Don Alonzo Cushman traced his roots
in America to Robert Cushman who landed in Plymouth on the Fortune in
1621. By 1792 when Don Alonzo was born, the family worked a farm in
upstate New York. But farm life did not play a part in the ambitious boy’s
plans.
He traveled to New York City to
find his fortune. By the time the 23-year old married in 1815 his dry
goods business on Pearl Street was a success. He moved to Greenwich
Village, where he eventually became acquainted with Clement Clarke Moore and
real estate operator James N. Wells.
Moore’s family estate, Chelsea,
north of Greenwich Village had been doomed as a bucolic retreat since the 1811
Commissioners’ Plan laid out on paper the regimented grid of streets and
avenues above 14th Street. Early on James Wells worked
hand-in-hand with Moore to develop Chelsea as a residential neighborhood.
Don Alonzo Cushman recognized
Chelsea as an up-and-coming neighborhood. In 1833 he bought property
on Ninth Avenue between 20th and 21st Streets and
constructed a commodious home for his family within a spacious garden.
After helping found the Greenwich Savings Bank, he gave up his dry
goods business altogether and focused on real estate and banking. In 1839
he began his most memorable project—the string of elegant Greek Revival homes
on West 20th Street between Ninth and Tenth Avenues that would
become known as Cushman Row.
Cushman embarked on a less ambitious
project four years later when he erected the double store-and-residential
building at Nos. 161-163 Ninth Avenue, between 19th and 20th
Streets. Each shop owner and his family
would live above his store in the three-story, two-bay wide residential space. The relatively-new Greek Revival style had
done away with the peaked roof and dormers of the Federal style, providing a
full-height attic floor.
As early as 1852 Samuel P. Armstrong
lived in No. 163. A house painter, he
ran his business, Armstrong & Vanbramer, from the shop. Starting around 1855 it was also used as the
neighborhood polling place each year. In
1865 the polling spot was identified as the “furniture-store” at No. 163;
referring to Martin Furey’s cabinet making business which had taken over the
space.
By the 1870s both addresses had
become multi-family homes. In 1876
Elizabeth Fraser lived upstairs in No. 161 and ran her “variety” store in the
shop. City directories listed her as “widow
of John.” Also living in No. 161 was
David C. Munson, a carpenter; Charles H. Putnam, a “truckman;” and Edward Adams
who earned his living as a clerk.
Next door, by 1872, Samuel Hanna had
established his neighborhood bakery in No. 163.
Among the residents upstairs were Janet Bowden, “widow of Thomas,” and
her son, Thomas E. Bowden. By 1876 William
Knapp, who moved in upstairs, had taken over Samuel Hanna’s bakery
business. He appears to have had only
one employee in the tiny bakery, George A. Bellows. By now Thomas Bowden had secured a job,
listing himself in directories as “segarmaker.”
A recent
arrival in New York City was Samuel Bath Thomas, who arrived in 1874. Along with his personal effects, he brought
his most valuable possession—a muffin recipe.
Thomas’s muffin was totally unlike anything Americans were
accustomed to and it would lead to his fortune in his new country.
In 1880
Thomas took over the bakery at No. 163 from George Knapp. He sold only to commercial establishments, advertising delivery “to
hotels and restaurants by pushcart.”
Before long Thomas’s English muffins were a tremendous success,
prompting Thomas to open a branch bakery around the corner at No. 337 West20th Street.
Working in
Samuel Thomas’s small, hot bakery may
not have been the best of jobs. In 1900
a State inspection listed three male employees at No. 163, each working an
average of 72 hours per week.
By now the
store at No. 161 was home to M. Voight & Sons, “bellhangers,” who nebulously
described their work as “electric work, bell hanging, etc.”
In the
crowded rooms upstairs in No. 161 in 1903 lived 44-year old Mary Herrol her
husband and their six children. When
Mary learned she had an incurable disease in January that year, she became
depressed. On Saturday night, January
31, she slashed her throat with a table knife.
She died in Roosevelt Hospital the following Tuesday.
More than
a little excitement occurred at No. 161 in 1910. The Chelsea neighborhood had been plagued
for weeks by what newspapers dubbed the “dumbwaiter burglars.” Early on the morning of November 9 three
detectives from the 20th Street Station House followed three
suspicious characters who disappeared into No. 161.
Ironically,
the rooms they broke into belonged to Patrolman Henry Bauersmith and his wife
and family, who were away. The thieves,
Joseph Carroll, James Edwards and Joseph Franks, headed out of the apartment
after about 20 minutes, “carrying a suit case that seemed to be heavy,”
according to The New York Times the following day.
The
New-York Tribune reported “When told to throw up their hands by Detectives
Young and Brown, the burglars fired six shots in reply. The noise brought Patrolman Callahan and
Dwyer…and the burglars were overpowered and arrested.” The thugs were later tied not only to a
string of burglaries, but to a recent murder.
Twelve
years later another notorious burglar would not be ransacking No. 161; but
living there. John Haughey had a record of 13 arrests and
prior burglary convictions in 1922. The
Evening World said “He has been placed on probation twice, twice has received
suspended sentences, one for violation of parole, and has been tried for
homicide and discharged.”
In January
that year Haughey was wanted on charges of assault and robbery, after he and two
cohorts beat and robbed jeweler Charles Niehauser on January 4 in his West 83rd
Street shop. On January 9 he proved that
he was not only dangerous, but stupid.
That day
one of the gang’s followers was on trial for burglary in Brooklyn County Court. John Haughery and his two accomplices showed
up in court to watch the trial. They
left the courtroom in handcuffs.
1922 was a
much happier year for Edward A. Wilson, who also lived at No. 161. When he entered a contest in The Evening
World in October, he won the “Special Prize”—a new Ford motorcar. (It was a much grander prize than the next
place prize of $25.)
In the
1960s Nos. 161-163 were given a make-over that replaced the 19th
century storefronts with blank walls during a conversion to apartments. The misguided owners made alterations which drew
enraged comments from the Landmarks Preservation Commission in 1970. “Expert guidance could have aided the owner
in producing a more appropriate design than that which combines a
pseudo-mansard roof with splayed Georgian lintels and a Mediterranean style
entrance door.”
Later
owners may have read that blistering critique.
The entrance gained a reproduction Greek Revival enframement which,
while it would be more appropriate in a high-stooped row house, is at least a
sympathetic effort.
In the
meantime, that the little building which introduced Americans to the English
muffin survives at all after nearly 175 years on bustling Ninth Avenue is
amazing.
photographs by the author
There is no better English muffin than a Thomas English Muffin.
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