The block of West 44th Street between Ninth and
Tenth Avenues was somewhat of an anomaly in the years following the end of the
Civil War. It was surrounded by the
notorious Hell’s Kitchen neighborhood—blocks of dangerous slum infamous for
crime, vice and hopelessness.
And yet here were rows of handsome brick and brownstone
Italianate homes, many of them owned by physicians. The double-wide mansion at No. 460 was
separated from the row of houses on the southern side by a wide carriage drive
that led to the private stables in the rear.
Unlike its neighbors whose parlor floors were entered above high
brownstone stoops, the entrance of No. 460 was nearly at street level.
A peek over the industrial-type gate reveals the surviving Smith stable at the end of the former carriage drive. |
The brownstone-fronted residence was home to Henry A. Smith,
his wife Rosena, and their three sons, Henry, Augustus and Oliver. Born in England, Smith had come to New York
as a youth and found a job with a wallpaper manufacturer named Jones. Eventually he became a partner and the firm’s
name was changed to Jones & Smith.
When Jones died, Henry A. Smith continued the business and
built a large wallpaper factory on Tenth Avenue and 42nd Street, just
two blocks away from his house. But before long he would retire from active
business. The New York Times said “A few
years after the war he sold out to Mr. Campbell, who had been one of his
employes, and retired from active business.
He had by that time accumulated an ample fortune, and he thenceforth
devoted his time to the management of his investments.”
The Smith boys were educated in the City College of New York. Augustus was enrolled there when his spinster aunt, Hannah Maria Smith, died on February 19, 1878. The funeral of the 69-year old woman was held
in her brother’s 44th Street mansion at 1:00 on the afternoon of Thursday,
February 21st.
The carriage drive allowed for an attractive bay on the eastern side of the mansion. |
Henry A. Smith’s retirement from the wallpaper business did not translate to inactivity. In January 1886 Smith was elected a Director of the
Tradesmen’s National Bank. He eventually
became one of the bank’s largest stockholders.
All wealthy New York City
families left the city during the hot summer months for fashionable resorts or
country estates. The Smith’s maintained
a summer home on Cayuga Lake in New York’s Finger Lakes district.
In the meantime, the Smith sons were doing well for themselves. In 1890 Oliver was still attending New York
City College; but Augustus had earned a civil engineering degree from the
School of Mines, and Henry was an architect, temporarily running his business
from the family home.
On Tuesday, July 21, 1891 Henry A. Smith suddenly died at
the Cayuga Lake residence. The New York
Times reported “The cause of his death is not known here, but as he was an exceedingly
hale and active man for his age, about seventy years, and was quite well up to
last Saturday, it is supposed to be apoplexy.” (Apoplexy was the term most often used for what we now call a stroke.)
The first of the sons to leave 44th Street was
Henry. On May 28, 1898 Architecture and Building reported “Mr.
Henry A. Smith, architect, formerly of No. 460 West Forty-fourth Street,
announces that he has removed his office to No. 85 Nassau Street, New York.”
Only three weeks later, on Saturday, June 18, Rosena W. Smith
died. Her funeral was held in the house
the following Monday.
By now Augustus was the senior member of the engineering
firm of Augustus Smith & Co. In May
1901 he was awarded the contract for erecting a new bridge across the Mott
Haven Canal by Bridge Commissioner Shea. Just two months earlier the Smith brothers had
agreed to sell the family home.
The Real Estate Record and Builders’ Guide reported that the
Young Women’s Christian Association had purchased the property on March 1 for
$36,000. The Association had maintained
their West Side Settlement nearby at No. 453 West 47th Street since
1897. It was founded “as a boarding
house at low rates, which would be as a home under the care of a home-mother.” It then branched out into settlement work in
the neighborhood.
The New-York Tribune now described it as a place “where
women find a congenial home at rates suited to their earnings. Classes at nominal charges to fit young girls
for self-support, a kindergarten, a library and a penny provident station,
which has grown to be one of the largest in the city, are there carried
on. Mothers’ meetings to refresh and
cheer the over-burdened women of that district have been established.”
The Association’s work in the disadvantaged neighborhood had
been so successful that it required larger quarters. The Tribune reported that in addition to the
$36,000 the group had spent on the property (which it called “the old Smith
mansion), “Four thousand dollars more will be needed for alterations,
additional furniture, etc.”
A house-warming was held on the afternoon of April 24,
1901. The New-York Tribune remarked that
”During the evening a number of the police force of the Forty-seventh-st.
station called with their wives. Tea was
served in the assembly room on both occasions.”
The newspaper described the new arrangements. “The house, formerly the home of the late
Henry A. Smith, is a spacious mansion of the English basement type, four
stories high and between thirty-five and forty-feet wide. The two upper floors are fitted as sleeping
rooms, and will accommodate twenty boarders.
Most of these rooms have been newly decorated and all are tastefully
furnished with iron bedsteads and white dressers, washstands and chairs. The floors throughout the house are of
hardwood and are covered with rugs. The
bedrooms are arranged for from one to four persons.”
On the top floor was a “daintily equipped” infirmary; on the
second were the parlor, house mother’s room, assembly room and a
classroom. The assembly room had a
rolling partition which made it possible to divide the large room into two
classrooms. “During the morning this is
occupied by the kindergarten, in the afternoon by classes and in the evening
for clubs, entertainment, etc.” explained the Tribune.
The first floor held the dining room, another parlor,
library (which consisted of an amazing 3,000 volumes) and office. The women eyed the large Smith carriage house
with eager anticipation of additional classrooms.
The West Side Settlement was supervised by the wealthy and
unmarried Ada Laura Fairfield. But a
year after opening the 44th Street facility, she would move on to another
project. Every summer she took working
girls to the country “in order to give them recreation, and at the same time an
idea of country life of which they usually know so little,” as explained by The
New York Times in May 1902.
But she found the places which she rented “more or less
makeshifts.” So in the spring of 1902
she purchased a large farmhouse outside of the village of Terryville. The Fenn Homestead was built in 1784. The New York Times reported “She proposes to
make the old landmark a fresh-air home for the poor children of the west side
New York.” The newspaper added, “There,
she says, she can give the working girls of the west side absolute rest during
their two weeks’ stay.”
Another unmarried socialite, Alida A. Bliss, took over
supervision of the West Side Settlement.
Christmas that year provided the perfect opportunity for the cooking
classes to exhibit their skills. “The jollity
began with a gingerbread festival last week,” reported the New-York Tribune on
December 15, 1902. “Gingerbread hot and
gingerbread cold, gingerbread by the loaf, by the cookie, by the wild animal,
with bead eye and red flannel tongue, was served, plus accessories to the
friends of the Settlement in general and the ‘Ada Laura Club’ in
particular. The senior cooking class cooked
while the club received, and the ‘gingerbread hot’ was served ‘from oven to
guest.’”
A few days later the Junior Cooking Class got its turn. None of the girls in the class was over 10
years old. The course—ten lessons long—taught
girls the fundamentals of “plain cooking.”
The girls’ mothers were invited to the Settlement to sample the results.
Christmas week was filled with activities for all the “clubs”
and groups associated with the Settlement.
Perhaps the most heart-warming of the activities, however, was the
Christmas tree for the “outside poor.”
This year, however, the Y. W. C. A. feared it could not afford the
gesture.
The Tribune described the “Outsiders’ Christmas tree” as a “festival
for all in the neighborhood who had not been remembered through some church or
other channel. There are many of these;
last year they ranged in age from five to seventy-two years. An old woman of sixty odd wept like a child
when a bright shawl pin was given her from the tree. It was the first Christmas gift she had received
for many years.”
The newspaper told readers on December 14 that the
Settlement “fears this feature of its many activities must be omitted, unless
some friend of the ‘outsiders,’ some one with five cents or $5, or their
equivalents in dollies and candy and ‘Christmasness,’ who has a fellow feeling
for those whom every one else has passed by, will let the Settlement know about
it, and so fill this threatened void in the usual Christmas cheer.”
The newspaper’s plea was worded to pull the heart strings of
turn-of-the-century readers and it worked.
On December 30 it reported “There was a Christmas tree for the “outside
poor” last evening at the West Side Settlement.” Readers donated $17 in cash and a box of toys,
as well as a Christmas tree. In an early
example of environmental sensitivity, the Settlement advised “After the tree
has served its purpose there it will be ‘passed on’ to the potting house, in De
Witt Clinton Park, for the children of the Plant branch.”
In 1906 the Y. W. C. A. published the long list of the
classes available at the West Side Settlement.
It included classes in embroidery, industrial arts, economic cooking,
basketry, cord work, sewing, weaving, and “Mothers’ Meetings” where parenting
skills were taught.
When the Y. W. C. A. raised a staggering $4 million in 1913,
the Settlement received $50,000 for improvements. The Association reported that “A gymnasium
will be added to the present facilities which are entirely inadequate to the
needs of the neighborhood.”
The Settlement could now add “physical culture” to its list
of classes. By 1912 it had added
dressmaking, millinery, and Bible Classes to the list. There were still boarding accommodations for “twenty-five
self-supporting young women.”
When the Settlement purchased the Henry A. Smith mansion in
1901 the block was still an oasis among the tenements and ramshackle buildings
of Hell’s Kitchen. But a quarter of a
century of change had taken its toll. On
Friday March 6 1925 The New York Evening Post reported that the Young Women’s
Christian Association had received permission from Supreme Court Justice
Erlanger to sell the property.
“It is set forth in the petition that the neighborhood in
which the building is situated has changed so much since 1901, when it was bought
for $36,000, that it has become inadvisable to continue its use as a boarding
house.” The Association sold put the
property on the market for $43,000.
Over the elliptically arched doorway a cross was incised into the keystone. |
Today the Smith mansion is nearly unrecognizable. The complex, bracketed cornice and the lovely
paneled Victorian entrance doors are the sole surviving architectural
elements. The lintels were long ago
shaved flat and the Italianate doorway surround was streamlined by the Y. W. C.
A. which added an incised cross to the new keystone. It nevertheless tells a vivid story of a time
when reformers and social activists worked to improve the lot of the West Side’s
poor.
photographs by the author
Extra wide houses like this must have been quite luxurious back in the day. I bet it had some pretty fancy wallpaper. Nice post.
ReplyDeleteI think you're absolutely right about that wallpaper!
DeleteA home with a carriage house that doesn't appear to be to overly changed. ! If I had the money... There can't be too many of these still around in Manhattan!
ReplyDeleteHi there, I just received an email saying that there are plans about demolishing this place (I live on the block), do you know anything about this?
ReplyDeleteI too live in the block. Would hate to see this demolished. Take the virtual tour! http://www.460west44.com/virtual-tour . It does appear it was for sale. http://www.460west44.com/setup. link for floor plan: http://www.460west44.com/floor-plans. more -block history link: http://www.460west44.com/history.
ReplyDeleteI heard they were tearing this building down and have plans to put up a glass structure!
ReplyDeleteThis was my great grandparents' home - Henry and Rosina Smith. I did not know, and have been searching for his address as well as for his sister's name for years. Thank you for writing this account! Just one thing to add: my own grandfather Arthur, the second oldest son.
ReplyDeleteI think if you look a little more deeply you will find that this Henry A. Smith was NOT the politician, Henry A. Smith. Also, he died of a heart attack according to his doctor in Ulysses, NY where he died in his boathouse on Cayuga Lake. So soon after the event, the NYT probably did not have this information. There was a 4th son, Arthur, who became a successful Wall Street attorney.
ReplyDelete