In 1705 Queen Anne deeded an immense tract of land north of
New York City to Trinity Church.
Stretching from Fulton Street to Christopher Street in Greenwich
Village, and along the Hudson River east to about Broadway, it became
familiarly known as Trinity Farm.
Initially the church leased large plots mainly to farmers; but as the
city inched northward, streets were laid out and houses, then commercial
properties were erected.
In 1860 the church leased the plot of land at what was now
No 110 Reade Street, between Church and West Broadway, to furniture designer
and manufacturer Alexander Roux. The
five-story Italianate structure, completed the following year, was emblematic
of Roux’s wide-spread reputation for creating the best and most lavish.
He and his greatest and (only true) rival John Henry Belter
manufactured the most expensive and elaborate Victorian furnishings of the
day. Their complex Rococo Revival suites
decorated America’s grandest mansions and Roux’s intricate pieces were
especially favored in the plantation and city mansions of the South.
This parlor suite created by Alexander Roux in a Southern plantation is a rather subdued example of his Rococo Revival designs. photo via Natchez Pilgrimage Tours |
Roux’s building on Reade Street was faced in gleaming white
marble. The verticality of the structure
was emphasized by visually joining the upper openings within two-story arches
with scrolled keystones and paneled spandrels.
The cast iron storefront featured fluted columns which originally
sprouted intricate Corinthian capitals.
It seems doubtful that Roux ever used the building for his
own business; not even as a warehouse.
In 1862 city directories list James Vanbenschoten’s grocery store on the
ground level. (The grocer lived rather
inconveniently far away at No. 84 West 28th Street.) Vansbenschoten was here until 1865 when
Victor E. Mauger listed his “stationery importers” business at the address.
It appears that when Mauger moved his business in (including
his playing card factory on an upper floor), Roux appointed him manager of the
building. On December 6, 1866 an advertisement appeared in The New York Herald: "To Let--Store, Basement and Sub-Basement of marble front building, 110 Reade street." The ad insisted on "a first class tenant" and directed inquiries to Victor E. Mauger.
Victor E. Mauger was the New York wholesale agent for the London stationery firm of Charles Goodall & Sons. On December 7, 1867 Mauger advertised their "Playing Cards and Christmas Stationery" and invited retailers to see "the new season's patterns, now ready."
Perrysburg (Ohio) Journal, February 27, 1874
|
Dundas Dick & Co. took space in the building. It produced “Sandalwood Oil Capsules” which
it touted as using more Oil of Sandalwood than “all the Wholesale and Retail
Druggists and purfumers [sic] in the United States combined.” Because the capsules were soft, Dundas Dick
& Co. assured they “solve the problem long considered by many eminent
physicians, of how to avoid the nausea and disgust experience in swallowing.” According to an advertisement in The Home
Journal of Winchester, Tennessee on November 20, 1873, “These are the only
Capsules admitted to the last Paris Exposition.”
Victor E. Mauger’s business ambitions went beyond stationery
importing and building management.
Aggressive and energetic, he seems to have been unafraid to branch out, grasping
whatever opportunities looked promising.
In 1872 he was still focused on stationery and printing—exhibiting the
latest in playing cards in the annual exhibition of the American Institute. But when he took on a partner,
John Petrie, his firm would expand into a mind-reeling variety of unrelated
products. Before then, however, he and his
landlord, Alexander Roux, made changes No. 110 Reade Street.
In 1871 architect John G. Prague was hired to modernize and
enlarge the structure. He added a sixth
floor in the form of a slate-shingled French Second Empire mansard roof—the
latest in architectural fashion. Prague's
impressive addition featured three arched-windowed dormers, the middle of which grabbed attention with its elaborate framing and triangular pediment.
The Fire-Proof Building Co. of New York used the addition to promote its product. An advertisement in the New-York Tribune claimed that the "rate of insurance has been reduced 90 cents per $100" at 110 Reade Street "after our Fire-proof Lining had been added to the Mansard."
By 1877 Victor E. Mauger & Petrie included imported wines among their wares. An advertisement on December 3 that year promoted "Chateau LaGarosse--the Comte de Lastic's favorite Clarets in glass and wood; also, the Jonzac Cognacs and Moreau Leievre Champagnes."
A starkly different product was the firm’s Victor Baby Food,
introduced about 1880. Promised to be an
“invaluable and strictly American Food,” it was touted by advertisements to be
the “best known substitute for mother’s milk.”
Consumers were prompted to use it for “the aged, the sick, or
convalescents,” as well.
Magazines filled with Victor E. Mauger & Petrie
advertisements. In 1879 another product
being hawked was Chinkalyptus. Taken in
pill form, it was guaranteed to be an antidote for chills and fever. An ad urged readers “Escape Malaria this
Season by taking Chinkalyptus.”
Consumers spent 25 cents for the “best general tonic and dinner pill.”
In the September 4, 1880 issue of the Army and Navy Journal,
the firm advertised the American Star Soft Capsules, sold in “metallic boxes,
Star stamped on cover, with blue wrapper with star on cover.” The ad declared the capsules were “Cheapest,
quickest, surest, best, and most reliable Soft Capsules.” The one detail it omitted was what the
capsules were supposed to do.
Mauger was noted as the "sole manufacturer and distributor" of his imitation sauce. Army & Navy Journal, May 21, 1881 |
The same periodical later advertised Mauger's American version of Worcestershire Sauce. And in 1882 Victor E. Mauger & Petrie introduced yet another
unexpected product—leg splints--when the firm became agents for Koehler's Adaptable Splint.
Leonard’s Illustrated Medical Scientific Journal described it as “for
lightness and convenience almost without a rival.”
That same year Victor E. Mauger and John Petrie
retired. An innocuous mention in The
American Stationery on October 19, 1882 noted “John Petrie, Jr., successor to
Victor E. Manger & Petrie, reports an unusually large demand for A. B.
French inks.” Petrie would continue
business in the location at least through 1889.
Fort Industry Manufacturing Company was operating from No. 110 Reade Street that year. On December 16 it advertised for women sales agents for a unique item. "Wanted--Lady canvassers for the sale of a novel toy lung tester, the most amusing little article ever offered to the public; easy sales; big profits."
The upper floors of No. 110 continued to attract a variety of
businesses. In 1890 the New
York sales office of Philadelphia-based machine manufacturer, Welsh & Lea,
was here.
By now the footwear district was taking over the Reade
Street area. In 1897 J. Faust &
Sons, “boots and shoes,” was perhaps the first such business in the
building. They were joined the following
year by shoe maker Bernhard Friedman.
Also occupying space in 1898 were a cigar factory, M. Brilles & Co.;
a cigar wholesaler, Weber & Erskine; Richard V. Vahjen’s “silver plated
ware” business; Isidor Nellenbogen’s shaving brushes factory; two
manufacturers’ agents, Charles H. Nesbitt and Louis Schlesinger; and the “wines
and liquors dealer,” Charles H. Koch.
(It is possible that Koch’s liquor store was in actuality a saloon.)
Although Weber & Erskine were still in the building in
1901 selling cigars; the shoe trade made up the majority of tenants. That year the Havre-de-Grace Shoe Mfg. Co.
was here, and by 1904 Carl H. Krieg & Co. had made No. 110 home.
Krieg did not deal in actual footwear, but in “findings” or
accessories. In 1904 The Canadian Shoe
and Leather Journal deemed Carl H. Krieg & Co.’s new catalog “the most
complete list of shoe retailers’ supplies it would be possible to have. Nothing is omitted from the tack hammer to
the store furniture, every conceivable necessity in a well-equipped shoe store
is enumerated.”
Boot and Shoe Recorder, September 11, 1907 |
On September 31, 1907 Boot and Shoe Recorder called Carl H.
Krieg & Co. “the leading wholesale finding establishment of the metropolis”
and advised “It should be borne in mind that a concern such as Carl H. Krieg
& Co. sell everything in the shape of findings for the retail trade.” The journal suggested that with winter
approaching, retailers should stock up on Krieg’s “overgaiters and leggings.”
Krieg's advertisements called the business "The House of Krieg" and used the tag line "Everything but the Shoe."
Before many years the shoe district would abandon Reade
Street. In 1913 attorney Emil J. Unger
opened his office in No. 110, and the following year M. J. Grady Company leased
the store. Michael J. Grady was the head
of that company, which dealt in twines.
It would remain at No. 110 Reade Street into the early 1920s.
G. C. Arrowsmith took space in the building in 1919. The firm manufactured harness hardware and
“horse clothing,” and dealt in hides and leathers. Like M. J. Grady Company, it lasted in the
building into the 1920s.
G. C. Arrowsmith was agent for American Chain Over-Shoes--a sort of snow chain for horses. The Sun, December 18, 1919 |
The changing Tribeca neighborhood was reflected in the
tenant list. In 1932 the Diagraph
Stencil Machine Corp. was doing business in No. 110. But even greater change for the district was
on the horizon.
By 1972, as Tribeca slowly became trendier, No. 110 Reade
was home to Living, Module, Inc. The
firm crafted custom-designed interior “environments” for apartments. That year, for instance, it designed and
installed a children’s bedroom on the Upper West Side. According to journalist Rita Reif of The New
York Times two years later, “It took [Douglas] White three weeks to install the
wall-to-wall, double-decker assemblage of bridges, bed, ladders, storage and a
basketball court.”
In 1982 the upper floors were converted to residential
space. The ground floor store became
Nam, a Vietnamese restaurant, in October 2001; and then the Thai food
restaurant, Lotus Blue, in 2012. Despite
replacement windows, a 20th century fire escape, the sad loss of the
cast iron column capitals and a coating of dirt; No. 110 Reade Street still
somewhat haughtily demands respect; just as Alexander Roux intended.
photographs by the author
from reader Robert A. Ripps:
ReplyDelete"As always a good read, fascinating and thorough, as well as great the way you bring history to life. My only quible is that Lotus Blue was a Yunnan style Chinese restaurant, not a Thai one"