from the collection of the New York Public Library |
Exactly who built the handsome French Second Empire mansion
that engulfed the building lots at Nos. 361 and 363 West 23rd Street
is unclear. Sitting on land that was
formerly part of Clement Clarke Moore’s family estate, Chelsea, it was like no
other house in the area.
The style had been introduced at the Paris Exposition in
1852 and within a decade had reached New York.
The 50-foot wide 23rd Street house epitomized the style with its high
mansard roof, slightly-projecting central pavilion, and a lacy cast iron porch.
No doubt it originally was adorned with
cast iron cresting along the roofline.
Whoever constructed the house preferred to live in a villa
rather than a rowhouse. The New York
Times would, decades later, note “All the other houses in that block…are of the
familiar high-stoop variety.” The
spacious plot provided for a 14-foot deep garden in the front and a carriage
house to the rear (the property stretched through the block to 24th
Street). Two wide carriage gates flanked
the 7-foot tall iron fence, allowing carriages dropping off
guests at the door to easily enter one gate and exit the other.
Most likely the original owner of the 20-room mansion was
Edward Fox. He was probably the same
Edward Fox whose high-end merchant-tailoring shop was at No. 216 Broadway. At the age of 58, Edward Fox died of a heart attack in the
house on Thursday night, June 22, 1865. His funeral was held here the following
Monday morning, prior to a solemn Requiem Mass downtown at St. Peter’s Church
on Barclay Street.
At least by 1872 William Libbey and his family had moved
in. Libbey was a partner in the dry
goods business of A. T. Stewart & Co.
Along with his wife, the former Elizabeth Marsh, their son William
Libbey, Jr. was living here at least from 1872 to 1874 while he studied at
Princeton. He graduated in 1877.
The wealth and importance of the Libbey family was evidenced
at the wedding of William Libbey, Jr. to Mary Elizabeth Green on December 7,
1880 in Princeton. A special train of
Pullman “palace cars” took wedding guests to Princeton where they were accommodated
at the “elegant University Hotel.”
The New York Times, which deemed the ceremony “one of the
largest and most brilliant weddings ever attended in Princeton,” reported that
between the hotel and the bride’s home, where the wedding took place, “a
continuous line of carriages was kept busy all the afternoon.” The names of the families arriving at the Green
mansion that afternoon included millionaires William E. Dodge, Anson Phelps
Stokes, and Henry M. Alexander.
At the time of the wedding, a Philadelphia railroad magnate,
Thomas Alexander Scott, was at work with Jay Gould in building a new railway
line to the Pacific. Scott was not only president
of the Pennsylvania Railroad, but of the Texas and Pacific Railroad
Company. In 1879 he partnered with
Gould and other investors to extend the railway from its terminus in Fort Worth
to California.
It was possibly this connection with his New York business
partners that prompted Scott to purchase No. 363 West 23rd Street. William Libbey had decided to leave the city
for his massive Woodcliff Castle on the cliffs of the Hudson River. Within a month of their son’s marriage,
William and Elizabeth sold the Chelsea house to Scott for $50,000—the equivalent of
about $1.2 million today.
If Thomas Scott intended to leave his Rittenhouse Square
mansion in Philadelphia in favor of the 23rd Street house in New
York; it never came to pass. Within a
few months of the purchase, he suffered a stroke. It was followed by two more, the last being
on May 4. He died on May 21, 1881.
The house passed to Scott’s nephew, David Beach Grant, a wealthy
manufacturer of engines and machinery. After living here for five years, the Grant
family sought to lease it. The problem
was, according to a local resident later in a letter to The Sun “the neighborhood
was no longer a favorite one among the wealthier people of the town, and no one
who had not ample means could well afford the upkeep of so handsome a place.”
But someone who could afford the upkeep of so handsome a
place appeared in the form of Frederick Gebhard. He had
inherited about $5 million and lived in a mansion at No. 100 Fifth Avenue. Known as a clubman and horse owner, he rubbed
shoulders with the wealthiest of Manhattan society. But his interests moved from sports and clubs
to Lily Langtry in 1882.
The entertainer, known as the Jersey Lily (for the
British island, not New Jersey), was famous not only for her performances on
stage; but for her beauty, charm and notorious affair with the Prince of
Wales. During one of her initial New
York appearances, in 1882, she met Gebhard who was immediately smitten. Although she was still married, the two began
a long-standing affair.
Gebhard became Lily’s manager, financing her tours and traveling
with her, despite disapproval from his club members. Rumors that the couple would marry persisted
while Lily attempted to obtain a divorce; but her obstinate husband, Edward,
resolutely refused.
The 23rd Street house was perfectly located for
the actress. New York’s entertainment
district was by now centered on 23rd Street—the Grand Opera House
was just a block away. As Lily sailed to
New York in 1886, Gebhard leased No. 363 for $3,000 a year. The house was ready for her when she stepped
off the Alaska on September 26, 1886.
The New York Times was there, describing her as “attired in a
black silk dress, with a white Fedora front and a huge Gainsborough.” She disembarked with four maids, her dog Miss
Tottles, and a Chinese servant. The
newspaper reported that she was driven “at once” to No. 363 West 23rd
Street.
“The house is finely furnished and Mrs. Langtry was
delighted with it. With Wong Mo, her
Chinese servant, at her right hand, and Miss Tootles, who is a dog, on her lap,
she gazed around her with placid satisfaction.”
Wagging tongues, of course, were ready to find fault with
the actress who was carrying on yet another extramarital affair. Just a week after her arrival The Times
reported “Considerable amusement in society has been excited by the elaborate
accounts of the Chinese decorations made by Mrs. Langtry in the house she has
taken in Twenty-third street.” The newspaper
took the gossipers to task when it added “As a matter of fact, these were
made by Mrs. Beach Grant, the mother of Miss Adele Grant and the owner of the
house last year, and were very much admired by society people at that time.”
Lily Langtry appeared as Lena Despard in the 1887 play As In A Looking-Glass while living in the 23rd Street house. |
On March 14, 1887 a servant prepared the Music Room while Lily was entertaining friends at dinner. Near
one of the gas fixtures was an arrangement of dried leaves and long
grasses. As the servant lit the jet, “the
vase became a bush of fire,” according to The Times the following day.
The flames quickly spread to the silk-covered wall and the
draperies. Servants rushed into the room
and spent ten minutes beating the fire out with rugs pulled from the
hallway. “A skin of a monster tiger on
the floor was charred, the tail of a cinnamon bear was eaten away, and the
polished wood floor was blackened.” Also
damaged were autographed pictures of Gladstone, the Prince and Princess of
Wales, and the King of Denmark.
The newspaper noted that Lily “was much disturbed at the
confusion and the loss.” It would not be
Lily Langtry’s last bout with fire in the 23rd Street mansion.
Another annoyance came in January 1888 when Inspector
McGinness of the Bureau of Encumbrances announced that Lily’s fence intruded on the
public sidewalk. When the actress heard
that her fence would have to be moved, she was incensed. Her attorney wrote a letter of complaint,
saying “it would be unjust discrimination to take away the [fence] piers.”
Newspapers closely followed the drama of the Langtry
fence. On February 5, 1888 The Sun
reported “The four formidable brick piers in front of Mrs. Langtry’s house…were
still standing yesterday afternoon.”
But in Lily’s absence while on a Western tour, the Bureau of
Encumbrances demolished the fence.
Masons were quickly set to work rebuilding the fence six inches within
the property line, using the old materials.
The demolition and rebuilding of the fence was an object of
interest. “A crowd of persons watched
them from the time they began till they drove the last spike,” said a disapproving
neighbor. “That fence is the biggest curiosity we have around here.”
The fence with its brick piers caused much uproar in 1888. from the collection of the New York Public Library |
The Sun hinted that the presence of an actress in the
neighborhood was as much an unwanted distraction as the fence hoop-la. “The rebuilding of the fence has not
increased Mrs. Langtry’s popularity in the neighborhood, where it is regarded
as a sign of her approaching return.”
Sometime around noon on April 11, 1889 Lily left the house
for a walk around the neighborhood. A
trunk of expensive costumes which she intended
to wear in a new play she was to produce in Chicago had recently arrived from Paris. They were taken to the third floor “wardrobe
and sewing room” and not long after Lily went on her stroll, the servant who was ironing the
costumes took a break.
When Lily got back to the house she found fireman at
work. The Times reported “A gas stove,
used for heating irons, which had been left burning near a window, set fire to
the window curtain.” The fire fighters
had to remove some of the slate shingles from the mansard to effectively fight
the blaze.
“The firemen, knowing the value of the contents of the
house, were very sparing in the use of water, and in this way a heavy loss was
avoided. The damage to the building,
which is owned by Suydam Grant, can be repaired for $600.” The often temperamental actress was less so
in this case. The Times said she “expressed
her admiration at the prompt and judicious work of the firemen. Her loss will not exceed $200.”
When Lily Lantry left West 23rd Street in 1890,
the house was leased to Richard de Logerot.
Also known as Marquis de Croisic, he was the manager and proprietor of
the Hotel de Logerot at Nos. 124-128 Fifth Avenue; the Croisic on Fifth Avenue
at 26th Street; and the Hotel de Logerot in Newport. On September 1, 1893 The Times noted that he
had “recently refitted” the former Lantry residence.
By the turn of the century de Logerot had moved on and
Suydam Grant was once again offering it for lease. An advertisement on August 26, 1901 boasted “over
twenty rooms in thoroughly good order, ready for immediate occupancy.”
The handsome house, now an anachronism on the much-changed 23rd
Street, became home to the Pasteur Institute and home to its head, Dr. George
Gibier-Rambaud. The tradition of theater
would continue in the house when Dr. Gibier-Rambaud married Jeanne
Gerville-Reache in 1910. She was for
many years a leading contralto at the Metropolitan Opera House.
One of the chief focuses of the Institute was the problem of
rabies and the inoculation of citizens against the disease. The doctors and scientists at the Institute
were often the bearers of unwanted news.
In May 1908 a 57-year old Brooklyn man took care of a wounded bull terrier
that had wandered into his shop. When the
dog began acting strangely later, a veterinarian was called in who diagnosed
the dog with rabies. The dog was killed.
Soon afterward, William H. Marsh began having trouble
swallowing. His doctor suggested that he
visit the Pasteur Instutite. The tragic story reached as far away as the Midwest.
On May 20 The Chicago Tribune reported “Dr. William L. Wheeler, one of
the resident physicians at the institute, made the examination and diagnosis.”
“Tell me the worst,” said Marsh. “I want to know what I have to meet.”
“In all probability,” answered Dr. Wheeler, “you must die.”
“How long do you give me to
live?”
“Not long,” replied the
physician, “probably not more than four days.
There is nothing we can do for you here.”
Dr. Wheeler injects the rabies serum into a patient. New-York Tribune, May 31, 1908 (copyright expired) |
That same month the New-York
Tribune wrote “New York is confronted once more with its summer plague of dogs,
a nuisance and detriment to health whose extent can scarcely be calculated.”
In 1914 the Institute was
the victim of what The Sun called “a dastardly nocturnal robbery with
abduction.” The newspaper said “eight
rabbits and fourteen guinea pigs, involuntary candidates for Pasteur inoculations,
were carried off.”
In 1918 Dr. Gibier-Rambaud
was commissioned a Major in the United States Medical Corps and a few months
later the Institute closed. On April 18
The Sun reported that the house had been purchased by The Ancient and Mystical
Order of Rosae Crucis.” The organization
would not have a serene occupancy.
The Grand Imperator, H. Spencer
Lewis, was arrested “in a spectacular raid on the headquarters of his
organization in the old Lily Langtry house,” reported The Sun on June 19. “The allegations against Lewis are that he has
disposed of several thousand dollars worth of bonds upon the representation that
his organization was a recognized branch of a worldwide institution devoted to
studies of the occult.”
The organization filed for
incorporation stating that its objects were to encourage an “analysis of all
ancient, medieval and modern religions, philosophy and moral codes.” The State denied the petition.
In 1927 H. Leon Sharshik
offered the property for sale, to be developed into a modern apartment building. An
outraged local, Robert Earl Outman, set out to save the house. In his zeal to preserve it, he got its
history seriously wrong. Calling it the
former home of Jenny Lind, he pleaded for people to donate to save “the old
Jenny Lind home.”
Sharshik’s project came to
an abrupt end when the Grant family as the Thomas A. Scott estate made the significant
point that the real estate operator did not own the property. Sharski was charged “with having forged the
trust company’s signature.” Sharshik
fled the city, but was later arrested and sentenced to six months to three
years in the penitentiary.
Nevertheless, the end of the
line had come for the old Chelsea landmark.
On February 4, 1927 The New York Times reported “The complainants had
announced that they intended to tear down the historic house…and that architects
had already drawn plans for a fifteen-story apartment house.”
Outman’s preservation thrust
was obviously well underway, for the newspaper added “Plans were made to
repurchase the property and put it under a Jenny Lind Memorial Association to
keep the mansion as a shrine for music lovers and the public.”
Now squeezed in by modern buildings and the fence replaced, the old house awaits its fate in 1928. photo from the collection of the New York Historical Society |
Plans for demolition dragged
on for two years. On February 12, 1929
Lily Langtry died in Monaco. Ironically, less than a
week later the sale and coming demolition of the Chelsea house was announced. Within the year it had disappeared and the
apartment building designed by Arthur Paul Hess was under construction. That structure was demolished in the 1950s for the
massive housing project for the International Ladies Garment Workers Union
known as Penn South.
The 1978 BBC miniseries, "Lily," was a magnificently produced biopic that featured a spellbinding performance by Francesca Annis as Lilly Langtry. The series detailed the whole Gebhard /Langtry affair - some of the scenes may have taken place in this house ( I would have to watch the series over again to be certain of this). The fire that destroyed the costumes is portrayed in the series, although the fire appears to come from the direction of the theater and not the house. The only other inaccuracy I remember in the film is that Freddy Gebhard - along with Pierre Lorillard and other New Yorkers - are shown speaking with middle class, Midwestern English. The Brits, I'm afraid, have a problem when they cast the roles of Americans - they don't understand our historic regional and social class diction. The New York upper class accent of that era was close to that of the British aristocracy (think Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt). The Brits rarely get it right. Other than the diction quirk,"Lily"was a truly outstanding series.
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