Breaks in the cornice define the four original houses. |
In the first decades of the 19th century the land
north of 14th Street was being transformed. The country estate of Clement Moore, “Chelsea,”
and the farm of George Rapelje, the southern boundary of which was around 16th
Street, for instance, saw the laying of streets and avenues and the erection
of private homes.
By the mid 1850s a striking row of speculative homes was
completed at Nos. 180 through 186 West 21st Street (later renumbered 256 to 262), between Seventh
and Eighth Avenues. Their
Ango-Italianate design was the cutting-edge in residential architecture; and
the commodious three-bay wide homes, five stories tall, were intended for moneyed
occupants. Clad in brownstone, they sat
upon two-story bases. Rows of architrave
openings lined up in a regimented order until No. 186 broke ranks with a jutting
angled bay.
By 1862 No. 180 was home to a “Mrs. Lawlin.” When Abby Jane Creemer, the widow of Francis
W. Creemer, died at 2:00 on the morning of Friday, July 11, 1862, Mrs. Lawlin
stepped in to offer her home for the funeral the following day at 1:00.
Mrs. Lawlin was soon gone from No. 180. In her place was Charles Pope, Sr., who was less well-known than his famous
son, Charles Pope, Jr.. The
New York Times deemed the actor “well esteemed” on November 21, 1864.
At the time of the newspaper’s comment, the Leonard family
was living two doors away at No. 184. As the family
prepared to close the house for the summer in 1864 one of the servants looked
for a new position. On May 24 an
advertisement appeared in The New York Herald: “Wanted—A situation as
chambermaid and waitress or nurse, by a capable girl; will go in the
country. Can be seen at her present
employer’s who will give three years’ recommendation.”
As the season drew to a close Mrs. Leonard began her search
for a replacement. On August 25 her ad
appeared. “Wanted—A girl to do general
housework; a German or Protestant preferred; must be a good washer and ironer,
and come well recommended.”
The Civil War soon disrupted the family routine at No.
184. In March 1865 A. H. Leonard was
inducted into the Union Army.
The Leonard family was followed in the house by A. A. Hall,
his wife, Eleanor, and their daughter Mary Kate. Tragedy struck on Sunday, July 14, 1867 when
9-year old Mary Kate died of gastritis.
Her funeral was held in the house the following Wednesday.
In 1865 West 21st Street was
renumbered. The row of houses now bore
the addresses of Nos. 256 through 262.
It would not be long before even greater change came to the residences.
The year following Mary Kate Hall’s death No. 260 (formerly
No. 184) was being operated as a boarding house. On May 27, 1868 an advertisement in The New
York Herald offered “Elegant front room, with hot and cold water, large
pantries, &c., to let to gentleman and wife or single gentlemen. Terms moderate.”
Maintaining a reputable boarding house required a staff and
on April 6, 1869 another ad sought “Two good girls; one to do washing and
ironing and assist in cooking; the other as chambermaid and waitress. Apply at 260 West 21st st.”
It would appear that not every one of the tenants at No. 260
was impeccably respectable. On Tuesday,
December 8, 1875 Patrick McGagney was arrested and “held to answer for pointing
a loaded pistol at Gesene Marshall…with felonious intent.”
A boarder in No. 262 was involved in a late night incident
in Central Park on Friday May 12, 1877. Why
Ferdinand Imhorst was there that night is unclear; but police routinely
contended with a problem which was succinctly described by The New York Herald:
“A number of idle and bad characters frequent the bridges in the Park after
nightfall.”
That night Officer Russell had driven several men from one
of the bridges. When he came back on his
rounds, he saw a man “who appeared to be one of the crowd, return.” The night was so dark, according to the
newspaper and “apprehensive of assault,” Russell grabbed Ferdinand Imhorst from
behind.
Imhorst, apparently believing it was he who was being
assaulted, responded by landing several punches on the officer’s face. When Officer Russell pulled his club and hit
Imhorst over the head, his prisoner cried out “Police!”
“Why, I’m a policeman,” said Russell.
“The devil you are!” replied Imhorst.
The Herald reported “There was an attempt at explanation,
but it resulted in the citizen being brought to the Fifty-seventh Street Court
yesterday.” The policeman charged
Imhorst of assault and he, in turn, filed a complaint against Russell.
In January 1888 Margaret.
Mahoney, who ran the boarding house at No. 260, took in 50-year old Richard B.
Carter, a former sailor. She could not
have imagined the drama that would follow.
Carter had taken a furnished room at No. 477 West 22nd
Street in the autumn of 1887. His
landlady was Teresa Adams, the widow of George Adams of Salem,
Massachusetts. Telling Mrs. Adams that
he was a widower, he courted her. The quick romance resulted in their marriage on December 14. The New York Times later noted “Carter soon
changed from a meek, industrious suitor to a domestic bully, and would not even
look for employment. He was constantly
grumbling at her because she would not let him control her little fortune.”
The domestic problems boiled over in January, just six weeks
after the wedding. A young woman with a
baby in her arms appeared at the boarding house and claimed to be Mrs. Richard
B. Carter. The Times reported “The
incident provoked a serious family dispute and Carter went to board at Mrs.
Margaret Mahoney’s.” His domestic abuse,
however, continued, in the form of stalking and threats.
The New York Times wrote “He there entered on a campaign of
annoyance and bullying by letter, waylaid his wife in the street, and then had
recourse to cajoling and piteous appeals for a reconciliation.”
In the meantime, Teresa Adams discovered she was not merely
the victim of bigamy—the woman who appeared at her doorstep in January was not
the only other wife. She found out
Carter had a wife in Valparaiso and one in Jamaica.
Richard Carter disappeared from Mrs. Mahoney’s boarding
house for a period, and then reappeared toward the end of June 1888. The stalking began again; and on Tuesday
night July 10 he confronted Teresa on the street, abusing and threatening her “so
violently that she took refuge in a neighboring house.”
Two days later he sent Teresa a “civilly worded” message
asking her to meet him at 5:00 at 23rd Street and Sixth Avenue to “talk
over their differences.” The two met,
but the conversation did not go as Carter had hoped. A witness saw them at 5:15 on West 22nd
Street walking rapidly and “conversing earnestly rather than excitedly.”
Suddenly Carter pulled out a 32-calibre handgun and fired it
at Teresa. She screamed and ran towards
Sixth Avenue. Carter fired again, this
time missing. The astonished witness reported
that Carter then pointed the weapon to his right temple “and he fell insensible on
the sidewalk.”
Teresa had run into McLaughlin’s stable at No. 106 West 22nd
Street where Dr. A. B. Tucker, whose office was on the same block, examined
her. The bullet had been stopped by her
whalebone corset. Richard Clark was far less lucky. He was taken to New-York Hospital where he
died at 7:35 that evening.
Margaret Mahoney operated her boarding house to accommodate her
working tenants. On January 16, 1889 she
advertised “A large and small room to let, with excellent board; table boarders accommodated;
meals to suit business hours.”
Ella Goodacker boarded in No. 260 in 1893 with her husband, a speculator in horses, and their baby. When Goodacker left for Philadelphia on business in March, Ella’s
mother, Mrs. Lemline, came for a visit. During her stay, Ella received news that her
brother, Jack Lemline, had committed suicide in a Jersey City hotel.
In his room was a letter from Ella dated December 7, 1892
inviting him to visit and saying he “will be surprised to see how big the baby
is.” Despite the seemingly warm
invitation, Ella was not overcome with grief at the news of her brother’s
death.
She told an Evening World reported “that he was a shiftless
fellow, who had been driven from home by his father when he was sixteen years
old.” The World reported “She expressed
no sorrow at her brother’s act, but said coldly that she had not seen him in
months.” She was more sympathetic with her
mother, of course, and had not yet told her about the suicide.
A few months later the proprietor of No. 260 was looking for
help. Her ad on May 11 read “Wanted, a
girl to wait on table and assist with chamberwork in private boarding-house.” The potential servant would earn $12 per week—about
$325 in 2016 terms.
In the meantime, the other houses in the row were also boarding
houses by now. In June 1893 No. 262 offered “Elegant large and small rooms to let, with excellent board; terms
moderate.” Their once upscale tone was
much less so as the 19th century became the 20th.
Among the boarders at No. 258 West 21st Street in
1904 were Frederick J Wyle and William J. O’Donnell. On the evening of May 3 they sat down to a
dinner of prunes and hash. Wyle
watched, offended, as his landlady dished out “the choicest prunes and the most
appetizing portions of hash” to O’Donnell.
Irate that O’Donnell received preferential treatment; Wyle stormed from the table
and went outside.
There he fumed until he scratched a note and gave it to a
passing boy to take inside to O’Donnell.
It said that Wyle needed to speak to him. When O’Donnell walked out, a fistfight ensued
during which Wylie produced a jackknife and stabbed O’Donnell five times in the
back.
According to The New York Times the following day, at the
station house Frederick Wyle explained to police “that O’Donnell was served
with an especially sumptuous supper, while he had to be satisfied with scraps.”
And so it continued for the four formerly-elegant
homes. In 1922 Ray Monohan was living at
No. 256 when he was arrested for Prohibition violations; and three years later,
on April 22, 1925, the landlady, Mrs. James Forbes called police concerned
about the welfare of 50-year old widow Emily McGuiness. Mrs. Forbes had noticed Emily “was not well”
the day before and brought her a cup of tea.
She now appeared so sick that she felt help was needed.
Indeed it was.
Patrolman James McKenna called Dr. Jaeger of the New York Hospital, who
diagnosed Emily as “suffering from starvation.”
Despite the alarming diagnosis, The New York Times reported “he did not
take her to the hospital, but made arrangements for notifying the Department of
Charities.”
The family of Philias La Chance was living
at No. 262 in 1928. With La Chance and his 33-year
old wife were their three sons, five-year old Arthur, two-year old Philias,
and John who was just one year old.
Life was hard for the family, especially when Philias lost his job that
year and could not find employment.
Driven to desperation, on the afternoon of September 21 his anxious
wife dissolved moth balls in hot water and flavored it with cologne, then drank
the poisonous blend. “She fell to the
floor screaming,” reported The New York Times.
Her suicide attempt was thwarted at the New York Hospital when Dr. Baker
was successful in reviving her.
During the 1870s and ‘80s operatic prima donna Mme. Caterina
Marco was, according to The New York Times decades later, “the toast of Europe
and America.” After a brilliant career
which included being the leading singer at the Imperial Theatre in St.
Petersburg, she retired. The Times noted
“In later years the earnings of her operatic career dwindled to almost nothing”
and by the early 1930s the destitute former star “resided in a cold-water flat
at 260 West Twenty-first Street.”
Even this became too costly for Mme. Marco and around 1934
she moved to a furnished room on West 23rd Street where she died penniless at the age of
83 on February 3, 1936.
That year artist Archibald McKeown was rooming at No. 256
West 21st Street. He ran into
problems when he set up his work at Washington Square’s ninth annual outdoor
art exhibition on May 29, 1936. Two tax
collectors arrived in the park on June 7, the last day of the show, to collect
the city sales tax.
While other artists begrudgingly forked over the levied
amounts, McKeown refused. The artist who
called his pictures “the world’s cleanest paintings,” countered that “he had
paid his taxes when he bought his materials.”
The tax collectors did not agree with his argument and ordered him to
report to the central office.
In 1967 Nos. 256 and 258 were combined, resulting in four
apartments per floor. The following year
Nos. 260 and 262 were similarly converted to a single apartment building. Other than the joint ground floor entrances
and replacement windows, the handsome row retains its pre-Civil War integrity. Their colorful stories are a fascinating
archive of the chapters in the ever-changing Chelsea neighborhood.
photographs by the author
many thanks to Burt Schein for requesting this post
photographs by the author
many thanks to Burt Schein for requesting this post
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