In 1896 traveling salesman Robert H. Spalding stepped off a
train from Wilkesbarre, Pennsylvania with his sample case of wood
trimmings. The 31-year-old was taken
with the ebullient residential and transient hotels that were rapidly rising
throughout the city. Gushing with Beaux
Arts ornamentation on the outside, their interiors dripped with overblown Belle
Epoque festoons and frescoes, marble columns and thick carpets.
With gutsy daring, Spalding decided to get in on the trend. Against all odds (The New York Times later
remarked “he had little capital to back him) he successfully constructed the
Ganoga Hotel on East 27th Street.
He sold the new hotel at a profit and immediately commissioned architect
Harry B. Mulliken to design the handsome residential Colllingwood Hotel
just off Fifth Avenue on West 35th Street. The former traveling saleman’s latest project
cost nearly $1 million.
The Collingwood had barely opened for business before
Spalding and Mulliken were working together again. Robert Spalding now turned his attention to
the Longacre Square neighborhood (later named Times Square), where the new theater
district was emerging. Spalding
purchased the land on which the old New-York Racquet and Tennis Club stood at
No. 127 West 43rd Street.
By the time plans were filed in 1902, Mulliken had formed a
partnership with Edgar J. Moeller.
Although Mulliken most likely took charge of the design of the Hotel
Spalding, Mulliken & Moeller is given credit.
Demolition of the old buildings was completed and foundation
excavation well underway by August 1902.
The neighborhood was still filled with high-stooped brownstones built in
the 1870's; many of them now operated as boarding houses. The construction site would cause neighbors
what the New-York Tribune deemed “intense disgust and annoyance” on the night
of August 18.
The excavation site, which stretched from No. 127 to 135
West 43rd Street, necessitated the construction of a 55-foot “timber
bridge” over the sidewalk. At around
7:30 that evening the heavy bridge caved in, breaking a six-inch water main and a four-inch gas main below. Luckily, although
the street was crowded with pedestrians, no one was on the bridge when it
collapsed. But the broken mains soon
created a major problem.
“Gas escaped so it could be smelled for blocks, and the
police would allow no one with even a lighted cigar or cigarette near the
scene, and all the gas lamps were put out,” reported the Tribune. The gushing water main caused additional
problems as it ate away at the soil beneath the street, part of which caved
in. “While people were standing on the
edge of the trench the water had been loosening the earth under the street, and
a big part of the street pavement gave way and sank with a loud crash into the
water. This caused much excitement. Women fled in terror, and men disappeared
almost as quickly.”
The thick gas seeped into the houses, causing some people to
get ill. Many were seen leaving their
homes with suitcases, expecting a massive explosion at any moment. In fact, the newspaper reported that within
an hour the atmosphere was so permeated with gas “that it got to be dangerous
to have lights anywhere in the neighborhood.”
Around 9:00 more of the pavement and remains of the bridge
gave way, loudly crashing into the water-filled crater. Many of those in the now-inky blackness
thought there had been an explosion “and there was much excitement for a time
about the neighborhood.”
Gas workers arrived around 10:00 and groped their way
around the gas main in the dark—no lamps could be used. The main was finally capped and by 10:30 the
danger had passed. Unfortunately for
residents, there would be no water or gas service until the next day.
With the regrettable incident now taken care of,
construction continued at a rapid pace.
On December 12, 1903 the Hotel Spalding opened “in the customary manner,”
according to the New-York Tribune. The
newspaper called it “the latest and most notable addition to the long chain of hostelries
in this City.”
An early postcard depicts the surviving brownstones on either side of the new hotel. |
“The lobbies and dining rooms were handsomely decorated with
flowers and plants, and the house was crowded the greater part of the day with guests
and visitors. Musical entertainment was
furnished by the management, besides the usual chefs d’oevres of the culinary
department.”
Mulliken’s façade was more restrained than the recent Hotel Collingwood. There were no sculptured figures or heavy
festoons; yet the limestone and brick was nonetheless stylish. A two-story portico sheltered the entrance
and French-inspired iron balconies punctuated the upper floors. Copper-clad angled bays gave dimension and
the 12-story hotel was capped by an ambitious, deeply overhanging spiky cornice.
A postcard shows the portico with its glass and metal marquee. |
The interiors, however, were meant to awe. Polished marble columns appeared in several
of the public rooms. The main Dining
Room was lit by an immense stained glass skylight. Decorated “in the style of Louis XVI," its cuisine
and service were touted by management as “as good as it is possible to have
them.” Off the soaring two-story lounge
was the slightly less-formal Grill Room, decorated with oaken Jacobean-style
furniture and matching paneled wainscoting.
Complementary postcards depict the main Dining Room (note the stained glass skylight), and the less formal Grill Room. Through the Grill Room's doors the two-story lounge can be glimpsed. |
Like Robert Spalding’s others, the Hotel Spalding accommodated not
only transient tourists and businessmen; but permanent residents (including Spalding, himself). Apartments for the long-term residents were
provided unfurnished.
There were 300 rooms for transients, consisting of suites of
two, three or four rooms with private baths.
An advertisement that appeared one week after the opening promised that “A
cosey, home-like effect has been carried out in the furnishings—the walls are
hung with attractive pictures, the furniture does not consist of two or three
uncomfortable chairs and a centre table, but is of the most luxurious and
home-like character, the sort that fills your heart with good cheer. There are soft, thick rugs and books and
bric-a-brac and other thing that contribute so much to the cheerful atmosphere
of the place.”
At the time of opening, a single room and with private bath
would cost the guest $2.50 a day—in the neighborhood of $70 today.
After checking in in the rather somber wood-paneled lobby (above), guests entered the airy Lounge. |
Robert Spalding’s wife did not live to move into the new
hotel with her husband. She died in the
summer of 1903. And one year almost to
the day after the hotel’s completion, Spalding died in his apartment here.
On Friday evening, December 9, 1904, he was “entertaining a
quartet of professional singers who were rehearsing in one of the apartments,”
according to The New York Times. The 39-year old suffered a heart attack which
caused his death at about 5:00 Saturday morning.
At the time of his death, creditors had been close on his
heels. Quickly the hotel was put into receivership
and on January 20, 1905 a petition of involuntary bankruptcy was filed. The Hotel Spalding owed debts amounting to
$700,000. It was sold in September for
$660,000.
Robert H. Spalding’s namesake hotel was quickly rechristened the
Hotel Woodstock. Guests and residents would
have noticed no real changes; although the single room rate was raised by 50
cents.
As Spalding had predicted, the site’s proximity to the
theater district proved attractive to tourists and theatrical types. In 1907 the internationally-known stage actress
Rose Coghlan was staying here while she rehearsed The Unwritten Law before taking it on the road. She was understandably upset in October that
year when she lost a gold lorgnette on a pearl chain somewhere in the Times
Square area.
Rose Coghlan - from the collection of the New York Public Library |
Among the permanent residents at around this time was the
young Madaline Davidson. On November 30,
1909 she was met at the hotel by Bostonian H. F. Kersberg who took her to a
nearby spot for tea. Kersberg was an
athlete, a member of the Harvard football team which had recently defeated Yale
for the first time in six years.
The young couple was apparently paying a great deal of
attention to one other and not enough to traffic when they started across
Broadway at 44th Street. The
pair was knocked down by a passing brougham.
Although Kersberg was uninjured, Madaline’s ankle was hurt and she had
to be carried into the lobby of a theater.
The football player then flagged down a hansom “and took her away.”
The carriage driver, William Savin, was arrested for
reckless driving. Kersberg appeared in
court the next day to defend him. The
New York Times reported “He and Miss Davidson, he said, had been to a hotel for
tea, and in crossing the street were chatting and did not watch very carefully.” Nevertheless, the judge fined Savin $10.
The Hotel Woodstock prospered under its new ownership. On December 10, 1910 Mulliken & Moeller
announced they were working on plans for a 12-story addition at Nos. 137 and
139 West 43rd. The Real
Estate Record and Builders’ Guide reported “The addition will be of the same
style of architecture and finish as the present building.” It added “the old dwelling on the site will
be torn down at once.”
The addition successful melded seamlessly into the original structure. The
Hotel Woodstock now offered 375 rooms and 285 baths. Possibly because the main entrance was now off-center the two-story portico was removed and replaced by a long glass and metal marquee.
The 1910 addition was seamless. photo by Irving Underhill from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York |
The hotel continued to be home to wealthy permanent
residents like Charles P. Dennin, president of O. Dennin & Sons, one of the
largest brush manufacturers in the nation, who lived here through the World War
I years.
The revamped entrance did away with the two-story portico. |
In the years following the war, many hotel operators in the
Times Square area were concerned that loft and office buildings were taking
over. Rumors were fueled by Vincent
Astor’s closing of his hulking Hotel Knickerbocker in 1920 and converting it to
office space. The Du Pont family not
only scoffed at the idea; but increased their holdings in Times Square.
On May 29, 1920 the Record and Guide suggested “The passing
of the Hotel Woodstock…into the hands of the Du Pont interests would seem to
show that this syndicate, which controls much hotel space adjacent, believes that
the Times Square neighborhood is not going to be captured altogether by loft
and office buildings.”
As with all hotels, the Woodstock saw its share of
tragedy. One such case occurred in
September 1924 while theater manager Howard E. Weaver’s wife, Katherine, was gone
on a visit to upstate New York. The 45-year-old had been manager of the Henry Miller Theatre; but had recently gone on the
road as manager of Merton of the
Movies. While in Detroit he was
fired.
Weaver returned to New York and the Woodstock around 10 p.m.
on Monday, September 15. The next morning
Peter Rice, a “theatrical man,” went to Weaver’s apartment to discuss his return to his
former job. When no one answered his
knocks, he found the hotel’s manager, Samuel Wieder, who had also been a friend
of Weaver for some years.
Howard Weaver was found hanging from an electric light
fixture in the bathroom. He had neatly
typed three notes. To his wife he
regretted that he had become a “disappointment and a failure.” He felt that losing his job had made him a
burden. To Wieder he apologized for the “mess
he was making;” and the note to Peter Rice read “Am more sick than anyone knows—so
what’s the use? Please forgive me.”
Had Weaver held out a few hours, he would have
discovered there was a job waiting for him.
The library featured comfortable easy chairs for reading. |
The meeting rooms of the hotel were routinely rented by political
and social groups, including the League for Industrial Democracy, several
socialist organizations, and the Sunrise Club.
The topic of one of the latter club’s lectures, in February 1931, was “The
Sources of Liberalism in Human Nature.”
And of course the banquet hall saw dinners thrown by
fraternal organizations, corporations, and groups giving tributes. On June 28, 1926, for instance, aviator
and explorer Richard E. Byrd, Jr. and his pilot to the North Pole, Floyd
Bennett, were feted here by the Adventurers’ Club of Long Beach, California.
Other timely issues were hashed out during meetings in the
Woodstock. In May 1937 a compromise was reached between
the National Education Association and motion picture producers, represented by
Hal Hode of Columbia Pictures. The
following day The Times reported “Cooperation between motion-picture companies
and schools in the greater use of films in education was discussed last night
by fifty educators."
Movies, prohibited in the classroom, were defended by Hode. “Movies do not create conditions—they are a vast mirror of society.” He offered that "the portrayal of evils on the screen led to their eradication by arousing the public."
Movies, prohibited in the classroom, were defended by Hode. “Movies do not create conditions—they are a vast mirror of society.” He offered that "the portrayal of evils on the screen led to their eradication by arousing the public."
In the 1940s liveried doormen still assisted guests, while inside the rooms were decorated in current war-time decor. (postcard from author's collection. photograph by Wurts Bros. from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York) |
And on June 9, 1943 William A. Lydgate, editor of the
American Institute of Public Opinion, addressed the Advertising Women of New
York, Inc. at a luncheon. He pointed out
that with the steady increase of men heading overseas to fight the war, “Women
will play a more important role in the 1944 Presidential election than ever
before in history.”
The reputation of the Hotel Woodward as a respectable place
to stay was not lost on two women living in the City Infirmary of North Adams,
Massachusetts. Flora Dampier, 64, and
Emily Brown, 62, decided to tick one item off their bucket lists around this
same time. The women earned extra
money by making quilts and bedspreads and when their “vacation fund” was
sufficient, they headed to New York City—with an escort, of course.
A New York Times journalist visited the two women in their
rooms on May 18, 1944. “Mrs. Dampier,
resident of the infirmary for forty-one years, proudly patted her new hair-do
and smoothed the pleats of a new gray dress as she and Mrs. Brown prepared to
go to dinner with their chaperone, Mrs. Delia Gorman, matron of the infirmary,
who accompanied them here.” The writer
noted that Emily Brown’s plain black dress “was set off by a white lace collar
which she made herself in preparation for the trip.”
The two elderly women had carefully planned their trip—wanting
to see the Statue of Liberty, Radio City, the Empire State Building, Chinatown
and Times Square. And they were living high
on their quilt money. “Both had steaks
for dinner last night and both have directed that they be served breakfast in
bed during their stay,” said the article.
But Emily’s and Flora’s agenda was not merely about
sightseeing. High on their list was “to
go to a night club and see the dancing.”
Mid-century brought about further updated decor. |
While some once-grand Times Square hotels became little more
than flop-houses after mid-century; the Hotel Woodstock tried desperately to
cling on. In the 1950's it hosted weekly
social dances for college students and in 1962 was the scene of a major jazz
dance in the ballroom.
But by 1975 the time-worn hotel seemed lost. The rusticated limestone base had been
slathered in layers of paint. Now outdated
and dreary, it was described by one person as “dismally gray and decrepit.” That year Project Find, a nonprofit agency
that houses, counsels and feeds the elderly, leased the hotel. Four years later it purchased the
building. Architects Hardy Holzman
Pfeiffer Associates initiated the $405,000 renovation that included a
refurbishing of the façade, including stripping off the paint.
Still called the Woodstock, the venerable hotel has lost its
stately portico and its crown-like cornice. Today it is operated by the city for low-income residents. Despite the changes, the integrity of the grand hotel, built by a traveling salesman when
Times Square was just coming to life, survives.
non-credited photographs by the author
vintage postcards from the author's collection
many thanks to Marc Mentzer for requesting this post
A beautifully written article. People walk by this building and never guess at the dramas that have occurred here.
ReplyDeleteHi -- informative as usual Mister Miller. I did notice suddenly in the article you refer to the hotel as Woodward instead of Woodstock. Is this a typographical error or did the hotel have two different "W" monikers?
ReplyDeleteThat was an inexcusable error on my part. What is most amazing is that four years since I published this piece, you're the first to notice the mistake! Thanks!
DeleteI stayed at the Woodstock Hotel with my parents in April, 1966. I was nine years old. It was my first and only visit to New York. I definitely need to go back again sometime, after Covid, of course.
ReplyDeleteDangerous dump overrun with roaches, rats and homeless.
Deletewhoever you are, the hotel and facade is still interesting. why must you lump homeless in with rats and roaches you fool.
DeleteMy ancestors, the Stilwells, lived in a brownstone on this site, at #129. Very interesting to read about what replaced their abode!
ReplyDeleteI had an ancestor work there from 1940-mid 1950s. Does anyone know where I would find employee records?
ReplyDeleteStayed here by force overnight @14 in 70-71,mother an brother took me to Manhattan to have an abortion.Ill never forget how grubby it was,I hated them for it.Drove from Ohio.
ReplyDelete