In 1886 developers Charles Graham & Sons began
construction on a row of six high-stooped houses on East 78th
Street. Steps away from Fifth Avenue and
Central Park, their reserved, four-story stone facades would reflect
the respectable, upscale families who occupy them.
The row was completed in 1887, but it was not until March
1888 that Charles Graham & Sons sold No. 14. On March 17 the Real Estate Record &
Guide reported that Albert G. Morganstern had purchased the 20-foot wide house
for $45,000—in the neighborhood of $1.2 million in 2016.
As was customary, the title to the property was placed in
the name of Morganstern’s wife, Madlon.
A wealthy rubber merchant, Albert was active in charitable causes. He was, for instance, a director of Primrose
House, a branch of the Society to Befriend Working Girls.
In a surprising transaction on October 5 1891, Madlon sold
half of the house to Albert for $22,500.
Possibly, this Albert was the Morganstern’s adult son; although the absence of
the designation of “Jr.” or “Sr.” in the paperwork makes it
a mystery.
Madlon Morganstern died in 1908 at the age of 69. Her funeral was held in the 78th
Street house on Tuesday morning, February 4 at 9:30 a.m. Albert stayed on for another nine years
before selling it in July 1917 to banker Andrew J. Miller for $70,000.
In the 30 years Morganstern had lived in the house, the
block had changed. Vintage, high-stooped
rowhouses were being demolished or transformed as even wealthier New Yorkers
moved into the neighborhood. Now, directly
across the street from the Morganstern house was the magnificent, five-year old
free-standing palace of James B. Duke. In
reporting on the sale of No. 14, the Record & Guide pointed out “The
building may be demolished and a residence of the English basement type erected
by the buyer for his own occupancy.”
As Albert Morganstern had done, Miller put the property in
the name of his wife, Grace Saunders Miller. Two months after the sale he commissioned
architect Harry Allen Jacobs to design a “5-story brick and stone dwelling”
with a projected price of $50,000. The
Real Estate Record & Guide predicted it would be a “handsome private
residence.” And the journal was right.
The completed mansion was a dignified—nearly austere—modern take
on the Italian Renaissance. Above the
centered, arched entrance was the home’s most distinctive feature; a deeply
recessed set of French doors fronted by two richly-veined Ionic columns. An unembellished set of grouped,
diamond-paned openings were at the third floor; while one story above three
delicate bas-relief panels were separated by the two windows. Above the limestone cornice was a sloping
roof of deep red Italian tiles.
Born in Washington DC, Andrew J. Miller was graduated from
Georgetown University in 1888 and arrived in New York in 1897. He was a member of the banking firm Boissevain
& Co. and a director, along with millionaires William Rockefeller and Henry
Huddleston Rogers, of the Anaconda Copper Mining Company.
The 50-year old banker and his wife had one daughter,
Frances. As was often the case with the
wives and daughters of wealthy men, Grace and Frances sometimes left Andrew in
New York conducting business while they traveled. And so Andrew spent Christmas alone with his
servants in 1920 while the female two-thirds of the family spent the holidays
with Grace’s mother in Cleveland.
Nevertheless, more often than not, the family traveled
together. In March 1923 they went to the
fashionable resort of Hot Spring, Virginia.
The New York Times noted that Frances “is attending the Farmington
School and is on her Easter vacation.”
They were back that fall and on September 5 a local newspaper reported
that “Mr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Miller of New York gave a riding party yesterday
afternoon for their daughter.” The article
noted “Mr. and Mrs. Miller and their guests rode over Cole’s Mountain and
through the jungles of the Jackson River, and on their return had dinner at
Valley View.”
Frances’s education continued in France where she attended
finishing school. She returned for the
winter season of 1924 in time for her coming out entertainments. Andrew and Grace threw a “large dinner party”
on the night of December 20 at Pierre’s.
The young men and women who dined and danced that evening included the
cream of young society. The guest list
included names like Dodge, McAlpin, Bouvier, Gould, Cushing and Bostwick.
By 1930 the Millers had moved to No. 53 East 70th
Street. The 78th Street
mansion became home to the John Nickerson family. That spring Mrs. Nickerson hosted a series of
lectures on municipal hospitals in the house.
Their residency would not be long-lasting, however. In 1931 they sailed for Europe and in July
1932 leased the house to Hicks Arnold Weatherbee for three years. The New York Times noted at the time that
Nickerson “is abroad and upon his return will occupy the house.”
Weatherbee was the grandson of James M. Constable and the
great grandson of Aaron Arnold, founder of the Arnold, Constable & Co.
department store. Born in 1885 he was
educated at the exclusive Andover Academy, at Yale University, and the New York
Law School. Despite his legal education,
he joined Arnold, Constable & Co. in 1912 and three years later became its
president. It was under Weatherbee that
the firm moved to its Fifth Avenue and 40th Street location. Following World War I the department store
was sold and Weatherbee founded Weatherbee & Co., a dry goods business.
On January 5, 1934 Margaret Kip Weatherbee was in
Philadelphia visiting relatives. In her
absence Hicks took the opportunity to have a pair of her diamond earrings
repaired. When he opened the safe where
they were kept, he found them missing.
Hicks telephoned his wife who confirmed she had not taken the “ear
pendants” with her. He hung up the phone
and called police.
Not only were the earrings missing, but so too were a pearl
necklace and several rings—a haul of $10,000.
The following day The New York Times reported “Three servants were
questioned, but detectives said they had not been able to determine how the
jewelry was removed from the compartment.”
The Weatherbees’ lease expired in 1935; but the Nickersons
by now had decided to remain in Europe.
In May that year they sold No. 14 East 78th Street to their
tenants for $78,000. The title was
transferred to Margaret Kip Weatherbee, Inc.
On August 1, 1940 Hicks and Margaret traveled to California
on vacation. Less than two weeks later,
on August 12, Weatherbee became ill.
When his condition worsened he was admitted to the Good Samaritan
Hospital in Los Angeles on Tuesday the 20th. He died there of acute pneumonia three days
later at the age of 54.
Childless, the bulk of Weatherbee’s estate went to
Margaret. His will also directed that
she distribute $25,000 at her discretion among the household servants and his
employees.
Unlike so many of the splendid private homes in the
neighborhood, No. 14 remained a single-family residence until 1983 when it was
acquired by New York University for its Institute of Fine Arts, which already occupied
the Duke Mansion across the street.
Called the Stephen Case House, the university described the function of
the new facility as “teaching and research in art conservation.”
Upon its opening The New York Times noted on October 2, 1893
“While more space, skylights and terraces were added, the 19th-century
façade was preserved.” The newspaper may
have gotten the century wrong, but indeed the façade remained untouched. A highly unusual example of the architectural
style, the structure appears much as it did when the Miller family
moved in in 1918.
photographs by the author
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