In 1900 the upper floor was a pool table showroom, while the ground floor housed a National Cash Register store. |
In April 1899 real estate operator John L. Miller purchased
the small building at No. 424 Columbus Avenue from the estate of Amos R. Eno
for $26,200. It was home to John
Castellano’s fruit and cigar store, and Anthony Carroll had just received a
permit from the City to operate a bootblack stand out front. Both men would soon have to find a new
location.
John L. Miller had already worked with architect Julius F.
Munckwitz for several of his building projects.
The two now turned their attention to a replacement building on the site
of Castellano’s grocery store. In July
Munckwitz filed plans for a “two-story brick and stone stores.” (“Stores” was plural, signifying that the
design was intended for two commercial tenants.)
Munckwitz’s plans called for a bay window which would extend
past the property line. On October 31,
1899 the Board of Aldermen voted to allow the encroachment. But it cautioned “such permission to continue
only during the pleasure of the Municipal Assembly.”
John L. Miller’s little building was not the only
construction project going on in August 1900. The
Metropolitan Street Railway Company had excavated a gigantic hole in Columbus
Avenue, directly in front of the site.
As two Metropolitan employees, Cornelius Boshea and Owen Connorty,
worked in the 8 by 10 foot wide hole, Alexander Lesser tried to drive his
horse-drawn wagon around the crater while navigating traffic.
The horse’s hooves slipped and the heavy animal tumbled into
the hole, directly on top of the two men.
Fortunately, Lesser and his wagon remained on the street; but the
workers were pinioned beneath the panicked horse.
The builders working on No. 424 Columbus Avenue rushed to
help, along with approximately 200 other men working in the vicinity. They struggled to move the struggling horse
while someone was sent to find a derrick.
When it finally arrived, it took another 20 minutes to haul the horse
out of the deep hole. Through the entire
ordeal Boshea and Connorty were pinned under the draft horse.
Both were removed to Roosevelt Hospital; Boshea with several
contusions and Connorty with a broken leg.
Not long after the terrifying incident, No. 424 was completed
at a cost of $12,000—about $350,000 in 2016.
The second story of Munkwitz’s Renaissance Revival structure was,
somewhat surprisingly, clad in sheet metal.
Here paired Corinthian pilasters flanked grouped show windows which were
enclosed in picture-like framing. Dainty
modillions lined up nearly shoulder to shoulder to uphold the cornice.
Miller immediately found the pair of tenants for his new
building. Rich Schulder opened a branch
of the National Cash Register Company on the first floor; and Tony Pauka installed
his Brunswick pool table showroom upstairs.
Schulder, however, would not remain long. By 1902 the ground floor had become the E. A.
Bauerschmidt Restaurant, run by Edward Bauerschmidt. Later that year the Bauerschmidt name was
drawn into a lurid news story; one that Edward tried to ignore but which his
loose-tongued wife was happy to indulge in.
Several years earlier Bauerschmidt’s brother, Frank, had
married Dorothy Allen, the granddaughter of one of Rochester’s most eminent
merchants. Upon his death Dorothy
inherited $40,000, meted out in $1,000 payments every May 5. The couple lived in New York City for a while
and then were gone.
Years later, in December 1902, a Philadelphia burlesque
actress, Dollie Earle, committed suicide just before the curtain went up in the
Trocadero Theatre by swallowing acid. At
the time, Frank Bauerschmidt was “mentally and physically wrecked,” according
to The Evening World, and “is spending his last days as a consumptive on a
ranch in Colorado.”
New York society may never have connected the dots were it
not for the eagerness of Edward’s wife to talk to a reporter from The Evening
World. The story, said the newspaper, “brings
to light the rapid descent of a young woman high in society, wealthy and
naturally talented until she reached the bottom of the social ladder.”
Dollie Earle was, in fact, Dorothy Bauerschmidt. Edward’s wife said that immediately after
Frank married her he discovered “that she was addicted to the excessive use of
strong liquor. On several occasions she
shocked society by appearing at receptions and parties while intoxicated." The last straw occurred when she appeared at
a ball “very drunk.” After Frank took
her home, she attempted suicide by turning on the gas in her bedroom; but he
found her in time to rescue her.
“Soon she was barred from all homes and her husband brought
her to New York, but to no good. She
went from bad to worse. The $1,000 she
received each year simply meant a two weeks’ spree for her.”
Driven nearly insane and utterly frustrated, Frank ‘had to
send her away.” Dorothy had been well-educated
and professionally trained as a contralto; but her drinking ruined her singing voice. Mrs. Bauerschmidt said “Having a stunning
figure she secured an engagement in a burlesque company like that at the Dewey
Theatre, and since then she has been with several of them.”
By 1902 she was living as man and wife with an opium addict,
C. E. Burns. The police described him as
“of the lower type of actors who travel with burlesque companies, doing odd
jobs and living as the husbands of the women in the company.”
Mrs. Bauerschmidt summed up the tragic end for all the
characters in the real-life drama. Dolly
Earle was now dead; C. E. Burns was in prison; and her brother-in-law, Frank
Bauerschmidt, was confined by his doctors to Colorado. The Evening World added “the last reports
from there indicate that he is near death from consumption and worry over his
wife.”
Both the Brunswick pool table store and the Bauerschmidt Restaurant
would remain in No. 424 Columbus Avenue for several years. By 1915, however, the entire building was
taken over by the Wright Laundry. The commercial laundry drew attention because
of its modern facilities which used electric motors.
On October 9, 1915 Electrical World noted that at the Wright
Laundry “central-station service is employed to operate all of the equipment.” The journal used Wright Laundry to prove
that “in the case
of a laundry it may be pointed out that if purchased energy is used for
operating laundry machinery, then only water heaters instead of expensive
high-pressure boilers will be required.”
Electric World, October 9, 1915 (copyright expired) |
The firm continued its up-to-date offerings and in March
1918 Cleaning and Dyeing World announced “The Wright Laundry…has installed a
cleaning and dyeing department.”
Throughout the 20th century the little building
was home to a variety of businesses. In
the 1930s it was home to the interior decorating firm, Andrew Gillies Inc.; and
in the last decade housed a Central Carpet store. Most recently, in the spring of 2016, the Danish
home goods store Flying Tiger announced it would be moving in.
Julius F. Munckwitz’s little gray-painted building is a bit
beleaguered today. The sheet metal
pilasters have a banged and bruised look; and the bay show windows which John
L. Miller fought the City for were long ago lost in a street level
modernization. But it and its
delightful, equally-proportioned next door neighbor at No. 426, are welcomed
survivors—quaint reminders of a far different era on Columbus Avenue.
photographs by the author
No comments:
Post a Comment