The house and grocery was originally two-and-a-half stories high. |
In 1826, as Greenwich Village experienced a building boom,
John Pollock erected his two-and-a-half story brick house on the corner of Art
and Gay Streets. By the time Isaac A. Lawrence
lived here, Art Street had been renamed Waverley Place in honor of Sir Walter
Scott and his novel Waverley.
Lawrence, a grocer, and his family had moved in by
1841. Since no separate business address
is listed in city directories, it is probable that it was he who first converted the
ground floor for business. Another renovation occurred before 1854, most
likely done by Henry Breckell, who listed both his grocery store and home
address at No. 141 Waverley Place.
Breckell’s handsome cast iron store front featured paneled
columns and pilasters with ornate Corinthian capitals. The material allowed for broad plate glass
shop windows. Breckell would live and
operate his grocery store in the building at least through 1853. That year a family member died suddenly
upstairs.
On July 25, 1853 The New York Times ran an article which
prompted more questions than answers. “Information
was received last evening, at the Coroner’s office, that a female died very
suddenly at No 141 Waverly-place, from some cause unknown to those residing in
the house.” Coroner Gamble promised an
investigation the following morning.
No. 141 Waverley Place was purchased by another grocer,
Henry Luhrs. He raised the building to
four full floors in 1860, and added a rear extension, numbered No. 7 Gay
Street. Luhr and his wife occupied the
commodious upper floors above the grocery store; while No. 7 contained income-producing
tenement apartments. Especially handsome
cast iron balconies, most likely always used as fire escapes because of their
otherwise unusual depth, projected from the tenement façade.
In 1861, the year after the ambitious project was completed,
a baby boy was born to the Luhrs in the Waverley Place home.
Henry Luhrs added the tenement extension to the rear, on Gay Street, when he enlarged the Waverley Place house and grocery. |
Although the tenement portion carried only the address of
No. 7 Gay Street, there were two entrances; the door nearer to Waverley Place
would later earn its own address, No. 5.
The apartments were apparently “floor-throughs;” for on July 10, 1869 an
advertisement in The Sun offered “A floor with water and gas, just papered and
cleaned.”
A month earlier one resident had met with violence a block away
at the corner of Christopher Street.
Patrick Clifford got into a quarrel with Edward Fleming on June 12. It worsened to the point of blows. The New York Times reported that “During the
brief struggle Clifford caught his foot in a grating on the sidewalk, and fell
or was pushed over, sustaining a compound fracture of the leg.”
While Clifford lay in the street severely injured, Fleming
and two other men “brutally kicked and beat him on the head.” His assailants ran away, leaving him on the
pavement.
Patrick Clifford was taken to his Gay Street apartment where
a doctor treated his serious leg wound. But
the brutal beating resulted in his death in his rooms late on Wednesday night,
July 30. The following day Dr. John
Beach made a “post-mortem examination” (what would be
called an autopsy today) prior to an inquest.
The inquest was held in the Gay Street apartment “over the
body of Patrick Clifford.” Neighbors and
friends were no doubt shocked when they read that Edward Fleming was released
from jail. The New York Times reported
that “the deceased and Fleming did not quarrel, but were wrestling in a
friendly way, when Clifford was thrown, and had an ankle sprained.”
The inquest jury did not expound on how a sprained ankle resulted in the man's death.
The inquest jury did not expound on how a sprained ankle resulted in the man's death.
While the lovely cast iron fire escapes were possibly "sleeping porches"--used to escape the insufferable tenement house heat in summers--their depth suggest they were always escapes. |
The Gay Street tenants were working class. Matthew T. Johnson was a machinist with a
shop on the corner of Franklin and Centre Streets; and R. G. Gregg had a
furniture store, for instance.
In the meantime the Luhrs children had grown up; but all
three remained in the Waverley Place home.
Louis C. Luhrs operated his real estate business from here by 1882; and John
L. was still in the house in 1888, as was their sister and her husband, John A.
Rosenbaum. Rosenbaum was a butter and
cheese merchant with an office at No. 310 Washington Street.
On the night of September 19, 1888 John Rosenbaum and John
Luhrs were returning home when they encountered Patrolman Richard Barry of the
Charles Street Station. Earlier that evening, according to The Evening
World, “Barry got drunk…and insulted Detective Mangin, Patrolman O’Donnell and
his brother, Tim O’Donnell, whom he met on the street.” Luhr and Rosenbaum, perhaps, did not recognize
Barry’s volatile condition when they challenged him.
Officer Barry, who had been on the force for only a month,
confronted the men just outside No. 141 Waverley and ordered them to move
away. According to Barrry later, Luhrs
replied “that he would when he got ready.”
It was an ill-advised comment. The
Evening World reported on September 21 that “Barry was in a towering rage, if
not half drunk, and kept the neighborhood in an uproar for several hours.”
Within second John Luhrs was being clubbed. Three neighbors, two women and a man, rushed
to the scene. William Jackson said that
Barry taunted Luhrs “to talk back, so he could carry him to the station-house on a
stretcher.” When Mrs. Ellis and Mrs. M.
Hexter tried to intervene the officer “used insulting and indecent language to
the women,” according to later testimony.
Hearing the commotion as his son and son-in-law were being
clubbed below his windows, Henry Luhrs joined the skirmish. Father and son ended up being arrested. Badly battered, John Luhrs was charged with disorderly
conduct, as was Henry.
The episode resulted in a flurry of complaints against
Officer Richard Barry. Rosenbaum and the three
witnesses appeared before Superintendent Murray to issue complaints. On September 21, 1888 The Evening World ran a
headline that read “Piling Complaints On Barry--The New Charles Street
Policeman Has a Hard Row to Hoe” and the article advised that any one of the
four complaints, “if proven, will be sufficient to break him.”
The following day The Sun reported that Henry Luhrs had been
discharged by Justice Ford at the Jefferson Market Court. “Luhrs hadn’t been doing anything, but the
policeman was on a rampage.”
The grocery store of Henry Luhrs was gone by 1890; although
the family continued to reside upstairs.
That year Henry Korff ran his business from No. 141 Waverley Street and
paid $175 to the city for the privilege of parking his truck on the street “during
the nighttime only.”
John H. Luhrs had ambitious plans for the aging buildings in
May 1892 when he commissioned architect E. L. Angell to design “three
five-story flats” on the property. It
may have been the weakening economy that culminated in the Financial Panic of
1893 that halted the plans; but the project never got off the ground.
The lives of the Luhrs’ working class tenants were often not serene. George Flanagan and his pregnant
wife lived here in 1893. Flanagan was an
engineer (a term equivalent to an apartment maintenance man today) at Waverly
Place and Greene Street. Fond of drink,
he failed to come home for several days that July, prompting his wife to search
for him.
On July 24 she went to his place of employment and found him
passed out, drunk. When she woke him up
and tried to get him to come home, he called a policeman and insisted he
did not know the annoying woman. Officer Seaman
ordered Mrs. Flanagan to leave; but, intent on getting her husband home, she
refused.
Not wanting to use the impolite term “pregnant,” The Evening
World noted “Mrs. Flanagan is in a delicate condition.” The following day the woman appeared at
Police Headquarters complaining “that she had been clubbed yesterday by
Policeman Seaman.” According to Mrs.
Flanagan, when she did not obey his orders, “the policeman kicked her and
struck her with his club.”
According to The Times, she promised that a witness would
give evidence against him at a hearing.
Resident John Cummings, a "truckman," stabled his horses with Lawrence Mulry
at No. 10 Christopher Street at the end of the block. On the night of May 3, 1896 the three-story
stable caught on fire. Hay and other
flammable materials caused the blaze to rage rapidly through the
structure. Before fire fighters could
attack the inferno, August Frederick Winberg who lived in the loft was dead,
two horses were burned to death and two more were so badly injured they had to
be shot. The Times reported the following
day that Cummings’s two horses had been “dragged out, badly burned.”
By 1897 John Laible ran his grocery store at No. 141 Waverly
Place (by now Waverley had lost its second “e”). He would remain here into the first years
of the 20th century.
A disturbing incident occurred in the apartment of the Peter
Dunn family on July 2, 1906. Dunn was
over 70 years old at the time and blind.
His 30-year old son John came home drunk that night; and the New-York
Tribune reported that “He refused to go to bed, and awakened the other members
of the Dunn family by shouting in the flat.”
When Peter tried to reason with his son, “the younger man
reviled his father with taunts and curses.”
Finally John grabbed his blind father by the waist and thrust him out
their third floor window. A policeman
heard Peter’s calls as he hung from the window.
The Tribune reported “The old man clung by his hands until a
policeman broke in the door and clubbed young Dolan [sic] into submission,
taking him to the police station.” Peter
Dunn was rescued and his son was sentenced the following afternoon to six
months on Blackwell’s Island.
But not everything was dreadful in the tenement
apartments. In 1914 The Evening World
held a contest for the “brightest, bonniest, and best” of New York City’s babies. It culminated on Mother-and-Baby Day, June
25, with a Fifth Avenue parade that started at Washington Square. Various organizations and institutions held
their sub-contests to pick entrants; thereby culling down the newspaper’s
otherwise massive amount of submissions.
No. 7 Gay Street resident Mrs. Robert Berry entered her 13-month old son
Robert in the Greenwich Settlement House content. The boy won first prize.
Rather surprisingly Louis C. Luhrs still lived in the family
home in 1933 when he retired from the real estate business. When the Great Depression hit, he had sold his
summer estate, the upstate “farm” formerly owned by popular stage actor Joseph
Jefferson. Now he daily traveled to
Central Park to relax and spend time with “other well-to-do” older men who
gathered there. In 1932 he had told a
reporter from The New York Times that he was pleased that the Park had remained
essentially unchanged since the days when he drove his carriage through its
rambling drives.
In 1948 Louis C. Luhrs died in the bedroom where he had been
born in 1861. When No. 141 and Nos. 5
and 7 Gay Street were sold in October 1955, the buyers K. M. T. Realties
announced “plans for remodeling.” The
old tenement apartments were renovated, resulting in two each on the upper
floors.
Another updating was completed in 1988. However little changed outwardly. Henry Beckell’s 1850s storefront is intact
and the Waverly Place building looks much as it did when Henry Luhrs added the
top two floors in 1860. And on Gay Street,
the magnificent cast iron fire escapes still catch the eye.
photographs by the author
many thanks to Robert Susser for requesting this post
photographs by the author
many thanks to Robert Susser for requesting this post
Good to know more about this block. I have a favorite image of it http://steeber.deviantart.com/art/Waverly-Place-and-Gay-Street-419032680 .
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