photograph by the author |
In the first years of the 20th century, Charles
Larned Atterbury and his wife, the former Katharine Mitchill Dow, lived at the fashionable
address of No. 23 East 62nd Street.
The Yale-educated lawyer had been the solicitor for the Erie Railway
Company before later becoming its Assistant President. He also served as counsel for the Chicago and
Atlantic Railway Company, and the Pullman Palace Car Company.
The couple’s son, Grosvenor, was 40 years old in 1909. He too attended Yale before studying
architecture at Columbia University and then working with McKim, Mead &
White. He was by now firmly
established as a respected architect and was working on a major commission—designing
the charming model housing community of Forest Hills Gardens for the Russell
Sage Foundation. But that year his
parents would give him one more project—remodeling an old rowhouse for the
family’s use.
Around 1871 architect Robert Mook designed two
Anglo-Italianate brownstone houses for wealthy produce merchant and part-time developer
Pearson S. Halstead at the northwest corner of Lexington Avenue and 70th
Street—Nos. 760 and 762 Lexington Avenue.
Halstead sold the newly-completed No. 762 to Ebenezer Hurd and his wife,
Jane, for $26,000 (roughly $520,000 today) and kept the corner house for
himself.
It is unclear whether the entrance to Halstead’s commodious
home was always on the 80-foot long 70th Street side; but as early
as 1884 he was using the address of No. 131 East 70th Street. On July 22, 1889 the 78-year old Halstead
died suddenly in the house. His widow,
Christina, lived on here until July 6, 1905 when Halstead’s estate sold No. 131
to “Chas. L Atterbury and Kath. M. his wife and Grosenor Atterbury joint tenants.” The family paid $65,000 for the “four-story
stone front dwelling.”
By October 16 Grosvenor Atterbury had filed plans and
awarded the general contract to J. B. Acken to remodel the old brownstone. The renovations would cost another $20,000
and result in a rather startling residence.
Viewed from Lexington Avenue, the rowhouse origins of the mansion are obvious. photograph by the author |
Oddly enough, Atterbury did little to the Lexington Avenue façade,
retaining the Italianate quoins, the projecting sills on their little brackets,
and the elliptical arched windows of the 1870s.
On the 70th Street side, however, he went all out.
The house was a surprising mish-mash of shapes and protrusions. House Beautiful May 1916 (copyright expired) |
He splattered the façade with irregularly-positioned
openings and bays; and added a two-story elliptical oriel. Reportedly, the leaded glass in the seven-sided copper bay had once
belonged to Louis Comfort Tiffany. The
intended effect was that the house had developed its quirky personality over
decades, rather than a few months. The
up-to-the-minute home included a connected garage, below the drawing room,
complete with reception room and leaded-glass windows. It was accessed on the far west end of the
house. House Beautiful noted “This
unusual proximity to the main entrance and to the living quarters has not
proved in the least objectionable, while the direct access to the car from the
main house is of inestimable value as an everyday convenience.”
To the left of and below the massive two-story copper-clad bay was the garage entrance; converted today to an upscale shop. photograph by the author |
The Atterbury family moved into the house in 1911. Grosvernor’s interior renovations reflected
the sophistication and taste of the family.
Basically English in design, there was oak paneling, beamed ceilings and
leaded glass throughout. The House Beautiful
commented “gloominess would be the last word to apply to Mr. Atterbury’s
house. Mr. Atterbury has progressed
beyond the state of mind of a puristic practitioner.”
“Gloomy” was prevented by the use of color and
material. One fireplace was faced in
bronze, the paneling of the dining room was enlivened by a frieze of blue-green
Spanish leather; and the wooden details included carved thistle and rose
elements—symbols of the Stewarts—and linen-fold panels.
Exquisite leaded glass, English paneling and brass lighting fixtures provided the venerable feel of the dining room. House Beautiful May 1916 (copyright expired) |
Now displaying upscale accessories, the dining room retains its green-tiled mantel and paneling. Sadly the leaded windows have been lost. photograph by the author |
New York society may have been shocked when, on March 27, 1923, Mr. and Mrs. Homer C. Johnstone announced that their
daughter, Dorothy, and Grosvenor Atterbury had been married four days
earlier. The quiet wedding of 54-year
old architect and his bride had taken place in the 70th Street
house. In reporting on the marriage on
March 28, the New York Evening Post noted “Mr. Atterbury is one of the most
prominent architects in this city” and added “Mr. Atterbury and his bride will
sail to-day for Nassau, and upon returning will make their home at 131 East
Seventieth Street.”
Two views of the living room. photo by Samuel H. Gottscho from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York |
Like all well-to-do Manhattan couples, Dorothy and Grosvenor
closed their city homes during the hot summer months. The Atterbury’s 80-acre estate, Sugar Loaf
Acres, was in Southampton. In the summer
of 1925 just two servants, sisters Frances and Elizabeth Koff were left back to
watch over the East 70th Street house. Everything went fine until shortly after
midnight on Friday, July 31.
Rain was beating against the windows as the sisters sat in
the kitchen and prepared a pitcher of iced tea.
Frances asked Elizabeth if she were sure all the windows upstairs were
closed.
“I think so, but as soon as I finish making the iced tea I’ll
go up and see.”
Instead, the sisters went together. Elizabeth carried the pitcher of tea as the
two rode the elevator to the top floor.
They checked the windows and the hatch leading to the roof, then headed
back down. Just as the elevator passed
the third floor, it ground to a stop.
Concerned but not panicking, they both tried punching this button and
that. The elevator would not move.
Two days later The New York Times reported “Calmly the two surveyed
their situation…They were alone in the house.
After some moments’ consideration one of the sisters pushed a button
which rings a large gong in the basement.
There was no one in the basement to answer it, of course, but it was the
only thing they could do.”
Of course, it was the dead of the night in a nearly-deserted
residential neighborhood. Although the
gong kept ringing, there was no one to respond.
So they simply sat on the floor of the elevator and drank tea.
Almost four hours later beat cop Paul Minor heard the “incessant
ringing of the gong.” Assuming it was a burglar
alarm, he called another policeman. He
and Officer Sullivan tried all the doors and found them locked. They woke up the residents in No. 962
Lexington Avenue, crossed the roof, and started forcing the hatch.
The two servant girls, most likely afraid of the damage they
would be held accountable for, shouted for them to stop. The policemen hear Elizabeth calling to “get
a ladder and try to enter one of the front windows.”
In the meantime, six more policemen arrived. One of them sent for Hook and Ladder Company
16. The fire truck’s ladder was raised
to an upper window and the firemen and police clambered in. Unable to solve the girls’ predicament, a
repairman from the Otis Elevator Company was summoned. Eric Granfeldt climbed up the fire truck
ladder and into the house. Within a few
minutes he found that the safety control in the bottom of the shaft had somehow
dislodged, preventing the elevator from moving.
The girls were freed.
The Koff sisters tempered their gratefulness with annoyance.
“We did not mind the wait at all, for we
had our tea and we knew that we couldn’t stay there forever,” explained
Elizabeth. But she added “If someone had
had sense enough to notify the elevator people immediately, we wouldn’t have had
all this fuss.”
The top-most floor includes this Arts & Crafts-style room, with beaten iron strap hinges, exposed beams, and a charming brick fireplace. photograph by the author |
By 1949 the Atterburys had left East 70th
Street. Grosvenor died in Southampton on
October 18, 1956 at the age of 87. No.
131 East 70th Street was converted to a doctor’s office on the
ground floor in 1949, with “showrooms and workroom” on the second floor, and
two apartments each on the upper floors.
The ground floor space became the boutique of Eulalie,
described by The New York Times on September 21, 1950 as “a promising newcomer
to the field of fashion designers." The
second floor “showroom” was well-known to Manhattan women as the Pierre &
Fred hair salon for years.
Nearly a century after Atterbury completed his remarkable
remake of the house, owner E. William Judson finished an exterior renovation in
2006. Sadly, the leaded glass in the
second floor oriel was disintegrating and was deemed unsalvageable. The panels were removed, but thankfully not
discarded.
The parlor floor, where Pierre & Fred had been, is now home to the upscale Hayward House. Its owners, John Goldstone and his wife, the former Marin Hopper (daughter of motion picture actor Dennis Hopper), live upstairs with their daughter. Their meticulous restoration of the drawing room and dining room included resurrecting the ceiling stenciling from beneath decades of grime, repainting areas which were lost; and careful removal scores of nails and built up lacquer (from years of hair spray mist in the air). The charming sixth floor where the elder Atterburys lived has exposed beams, strapwork hinges and other interior elements of the Arts & Crafts era.
John and Marin Goldstone have sensitively restored the drawing room floor where, thankfully, most of the original elements survive. photo courtesy of John Goldstone |
many thanks to John and Marin Goldstone for taking me through their exceptional home.
As I remembered, when I moved out around 1967, there was "The New York Ladies Bridge Club" residing on the first floor. I, as a single girl had rented the in third floor the studio apartment. On the main floor you could voisit thje "Oyster Home Botique" And on thje very top you could find the charming lawyer whose clientel was mainly the mafia of N.Y., That apartment was absoltely overwhelmingly beautiful. Dark brown gleaoimg wooden paneld walls and wooden parket.
ReplyDeleteIn 1959, 131 E 70 was the so called Baltic Freedom House, where the Baltic Chess Club also met.
ReplyDelete