In 1825 New York City doctors recognized the first signs of
a terrifying disease—cholera. Only two
years earlier citizens had endured an epidemic of yellow fever. At that time many residents with the means
to do so fled north to the sleepy village of Greenwich. Now an even greater threat loomed.
By 1827 the overcrowded city faced a full-scale cholera
epidemic. Soon Greenwich Village would receive another
wave of refugees. The New York Evening Post later recalled that in 1832 “the roads, in
all directions, were lined with well-filled stagecoaches, livery coaches,
private vehicles and equestrians, all panic-struck, feeling the city as we may
suppose the inhabitants of Pompeii fled when the red lava showered down upon their
houses.”
The rapid population growth required additional homes and
commercial buildings. Enterprising builders,
like John Nichols, bought up plots and quickly raised Federal-style homes for
the village’s new residents. In 1832 he
purchased nine building lots on Washington Place, not far from his own home on
Grove Street. It seems he quickly realized that he had
bitten off more than he could chew and resold two of the plots to
two other men in the construction business—Ephraim Scudder, a mason, and
builder Nathan H. Topping.
Nichols teamed with other men in the building business to
erect his seven houses that stretched from No. 106 through 122 Washington
Place. The first homes were completed
in 1832; and the entire row was ready for sale in 1833. No. 114 became the home of merchant Joseph
Annin in 1833. Like its neighbors, the
two-and-a-half story house was faced in red Flemish-bond brick and sat above a
brownstone basement level.
Handsome details raised the house above the working-class
homes being erected elsewhere in the Village.
The iron fencing featured a popular acorn motif along the lower edge. The designer of the stoop railings forewent
fancy newels in favor of turned-under handrails. The doorway, flanked by fluted Doric columns,
was surmounted by elaborate carvings.
Above it all, two especially attractive dormers—with pilasters,
segmentally-arched windows with keystones, and arched cornices—punched through
the peaked roof.
How long the Annin family lived in the house is unclear;
however they would retain possession of it for more than a century. About a decade following its completion, the Annins
gently updated the appearance of the house by adding Greek Revival-style
palmettes to the areaway fencing.
The palmettes, or anthemions, were added to the ironwork later. Note the built-in boot scrapers of the stoop railings at the second step. |
In September 1886 architect and builder Robert Huson was
hired to modernize the No. 114 again. A
two-story brick extension “for bathrooms” was added to the rear. The renovation, costing $4,000, most likely
also included the new pressed metal cornice over the entrance, the sheet metal
lintels installed over the brownstone originals, and the little corbels added
below the sills.
The house was being operated as a boarding house at the
time, run by Josephine Lowerre. Among
the boarders was Peter McLarty. He also used
the address for his business activities and on February 11, 1888 an
advertisement appearing in The Publishers’
Weekly announced that the new U. S. Official Postal Guide was available by
mail order from him here. A
cloth-covered edition would cost the consumer $1.50.
The incongruous pressed cornice above the doorway was a late Victorian addition. |
An advertisement in The Sun on December 2, 1891 offered “Large
handsomely furnished sunny room; two folding beds; hot and cold water; also
single room, $2.” That double room may
have been available because its former resident was unable to find someone to
share the costs. Just a month earlier,
on November 7, someone advertised “Gentleman having nicely furnished sunny
room, two folding beds, would like another gentleman to share.”
At the turn of the century the house was operated by a Mrs.
Webber. The Spanish-American War had
been over for nearly two years and as the fall of 1900 approached, 32-year old Thomas
Gilroy, recently discharged from the Third United States Infantry, arrived at
No. 114 Washington Place.
Gilroy took a room in what The New York Times referred to as
“Mrs. Webber’s furnished room house.” The landlady later revealed that the
former infantryman had contracted “fever” in Cuba. Statistics would later show that 968 American
soldiers died in combat during the war; but more than 5,000 succumbed to yellow
fever.
Thomas Gilroy lived quietly in the house for several
weeks. Mrs. Webber noticed in the first
week of September that he seemed more depressed than usual. But, she would later say, he volunteered no
explanation and she sought none.
Shortly after noon on September 11, she smelled the odor of
gas in the hallway. When she entered
Gilroy’s room, she found him face down on the bed with the rubber tube for the
illuminating gas coiled around his neck, the end of it in his mouth. A doctor from St. Vincent’s Hospital said he
had been dead for an hour. Sadly, The
New York Times reported “nothing is known of any relatives.”
By the 1920s, the stigma attached to single women living on their own was dissipating. In 1926 Rosalind Morley lived in the boarding house formerly reserved for “gentlemen.” Rosaline worked during the day, but was determined to follow a career in art. She enrolled in the Cooper Union Night School of Art where her obvious talent was honed.
On April 7, 1926 she competed with about 50 other art
students in the Society of Beaux Arts Architects’ architectural
competition. The theme was “Decoration
of an Entrance Hall of a Private Library Building.” Rosalind’s submission won her “first mention.” The following month hers was one of 21
drawings submitted to the Beaux Arts Institute of Design’s mural contest. The Times reported “The problem of an
advanced grade, presented jointly by the Departments of Painting and Architecture,
called for a mural suitable for the end wall of an assembly hall, the scene to
represent music.” Rosalind Morley was awarded second mention for this submission.
In 1928 Rosalind received an impressive commission to
illustrate Donald Graham French’s children’s book, Famous Canadian Stories Retold for Children.
By 1937 the stage and motion picture actress Genevieve
Belasco, cousin of producer David Belasco, was living here. Her greatest film credit came when she
appeared in Cecil B. DeMille’s 1923 epic The
Ten Commandments. In 1937 Saks
department store celebrated its 35th anniversary. As part of the festivities, it initiated
a search for the first customer who entered its Herald Square store on October 2,
1902.
Genevieve recalled crossing Herald Square before noon that
day “with a group of other girls in the chorus of a popular revue.” She said
that on the way to an early rehearsal they “paused at Saks to buy flowers.” The actress received a $10 gift certificate
for being one of the original customers.
The following year No. 114 was converted to a triplex, with
an apartment in the attic. By now it was
the only one of the original row that had not been significantly altered. While all but one of its neighbors had been
raised to three full floors, the little house retained its Federal proportions.
The two-apartment configuration, however, would not last
long. When the estate of Margaret Annin
sold the house in January 1946—the first change in ownership since 1833—The
Times said “the building now comprises four apartments.” Assessed at $17,500 at the time (a little
more than $210,000 today), it was purchased by Emil Talamini.
Private house living in Manhattan in 1957 was far different
than it would be half a century later. When working parents Jerry and Sunny
Fritz began looking for a new place to live with their two children, they were
paying $185 a month for a four-room apartment.
The couple, who both worked in television and theater,
embarked on a year-long search with a real estate agent. A major consideration was their limited
finances; but they finally settled on No. 114 Washington Place, which needed
obvious upgrading in plumbing, wiring and 1950s conveniences. They spent $40,000 on the house (their mortgage
was $1,460 per year) then set to work renovating.
With a lack of historic sympathy typical of the period, architect
Lowell Brody stripped the plaster walls to expose brick and discarded 1833
mantels. Once the original details were
gone, the family introduced antiques to give the home a feeling of age. When the renovations were completed, The New
York Times’ journalist Rita Reif reported on January 3, 1961 “Their move has
tripled their living space and reduced their monthly costs.”
Thankfully, Brody considered the exterior of the home “in
good shape.” As a result, the charming
survivor of John Nichols’s row looks much as it did following the limited late
Victorian updating.
photographs by the author
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