In 1821, about a year before Cherry Lane was renamed Commerce Street, shoemakers Asher Martin and John Bennet got in on the building boom in Greenwich Village by erecting three modest homes at what would be numbered Nos. 24 through 28 Commerce Street.
Faced in red Flemish bond brick, the frame Federal-style houses were intended for working class families. Two-and a half stories stories tall, each was just 16 feet wide. They displayed none of the upscale details that defined more affluent residences. Plain brownstone lintels and simple wooden cornices made do. Nevertheless, the architect added decorative molding around the sunburst transom bar above the paneled door.
The delicate treatment of the entrance transom was a lovely exception to the otherwise moderate design. |
Bennet and Martin leased the houses until January 15, 1852 when they sold them as a package for $6,000, or about $65,300 each today. No. 28 became home to mason Garret Spear. The New Jersey native died in the Commerce Street house at the age of 56 on Sunday, November 27, 1859. His funeral was held in the parlor the following night.
Houses like this routinely had a secondary building in the rear--either stable, a small house, or a shop (like a carpenter or blacksmith shop). At the time of his death Spear was leasing the rear structure to brothers Charles and Gilliam B. Seely. Both men lived nearby--Charles at No. 89 Commerce Street and Gilliam at No. 104 Leroy Street.
They used the building for their "soda water factory," known as Seely & Brother. Using the address of 28-1/2 Commerce Street, they would manufacture and bottle soda water here for years. For a period it seems that the building doubled as both factory and stable for the company's delivery truck. On October 30, 1862 the brothers looked to replace one of the horses:
FOR SALE: A black horse, 16-3/4 hands high, short tail, very stylish and an excellent military horse; 5 years old, and a smart traveler; would make a good express or carriage horse, or fit for any use; warranted right every way. Apply at Seely's soda water manufactory, 28-1/2 Commerce street, near Bedford.
Two years later another horse was offered for sale by Seeley's, this one a "brown Hambletonian mare."
In the meantime, following Garret Spear's death No. 28 was operated as a rooming house. Isaac Laforge, a "cutter," was living here in 1861, as were Isaac and Helen M. Lafarge. Their marriage ended in divorce that year. J. Sullivan was renting a rented room in the house on August 19, 1863 when his name was pulled in the Union Army draft lottery.
The proprietor of the rooming house, like so many others, was reticent to rent to an unmarried woman. In 19th century New York, a female of questionable character could seriously damage the reputation of the house. An advertisement in The New York Herald on June 5, 1864 offered "To Let--A nicely furnished front room on second story, to a gentleman only."
The policy was still in place six years later. An advertisement on February 17, 1870 read "To Let--A nicely furnished attic room, to gentlemen only." The $2 per week rent would equal about $39 today.
The attic room was not the most comfortable. Not only did the tenant have to deal with its sloping ceiling. but in the days before air conditioning or central heat, it would have been stiflingly hot in the summer and cold in the winter. It was vacant again in 1871, and again in October 1872. The price remained the same.
Seely & Brother was gone by May 1873 when the rear building seems to have been used as a livery stable. A patron who stored his buggies here offered them for sale that month. "Two splendid leather top (City made) buggies; good for city or country; price $200 each." Each would cost the potential buyer about $4,250 today.
The little house continued to house respectable, blue collar class families. The family of little Mamie Bogart lived here in 1888 when the fifth grader was enrolled in the newly-built Public School No. 8 on King Street.
The houses of the charming row, unexceptional in 1821, are highly-sought after today. |
Problems came again in 1999 when the little house was deemed an "unsafe building." The condition was corrected and No. 28 returned to life as a private family home. The owner, Richard Verrazzani, incurred the Department of Building's displeasure again, however. In 2010 he was cited for creating an illegal apartment in the basement.
Despite an occasional brush with the city, the appearance No. 28 and its 1821 neighbors are little changed. They create a picturesque snapshot of early 19th century Greenwich Village.
photographs by the author
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