. 213 Bowery since about 1895. In 1921
John D. Hanson sold the building to the 86-year old millionaire. In reporting on the sale on April 2, the
New-York Tribune called it a “landmark of the lower East Side.” It
added “Mr. Ehret immediately leased the property for ten years to Jacob
Margolies for a restaurant.”
Margolies agreed to pay Ehret $7,200 a year on the building
and announced his intentions to “extensively alter the property into a modern
store and office building and will occupy the ground floor for his business.”
The old saloon became home to Jack’s Busy Lunch where neighborhood
tradesmen sat at the counters or small tables for coffee and sandwiches. The old painted sign ONE MILE HOUSE slowly faded
on the Rivington Street side.
By the 1960s No. 213 Bowery was once again a bar. And the history of graft and crime had not
totally been erased. In 1963 Simon Golly’s
tavern was here and on July 26 that year Jack M. Golly was indicted for perjury
by the grand jury investigating a New York State liquor license scandal. The indictment charged that the 52-year old
bar operator “lied to the grand jury about his participation in a conspiracy to
bribe an S.L.A. official to obtain ‘favorable disposition’ of a violation
charge against the tavern,” reported The New York Times.
Simon Golly’s was gone by the mid 1960s. There would be no more
drinking at the old One-Mile House after 1985.
That year the all three floors of building were converted to commercial
space.
Today a restaurant equipment store operates from the
modernized ground floor and a ghastly brick-textured building paper, installed
around mid-century, hides the brick front on the Bowery and the wooden siding
on Rivington Street. In June 2011 street
artist Shepard Fairey, who became well-known for his Barack Obama “Hope”
poster, added an intricate Obey stencil to the Rivington elevation.
Behind the artwork and unnoticed by passersby is a venerable structure with a long and
astonishing history.
photographs by the author
many thanks to reader Adam Woodward for suggesting this post
many thanks to reader Adam Woodward for suggesting this post
it's hard to believe that there's still a wooden exterior under that 'building paper'
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