In the 1830s and ‘40s William O’Brien and his family lived
in a comfortable brick house at No. 435 Broome Street. Like their father, William Jr. and John were
insurance brokers and the three worked together at No. 16
Wall Street.
By the end of the Civil War, however, the Broome Street
neighborhood was no longer quietly residential.
The Federal-style homes were quickly being replaced with modern
commercial structures. Catherine Wilkins refused to be impeded by her sex and aggressively entered the real estate development
game. Her name repeatedly appeared in
real estate columns as she bought and improved properties.
Among these was the former O’Brien house, being used as the
C. M. Tremaine & Brother’s piano and organ store as early as 1869. In 1873 she demolished the old building and
commissioned architect William Appleton Potter to design a store and loft
building.
Potter had just completed designs for the Princeton
University’s Chancellor Green Library—his first major commission. He had worked in the newly popular Victorian
Gothic style for that structure, and now would bring it to his cast
iron Broome Street project.
Cast iron facades tended to take typical forms in 1870s New
York—pretending to be stone buildings with engaged Corinthian columns and broad
openings. Potter’s No. 453 Broome Street
would step far out of that box. He
included fanciful elements, such as the unusual capitals of the pencil-thin
columns upholding curlicue brackets. And he pulled out the stops at the
top-most level.
Here Potter ornamented the openings with Gothic tracery and
topped it all with a decorative frieze and parapet similar to the cresting of bedroom
and dining room furniture being designed at the time. Here he added touches of another up-to-the-minute
style. Delightful spindly cast iron
sunflowers—one of the major motifs of the Aesthetic Movement—lined up in full
relief. Within the triangular pediment,
unseen from the street, was the date 1873.
Catherine Wilkins quickly sold the completed building to the
well known real estate operator S. Van Rensselaer Cruger. His long-standing firm had been founded in
1796 by Van Rensselaer Cruger.
Termed a “warehouse” by the Real Estate Record and Builders’
Guide, the building filled with firms involved in the millinery and apparel
industry. In 1876 H. Bacharach &
Co., importer of artificial flowers; William Imissohn, feather dealer; and
James P. Bills and J. N. Davenport, both cloth merchants, were in the building.
By 1885 the lace importer and manufacturer Duden & Co.
had its salesroom here. Its factory which
employed about 100 workers was located in Williamsbridge area of the Bronx. It was the scene of a vicious attack in March
that year when factory worker Richard Roe was set upon by Louis Farrend and
Louis Lagrange who then disappeared.
A search for the attackers frustrated police. On March 25, 1885 the New-York Tribune reported “The Frenchman who inflicted the serious, if not fatal, injuries had not been captured at noon yesterday. Mr. Roe was much worse yesterday, and his condition was considered critical.”
A search for the attackers frustrated police. On March 25, 1885 the New-York Tribune reported “The Frenchman who inflicted the serious, if not fatal, injuries had not been captured at noon yesterday. Mr. Roe was much worse yesterday, and his condition was considered critical.”
Duden & Co. was based in Brussels and, in addition to
New York, had branches in San Francisco, London and St. Petersburg. It had been doing business in New York since
1858. The firm suffered a devastating
blow when the Bronx factory caught on fire on March 8, 1888. The
was no fire department in Williamsbridge and a hand-operated engine from West
Chester village did not arrive for an hour and a half after the blaze was
discovered.
Hermann Duden told reporters that night, after the factory
was destroyed, “It was shameful so much valuable property was lost. I never would have built there had I known we
were so ill provided with fire engines.”
Creditors quickly became nervous, especially because Duden’s
permanent residence was in Brussels.
When the firm was late on paying Wilmerding, Hogeut & Co. that
summer, a judge granted an attachment for $13,000 against the lace
manufacturer.
Henry Rogers ran his novelty goods business in the Broome
Street building in 1893 when he was slapped with an unexpected lawsuit by his
sister-in-law. Bernard Rogers had
secured a degree of separation from Catherine Rogers several years before
because of her “intemperate habits.”
Drinking, however, was not Catherine’s only problem.
The Evening World noted on December 8, 1893, “Rogers was a
wealthy man when he was married, but is now a poor man. He attributes his poverty to his wife’s
habits.” When the separation was
finalized, Bernard stayed in the house at No. 395 12th Street in
Brooklyn. According to Catherine, he had
purchased the $6,500 residence “in the name of his brother, Henry Rogers, so
that she could not claim any part of it.”
The Evening World noted that “Mrs. Rogers has figured in
court many times in the last few years.” In December 1893 she would be there
again. And again. She brought an action early that month to
set aside the decree of separation, saying it had been obtained through
fraud. That case failed when evidence
showed no fraud had been committed. She
then sued her former husband for “cruel and inhuman treatment.” And then she sued Henry Rogers for $100,000
damages “for being responsible for her husband leaving her.”
Yet again, on December 7, she was in court concerning the assault
case she filed against Bernard Rogers’ attorney, John Shea. When he visited her about three weeks
earlier, she had set an attack dog on him.
The Evening World reported that according to Catherine’s testimony, Shea
“who represents her husband, from whom she is separated, knocked her about,
threatened to shoot her and otherwise abused her.”
Shea’s story was far different. “Shea, in his defense, said as soon as he got
in the hallway Mrs. Rogers called to a boy to bring on the dog. In about a minute
the boy appeared, holding the dog by a chain.
“Mrs. Rogers urged the dog to attack him, Shea says, and he
had just time to dodge behind the vestibule door as the dog and boy shot by
him.”
Once again Catherine Rogers’ case was dismissed, there being
no evidence to substantiate her claims.
In June 1898 S. Van Rennselaer Cruger sold No. 435 Broome
Street to William Waldorf Astor for $75,000—about $2.2 million in 2015. Astor’s interest in the area was keen and by
1906 would own the adjoining structures at Nos. 484 and 486 Broadway.
In 1908 Astor leased the entire building to leather bag
manufacturer Freund Bros. & Co. Its showroom
was on the first floor, and its factory occupied the upper floors. Freund Bros. would remain in the building
until 1911 when it moved to East 17th Street. In its place A. Lercher, leather trunk
manufacturer, moved in.
Shoe & Leather Reporter, 1912 (copyright expired) |
In the early years of the 20th century trunks and
wardrobes were essential for wealthy families traveling on railroads and
steamers to summer resorts and European tours.
Manufacturers like A. Lercher had a broad customer base available.
In July 1912 Luggage
and Leather Goods announced that Lercher, “whose factory at 101 Bowery, was
recently damaged by fire, has removed to 435 Broome street in the building
formerly occupied by Freund Bros. & Co…It is conveniently located near
Broadway, with the advantage of the entire ground floor for office and
salesroom. He occupies the entire
building, which has been equipped for manufacturing on a more economical and
extensive scale.”
Lercher would remain in the building into the 1920s. In 1925 the Astor family sold the property;
and in the mid 1930s it was home to Henry Allen, distributor of hospital
supplies. In 1936 the company received a
significant contract from the United States Government.
The somewhat battered ground floor managed to retain a few of its original cast iron elements. |
For the next few decades No. 435 Broome Street would
continue to house industrial-type tenants.
In 1942 Murray Axlerod leased the entire building “for the sale of metal
office furniture.” And by 1966 the
American Aviation Manufacturing Corporation, a supplier of aviation parts, had
been here for several years. It used the
building for its “offices, stock room and shipping.”
But within the decade the Soho neighborhood
would be transformed into one of artists, galleries and studios. In 1976 the building was home to the Ambrose
Arts Foundation’s performing arts venue and the gallery of the Women in the Arts
Foundation, where artwork by female-only members was exhibited.
From 1995 through the first decade
of the 21st century No. 435 housed the Puffin Room, a gallery and
performing arts center. It annually
presented The Loft Show which highlighted the work of artists “considered Soho’s
modern pioneers.”
In 2010 the owners put No. 435 on
the market for just under $9 million, promising to deliver it vacant. One real estate column noted “We see mansion
potential here.” Unsold, the building
was relisted in 2013 with an increased price tag of $23 million.
As it did in 1873, No. 435 Broome
Street stands out among its neighbors.
The ground floor was been altered; although some elements survive. The upper floor are deliciously intact; the
greatest loss being the leaves and one blossom of the eccentric sunflowers
along the frieze high above Broome Street.
non-credited photographs by the author
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