Thaddeus Moriarty arrived in New York with his
parents from his native Ireland in 1851 at the age of 8. He left school
when he was 15 and took a job as an office boy.
Within a year he was promoted to cashier and bookkeeper, and then
to traveling salesman at just 16. Although
he had learned the dry goods trade, in 1863 the 25-year old partnered with
James Jordan to form the furniture retailer Jordan, Moriarity & Co.
Thaddeus Moriarty in 1897 The Tammany Times, December 6, 1897 (copyright expired) |
In 1897 The Tammany Times would say of him “The same qualities
which had made him successful in the service of others brought him success in
his own enterprises and his business steadily increased.” The article noted “In `1889 Mr. Moriarty
purchased three lots in East Twenty-third street, between Third and Lexington
avenues.”
Twenty-third Street was the center of the retail furniture
trade at the time. Well-known
manufacturers and dealers like George C. Flint Co. and Robert J. Horner lined
the street with their impressive buildings and showrooms. Now Jordan,
Moriarty & Co. joined the trend, and commissioned architect Albert
Wagner to design what The Tammany Times would call “a magnificent 7-story
building” and “one of the largest furniture establishments in Greater New York.”
Wagner filed the plans in September 1890. The Engineering Record reported that the
projected cost of the new building would be $100,000—in the neighborhood of
$2.7 million in 2016. Construction was
completed nearly a year to the day later and on September 13, 1891 Jordan,
Moriarity & Co. announced its grand opening would be held September 21st
through 23rd.
The announcement said in part “We have erected…a new
warehouse, built especially for the furniture and carpet trade. As this is the only house ever designed and
erected solely for that purpose in New York city, it is interesting to the
sightseer.” It added that the items
offered there were “suitable for the spacious mansion or the modest home.”
In its opening advertisement, the firm noted "New Buildings, New Furniture." The Evening World, November 23 1891 (copyright expired) |
Albert Wagner had successfully married the Renaissance and
Romanesque Revival styles into a brick, stone, and cast iron emporium. The boxy proportions of the building were
eliminated by three grand arches filled with cast iron-framed openings. The Romanesque motif was carried out in the
heavy cast iron masonry supports, rough-cut stone bands, and the handsome arcade
at the top floor. Renaissance Revival
was introduced in the delicate carved panels, the upper frieze and the
bracketed cornice.
As the firm had promised in the grand opening announcement,
it offered both high- and low-end furniture.
In 1893 Jordan, Moriarty & Co. put its brass and enameled iron
bedsteads on sale. A “very neat white enameled
and brass-trimmed” bed was being sold for $5, down from $12. And a “massive white enameled and brass
rod-top bedstead” could be had for $7.12.
The sale ad promised it was “worth at least $15.00.” (The sale price for the lesser-expensive
model would be equal to an affordable $136 today.)
Wicker rockers were available in 1911 for $1.99 The Evening World May 3, 1911 (copyright expired) |
In 1913, exactly half a century after starting business,
Jordan, Moriarty & Co. was in financial trouble. In June that year a receivers’ sale was
ordered by the United States District Court.
The auction continued for several
days, until the entire seven floors of furniture was sold. The auctioneer’s announcement said in part “This
stock consists of High-Grade Furniture, Carpeting, Draperies, etc., and must be
sold as speedily as possible, regardless of cost.” Included, of course, was the fine Jordan,
Moriarity & Co. Building.
The building sat vacant for months; and then on April 18,
1914 fire broke out on the fourth floor.
The Insurance Press reported that the flames “spread to roof” and put
the damage to the building at $25,000.
The fire-damaged structure was offered at auction by the estate of
Margaret Cockburn.
The War Industries Board, formed on July 28, 1917, prohibited
the application for new buildings or alterations. And so the Jordan, Moriarity & Co.
Building still sat vacant and charred when the union Trust Company finally sold
it to the newly-formed 155 East Twenty-third Street Corporation in June
1918. It was assessed by the city at
just $170,000.
Happily, five months later the War Industries Board
authorized the Mayor’s Committee on National Defense to “act on all applications
for new buildings or alterations to buildings where the cost of the work ranged
between $10,000 and $25,000,” as reported in The Sun on November 16. The article noted that permission to alter
the Jordan, Moriarity & Co. Building was given “for use of the Water’s Hospital
Supply Company.”
The alterations were completed early in 1919 and Water’s
Hospital Supply Company moved in. The
manufacturer was founded in 1898, making “everything for hospital and surgical
work.” When the renovated building opened the firm employed 93 men
and 40 women throughout what was now a seven-story factory. With proper Edwardian discretion, the women
worked only on the second floor. They
were thus shielded from any unsavory language or behavior on the other,
men-only, floors.
The Water’s Hospital Supply Co. remained in the building until
1952, although part of the ground floor space was given over to a new post
office branch in 1936. When Water’s
Hospital Supply moved out, the ground floor retail space became home to Monarch
House, Inc., a contemporary furniture store; while the upper floors housed
Childcraft Equipment Company.
The upper floors were converted to apartments in 1976. Perhaps the building’s most infamous resident
was Joey Skaggs who lived here by 1981.
A painter and sculptor, Skaggs began earning notoriety in the 1960s with
noticeable pranks such as attaching a 50-foot bra to the front of the U.S.
Treasury Building on Wall Street in 1969.
While living in Suite 405 here in 1981 Skaggs took on the
pseudonym Dr. Joseph Gregor and announced he had created Metamorphosis. He purported that the “cockroach extract” would
cure “arthritis, acne, menstrual cramps and enable people to survive high doses
of radiation.” The hoax, like his
others, was intended as a non-malicious prank on the media and public.
Although the brick has been painting and the spandrel decorations filled over, the integrity of the upper story design mostly survives. |
Albert Wagner’s storefront survived, rather amazingly, until
2000 when it was removed and replaced with what might be described as grievous. His upper floors, however, survived embattled but greatly intact from the days when homeowners shopped for brass beds and oak dining
tables.
photographs by the author
The blog says Tammany Times credits Wagner with designing a "magnificent 7 story building," then later suggests that it became 7 stories during the 1919 renovation. Present day image looks like perhaps 6 stories?
ReplyDeleteDept of Bldgs recognizes a 6th floor and 6th floor mezzanine. Perhaps that is where the confusion in reports descriptions arose.
Delete