In 1899 Edith Shepard and her husband Ernesto Fabbri moved
into a grand mansion at No. 11 East 62nd Street. The house was a gift from Edith’s mother,
Margaret Louisa Vanderbilt Shepard.
The great-granddaughter of
Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt, Edith Shepard Fabbri was expected to entertain
lavishly--and she did not disappoint. And while Edith was busy with her social
routine, Ernesto worked in the financial firm of Drexel, Morgan and served as
president of the Society of Italian Immigrants in New York. Just seven years after moving into the new
house, Fabbri was transferred to Europe by Drexel, Morgan. The couple would live overseas for several
years.
The Fabbris apparently anticipated their
return to American when on November 1912 the Record & Guide reported that
Ernesto Fabbri had purchased a 100-foot wide plot on the north side of 95th
Street, just off Fifth Avenue. The
journal noted a trend in the sale.
Reminding readers that Andrew
Carnegie had purchased the immense lot at the corner of Fifth Avenue and 91st
Street, it added other recent purchasers in this neighborhood included
Judge James W. Gerard, who bought the lot at the corner of Fifth Avenue and 95th
Street; Ogden Codman whose 40-foot wide mansion was under construction on the
north side of 96th Street; and John B. Trever, John H. Hammond, I.
Townsend Burden, James A. Burden, and Mrs. Frederic Branson.
The publication felt that the movement
of millionaires this far north was due to “the increased use of motor cars” and
predicted that “this section of 5th av. Is about to come in for a
great revival of interest.”
Less than two months later the
Fabbris had chosen their architect. The
Record & Guide reported on January 11, 1913 “Mr. Fabbri has arranged with
Grosvenor Atterbury to build a 50-ft house for his use.” While Atterbury’s name appeared on the plans,
he worked closely with Ernesto Fabbri’s architect and interior designer brother,
Egisto Fabbri.
The plans were not prepared until
October that year; with the Fabbris still in Europe. They called for a 40-foot wide “five-story
brick and marble residence” with an estimated cost of $150,000—in the
neighborhood of $3.7 million in 2016.
There seemed to be little rush to
start construction; however the Fabbris’ return to New York was most likely
hastened both by the outbreak of war in Europe in July 1914 and daughter Teresa's rapidly-approaching debut. Nevertheless, the contractor was not chosen
until January 1915.
By now the neighborhood was
filling with costly mansions, including the striking Carhart residence at the
corner of Fifth Avenue. Although Ernesto
sold half of his plot, abutting Marion Carhart’s property, to Goodhue
Livingston, his house never came to be.
The unused lot happily provided unexpected sunlight and air to both the
Carhart and Fabbri mansions.
photo The Living Church, December 18, 1949 |
The Fabbri house was completed
late in 1916—just in time for Teresa Fabbri’s debutante entertainments. Unlike their ornate French confection on East
62nd Street, the new Fabbri mansion was restrained and dignified. The red brick façade was highlighted by white
marble elements. Ernesto Fabbri’s
Italian roots were reflected not only in the architecture, but in the
interiors. The Living Church reported
decades later “The interior of the first and second floors came from the Ducal
Palace in Urbine, Italy.”
The Fabbri crest appears within a stone mantel. photo by Wurts Bros. from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York |
The Fabbri coat of arms featured
a raised arm holding a hammer. It was
repeated in the ironwork of the ornate entry gates and throughout the house,
carved into mantels, and even in the design of the dinnerware. It has been suggested that the L-shape of the
residence reflects the bent arm of the Fabbri crest.
The crest reappears in the design of the iron carriage gates. |
On January 6, 1917 the doors to
the new mansion were thrown open for a lavish dinner dance for Teresa. Among the 300 guests were “the debutantes and
young dancing set, with a sprinkling of young married people and a very few of
the older friends of Mr. and Mrs. Fabbri,” wrote The New York Times.
The wealthy crowd was served
dinner in the dining room, and following the dancing, enjoyed a “seated supper”
at 1:00 in the morning. While they ate, “Hawaiian
musicians sang and played.”
Later that year, on November 21, Ernesto
and Edith announced Theresa’s engagement to James Cameron Clark. Society page readers were reminded of Teresa’s
elite pedigree. “She is a
great-granddaughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. William H. Vanderbilt, a niece of
Mrs. William J. Schieffelin and Mrs. Davd H. Morris, and a grandniece of
William K. Vanderbilt, Mrs. H. McK. Twombly, and Mrs. William D. Sloane,” noted
The New York Times.
James Clark was a graduate of
Harvard and was a lieutenant serving with the aviation section of the Signal
Corps in San Antonio, Texas.
Almost a year to the day
afterward, the New-York Tribune reported on November 17, 1918 that the “stork
visits the Clark home.” In 1918 wealthy
women did not go to hospitals to have their babies; the doctors came to
them. And so with Lt. Clark serving in
the Army Air Service, Teresa’s baby was born in the Fabbri mansion.
Entertainments in the 95th
Street house were often centered around war relief and political causes. On February 8, 1920 The Sun reported “At a
meeting to be held on next Sunday afternoon in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ernesto
Fabbri at 7 East Ninety-fifth street, a scheme for international charitable
effort will be unfolded and a noted priest and orator will be introduced.
The “noted priest and orator” was
Padre Semeria. He lectured on “Dante’s
Ideal of Civilization” as a benefit for the war orphans of southern Italy. Edith also arranged for a “programme of old
Florentine music.”
By now Ernesto’s brother,
Alessandro was living in the house, along with the Fabbris’ staff of 11. The 43-year old had never married and The New
York Herald pointed out that he “made his home with two brothers, Egisto and
Ernesto.” Alessandro’s decision not to
have his own home was not based on financial difficulties or a lack of success.
The Herald described him as “a
pioneer in the use of motion pictures in scientific research.” He developed a microscopic motion picture
process which he demonstrated by recording the growth of life in an egg. During the war he built a large wireless
plant in Maine at his own expense, and then offered it to the Government. The military declined the offer, purchasing
it instead, and hired Alessandro as its head with a staff of several hundred.
Edith was politically
active. On January 15, 1920 James W.
Gerard, former Ambassador to Germany, spoke to about 100 women in the
mansion. He said that “the women of the
country would be the deciding factor in the next Presidential election,” and
added “If you ladies were Senators the League of Nations would be settled in a
week and the treaty agreed on. Women are
more practical than men.”
Three months later, on April 21,
Edith hosted a meeting of the Butler Women’s Committee here. The group endorsed Nicholas Murray Butler, a
name lost in popular history, for President.
Among the wealthy socialites in the group that day were Mrs. Edmund Baylies,
Mrs. Goodhue Livingston, Mrs. Oliver Jennings, Mrs. William Sloane, Mrs. Eliot
Shepard, and Mrs. George Post.
An entertainment of note took
place in the mansion on May 24, 1921.
The Duchesse de Richelieu gave a “song recital” that afternoon for the
benefit of Madame Clemente Bologna, the widow of a recently-deceased voice
teacher. The New York Herald pointed out
“Through her recitals given during the war the Duchesse raised several hundred
thousand dollars for tubercular soldiers of France.”
Alessandro Fabbri died in the 95th
Street house after an illness of just three days on February 6, 1922. The scientist was 45 year old.
Although Ernesto Fabbri was still
living here in 1924, Edith was apparently still in Europe. In February 1923 she obtained a Paris divorce
and “three months later Mr. Fabbri married Miss Mary Valentine Darrah, of
Overbrook, Pa.,” as noted by The New York Times.
On Christmas Day 1924 Prince
Sergio Romanovsky, Duke of Leuchtenberg arrived on the Italian steamship
Duilio. The New York Times noted “The
Prince has come for a visit of two months with Ernesto Fabbri, 7 East
Ninety-fifth Street.”
Edith received the 95th
Street mansion in the divorce settlement and resumed the upscale entertainments here. December 1937 was an especially busy month. On December 18 Edith gave a ball for her
debutante granddaughter Edith Fabbri Clark, deemed by The New York Times to be “one
of the largest debutante parties of the season.” Two days later she hosted a benefit recital
for the Soldiers and Sailors Club of New York on December 20, 1937; and two
days after that, on December 22, she hosted another ball for her debutante grandniece,
Anne Louise Schieffelin.
The New York Times reported “Dancing
took place in the spacious library…on the upper floor, the room having been
converted into a ballroom for the event.”
The writer made special note of the Della Robbia-type garlands of real
fruit which hung from the walls and shelving.
The garlands were “in harmony with the Italian furniture and paintings,
which, throughout the house are mainly of the Renaissance period, although some
of the decoration suggests the Tuscan school.”
The article noted “Mrs. Fabbri’s
house was built a little more than two decades ago, many of the materials of construction,
as well as the furbishments, having been brought from Italy.”
In 1949, at the age of 77 Edith
Shepard Fabbri donated her home to the Episcopal Church of New York “to promote
spiritual retreats.” On December 18 The
Living Church reported on the gift, saying “The house is one of the notable
houses still standing in New York.”
Edith not only donated the mansion, but the artwork and furnishings.
“The library will remain much as
it is,” said the report, “Mrs. Fabbri left many of the books in place. The drawing room will be made into a chapel…The
house has been adapted to the purpose of a retreat house, without in any way
altering its architectural beauty. The
fourth floor has been made into a convent for the Sisters, quite apart from the
rest of the house.”
The article explained “The name,
House of the Redeemer, was chosen because a church once standing in the
neighborhood and attended by Mrs. Fabbri bore that name.”
More than half a century later
the House of the Redeemer continues on in the Fabbri mansion. Its tender maintenance of the structure has
preserved its original appearance.
photographs by the author
That house looks a lot wider than 40 feet - perhaps the 40 feet does not include the large L on the left side towards the back of the mansion.
ReplyDeleteSadly, the Fabbri's summer estate in Bar Harbor was demolished around 1963. This was 16 years after the villa survived the great Bar Harbor fire of 1947, which leveled about half of resort's fabled mansions. It was also an Italian style residence designed, I'm pretty sure, by Atterbury.
Titanic Bill