The block of Spring Street, between Wooster Street and Laurens
Street (later renamed West Broadway) saw a flurry of construction in 1818. Around that year the entire south side of the block
was developed with Federal-style homes.
And Josiah Purdy erected his three-story frame house with brick front at
the northwest corner of Spring and Wooster at the same time.
Spring Street was originally Brannon Street—named for the
man whose garden or orchard had been here.
It ran essentially east-to-west providing a route to British General
Abraham Mortimer’s lavish country estate, Richmond Hill, near Greenwich
Village. But the street was renamed for
the spring which supplied drinking water to the residents.
Most likely Purdy’s house at No. 143 always had a store on
the ground floor. The residents who lived on the upper floors throughout the coming years would always be working-class.
By 1844 it was home to veteran “tinner” Asa W. Hall and his
wife, Elizabeth. Elizabeth M. Hall was
significantly younger than her husband.
He was 46, she just 25 years old.
Tinners were important figures in the construction
trade since most structures at the time were
constructed with tin roofs. But the
rooftop work came with danger. On the
morning of December 9, 1844 at around 9:00, Hall climbed the ladder of the
house being constructed at corner of Prince and Laurens Street. Tragedy would soon follow.
Nineteenth century homes had “scuttles” built into their
roofs; trap doors that provided access from below and, too often, access from
above by burglars. Hall was apparently
distracted this morning and did not see the open scuttle. The New-York Daily Tribune reported that he
had gone to the roof “to put the tin thereon, when he accidentally fell through
the scuttle in the roof to the cellar, a distance of some 50 feet, and died a
few minutes thereafter.”
Fellow workers explained to the coroner that Hall “was
attending to some workmen” when he “incautiously stepped backward and fell
through the scuttle into the cellar.”
Less than four months later his young, broken-hearted widow died in the Spring Street House.
Her uncle, William Witzel, oversaw her funeral arrangements in the house
at 4:30 on the afternoon of April 5, 1845.
By the early 1870s what was described by the Real Estate Record
& Builders’ Guide as a “one-story frame store” had been added to the rear with the
address of 93 Wooster Street. A saloon was in the ground floor of the house itself. Patrick
Maher ran the store, and in 1874 James Cassin took over operation of the saloon
from J. E. Dowling. Cassin also ran a
saloon at No. 755 Fourth Avenue.
On February 6, 1875 Blanche Martin strolled into Maher’s
store. When the shopkeeper turned his
back, she “snatched $100 in bills from the money-drawer,” according to The New
York Times. Patrick Maher was faster
than Blanche (described by The Times as “a colored woman”) and she was arrested
before she could escape the store.
There was little hope she could make bail, set by Justice Otterbourg at
$1,500—in the neighborhood of $33,500 in 2016.
Blanche’s trial was held on February 18 and did not end well
for the woman. She was found guilty of
grand larceny and sentenced to three years in State Prison.
By 1881 H. Hotje had taken over the saloon. For decades the Hotje family name had appeared throughout
the city in various liquor businesses.
John F. Holtje, for instance, ran a saloon at No. 1 Whitehall Street in
1860. According to Bonfort’s Wine and
Spirit Circular in 1883, the name of the Spring Street business was changed to
the “H. Holtje Saloon.”
In April 1882 Henry Rowe spent $20,000 to purchase the old house, the
store, and a five-story brick store and tenement abutting at No. 95 Wooster. At the time Dr. F. Eliseo Marini practiced
medicine from the upper floors of No. 143. But two
complaints against him that year raised the attention of Dr. Frederic R.
Sturgis, president of the County Medical Society.
Sturgis looked into Marini’s practice and discovered he had
no license. Calling him a “so-called
doctor,” the Homoeopathic Journal of Obstretics, Gynaecology and Pediatrics
reported that he had been found guilty “after a protracted trial” and fined
$50.
Apparently Marini remedied the licensing problem; for he was
practicing again two years later. In
June that year he married and the newlyweds were living at No. 117 West Broadway. His new wife was insecure and jealous—The New York Times
called her “prepossessing"—and when the doctor was called to Hoboken around
midnight on Tuesday, September 2, 1884, Maria Marini accused him of seeing
another woman.
“She had been married to the Doctor only four months,” said
The Times, “and was troubled with hysterical convulsions.” When Marini insisted he was obligated to go,
Maria rushed from the room and swallowed carbolic acid from a medicine case.
She came back into the room and breathed into her husband’s
face, to show him what his infidelity had caused. The
New York Times reported “The doctor hastened to call some of the
neighbors. The landlady, Mrs. Brosher,
found Mrs. Marini with a pen in her hand.
On a piece of paper, were written the words: ‘I have killed myself.’ She was removed to St. Vincent’s Hospital,
where she died.”
In the meantime, H. Holtje’s saloon was doing
well enough that he had purchased the building from Henry Rowe. In 1883 The
City Record showed that Holtje had paid $75 for his renewed liquor license; but
he apparently died that same year.
On July 21, 1883 the Real Estate Record reported that Holtje’s
estate had sold the property to Owen Jones for $28,000. Within a decade Jones, too, died. And by now the corner property had risen dramatically
in value. In 1893 Jones’s heirs reportedly turned
down a $60,000 offer. When they finally
sold it to Mandlebaum & Lewine in June 1895, the various rental spaces—the store,
the saloon, the tenement at No. 95 Wooster, and the rooms on the upper floors
of the house—were bringing in $2,900 a year (about $7,000 a month today).
W. J. Kennedy had been running the saloon, backed by the
Elias Brewing Company, at least until 1891; but in 1898 the liquor license was
held by John F. Esselman.
In 1907 Henry Steffens had a small trucking business in the
old store. On March 15 that year his
driver, Charles Cozzal, was taking a “heavily laden truck” over the Williamsburg
Bridge when his team of horses spooked and ran.
As the team dashed toward the Brooklyn side, the truck collided with
several other vehicles; but caused little damaged.
The Williamsburg Bridge, opened only four years earlier,
included large “runaway gates” which were installed with such incidents in
mind. Policemen closed the gate “and
then awaited the crash,” according to The Sun the following day.
The team struck the gate with such force that it was blown
open, knocking Policeman Guy Cobough 12 feet onto the Brooklyn Rapid Transit
Company’s eastbound tracks. Cobough was
stunned, unable to move as a Franklin Avenue train approached. “Before the motorman could check its speed
the policeman was struck and pushed along for several yards. He escaped with a dislocation of the left arm
and a few slight contusions.”
Charles Cozzal had been thrown over the gate and suffered
injuries of the face and head. The
horses were not so fortunate. One was
killed in the collision and the other had to be put down.
When Charles Von Urban photographed the saloon in 1932 it was surrounded by tall loft buildings. A fruit stand operates on the sidewalk under the large awning. The advertisement painted on the side is for Peter Doelger beer. The brewery was established in 1846 by German immigrant Joseph Doelger -- from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York |
The story of an upstairs resident in 1926 was not only
bizarre, but disturbing. Rudolph
Raymondi took a “small room” here in 1924.
He had come from Italy and made his living as a clerk. His purpose for immigrating was unusual at
best.
The then 27-year old noticed a Red Cross poster in Rome in
1923. He told officials later he “fell
in love with the vision of loveliness it held.”
He became determined to find the beauty who posed as the nurse and marry
her.
Ramondi tracked down the artist, who told him he didn’t
remember the woman’s name; but that she had left for America shortly after
posing for the poster. The infatuated
man boarded a ship as soon as he raised the steamer fare. The Times later reported “For two years he
scanned billboards, posters, photographs in the magazines and newspapers, and
the faces of the girls who tripped Fifth Avenue and Broadway.”
And then, seemingly against all odds, Ramondi saw a picture
in a Fifth Avenue photographer’s window.
It was his dream woman. He went
inside and demanded to know her name and address and the photographer
irresponsibly supplied it.
Helen Lewis lived on Burke Avenue in the Bronx. She was, incidentally, Mrs. Helen Lewis. The love-struck Italian began an onslaught of
telephone calls. “The young woman was
not cordial,” noted The Times.
Finally Helen went to the police. Detectives instructed her to agree to meet
Romandi. On January 17, 1926 he went to
the spot. “Raymondi kept the tryst and
his arrest followed,” reported the newspaper.
It noted he was “charged with annoying the girl of his dreams.”
In 2006 the old store to the rear still survived, much altered. Historically inappropriate bay windows had sprouted at ground level and clapboards were coming loose. photograph William J. Rockwell architect LLC |
The days of the saloon came to an end in 1950 when the
ground floor was converted to a restaurant and kitchen. In 1978 it was renovated again to a
restaurant and “drinking establishment” that spanned the first and second
floors. Tennessee Mountain would remain
a Soho destination for decades.
In 2006 architect William J. Rockwell embarked on what was
called “part restoration, part renovation” to transform No. 143 Spring Street
into a modern retail establishment.
Although Patrick Maher’s old store building was lost in the project, the
resulting appearance was as historically faithful to the structure’s
varied history as possible.
non-credited photographs by the author
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