Harper's Weekly, October 1869 (copyright expired) |
On June 6, 1844 London draper George Williams founded the
Young Men’s Christian Association.
Williams and his colleagues were concerned about the evils and
temptations surrounding young men in the teeming city. Starting with prayer meetings, the
organization grew; its purpose being “the improving of the spiritual condition of
young men engaged in the drapery, embroidery, and other trades.”
Williams, no doubt, had no idea how far-reaching his concept
would become.
The Young Men’s Christian Association in New York City was established
in 1852. The fledgling group operated
from a number of rented rooms while gaining the support of several wealthy New
Yorkers while growing to in size and influence. The Association not only provided spiritual
guidance and activities for young men, it was active in social reform.
In February 1866 an investigation “into the condition and
needs of the young men of New-York…called the attention of the Board of Directors
to the traffic in obscene books, prints, &c., as a fruitful source of
demoralization and crime.” The
Association managers were shocked when they were told there was no law against
the purveyance of such materials.
Through its lobbying an anti-obscenity law was passed in 1868.
By now the Association was in dire need for a permanent,
substantial headquarters. With private
donations—the most substantial of which came from millionaire William E. Dodge,
Jr.—a large plot was purchased at the southwest corner of 23rd Street
and Fourth Avenue (later renamed Park Avenue South) for $142,000. The site stretched 175 feet along 23rd
Street and 83 feet down Fourth Avenue.
To design its grand new building the Association
commissioned James Renwick, Jr. The New York Times was, apparently, not overly
impressed. Its passing mention noted “The
architect is Mr. Renwick, who built Grace Church and several other public
edifices.” Among those other edifices was the masterful
St. Patrick’s Cathedral, still rising on Fifth Avenue.
The cornerstone was laid at 3:30 on the afternoon of October
31, 1868 “in the presence of a large concourse of spectators,” according to The
New York Times the following day. The
newspaper pronounced the architectural style to be “the French Renaissance,”
the term then used for what would later become French Second Empire.
To provide additional income to the Association, Renwick
designed the ground level for stores, and studio space for artists on the fourth
and fifth floors. The fifth floor
studios would open onto a large exhibition, or “picture gallery.”
“We are assured that this will have a very beautiful interior, as no money will be spared in its adornment,” said The Times. The newspaper added, “It will cost about $300,000, and will be finished next Summer.”
“We are assured that this will have a very beautiful interior, as no money will be spared in its adornment,” said The Times. The newspaper added, “It will cost about $300,000, and will be finished next Summer.”
As construction continued, members worked on compiling a
library. On February 19, 1869 The Sun
reported that the Young Men’s Christian Association “are getting together a
free library for workingmen and others.
A ladies’ fair in furtherance of this object will begin at 473 Grand
street on Monday.” The results were
astonishing. By the time the library stacks
were ready to receive books, there would be more than 3,000 volumes.
In July 1869 the great structure had taken form, diminishing
the National Academy building on opposite corner. In a rather left-handed complement, on July
18 The Times said that the “Academy is certainly more attractive than the brick
and Dorchester stone of the Christian Association. But the latter building is yet one of the
finest of the recent additions to the architecture of the City, and is at the
same time a noble monument to the philanthropy of the Christianity of New-York.”
The newspaper was pleased that the building would include “a
splendid gymnasium.” “This concession to
the muscular Christianity of the time has been made, we are glad to hear,
almost without dissent.” Indeed, when
completed the gymnasium of the Young Men’s Christian Association building would
be the largest in the city.
Young men exercise on the latest in gymnastic equipment in October 1870 --Harper's New Monthly Magazine (copyright expired) |
By August two of the stores had been rented in anticipation
of the structure’s completion within three months, and all of the 30 artists’
studios were taken. James Renwick, Jr. had produced a stately
stone pile that announced that the Young Men’s Christian Association in New
York City had arrived. The entrance was
centered on the 23rd Street front within a slightly-projecting
pavilion that rose to a stunning four-sided cap erupting through the mansard.
On November 29 a private tour of the building was held for
donors and specially invited guests, including the press. The New-York Tribune described the lavish
interiors. It deemed the Reception Room “a
spacious apartment, tastefully carpeted and furnished, and bearing upon its
walls, side by side, two paintings by [Thomas] Cole, of the series The Cross and the World.” Also on the first floor were the reading room,
“which contains the best reading matter—newspapers and magazines—which the
brains of America and Europe can supply,” and three parlors. The parlors were for “conversation, informal
meetings, and committee work” and contained the companion paintings by Thomas
Cole.
The pipes to the grand organ can be seen at upper left. Harper's New Monthly Magazine (copyright expired) |
Above the main stone staircase was the great hall, capable
of seating 1,500 persons. It would be
used for lectures, concerts and religious meetings below its frescoed ceiling. According to James Dabney McCabe in his New York by Sunlight and Gaslight, “It
is one of the largest and handsomest halls in the city…It is two stories in
height, and is beautifully and tastefully decorated. A broad gallery extends around three sides of
the hall, and this and the floor below are provided with ion chairs, such as
are used in the principal theatres.”
Along with a grand Chickering piano, donated by the Musical
Committee, there was an immense $12,000 pipe organ built by J. H. & C. S.
Odell. The New York Times said “The
instrument has many great advantages over any organ in the country, and
possesses more mechanical appliances than any organ in the world—no less than
500 combinations can be effected without touching a draw stop.”
The Library, also on the second floor, was, like the great
hall, two stories tall; here too were several lecture rooms and classrooms.
The New-York Tribune explained that income from the stores,
the artists’ studios and the leasing of the great hall when not in use, would
offset much of the working expense of the structure. (Eventually the combined rentals would amount
to $13,000 per year.) The total cost of
the building, including land, had reached $487,000 (in the neighborhood of $8.7
million today) of which $435,000 had been paid for by donations. During the private preview the speakers urged
“the advantages of having this $52,000 made up before Thursday, when the building
is to be formally dedicated.”
Immediately upon opening the night classes commenced. Courses were available in music, writing,
bookkeeping, German, Spanish, drawing and the natural sciences. Young men wishing to take advantage of the
Association paid $2 per year membership.
Unlike the impoverished men of the downtown missions, the young men
frequenting the Young Men’s Christian Association could afford the dues. The Times mentioned on July 18, 1869 “the Association
appeals mainly to the young men employed as clerks.”
The great hall was leased regularly to political and social
groups. Only two weeks after the
building’s opening, the hall was used by the Woman’s Parliament. The
group was quick to clarify that it was no suffrage organization.
“The ladies of the Woman’s Parliament are not in favor of
securing the ballot for woman,” reported The Sun on December 15, 1869. “To that undertaking as we understand, they
are opposed. Their purpose is to bring
about cooperation among women in respect to education, sanitary reform, the
treatment of questions that are strictly social, improvement in the present
system of housekeeping and the like.”
Another women’s
group, the Working Woman’s Protective Union, held its anniversary meeting here in
April 1871. Among the speakers was Rev.
Henry Ward Beecher and, “by special request” a reading of “The Song of the
Shirt” was done by Sidney Wollett.
Despite its good works, the Young Men’s Christian
Association did not always garner praise.
In June 1872 the New-York Tribune felt the group had gone too far after it
had proposed “to make a simultaneous attack on alcohol, tobacco, and the Pope;
the assaults to be made, too, with all the vehemence and contempt of prudence
or expediency characteristic of youthful soldiers in religious battles or
elsewhere. Total abstinence was to be made a test for membership; tobacco to be
prohibited as ‘inconsistent with the highest type of Christianity;’ the Bible
was to be forced into the public schools, and a copy of it placed immediately
in every Catholic family.”
A fire in 1886—the second in only a few years--prompted not
only repairs, but updated materials aimed at preventing further problems. On August 7 the Real Estate Record and
Builders’ Guide reported that architect B. L. Gilbert had filed plans for “interior
alterations, iron girders furnished, new fire-proof iron structure in open
court.” The repairs and renovations were
expected to cost about $15,000.
Despite the precautions, the 1886 fire would not be the
last.
In 1889 offices on the fifth floor were occupied by the
architectural firms of Hoar & Day, and William Hunt. Studios here were fully leased to artists
like Hillary Bell, Frank P. Carpenter, J. R. Brevoort, W. S. Macy, and J. C.
Durand, among others. One floor below
were more artists, including Charles A. Vandenhoof, A. C. Howland and J. H.
Dolph. The street level stores included
the New-York Sunday School Union and American Tract Society; Robert Lefferts’ laundry
soap store; William McClenahan’s shoe store; Hahn & Co, opticians; real
estate agents F. T. Hebbard & Son; Dr. Smith, a dentist; the Woodlawn
Cemetery Association; and merchant tailor James L. McEwen.
A stereopticon view captured a pedestrian-free view. |
On Sunday, July 28, 1889 there were few residents in the
building. The artists were all away for
the summer; however the building’s engineer and janitor, W. S. Brazier, and his
family were at home in their apartments on the fifth floor. About 100 men had assembled for a late afternoon
evangelical service in one of the parlors, and there were approximately 60 men
in the reading rooms.
At around 6:45 a fire broke out in the basement engine room,
just at the foot of the elevator shaft.
Brazier discovered the fire and headed downstairs for the alarm
box. But when he found the elevator
shaft “a seething mass of flames,” he returned to his apartments to save his
wife and three children. He managed to
get the terrified family out by groping through the dense smoke and, finally,
onto the street.
The fire rushed up the elevator shaft, as through a
chimney, and spread to the two uppermost floors. The men of the religious service marched, single
file, down the staircase singing hymns.
They were joined by those from the reading room and “in perfect order…the
crowd marched out into the street singing,” reported The Times.
The studio of Hillary Bell contained paintings worth
approximately $10,000 and was in the center of the fire. The Times reported “Mr. Burr McIntosh, a
well-known actor and a friend of Hillary Bell, rushed into the building to save
his absent friend’s pictures. After
working like a beaver for over an hour and placing a large number of valuable
pictures in safety he found that he was not in Mr. Bell’s studio, and had saved
the paintings of a total stranger. He
emerged from the building looking like a downed rat, thoroughly disgusted, and
went home. While he was at work Bell’s
studio had been gutted by the fire.”
By the time the blaze was extinguished, a 20-foot hole had
burned through the roof and the large mansard cap had been destroyed. “The
main staircase will have to be thoroughly redecorated,” reported The
Times. “Water deluged the gymnasium, but
its contents were not injured.”
Some of the artists’ studios were destroyed, or heavily
damaged. “The heaviest loser among the
tenants is Artist J. H. Dolph, who occupied two large studios on the fourth
floor…His studio was a perfect treasure room of antique furniture, rich old
rugs and tapestries, and art gems. Hung
about his walls was a valuable collection of old Spanish and Italian stringed
instruments, and a collection of antique firearms, sabres, and swords. Several rich old cabinets were filled with
choice costumes, and rare specimens of crockery, china, and glassware. There were sixty finished pictures and a
hundred unfinished bits of canvas scattered about. Mr. Dolph says that his treasures were worth
at least $20,000.”
The library escaped damage.
By now the lit had amassed more than 12,000 volumes; a number that would
almost quadrupled by 1894. That year the
Report of the Secretary of the Interior would count 40,000 volumes among the
Association’s collection.
Despite the terrifying history of fires, artists continued
to move in. In 1898 Percival de Luce
took a studio. He completed a commission
portrait of Horatio N. Twombley that year which was presented to the Berwick
Academy in Maine.
Around 2:00 on the afternoon of May 28, 1899 John Cummings,
about 30-years old, walked into the crowded second floor reading room. Men in the room that day described his
clothing as showing “the sign of considerable wear.”
Cummings, who was homeless, sat in a corner of the room,
resting his head in his hand. After a
while he took a large pair of scissors from his pocket; and then a large pocket
knife. He showed signs of agitation as
he ran his fingers through his hair and began mumbling. Uneasy men at the same table quickly moved
away.
An attendant found Secretary Frank Peterson and reported the
unknown visitor’s behavior. “Mr.
Peterson walked over to the man and tried to speak to him,” reported The New
York Times the following day. “Before
the third word had left his lips, however he man was upon him. As the man rushed, Secretary Peterson jumped
back and a dozen persons came to his aid.”
There was a fierce struggle, but by the time police arrived
the Cummings had been subdued. Secretary
Peterson, having barely escaped a stabbing, assumed his attacker was intoxicated. “But the policeman thought otherwise.” A doctor from Bellevue was called, who “said
there was no question but that he was insane.”
The Times’ headline read “Crazy Man In Y. M. C. A. Room.”
The changing neighborhood and the age of the structure
prompted the Young Men’s Christian Association to sell the building for
approximately $800,000 in April 1901. It
remained here while its new structure on 23rd Street west of Seventh
Avenue, was constructed.
In the pre-dawn hours of November 27, 1902 yet another fire
broke out in the basement. Fireman
battled the blaze from 2:00 to 5:00, dealing with the problem of the excavations
for the new subway which hindered access.
In the meantime, firemen rushed to evacuate the many artists’ families
who still lived on the upper floors.
Four months later, on March 28, the Young Men’s Christian
Association said good-bye to the old building.
The grand hall was packed with members, contributors and clergymen.
Not long afterward demolition of James Renwick Jr.’s
massive stone structure began. When a
remarkable building is lost, there is comfort when it is replaced by another
fine example. And so it was here. In 1904 304 Park Avenue South (originally 44
East 23rd Street) was completed by designs of Clinton &
Russell. It survives today.
photograph by the author |
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