Largely forgotten today, the architectural firm of C. Abbott
French & Co. was prolific in the 1880s.
The extent of their activity was evidenced on a single day, November 3,
1888, when Architecture and Building
listed four projects they were designing—two rows of townhouses, a tenement
building and a 5-story flat. Two of the
commissions were for developers William J. and John P. Walk.
At the time another C. Abbott French & Co. project, also
for the Walks, was being completed on East 95th Street. A year earlier, on February 19, 1887, the
Real Estate Record & Builders’ Guide had reported on the 12 “Queen Anne
private residences” being designed. The
total cost was estimated at $169,000—an average of $361,000 each today.
Stretching from No. 116 to 138 East 95th Street,
the charming row of three-story brick homes were completed in 1888. The architects had produced string of
delightful houses which had only their architectural style and charm in
common. Each flexed its individuality
with oriels, arches, terra cotta plagues or medallions, and stained glass—yet the
similarity of the treatment created a harmonious flow.
Among the new homes was the 18-foot wide No. 130. Three floors of brownstone (including the
English basement) supported the brick-faced uppermost story. Above the brownstone stoop the tympanums over
the entry and parlor window mimicked fanned and folded fabric behind two medallions—the
one over the doorway announcing the address, and the one over the window
depicting a fearsome face.
The expected asymmetry of the Queen Anne style allowed for a
single window that illuminated the stairway hall, and grouped openings in the
front-facing rooms. Below the heavy
brick eyebrow that embraced the arched openings of the third floor was another
terra cotta medallion with a watchful beast.
The home was briefly owned by Martin C. Monaghan, who sold
it in April 1890 to Jacob Simmons for $16,000 (about $430,000 in today’s
dollars). Simmons was a manufacturer
of furs with offices at No. 734 Broadway.
The Financial Panic of 1893 caused mayhem across the country. Stock prices plummeted, 500 banks closed, and
15,000 businesses failed. Even moneyed
shoppers cut back on luxuries—like furs.
The downturn in business may have prompted Simmons to try to lease the
house in 1895. An advertisement appeared
in The Evening World on March 5: “Beautiful
Queen Anne style house, furnished or unfurnished; terms reasonable. J. Simmons.”
On November 27, 1896 Jacob Simmons filed for
bankruptcy. And he quickly took steps to
prevent losing his home. The Sun
reported that “Jacob Simmons and wife” transferred the title to David S. Cahn
for $1.00.
Two weeks later a sheriff
arrived at the door of No. 130 East 95th Street. He was looking for hidden furs. The Sun reported on December 20 that $6,000 worth of skins purchased from Joseph Ullman & Co. was missing.
“It is alleged that Mr. Simmons obtained the goods by
misrepresenting his financial responsibility, and that he has turned them over
to his wife. The Sheriff visited his
house and several other places, but found none of the goods,” reported the
newspaper.
The personal humiliation of the once highly-respected merchant
continued when the New York City Law Department’s annual report listed Jacob
Simmons as being in arrears for personal taxes.
In 1898 Jacob Simmons was in default of $13,343 on his
mortgage and lost his house at foreclosure.
Sold at auction, it was owned by Charles Spiegel until 1906 when he sold
it to the well-known mustard manufacturer, Charles Gulden. Gulden was active in the real estate market
and the same day that he bought No. 130 he purchased No. 123 East 95th
Street, both as rental investments.
Gulden’s first tenant in No. 130 was Dr. B. Morje, who had
been living at No. 1291 Madison Avenue.
The German-born internist was affiliated with the German Hospital.
He was applauded in 1907 in the Annals of Surgery for his
treatment of a 25-year old trapeze performer.
The woman was admitted to the German Hospital on September 26, 1907
suffering from chronic hemorrhages. They
had begun 14 months earlier after a trapeze accident. On October 12, 1907 Morje performed a blood transfusion
on his now-anemic patient. It was a risky and unusual procedure at the
time. Although the woman eventually died
from her unknown ailment, the medical journal was impressed at Morje’s
aggressive and resourceful treatment.
For decades, beginning at least in the mid-1920s, No. 130
would be home to George S. Mittendorf and his family. The attorney had been educated at Yale,
Columbia University, and the University of Leipzig. Widely remembered as a college athlete
who managed the first Yale Hockey team, he had been a member of the law firm of Mitchell, Capron, Marsh, Angulo
& Cooney since 1910. He was also a
Vice President and Director of the Manhattan Eye and Ear Hospital. Mittendorf’s most visible client was the John
Jacob Astor estate and he personally argued the Astor cases.
The house was the scene of daughter Matilde’s wedding to
Edmund Louis Grey Zalinski in 1939. Four
years later Constantine Mittendorf, a lieutenant in the US Navy Reserves,
married Marcella heron in the rectory of St. Paul’s Catholic Cathedral in
Pittsburgh. The Middendorfs were still
in the 95th Street house on November 11, 1952 when George died in
Roosevelt Hospital at the age of 74.
In 1963 Otto Sander purchased the house “for occupancy;” and
by 1982 it had become the Galenson-Rolphe Infant Center. Affiliated with Mount Sinai Medical Center,
the center treated children under the age of three in early childhood
development.
By the time the house was reconverted to a single-family
home in 2009, the dog-leg stoop had been removed and the doorway renovated to a
many-paned window. But the façade survives
as an integral element of C. Abbott French & Co.’s delightful Queen Anne
row.
photographs by the author
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