Prior to the end of the 19th century, parts of Greenwich Village had changed from bucolic charm to squalid tenement life. Immigrants poured into the district until Greenwich Village had the densest population in Manhattan. Simultaneously, the Settlement House Movement was taking form. It was based on the concept that the lives of the poor would be bettered not by charity; but by instructing them in income-producing skills, in health care, and homemaking.
Mary Kingsbury Simkhovitch graduated from Boston University
in 1890 and immediately threw herself into social reform. Recruiting the
help of other reformers like Carl Schurz, Felix Adler and Jacob Riis
(whose stark photographs of slum life and tenement interiors startled the
nation), she founded Greenwich House. With the immediate goal of improving
the lives of the impoverished Greenwich Village immigrant population, it opened
on Thanksgiving Day 1902 in a renovated brick house at No. 26 Jones Street.
It was one of a row of Greek Revival homes built in the
early 1840s as comfortable residences. When the new Greenwich House took it over,
the houses had been converted to tenements.
The House offered free instruction to women on housekeeping,
lace making, reading, language, and other areas that would help them improve
their own lives. All the while Simkhovitch worked to reduce the appalling
infant mortality rate. And she relentlessly fought for playgrounds,
sanitation, child labor laws and overall improved living conditions.
Within the first year the Greenwich House's Social Investigation Committee
published The Tenant's Manual, the first guide to tenants' rights and
tenement law.
In 1909 Greenwich House added pottery making to its
curriculum. It was no frivolous arts-and-crafts
recreation. Art pottery was a major
trend and while companies like Rookwood, Roseville and Weller produced large
amounts of commercial pottery; the studio art pottery movement was growing
roots. An accomplished potter could earn
a comfortable livelihood.
The success of Greenwich House led to its new expansive
building on Barrow Street, designed by Delano & Aldrich and opened in
1917. But a decade later space here was already
overtaxed. Mary K. Simkhovitch, still
its director, nudged millionaires to donate to the construction of an annex
building on Jones Street. Among the contributors
were Greenwich House Treasurer Marshall Field and, most significantly, John D.
Rockefeller, Sr., who wrote a check for $10,000.
Greenwich House already owned the “four story front and rear
tenements” at No. 16 Jones Street. The
old house was demolished and the rear building was rented to Camilla Mason and
Maude Robinson, both House potters. It
is not surprising that Delano & Aldrich were called back. Chester Aldrich was highly involved in social
reform and was a member of the Greenwich House board.
The cornerstone for the Jones Street building was laid on
June 27, 1928 by Marshall Field. The
building would be devoted “to stone, wood and iron shops for training
youngsters in the art trades.” Its
purpose was reflected in the list of speakers, including Chester Aldrich, Leo
Calarco of the Wood Carvers’ Guild (he had graduated from the Greenwich House
workshops, himself), sculptor Victor Salvatore, and master cabinetmaker Nicola
Famigletti. Famigletti addressed the
group in Italian; but his lack of English skills was not a problem for the boys
learning woodworking since most were Italian.
The New York Times reported that in his remarks Marshall
Field “predicted that another Raphael, or some one who might become world
famous, would receive his apprenticeship at Greenwich House.”
Completed within the year, the chaste Colonial Revival annex
was a visual off-shoot of the Barrow Street building. Faced in Flemish-bond
brown-red brick; its arched openings at the first floor and the tall windows
and balcony at the second echoed Greenwich House. The sedate façade gave little hint of the active industrial classes that would take place within.
The stone-cutting and woodworking classes had proved so
successful during their seven-year history that in 1930 Marshall Field donated a
foundry at No. 16 Jones Street for bronze and metal work. A year later, on February 8, 1931, The Times
commented on the work being done here.
“An effort to counteract the machine-made art of the present
and to revive the old craftsmanship of the Middle Ages is being carried on by
the Greenwich House Workshops at 16 Jones Street. There, under the 500-year-old apprenticeship
system as it was practiced by Michelangelo and other masters, youths are
trained in the arts of stone-cutting wood-carving, cabinet-making and bronze
work.”
Because architects and decorators placed orders for the
custom-made items, students paid for their training only through labor. New students—apprentices—helped the senior
apprentices and “masters” until their skills earned them a higher spot on the
chain. An arrangement with the public
schools allowed the mostly impoverished boys to attend school in the mornings
and classes here in the afternoons.
The Workshops offered the boys a means to escape the
grueling and dead-end fates otherwise destined for them. The Times noted “One boy, working in a mine
in Pennsylvania, read of the Workshops, saved $35 in order to pay his way to
New York, and arrived here penniless.”
Pottery and ceramic work were still being taught in the main building on Barrow Street. But the sales of these goods helped maintain the Jones Street facility.
Pottery and ceramic work were still being taught in the main building on Barrow Street. But the sales of these goods helped maintain the Jones Street facility.
But by now the Great Depression was taking its toll on Greenwich
House. The Times noted later, “Before
the depression forced Greenwich House to curtail some of its activities, the
[Jones Street] building was largely maintained by sales of its pottery and
ceramic art and its woodcarvings and cabinet work.” Now
money the public had spent on household decorations was being spent on
necessities like food and clothing.
In 1936 Mary K.
Simkhovitch and the directors leased the Workshop to the City at $1 a year on a
five-year trial. The school was made
part of the School of Industrial Art under the Public School system. The New York Times explained that at
the end of the trial “the educational authorities will decide whether it is to
continue.” Mary K. Simkhovitch, still
involved, insisted “Why should we have to send abroad to get the decorative
panels and rich reliefs for our cathedrals?
Why not train the boys to do that right here?”
In 1938 there were 48 boys attending classes. The Board of Education insisted that there
was no prejudice against admitting girls, but that “none has yet applied.” As was the case previously, the boys’
handiwork was offered for sale, with the proceeds now going back to the school
for the purchase of tools, materials and equipment. One instructor told reporters “One piece may
bring as much as $250, while it is not unusual to receive $150 or more for a
sculptured bear or a hand-turned chair.”
In 1941 the trial period was over and the Board of Education, disappointed in the results,
decided to shut down the endeavor. For
seven years the Jones Street building was used as a branch of the New York
Public Library. But then, on October 7,
1948, it was reopened by Greenwich House.
As the economy resurged, so did the interest in the workshops.
Not all the old classes, like bronze-making for instance,
would return. But several new areas were
added. The pottery school moved from Barrow
Street into the building and The Times reported “The woodcarving and
cabinetmaking shops, discontinued when the building was transferred, are
functioning again, and the art classes and workshops of the theatre and dance
that had interim housing in the main building are back too.”
The building was outfitted with two large pottery studios, a
firing room and drying room. Children
(from 8 to 12), teenagers and adults were offered courses in pottery making,
ceramic sculpture, mold making and design.
Nicola Famigletti was back as well, teaching wood
carving. Examples of the work his former
students had produced lined the walls.
The astounding quality of the pieces was reflected in the
patrons. The Times noted “Among the
objects produced by them and sold were frames for paintings in the Metropolitan
Museum and in the Whitney, religious carvings for churches, and furniture and
fences for individuals.”
As the years passed, the industrial classes gave way to the
highly-popular pottery until No. 16 Jones Street was entirely devoted to the
craft. In 1952, when the well-known Inwood
Pottery Studios was threatened with closing, Gabriella Maria Le Prince convinced
Greenwich House to perpetuate it.
The studio’s kilns and raw materials were installed at No. 16 Jones
Street. The following year Gabriella Le
Prince died.
Throughout the decades the Greenwich House Pottery’s regular exhibitions and sales were
highly-anticipated and attended. The Jane Hartsook Gallery was installed for
the purpose, named in honor of the former Pottery Director who had made the
school “one of the nation’s leading ceramic arts studios,” as described in her
Alfred University obituary.
In 2002 faculty member Peter Gourfain designed the plaque to commemorate the centennial of the founding of Greenwich House. The inscription reads "argilla potest servare vitam tuam." |
Hidden away on the block-long Jones Street, Delano &
Aldrich’s jewel is easily bypassed by anyone not specifically looking for
it. Little changed externally, it is a
reminder of a remarkable period in Greenwich Village history, when the sons of
impoverished immigrants struggled to get a new start.
photographs by the author
Interesting read, thank you.
ReplyDeleteHi Tom, I'm a follower. Thanks for this information, my googling was getting me nowhere, but I thought you would come through. I was excited to celebrate the Centennial Celebration for Greenwich House Pottery. I've always had an interest it since I was an Art Major concentrating in Ceramics. I was interested in the origins of the medallion, but couldn't find the history. I'm adding the English translation of the medallion's latin which means: "Clay can save your Life". I know it helped me, one of the classes I taught at my 1st job after graduating college, was Ceramics at a YMCA.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for the translation. Brilliant!
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