A single block of Waverley Place, near Washington Square kept architect Alfred Zucker busy in the first years of the 1890s. Within a two year period between 1891 and 1893 he would design Nos. 12, 18, 24-26, and 28-30 Waverley Place, and the massive stone structure at the corner of Waverley Place and Greene Street, No. 246 Greene. Elegant brick-faced residences, once the homes of some of New York’s most influential citizens, were being razed at a dizzying pace to be replaced by his modern commercial structures.
Wealthy merchant John Dowley owned one such house, No. 18,
in the decades before the Civil War. Four stories tall and 33-feet wide, it was an
impressive residence. Following Dowley,
it became home to Joel Browne Post and his wife, the former Abby Mauran
Church. Here their son, George Browne
Post grew up to become one of America’s premier architects. But by 1891 Post’s boyhood neighborhood was
doomed.
On February 7, 1891 the Real Estate Record and Builders’
Guide reported that Post had sold the house.
“It is understood that the purchaser will tear down the house and erect
a warehouse on the site.” The purchasers
were brothers Samuel and Henry Corn, who were grabbing up several other
properties on the block. Their architect
of choice was Alfred Zucker and it was this relationship that resulted in Zucker’s
unusual string of commissions on the street.
A month later the Record and Guide reported that Zucker had
filed plans for “a six-story basement and sub-cellar warehouse.” The paper noted “This building will be of brick,
iron and stone construction, furnished with all modern conveniences and is
estimated to cost $75,000.” That figure
would translate to just under $2 million today.
Interestingly, when the Corns took out their $75,000 mortgage from the
Title Guarantee Trust Co. in September that year, the paperwork included “and
wives.”
George Post’s home was demolished, construction begun, and
the building completed within a year. Zucker
managed to produce a Romanesque-inspired design without the use of arched
openings—other than those at the sixth floor, where paired windows formed a
near arcade behind thin columns with fanned capitals. Two story stone piers with carved medieval
capitals continued upward as brick. The
central section was, for the most part, cast iron; allowing for vast expanses
of glass. The spandrels at the fourth
and fifth floors were filled with creatively-laid brick, creating waffle-like panels.
The rapid redevelopment of the neighborhood was due, in
part, by the encroachment of the millinery and garment districts. The
ground floor retail space became home to the “hats and caps” store of Crofut
& White before long. The Clothiers’
and Haberdashers’ Weekly reported on December 27, 1895 that Crofut & White
"will shortly move their New York office from 24 West Fourth street into the
store at 18 Waverly Place."
The Empire Cloak and Suit Company moved its manufacturing
operation into the building. Abraham
Moses worked here in 1897 as a cloth cutter.
Moses commuted daily from Newark, New Jersey; but his daily routine would
end suddenly and tragically on September 11 that year.
That day the cutting crew was running low on material and
Abraham Moses went to the elevator, leaned into the open shaft and yelled down
for the operator to bring up more cloth.
The New York Times reported the following day “The elevator was coming
down with a load of freight and it struck Moses on the back of the head,
breaking his spine and inflicting injuries from which he died two hours later in
St Vincent’s Hospital.”
At the time of the accident, the labor movement was taking
root in the United States. It would
bring the Empire Cloak and Suit Company to a halt three years later. In 1899 about 200 of Empire’s employees
joined the Cloakmakers’ Union. Not only
did the owners, brothers M. and J. Silverman, refuse to recognize the union;
they adamantly refused to hire new union workers.
When the unionized workers arrived at No. 18 Waverley Place on
January 10, 1900 they found themselves locked out. Now officially on strike, they told reporters
two days later that they “still remain firm and declare that they will not
acceded to the demands of M. and J. Silverman.”
Hat manufacturer Lanchick Bros. were not immune to labor
problems, either. In 1905 its employees,
members of the cap makers’ union, went on strike.
Van Orden & Bickner sold hats for men and boys here in 1907 -- The American Hatter, August 1907 (copyright expired) |
Among the other millinery and clothing firms in the building
were Van Orden & Bickner, wholesale hat dealers in 1907; The Queen Waist
Company in 1908 and the Fiberloid Company in 1909. Fiberloid produced men’s collars and cuffs,
and aggressively marketed its Litholin brand.
Made of waterproofed linen, it was guaranteed to “hold its shape,
cleanliness, neatness, and has the regulation dull white surface of ordinary,
well-laundered linen…if the sun shines or the rain pours.”
Scandal visited No. 18 in 1912 when burglars broke into a
garment manufacturer. The owner was
disgraced with his son, Bernard Levy, was arrested for the crime. After working to clear his son of the
charges, the owner committed suicide.
By the 1940s the garment and millinery industries had moved
north of 34th Street. In 1944
No. 18 was sold, assessed at the time at $29,000. The building was taken over by a vastly
different trade—chocolate.
On May 8 that year Jane Holt of The New York Times wrote “The
appetizing aroma of chocolate that is being melted pervades the factory of the
Kopper Company at 18 Waverly Place, where candies in the European style are
manufactured for sale in retail stores in many sections of the country. The confections…are of twenty varieties that
the firm used to make in Germany before its establishment in this country in
1938.”
The “appetizing aroma of chocolate” would waft out of No. 18
Waverly Place for more than four decades.
Kopper’s Chocolate factory left the building in 1986. The building was acquired by New York
University, which initiated a restoration and renovation in 2008. Today it remains a handsome element in Alfred
Zucker’s eclectic string of 1890s structures.
photographs by the author
photographs by the author
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