In January 1877 Dr. George Thompson held the position of
Surgeon of the Ninth Regiment and, according to a newspaper “He was in
prosperous circumstances, and his domestic relations were eminently happy.” Thompson and his wife apparently leased their
comfortable home at No. 41 East 10th Street from the Renwick family. The Renwicks, relatives of the great
land-owning Brevoort family, held title to the property.
Dr. Thompson’s life would end somewhat mysteriously and with
great agony on Monday January 15, 1877.
Although his family pressured officials for a “secret” investigation, The New York Times gleaned “through
trustworthy sources” information that was “reluctantly corroborated…by Dr.
Miller.”
The Coroner deduced that five days earlier Thompson “while suffering
from a nervous attack” removed a bottle from his medicine cabinet which he
supposed to be diluted hydrochloric acid.
Instead it was acid nitrate of mercury, “a powerful drug.” He swallowed some of the contents and
immediately collapsed in agony.
“He lingered, however, until Monday, when,
surrounded by his grief stricken friends, he succumbed to the deleterious
effects of the drug.” Despite the family’s
unusual secrecy, the Coroner insisted that there was nothing to suggest “that
Dr. Thompson meditated self destruction.”
Ten years later, the East 10th Street block between
University Place and Broadway was still upscale. The Renwick family decided to update its
income-producing properties by demolishing the former Thompson house and its
next door neighbor at No. 39 and, in their places, erecting an apartment
building. The concept of apartment
living for the well-to-do was relatively new and The Lancaster would be among
the first in the area.
The choice of architects was not surprising. On May 28, 1887 the Real Estate Record and
Builders’ Guide reported that Renwick, Aspinwall & Russell had “drawn up
sketches for a five-story first-class apartment home…with all modern
improvements at Nos. 39 and 41 East 10th street to be built of
croton brick and terra cotta with stone trimmings, for E. S. Renwick.” James Renwick, Jr., although never formally
trained, was by now one of the nation’s leading architects—responsible for such
iconic structures as St. Patrick’s Cathedral and Grace Church in Manhattan, and
the Smithsonian building in Washington. William Hamilton Russell was a relative as well, the grand nephew of James Renwick.
The firm married two arising stars in residential
architecture—Queen Anne and Colonial Revival.
The architects modernized traditional Federal elements—like splayed lintels—with
a Queen Anne interpretation of the design. The
Federal-style doorway received an overblown fanlight and a decorative terra cotta
frame. A striking terra cotta shell
burst from each tympanum above the fifth floor windows. The
numbers 39 and 41 were crisply incised into the brick on either side of the
entrance, as was The Lancaster overhead.
While other architects would produce near reproduction 18th
century homes within the next decade, Renwick, Aspinwall & Russell created
a unique modern take on the period.
There were just two
apartments per floor and the moneyed residents tended to list their addresses
accordingly—either No. 39 or 41—depending on which side of the hallway they
lived. As was often the case with
high-end apartments at the time, the original tenants had their input in the
design.
Apparently Stanley B. Tyler did. On April 5, 1891, in an article about the new trend of stained glass in homes, The New York Times mentioned “Two of the latest and most striking designs in the city are in the house of Stanley B. Tyler, at 39 East Tenth Street. They are companion windows for the dining room, each 2 feet by 3, and show female heads typifying Spring and Autumn. The heads are executed in subdued tints, and the general tone is soft and harmonious.”
Apparently Stanley B. Tyler did. On April 5, 1891, in an article about the new trend of stained glass in homes, The New York Times mentioned “Two of the latest and most striking designs in the city are in the house of Stanley B. Tyler, at 39 East Tenth Street. They are companion windows for the dining room, each 2 feet by 3, and show female heads typifying Spring and Autumn. The heads are executed in subdued tints, and the general tone is soft and harmonious.”
Among Tyler’s neighbors was attorney Girard Irving Whitehead
whose offices were in the Evening Post Building at No. 206 Broadway. Whitehead was drawn into unwanted publicity
in 1893. His sister was married to
inventor and civil engineer Francis J. Palmer and the couple had a
daughter. But the marriage had fallen
apart and by now they had been separated for several years.
On September 8, 1893 Whitehead was called to Smith &
McNell’s Hotel at No. 199 Washington Street where Palmer had committed suicide.
Palmer, who went to elaborate lengths to
ensure that his death by inhaling lighting gas did not fail, left two sealed
letters for his brother-in-law. Whitehead refused to reveal the contents; but
said only that “rapid-transit schemes had ruined him financially and had turned
his brain.”
By 1901 wealthy collector John Karst lived in the
building. The collection in his
apartment was described in the Anglo-American
Pottery’s “Directory of Collectors”
as “mainly English and American china and glassware, including 3000 plates, 250
teapots, etc.”
Other residents included mining engineer Daniel W. Langton,
Ph.D.; Captain Tom Miller; and Archibald Pell.
A retired Navy Captain, Miller
was described by The Times as a “club man, epicure, and a widely known
character in New York.” The newspaper said that he had “a wide
personal acquaintance with men in the higher walks of life than any one being in
New York.”
The Manhattan Club was Miller’s favorite and he was noted for his whist and domino playing there. But all agreed that it was his epicurean side that defined him. “The Captain was most noted for his knowledge of the fine art of good living. He was regarded as an authority on what to eat and how to cook, and what to drink with meals and at other times.”
The Manhattan Club was Miller’s favorite and he was noted for his whist and domino playing there. But all agreed that it was his epicurean side that defined him. “The Captain was most noted for his knowledge of the fine art of good living. He was regarded as an authority on what to eat and how to cook, and what to drink with meals and at other times.”
Miller once said “Anybody can give a pretentious breakfast,
luncheon, or dinner. That’s only a question
of the fatness of one’s purse. But to be dainty in the ensemble and exact as to
detail is the fine art.” The Times noted
“It is said that he never gave a dinner at which some dish was not served the
like of which nobody at the table eve before tasted. When asked what it was the host would remark,
‘Oh, that’s just a new invention of mine.
Now that you have reminded me of it, I must give it a name.”
Captain Miller was 91 years old in February 1903 when he
headed home to The Lancaster from the Manhattan Club at 3:00 in the
morning. He wore no gloves. By the time
he made it to East 10th Street, the frigid temperature had taken its
toll. The aged man was found on the shallow
stone stoop, his hands frozen. He died
in St. Vincent’s Hospital six weeks later.
Like Captain Tom Miller, H. Archibald Pell traveled among
high society. The Evening World, on
February 16, 1903, described “Archie” Pell as a “real estate broker and gay
society man; lives at No. 39 East Tenth street; one of New York’s best-known
gentlemen about town; young, rich, and handsome.” Being young, rich and handsome did not keep
Pell and several other Manhattan millionaires out of the newspapers for
scandalous behavior.
Richard Canfield and David Bucklin were indicted by a Grand
Jury on January 24, 1903 for “keeping and maintaining a gambling house at 5
East Forty-fourth Street.” The exclusive
address was appropriate for its clientele—including the likes of Reginald C.
Vanderbilt, architect Clarence Luce, millionaire ink manufacturer William A. H.
Staffford and Archie Pell.
Despite the operation’s elegant décor, the indictment called
it “a public nuisance, where certain idle and evil persons congregated and were
allowed to play certain games known as faro and roulette for excessive sums, to
the discomfort and danger and annoyance of the citizens of the City.” The millionaire patrons, including Pell, were
not charged; but were subpoenaed as witnesses.
The scurrilous publicity would be damaging to the men’s social
reputations and several of them fled.
Luce boarded a steamer for Europe; Vanderbilt headed off for
Newport where newspapers said “he is out of harm’s way;” and the other three,
including Pell, could not be found. District
Attorney Jerome was incensed, telling reporters on February 15 that if they did
not appear in the courtroom the following day there would be “no mercy shown
them.”
While Archie Pell worked through his legal and social embarrassment,
his neighbors in the building included A. Irving Biggs, secretary of the
American Stove Board Company, and William B. Anderson a civil engineer. When Mr. and Mrs. Lippincott moved in around
this time with their five children and baby grandchild, the Port Chester
Journal described The Lancaster as “a staid and conservative apartment house at
39 East Tenth street, owned by the Renwick estate.”
The newspaper said “All of the members of the family are long on refinements. In fact, old fashioned respectability is their chief stock in trade. It was that which caught he agent of the Renwick estate, and the ‘Lippincotts,’ as they were known there, were the only ones who ever got into the house without a string of recommendations a yard long.”
The newspaper said “All of the members of the family are long on refinements. In fact, old fashioned respectability is their chief stock in trade. It was that which caught he agent of the Renwick estate, and the ‘Lippincotts,’ as they were known there, were the only ones who ever got into the house without a string of recommendations a yard long.”
The newspaper added quotation marks around the Lippincott
name because it was merely their latest alias.
They lived in high style in the new apartment. “The best meat that the Sayles-Zahn Company
could furnish was delivered at the house—ordered over the telephone—and the
grocer and the baker and other tradesmen were liberally patronized. There had to be flowers—flowers made a home
so much more attractive, Mrs. ‘Lippincott’ said—and then the baby had to be
taken out for an airing every day, and that required at least a hansom cab.”
The truth was that the Lippincotts made a practice of
establishing themselves in high-end apartment houses and hotels, then skipping
out without paying either the rent or the other bills. Before coming to The Lancaster, the Journal
said, “They hung up the landlord, the butcher, the baker, and the candlestick
maker, to say nothing of the florist and the liveryman, the milkman and the
iceman.”
It all came crashing down, however, when Mr. Brown of the Protective Association “happened in on the ‘Lippincotts’ one fine morning, recognized them as the ‘Hills’ of West Thirty-ninth street, the ‘Harrisons’ of East Thirty-first street, the ‘Runyons’ of West Washington Place, the ‘Somebody-elses’ of West Eighth street, and the McVeys of Philadelphia.” They were arrested on Wednesday April 27, 1904.
It all came crashing down, however, when Mr. Brown of the Protective Association “happened in on the ‘Lippincotts’ one fine morning, recognized them as the ‘Hills’ of West Thirty-ninth street, the ‘Harrisons’ of East Thirty-first street, the ‘Runyons’ of West Washington Place, the ‘Somebody-elses’ of West Eighth street, and the McVeys of Philadelphia.” They were arrested on Wednesday April 27, 1904.
Later that year, in September, the Renwick Estate sold the
building to Jacob Stein, whose office was directly across the street at No. 44
East 10th Street.
The numbers 39 and 41, as well as the building's name, are precisely cut into the brickwork. The delightfully-squiggly fence pickets are pure Queen Anne. |
More respectable tenants included the widow Mrs. Arthur W.
Plimpton and her daughter Melinda. The
young woman was married in a fashionable Church of the Incarnation wedding in
October 1906 to James Ditmars Remsen.
After the ceremony, guests assembled in Mrs. Plimpton’s apartments for
the reception.
On the evening of March 28, 1907 64-year old Francis
Theodore Patton died in his apartment here.
He had been employed by The Sun for 35 years, 26 of them as news editor—this
after raising cotton on a 2,400-acre Louisiana plantation until 1872 following
the end of the Civil War. The New York
Times outlined his literary successes in its obituary. The Evening World, however, focused on his
high ideals.
“The subject of this notice was not one of New York’s rich
men. He was not one of New York’s
powerful men. He was not famous. He was not in politics or on the stage or
before the public view in any capacity.
The usual claims to post-mortem notice would not in any way include him.”
Instead, said the newspaper, he honed young reporters. “He told them how to do their work. Their standards of newspaper honor were of
his moulding.” Called “Father Patton” by
the cub reporters, The Evening World said that he “believed that to print and
publish the truth was the noblest work man could engage in. No truth to him was trivial. The universe was truth from the highest to the
lowest happening within human ken.
Humble as was his position, he knew of no millionaire, no lawyer, no
railroad magnate, no stock broker, no man with whom he would exchange.”
Living in the building in 1913 were Harry Friedman, a “keeper”
in the Blackwell Island Penitentiary, and his wife, Antonia. The Philadelphia-born woman was the daughter
of Dr. Victor Lesser of the German Hospital there. While other wives in The Lancaster busied
themselves with teas and charity events; Antonia held the highly unusual
position of Probation Officer in the Children’s Court. Sharing the apartment with the Friedmans was
another social worker, “Mother” Krause.
Antonia’s job would lead to a frightening event in the
apartment building hallway.
In July 1913 she recomended that Violet Cooper of No. 69
Gansevoort Street be removed to the care of the Children’s Society. The girl was first put in a home in New
Jersey; but when it was discovered that she was in need of medical attention,
she was brought back to Manhattan and admitted to Bellevue Hospital.
Threats immediately began coming from the Cooper family. On Sunday, August 3, about two weeks after
Violet was removed, a note was found pinned to the Friedman’s apartment
door. It said that if Violet was not
returned home, Antonia Freidman “would be killed.”
Four days later there came a knock on the door. When Antonia answered it she “was met by a
swarthy, stocky man who seized her by the throat, dragged her into the hallway,
and struck her over the head with a blackjack,” as reported by The New York
Times the following day.
The noise of the struggle alerted Mother Krause who rushed
into the hallway, causing the attacker to flee.
The newspaper reported “Mrs. Friedman is suffering acutely from shock
and a slight brain concussion.”
Antonia may have felt a change of jobs would be advisable. She became superintendent of the Magdalene
Home for women early in 1915. Run by the
Episcopal Church, the home was first opened in 1838 to reform prostitutes. By now the focus was on helping wayward
girls.
But that position did not work out well either. Six weeks after she took the job, she
resigned. She found the discipline at
the Home to be excessive. “These
punishments,” she said, “consist of being deprived of many little liberties, going
to bed supperless, and being put into cells.”
The New York Times reported “Mrs. Friedman contended that she ruled with
love and kindness and that at no time while she was serving as superintendent
did she have occasion to make use of the cells.”
Antonia’s “resignation” came after Mrs. H. Scheftel, the
second Vice President, “told her to leave the place on Thursday, without giving
her time to pack her belongings.” The
ouster enraged the girls at the Home and it “occasioned a mutiny among some of
the inmates.”
The girls were taken to the Women’s Night Court. When a reporter arrived at the Friedman
apartment, Antonia stated that she hoped they would be “dealt with considerately…for
they made the demonstration as a protest to a return of what they say will be
old customs of being punished severely for minor infractions.” One can assume that the Edwardian teens who committed
“mutiny” were not dealt with “considerately.”
The 1920s saw change in the neighborhood. Private homes were operated as rooming houses
or were replaced by tall commercial buildings.
The political and social climate was changing as well.
The tension between capitalists and socialists was evident
when 25-year old Lancaster resident William P. Sim was arrested in 1921. Sim had misrepresented himself as being
connected with Bellevue and Roosevelt Hospitals and was accused of charging
Mrs. Anna Waschenko $60 per visit for treating her child. The excessive fee would translate to about
$785 today.
On November 25 he was sentenced to serve 13 months to five
years in Elmira Reformatory by Judge Ernest I. Edgcomb. According to the Federation Bulletin, “Judge Edgcomb denounced him as ‘a maker of
anarchists and bolshevists.’”
On September 26, 1925 The Lancaster received a surprising
new tenant—the Beta Chapter of New York University’s Delta Phi Epsilon
fraternity. The organization paid $110 per
month (in the neighborhood of $1500 today).
Member George Stretch wrote “The boys have a new house. I think the move a good one…Now we have a
real apartment with real sleeping rooms, which afford more private for living
and study…We have several fireplaces, and several rooms, open together, are
large enough for meetings. Ordinarily such a place would be out of the question
at the money. The only reason for it is
that the house is an old one and in a thoroughly business section, one might
call it a manufacturing section. But we
cannot have our cake and eat it too, so we have to overlook the surroundings.”
Within three months another fraternity moved it. The Upsilon
Chapter of Theta Chi announced on December 5, 1925 in The Rattle of Theta Chi “We are moving into an apartment at 39 East
Tenth Street this month and we shall be ‘at home’ after January 1, 1926.” The Theta Chi boys were here only temporarily
while working on their permanent chapter house.
The Lancaster saw a quick turnover in owners in 1927. That year Samuel H. Potter purchased it as
part of a syndicate, the 39 East Tenth Street Realty Corporation. A year later, on March 39, 1928 the New York
Evening Post ran the headline “The Lancaster on East 10th St. Sold.”
Despite the commercialization of the area, the apartment
building still retained respectable residents.
One was lyric poet Barbara Young.
In May 1928 she and poetry patron Frances Randolph announced their plans
to found the Poetry House in the old Ogden Mills residence at No. 12 East 10th
Street. They told reporters they
intended it to become an American institution with a large audience room, music
room, and a book room “where guests may sit down in quiet and comfort, in a
homelike atmosphere and browse over whatever poetry they will, and on stated
occasions listen to poets’ readings.”
Speaking in her apartment in The Lancaster, Barbara Young
told reporters “At the present time there isn’t any home for poetry in all of
New York. In spite of the poets and
nearpoets and would-b-poets, all around us, we have treated the great art very
much like a step-child and it hasn’t a hearth nor roof-tree to call its own”
Tragedy visited The Lancaster in 1936. Two
young women, Phylis Telfort and Ruth Kaman, shared an apartment here. Phylis was a 27-year old librarian. She arrived in New York from Rochester, New
York in September 1935 and rented a furnished room in Ruth’s apartment on the fourth
floor. The Great Depression years were
no time for jobless librarians to try to find work in Manhattan. But as the holidays neared, she landed a job
in a toy store.
But when the Christmas selling season ended, so did Phylis’s
employment. With no job and little money,
on January 4, 1936 she plunged to her death from the fourth floor living room window.
The Lancaster survived the Great Depression without its
spacious apartments being dissected.
When it sold in 1937 it was still described as a ten-family apartment
house. Nine years later when Henry
Payson purchased the building, it was described as “re-modeled;” yet the
original ten apartments were still intact.
Nearly unheard of to New York apartment dwellers; The
Lancaster’s floor plan was never altered.
In 1981 when it was converted to cooperative apartments, there were
still merely two residences to a floor.
Today the 1887 survivor is nearly untouched on the outside Renwick, Aspinwall & Russell’s delightful
Queen Anne take on Colonial architecture is a wonderful surprise and treasure.
photographs by the author
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