Involved in the aggressive and sometimes ruthless real
estate development business in 19th century New York were, somewhat
surprisingly, a few women. Among them
was Sarah J. Doying. She had been
wheeling and dealing for several years, sometimes reducing her costs by acting
as her own contractor.
In May 1886 Sarah embarked on one of her most ambitious
projects. She commissioned the
architectural firm of Hubert & Pirsson to simultaneously design six
five-story brick “tenement buildings” on Ninth Avenue (later renamed Columbus
Ave this far north), three houses around the corner on West 69th
Street, and three more houses directly behind those, on West 70th.
The West 70th Street residences, Nos. 60 through
64, were completed in 1887 at a cost of $10,000 each (nearly $260,000 in 2016). The high-end four story Queen Anne houses
were the latest in architectural style.
The basement and parlor levels were faced in brownstone, while the
middle floors were clad in red brick.
Steep fish-scale shingled mansards with full-floor cast metal dormers
capped the structures.
As many of the architects working on the Upper West Side at
the time were doing, Hubert & Pirsson designed the homes to be
architecturally individual; yet to work together as a whole. Nos. 60 and 64 balanced one another with
matching second floor bays; while the projecting bay of No. 62 was a floor
above. It morphed into a handsome
balcony for the attic story. The
architects playfully turned the chimneys of the end homes sideways, using their
wide sides as architectural bookends.
Like Sarah Doying,
Josephine Peyton was a force in the real estate business. While she owned and operated much Manhattan
property (in 1886 she advertised for lease No. 303 Fifth Avenue, “One of the
handsomest stores on the avenue…having three magnificent show rooms.”) she
amassed vast real estate in the Bronx.
Josephine was the daughter of John B. Walton, who started
his business career as the owner of a crockery shop, but made a fortune in real
estate speculation. When she was 21
years old, in 1861, she married real estate investor George W. Sherman. They had one child, Mabel. Through her exposure to her father’s and
husband’s businesses, Josephine learned the real estate business.
When John Walton died in 1875, Josephine inherited $500,000. That enormous amount was increased when she
inherited “a good deal of money” from her mother, who died in 1881. And when George Sherman died, her fortune
grew to about $2 million.
By the time Josephine purchased No. 60 West 70th
Street in 1892, she had remarried. William
K. Peyton had originally operated a dry goods story; but he too turned to real
estate, which is how he and Josephine met.
Now Peyton focused on managing Josephine’s lower Manhattan interests,
including the Jackson Flats on 13th Street and Greenwich Avenue, and
a block of houses on Bleecker Street.
Despite her enormous wealth and her “fine house in
Seventieth Street,” as described by The New York Times; Josephine Peyton lived
relatively simply. She owned one horse
and one carriage, and preferred to use the street cars to get around town. The Times described her saying “She dressed
very plainly, and was shrinking in her manner.
She had black hair, and her figure was slim. She was brisk in her movements.”
Her pastor, the Rev. Alfred W. Hodder of the 16th
Street Baptist Church called her “a very able business woman of great prudence,
foresight, and executive ability. She
was as extensively traveled as any woman I know. There is hardly a foot of the United States
that she and her accomplished daughter did not explore. She was very fond of traveling. She was a woman of exalted character.”
She was also, as was later discovered, a woman not to cross. On September 19, 1894 she sat down with her
lawyer and revised her will. Less than
two months later, on November 7, she died.
When Josephine’s will was probated a week later, jaws
dropped throughout Manhattan and, in fact, the entire nation. A headline in the Los Angeles Herald on
November 16 read “An Undeserving Husband,” and a corresponding headline in The
Times was “Naught for Her Husband.”
The New York Times article began “Of the estate of
$3,000,000 left by Mrs. Josephine L. Peyton, not one penny goes to her husband,
William K. Peyton.” Josephine had
quietly disinherited her apparently adulterous husband; explaining in her will “Inasmuch
as my husband, William K. Peyton, has not acted in a manner befitting a
husband.” No one, it seemed, was more
surprised and shocked than Peyton.
Josephine also managed to evict Peyton from the 70th
Street house. The executors’ sale
auction on Wednesday, February 20, 1895 not only included the residence; but
the furnishings. The auction
advertisement offered “The elegant four-story high-stoop brownstone private
resident, with three-story extension; exquisitely decorationed; gas fixtures,
gas-logs, and in perfect order.”
In the meantime, Peyton wasted no time in protesting the
will. On November 26, 1894, ten days
after it was probated, he filed “formal objections to the probate of the will
and notice of contest.” He insisted that
the codicils were not part of Josephine’s will, and “that if she executed them
she did so under undue influence, and that her signature was procured by fraud.”
The case dragged on until January 1899. A settlement was reached whereby $10,000 of
Josephine’s fortune was invested by trustees and William Peyton received the
income for five years “or until his earlier death.”
In the meantime, with startling coincidence, Nos. 62 and 64
were owned by real estate operator Ella Webster. A
widow, Ella moved into No. 64 and leased the adjoining house. For several years in the early 1890s the
upscale residents of the block were plagued by mischievous teens who made
coming and going from their homes a challenge.
And their favorite target was Ella Webster,
The New York Times told its readers about of them, 14-year
old Phineass Fairman, saying he “has, according to the stories of the
neighbors, devoted his best time and talents to making things lively for
them. In this he was aided and abetted
by a number of other youths, and that they succeeded admirably in keeping
things moving along the upper west side.”
The Times said “among the people with whom Master Fairman
devoted himself with special care was Mrs. Ella Webster, a wealthy widow of 64
West Seventieth Street…Whether it was that the opulence of Mrs. Webster, who
owned almost the entire block of houses from Sixty-ninth to Seventieth Street
in Columbus Avenue, specially roused the young gentleman’s resentment, or that
he was opposed to her from cardinal principles because her deceased husband had
made his money as a slaughterer of hogs, does not appear.”
Whatever the reason, the boys “pursued her with the most persevering
industry.” They would wait for callers
to visit Ella, and then “bombard her and her callers with various forms of the
lower order of animal life. Lobsters at
a particularly ripe and gamy stage, rats, similarly conditioned, &c., were
hurled at her front door until her friends were almost afraid to visit her.”
Finally, on July 13, 1891 Ella had enough. Her sister called on her that day and she was
pelted with a rotten lobster. When it
smashed on her dress, the odor of the decaying corpse and the stain were
irreparable. Ella stormed off to the
police court to have Phineass Fairman arrested.
The following day the teen promised to reveal the name of
the ringleader of his gang, and was released.
Quite surprisingly, nearly two years later Phineass and Ella were back
in court. The boy’s father, Gibson W.
Fairman, had filed a $3,000 suit against her for “false imprisonment and
malicious arrest” of his son.
The Times informed its readers that it was Phineass who,
with his gang, had repeatedly soiled the garments of Ella Webster’s
visitors. When her maid would clean the
items and hang them out to air in the yard, “Phineass and his friends would get
on the fence and almost drive the maid off with language and actions that the
witness could hardly hint at.”
Justice came swiftly.
“On the testimony the jury found for the defendant within two minutes
after they left their seats.”
By the time of the trial, Ella had recently remarried. Her new husband, Theodore Conkling, was a woolens
manufacturer on West 23rd Street.
She left West 70th Street; but would be back before many
years. Ella left Theodore because of “her
husband’s alleged intemperance” and in November 1899 they were divorced.
When Ella moved out of No. 64 it became home to Lavinia H.
Dempsey. The unmarried woman was a
member of Holland Dames and in January 1898 she was scheduled to become Queen
of the New York chapter at a ball. But dissension over the function prompted The United States Army and Navy Journal
to write, on October 2, 1897, “The tendency to division among societies
representing historic ancestry is something lamentable.”
The comment was in response to a notice from Carrie H.
Lupton, Queen of the Connecticut Holland Dames, who said they “are not in
sympathy with the New York society” and “will never recognize any of their
social functions.” The Connecticut branch refused to participate in Lavinia’s
coronation. The Journal remarked “This
is very sad.”
Following Ella Conkling’s divorce, she moved into No. 62,
next door to her former home. She was
expecting friends on the night of March 14, 1901, so when the doorbell rang she
answered it personally. Instead of her
expected guests, it was Theodore Conkling and he was drunk. She tried to slam the door on him, but he was
too quick and entered the foyer.
Conkling grabbed his former wife by the throat and a
struggle ensued. Luckily for Ella, just
as Conkling drew his revolver, her attorney, Mark M. Schlessinger, and his brother,
Edward, came through the open door.
The lawyer joined in the fray while his brother ran for
help. He found Policeman Owen McKenna at
the corner of Columbus Avenue. “There’s
a man in here with a gun, and he’s liable to shoot it,” he shouted.
The policeman rushed into the house to find Schlessinger
holding Conkling down. Schlessinger told
him that Conkling had threatened to “annihilate” everyone in the house. The Times reported “At this point Mrs.
Conkling appeared. She corroborated this
allegation. Her clothing was torn and
several bruises on her neck were visible.”
Everyone was taken to the West 86th Street police
station. Theodore Conkling explained to
the police that “his call on his ex-wife had been purely social, and that she
had knocked him down and assaulted him.”
He added that “he had not threatened her.”
By the end of World War I all three houses were being
operated as boarding houses or as furnished rooms. On February 10, 1920 an advertisement in the
New-York Tribune offered “neat, comfortable room, suitable for two, $9 weekly”
in No. 60.
Residents of furnished rooms were not always respectable. In 1934 two 19-year old
girls roomed in No. 60. Grace Perry and
Bobby Essex worked as “taxi dancers” at the Gem Dance Hall at No. 88 Columbus Avenue,
near 64th Street. Taxi
dancers were hired to dance with customers on a dance-by-dance basis. Upon entering the clubs, male patrons would
buy dance tickets, usually for ten cents each (memorialized in the popular 1931
song “Ten Cents a Dance”).
On Friday evening, March 11 that year 28-year old Armedo P.
Lopez entered the club. Lopez was a
chauffeur and throughout the night he danced with both girls. The following morning his body was found in
the hallway of No. 60 West 70th Street. He had been fatally shot.
The girls admitted they had danced with the victim the night
before, but said they knew nothing about how his body came to be in the hallway
where they lived. In requesting $1,500
bail for each, Assistant District Attorney Saul Price told Judge Freschi “he
did not believe the women were telling all they knew about Lopez’s death.” The judge thought that was a reasonable
assumption.
Nos. 62 and 64 were suffering neglect around this time. Around 1937 they were boarded up and remained
vacant for three years. Then in 1940 a $35,000
remodeling by architect Samuel Hertz was completed that resulted in 36 one-room
“suites.” As was common at the time, the
stoops were removed and the entrances moved to below street level in the former
basements. That same year No. 60 was
renovated to furnished rooms and its stoop removed as well.
The start contrast between the early days of the row, when
millionaire businesswomen lived in the homes, and the 1940s when single rooms
were rented on a weekly or daily basis, was exemplified on February 24, 1943. Philip Stein, 34 years old, lived in No. 64
with his “common-law wife,” 23-year old dancer Sandra Stein.
Stein was a drug dealer known on the street as “Flip.” He and Sandra were spotted in Midtown by
detectives that night after a tip reported that he had been “peddling narcotics.” They followed the couple to a Broadway
theater and detained them, accusing Stein of using a counterfeit bill to buy
the tickets. It was a clever ploy to get
inside their 70th Street room.
Philip Stein pulled $275 in cash from his pocket to prove
his money was genuine. The detectives
then “dared him to leave them to his apartment to convince them he had no
counterfeit money there,” said The New York Times the following day. Apparently not the brightest drug dealer in
town, Stein fell for the trick. Both he
and Sandra were arrested when a large quantity of narcotics was found in their
room.
Another tenant brought publicity to No. 64 in 1961 after
Paige Mallory gave her 35-pound pet monkey, Barney, a bath on July 8. As the woman dried him off, he escaped from
his collar and fled out the window.
Police were called, but despite all efforts the beast escaped over the
fence.
Down the block, at No. 50 West 70th Street, Mrs.
Sadie Cohn and her five-year old son, Joel, were in the backyard when Barney
showed up. Finding the monkey’s antics
amusing, Mrs. Cohn brought him a banana.
After he ate it, he jumped onto the boy, scratching him in the arms and
shoulders.
Surprising to readers more than half a century later, The
Times reported “A patrolman helped subdue the animal and returned it to Miss
Mallory.”
All three of the houses of the Queen Anne row were renovated
to apartments in 1993. The architect for
No. 60, Kenneth Halpern, recreated the missing stoop, using Hubert &
Pirsson’s surviving houses on 69th Street as models. Despite the still-missing stoops and grossly
out-of-period entrances on the other homes, the group retains its charm. And the histories of the three houses are inextricably
bound to three extraordinary pioneering businesswomen.
photographs by the author
its nice post.
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