Change often comes quickly to Manhattan neighborhoods. In 1881 No. 381 Fifth Avenue was home to the
wealthy and respected C. Oliver Iselin and his new wife, the former Frances
Margaretta Garner. The couple had been
married in the house, owned by the bride’s widowed mother, just a year
earlier. The wedding had been attended
by 500 of some of Manhattan’s wealthiest citizens—including Caroline
Schermerhorn Astor who lived a block to the south.
Next door lived the Haliburton Fales family at No. 383. The New York Times would later mention that
they have “long been socially prominent in this city.”
But ten years later the Iselin family was gone, their
mansion being used by Madame Leoncia Tierce as her millinery shop. By 1897 the art galleries of Julius Oehme
would share the building. And soon after
the widowed Elizabeth J. Fales died in her house next door on October 1, 1900,
it was taken over by the Musical Art Society.
The blocks of Fifth Avenue just
above 34th Street had been taken over by every mansion district’s
greatest enemy—commerce.
By 1907 once-grand homes in the neighborhood had been razed
for modern structures—the Astor mansions had been replaced by the
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel; Benjamin Altman’s block-consuming department store now
stood on the east side of the avenue between 34th and 35th
Streets; and real estate operator J. H. Peller leased the old mansion at No.
381 from the Iselin estate as the site of a new commercial building.
On October 27 The New York Times reported that Peller had
commissioned architect Samuel Sass to transform the house into a six-story
brick and limestone-fronted building to cost $60,000. Rapid-fire construction resulted in its completion
within the year. Five stories of Beaux-Arts
decorated limestone sat above a store front seemingly plucked from
the Champs Elysees. The rusticated façade
served as a framework for the four-story cast iron bays; adorned with a lush
carved cartouche and palm fronds. A
free-standing Ionic colonnade fronted the sixth floor below a bracketed copper
cornice.
The storefront was a slice of Paris. photograph by Wurts Bros. from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York |
No. 381 quickly filled with
tenants. William Bentley Quaintance took
the store, basement and second floor.
The wealthy merchant's upscale shop sold imported “madras and muslin
piece goods and fancy nets.” His patrons
were the dressmakers of Fifth Avenue who catered to the socialites who had
lived in the neighborhood only a few years earlier.
One of those was Miss Alice
Maynard, a well-known society dressmaker, who also moved into No.
381. A. J. O’Donovan & Co., importers of laces
took the entire fourth floor upon the building’s opening.
Society women were stunned
by a tragic accident that occurred on New Year’s Eve 1909. Mrs. Florence T. Ellis was celebrating at
the exclusive Café Martin when, as reported in The Times, “a tiny flame touched
the flimsy fabric of her skirt.” In an
instant Mrs. Ellis’s gown was ablaze.
Horrified patrons watched while everything was done to extinguish the
flames. Yet Florence T. Ellis died of her
injuries.
A reporter from The New York
Times called on Alice Maynard for her opinion as to the cause. She blamed “fashion for the increasing danger
from fire.” The modiste
pointed to chiffon and celluloid. “It is
not like in other years, when the dresses were made with ruffles. For where there are ruffles there is a break
to check the flames; but in the one-piece chiffons there is no break, and the
gown goes up in a puff. Celluoid is
dangerous, and is now only used for spangles in black-spangled gowns. Several years ago, then there was a craze for
spangles, there did not seem to be a great many accidents, for the women knew
how dangerous it was to have their spangled gowns come in contact with fire.”
Peller’s project was a
success--enough that in December 1910 he leased the former Fales house,
recently home to the William Clausen art galleries. “It is the intention of Mr. Peller to tear
down the old structure…and erect a building in keeping with the surrounding
property.”
Three months later plans
were filed. “The smaller building will
be increased in height to that of the larger, and a pent house for studios
built on the roof,” reported The Times.
The alterations to No. 383 would cost Peller about $40,000 and would
result in a mirror-image of No. 381.
Alice Maynard's creations targeted Manhattan's "discriminating class of women." Theatre Magazine, April 1911 (copyright expired) |
Tenants of No. 381 stayed on
through the construction. In April 1911
a journalist from Theatre Magazine stopped by Alice Maynard’s shop. “Always there is something new to be found in
this delightfully cosy shop, in which the gowns are distinguished by unusual
elegance and refinement that appeals so strongly to the discriminating class of
women,” she wrote.
As construction neared
completion on No. 383 Fifth Avenue in January 1912 Peller had Samuel Sass made
$1,000 in alterations to No. 381 as well.
Skylights were added to the top floor and walls, presumably on that
floor, were reconfigured.
The buildings were depicted in P. W. Lambert & Co.'s opening announcement. Notions and Fancy Goods, May 1914 (copyright expired) |
P. W. Lambert & Co. “makers
of fashionable novelties in fabrics, etc.” moved into the newly-completed No.
383. Upon the showroom’s opening on May
1, 1914 the firm advertised its “ideal Afternoon-Tea and Theatre Bag.”
That same year, on July 1,
the store space in No. 381 was taken by Cammeyer Shoes. Since 1892 Alfred Cammeyer’s business—touted as
the largest shoe store in the world—was located on Sixth Avenue along the
shopping district that would become known as the Ladies’ Mile. Cammeyer died in 1909, at the time when the
great New York retailers were moving northward. The removal of Cammeyer to No. 381 Fifth
Avenue was one of the final dominoes to fall in the death of the Ladies’ Mile.
from the collection of the New York Public Library |
In the matching retail space
next door was Schrafft’s drugstore. It
was the scene of an unfortunate accident on November 20, 1915 when Marie Ethel
Barker dropped in to pick up a bottle of Zoolak.
(As a side note, Dr.
Dadirrian’s Zoolak was made in Brooklyn and advertised as a patent
medicine. It was mostly slightly
fermented cow’s milk.)
Marie worked in the office
of Dr. Redell at the corner of 35th Street and Fifth Avenue. At around 2:00 that afternoon he sent her to
the drugstore to pick up the medicine.
As she entered the store, she casually noticed that the iron sidewalk
shutters to the basement were closed.
Her errand took about ten minutes, during which time a Schrafft's employee went
into the basement.
Marie Barker was looking at
the crowd of pedestrians on the sidewalk rather than where she was walking and
she dropped down the open trap door. She
somehow grabbed the open door and clung there until a boy helped her to the
sidewalk.
A year later the
management of Schrafft’s drugstore found itself in court defending against a
law suit filed by Marie Barker.
Both Schrafft’s
and Cammeyer would remain in the stores for years. Meanwhile a variety of tenants came and went
in the upper floors. In 1917 general
contractors Cauldwell-Wingate Company was here.
That year it received the contract for constructing the Henry Miller’sTheatre on West 43rd Street.
In 1920 merchant
tailor Jules C. Weiss & Co. was in No. 381; and the National Better
Business Bureau had its offices in No. 383 by 1927. In 1929 Max Fertig, a linen dealer, leased
the entire building at No. 381.
A nighttime view of Schrafft's in 1939 shows an already-streamlined shopfront. photo by Gottschol-Schleisner, Inc. from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York |
On August 10,
1940 Gerald Shattuck, president of the Frank G. Shattuck Company, owners of the
Schrafft’s chain, announced that the firm had hired the architectural firm of
Bloch & Hesse to redesign the storefront and modernize the interior of No.
383. The result was a flat modern façade
in keeping with the times and in brutal contrast with the structure.
The 1940 Bloch & Hess storefront was starkly modern. photo from the collection of the New York Public Library |
Throughout the
rest of the century the wide range of shops and offices continued. A Bornand, Inc. music box dealers and
repairers was in No. 383 in the 1940s; Ritts Company’s Fifth Avenue Tropical
Shop sold contemporary “tropical” furniture of rattan from No. 381 at the same
time and into the 1950s; and the Japan Trade Center was also in the building at
mid-century.
It was not until
1959 that the Fales Estate finally sold No. 383.
By 1960 the Fifth
Avenue neighborhood was slightly tarnished.
Joseph Menaged owned his McCall’s Fifth Avenue gift shop at No. 381
Fifth Avenue that year. In February he
received a special sale license for his Going Out of Business Sale. A sign in the window read “Everything Must
Go.” A representative of the Better
Business Bureau, Claire Frey, stopped in.
Joseph Menaged showed her Oriental rugs.
When the special
license expired at the beginning of March, she dropped in again. McCall’s Fifth Avenue had changed its
name. It was now Regis Fifth
Avenue. But it was the same Mr. Menaged
who waited on her and he showed her the same Oriental rugs.
On April 5 The
New York Times reported “Yesterday, Mr. Menaged, having neglected to go out of
business, was convicted of violation of a local law that prohibits misrepresentation
about sales. He faces a possible fine of
$500 and sixty days in jail.”
While the twin
buildings appear to be one; Nos. 381 and 383 remain separate structures. A recent facade unifies the lower two floors
where somewhat garish signage mocks the elegant Parisian storefronts of a
century ago. The upper four floors,
however are essentially intact since Samuel Sass remodeled two brownstone mansions
into upscale commercial buildings.
non-credited photographs by the author
That was so fascinating! Your site is one of my favorites. There is a four-alarm fire there this morning and I was looking for information about the building.
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