In September 1852 Allen Dodworth opened his Dancing Academy
in a new double-wide brownstone structure at Nos. 806 and 808 Broadway. He and his family lived in part of the
building while the magnificent Dodworth’s Hall made up the remainder.
On September 16 The New York Times gushed “In this City of
magnificent tastes, private enterprise, stimulated by boundless liberality,
erects palaces, decorates and furnishes them in the style that may well be
called royal, and after incurring an expense that would be deemed ruinous in
plodding Europe, realizes vast fortunes by its brilliant experiments…Prosperous
of a joyous temperament, and with hands open as the day, the people of New-York
long ago determined that their amusements, like their business, should be
conducted on a grand and magnificent scale—and
they are.”
It was merely an introduction to a description of Dodworth’s
new edifice. The newspaper said Allen
Dodworth “is unquestionably the occupant of the most splendid private Dancing
Acadmy in this country.”
Dodworth Hall sat directly north of the Grace Church
rectory which, like the church, was designed by James Renwick, Jr. The Hall blended in with the nearby mansions—faced
in brownstone and designed in the Italianate style.
But the northward migration of Manhattan’s wealthy that had prompted
Dodworth to erect his exclusive academy here continued on. In 1861 he left Broadway, moving his
high-toned hall to Fifth Avenue and 26th Street. The Broadway venue where New York’s upper
crust had heard Europe’s finest performers now offered crowds cheap amusements.
By the second half of the 1880s the Broadway blocks below
Union Square filled with retail stores and shops. The end of the line had come for Dodworth’s
Hall. In 1887 the architectural firm of
Renwick, Aspinwall & Russell designed a store, office and loft building for
the site.
Completed the following year, it intentionally melded with
the Grace Church complex. Five floors of
beige brick sat on a cast iron and brownstone base. Exuberant terra cotta Gothic Revival details,
pointed arches and corbels combined in a stately, nearly ecclesiastical structure. The side wall, which would have been blank in
nearly any other midblock location in the city, was as decorated as the Broadway façade,
forming a romantic northern enclosure for the Grace Church lawn.
The building quickly filled with a variety of tenants. On January 1, 1888 Robert K. Davies &
Co., importers and manufacturers “of men’s furnishing goods,” moved in. The firm, originally named John M. Davies
& Co., had been started around 1850 by John M. Davies, who died in 1871
leaving an estate of more than $1.3 million.
When John M. Davies, Jr. died in 1887, the surviving son Robert carried
on the business.
On April 20, 1890 The New York Times reported on the
newly-formed American Book Company. The
result of a merger of four of the largest school book publishers in the country—Ivisen,
Blakeman & Co., A. S. Barnes & Co.,
D Appleton & Co. of New York, and Van Antwerp, Bragg & Co. of
Cincinnati—it now took space in the Broadway building.
Seeger
and Guernsey’s Cyclopaedia of the Manufacturers and Products of the City of New
York listed the broad array of school supplies also offered by the American Book
Company. Included
were pen holders, pencils,
pen racks, pen moisteners, rubber erasers, rulers, thumb tacks, school writing
books, and writing books.
Three months before the American Book Company moved in, Robert K.
Davies’s business had begun to crumble. His
sister-in-law had sued him for her deceased husband’s share of the business,
costing the company $127,000. Then he
discovered that the business owed his father’s estate $265,000; although Davies
insisted to the courts that there was no estate money in the business.
Gentlemen who had shopped at the high-end men’s store for decades
were no doubt astonished when they read the headline in The New York Times on
January 15, 1890 “Robert K. Davies Fails.”
A year and one day later, on January 16, 1891, Robert K. Davies
suffered a massive heart attack in his home, dying instantly.
Other tenants in the building included builder H. T. Ambrose by
1894, and architect William Debus, who would maintain his offices here for
several years. In 1900 he was busy
designing several Brooklyn tenement houses; and in 1901 designed Brooklyn
structures for two other builders who also leased space in the building, Jacob
Schauf and Louis Beer.
By now the millinery and garment districts had engulfed the
area. In 1896 Weld, Colburn &
Wilckens, makers of scarves and suspenders, was in the building, joined soon by
Hill Brothers ladies hat manufacturers.
advertisement from The Menorah, May 1901 (copyright expired) |
In 1903 Hodgman Rubber Co. moved in. The manufacturer and wholesaler sold “rubber
surface clothing, slip-ons,blankets and hospital sheetings, druggist sundries
and surgical goods, elastic bands, and coated cloths of all descriptions.” With George F. Hodgman in the firm were his
two sons, S. Theodore and Goerge B. Hodgman.
When George B. Hodgman’s health began failing in 1906, he and his
wife sailed for Europe “in the hope that the change would benefit his health,”
according to The New York Times on September 29. The 61-year old businessman died in London on
September 28.
Hill Brothers advertised in The Illustrated Milliner, 1902 (copyright expired) |
By 1905 the building was home to Samuel W. Peck & Co., makers
of boys’ clothing. The firm manufactured
its own brand, Sampeck, An advertisement
in the New-York Tribune that year boasted “the beauty of the fabric, the
careful tailoring, the minutely accurate gradation in the cut of the
pattern. The grading of the pattern
determines the degree of perfection in the fit.”
While Samuel W. Peck garnered a fortune in his boys’ clothing
business, his luck was otherwise not as good.
He lived with his wife in the smart Ansonia Hotel on Upper Broadway. A quiet night at the theater later turned wild when,
on January 18, 1905 their chauffeur, Gustav Swanson, picked them up in their “Victoria
automobile” and they headed home.
Swanson, it seems, had a heavy accelerator foot.
“As they whirled up Broadway beside a big touring car, driven by
Leo Trousler,” reported The New York Times the following day, “Bicycle
Policeman Bullman of the West Forty-seventh Street Station gave chase.” In 1905 speeding automobiles were easily
matched by in-shape bicyclists and Officer Bullman intended to stop the
reckless drivers.
He “sprinted along behind the autos” up Broadway from Times Square
to 52nd Street, where Trousler made a sharp turn directly into the
path of the policeman. Bullman “struck
the touring car full tilt, pitched off his wheel and slid twenty feet along the
pavement.”
Despite his tumble, he had no intentions of letting Peck’s automobile
get away. He shouted to another officer
who took up the chase. “Kerrigan caught
up with the Pecks’ Victoria at the Circle,” reported The Times. “Mr. and Mrs. Peck accompanied their
chauffeur to the West Forty-seventh Street Station, where Mr. Peck furnished
bail.”
Samuel Peck's advertisement in the New-York Tribune illustrated a variety of boys' fashions -- March 24,1907 (copyright expired) |
Peck’s bad luck continued on the night of October 20, 1908 when
burglars blew open the safe in his Broadway offices. In order to blow the safe, the thieves used
plaster of paris to seal the cracks.
In doing so, they spilled the powder on the floor, then walked through
it during their escape.
In a stunning example of early forensic detective work, the police
solved the case. The New York Times
later said “it was one of the most daring that the police have had to solve in
some time, and bore all the earmarks of a job done by practiced cracksmen.
“Through the marks left by the plaster of paris dust the three
were traced to various houses, until they were found in Brooklyn.”
The gang of three—William Pesky, the leader, his sister Minnie,
and her husband, Frank Marquette—were arraigned in the Tombs Court on November
12. But Pesky and his lawyer had a trick
up their sleeves. The Times said that he
“behaved like a maniac yesterday…and it became known that an effort will be
made to prove him insane.”
Pesky’s lawyer, Moses A. Sachs, told the court that he “has been
of unsound mind ever since childhood, when a bad fall resulted in injuries
affecting his brain.”
On cue, Pesky launched at a witness “and grabbed for his throat,
but three big court policemen threw themselves between the men and seized
pesky. He fought desperately, kicking,
biting and scratching, and the policemen rolled over the floor with him, while
lawyers and witnesses were scattered in all directions by the fighting men.”
In the meantime, Pesky’s sister screamed and tried to get into the
fray. Four policemen had to carry her,
kicking and screaming, out of the courtroom.
No sooner had Pesky been controlled and sat on a bench, he started
another violent attack. Finally, the
judge gave up and postponed the hearing until the next day.
Samuel Peck would remain in the building at least through
1914. Another boys’ clothier,Dubbelbilt,
would make No. 806-808 Broadway home around the same time, into the 1920s. In 1918 the firm advertised its Dubbelbilt
Mackinaw as “the niftiest, thriftiest coat you’ve ever seen.”
Two tenants, E. & R. Rosenberg and Al Jacobsen, ran into
trouble in 1925. The first was Jacobsen,
who ran a men’s clothing store at street level. He was the victim of a brazen robbery of
seven overcoats on January 13 that year.
Just as Police Inspector Thomas M. Fay, Chief of Staff of the
Detective Division, and his driver, Detective Sergeant Lines, approached the
building in their unmarked car, a taxicab sped up to the curb. “One of the occupants of the taxi hastened
into Jacobsen’s shop while the driver held the taxicab door open” reported The
Times. “In a few seconds the first man
returned with a bundle of overcoats, threw them into the taxi and ordered the
driver to speed up.”
Detective Lines jumped out of the police car with his pistol drawn
and arrested the man who had thrown the coats into the cab. The driver sped away into the tangle of
traffic with the coats in the back seat, leaving his cohort to fend for
himself.
“Lines’s prisoner had to be beaten into submission,” said The
Times.
An even more frightening episode occurred in the shop of E. &
R. Rosenberg later that year in July.
The firm, described as “one of the largest manufacturers of men’s
clothing in the country,” did not hire union help. Reuben Rosenberg explained “We pay our
employes good wages and they are satisfied with conditions under which they
work. The unions, however, warn me that
I must join them or suffer the penalty.”
“The penalty” came on the afternoon of July 15. For months union thugs visited non-union
shops carrying lead pipes wrapped in newspapers, threatening workers and
sometimes stealing garments. Called “visiting
committees,” their purpose was to strong arm owners into hiring union
workers. But today the visiting
committee would go beyond threats.
Six armed men entered the offices just after Rueben Rosenberg had
left for lunch. Five went directly into
the shop area while one held a gun on the telephone operator, Helen Cohen, and
warned her not to answer the switchboard.
The five men lined up the nine workers—four of them women—against the
wall and told them that “resistance would mean death.” Held at gunpoint by two men, the terrified
employees watched as the other three produced bottles of sulphuric acid which
they poured over high-priced overcoats.
The thugs then ran down the stairs and into a waiting automobile.
Rosenberg valued the ruined garments at between $60,000 and
$100,000.
Throughout most of the 20th century the building would
continue to attract tenants in the garment trade. In the 1930s Lubell Bros. Mfg. Co. was here,
makers of boys’ shirts. In the 1940s
Criterion Shirt Band Co.; Rosenhirsch Company, importers; Spiegel Brothers
Corporation; and Eastern Textiles Co. were all in the building.
In 1981, as the Noho neighborhood experienced a rebirth, the
remarkable building was converted to 69 cooperative residential units. Given the slightly-misleading name The
Renwick, its magnificent ivy-covered façade survives as an integral part of the
charming Gothic Revival ensemble.
photographs by the author
photographs by the author
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