In the 1850s, waves of European immigrants began changing the demographics and personality of the East Village. To accommodate the exploding population, tenements and flat buildings replaced private homes. As early as 1853, a four-story flat-and-store occupied 250-252 Ninth Street (renumbered 345-347 East 9th Street in 1868) just west of First Avenue. An early example of Italianate design, the upper floors were faced in red brick. At street level, the centered entrance was flanked by two wooden storefronts. Cast sills and corniced-lintels decorated the upper openings (other than the smaller, hallway windows in the center). The edifice was capped with an elaborate pressed metal cornice. Its fascia was decorated with unusual, embossed imitation blocks; and a host of scrolled brackets crowded one another to uphold the cornice.
The building was a "double flat," meaning that there apartments on either side of a centered hallway--two each, front and back, in this instance. The professions of the tenants reflected their working class status. In 1853, they included a marble cutter, a painter, two coachmen, an ostler (or stable hand), and an upholster. The surnames of the residents in 1855 were mostly Irish, including Kelly, McCarthy, O'Brien, O'Reilly, and O'Shea. Downstairs, one of the shops was occupied by James Mewkill, a "paperstainer," or maker of wallpapers. He lived rather inconveniently far away at 234 West 27th Street.
Women and children worked to augment the families' income, as reflected in the "situations wanted" pages of local newspapers. One, on March 12, 1856, read: "Wanted--A situation, by a young woman, as chambermaid and waiter, or to do general housework in a small private family. Can be seen for two days, if not engaged, at 250 9th st., between 1st and 2d avenues, third floor, front room." And the following year, on April 27, an ad in the New York Daily Herald said, "A most respectable young woman wishes a situation as chambermaid and waitress or [to] take care of children and do plain sewing."
Around 1862, Arthur Carey opened his boot and shoe making business in one of the shops and moved his family into an apartment upstairs. Late on the night of May 18, 1866, two burglars broke into Carey's shop "by bursting in the front door," as reported by the New York Dispatch. They gathered up $26 worth of goods and attempted to escape, but were seen by passersby who chased them. The article said that the thieves, "dropped their plunder and fled." Officer Callery, who had just gotten off duty and was on his way home, "joined the chase, and fired three shots at one of the thieves." One shot hit George McGrath's hip, ending his flight.
McGrath was taken to the 17th Street precinct station where a surgeon was sent for to treat his wound. A search found a table knife hidden in one of his sleeves and a lock-pick in the other. Had McGrath and his accomplices successfully made off with the shoes and boots, the value of their booty would would translate to about $530 in 2026 terms. Instead, McGrath, who was refused bail, faced serious consequences. Two weeks later, on June 5, he faced a judge. The New York Herald reported that he "pleaded guilty to an attempt and was sentenced to one year's imprisonment in the Penitentiary."
Arthur Carey remained in the space at least through 1870. It was possible that two of his neighbors in the building worked for him. Both Leonard Kantz and Charles Koener listed their professions as "shoemaker." Other residents that year were George Johnson, a "seaman;" George Tugman, who drove a wagon; and James Shaw, a laborer. Shaw was typical of the hard working residents. Born in County Down, Ireland in 1830, he died on April 13, 1872 at just 42 years old. His funeral was held in the family's apartment here.
In 1873, the stores were occupied by a fish and oyster market and a butcher shop. The latter was operated by Abraham Altheimer, who moved his operation here from Avenue C. That year the owner of other store closed. His advertisement in the New York Herald on November 4, 1873, read: "For Sale--Fish and oyster market, with a Horse and Wagon. Inquire at 347 East Ninth street."
The space became home to D. C. Voss's jewelry store. By 1876, Samuel C. Altheimer, possibly Abraham's son, had taken over the butcher shop. He and his family lived nearby at 352 East 9th Street.
As had been the case with Arthur Carey 12 years earlier, on the night of February 25, 1878, three thieves attempted to rob Voss's store. And like that endeavor, they were unsuccessful. They were hunted down and arrested a week later, on March 4, and held for trial.
The residents continued to be blue collar, listing commonplace professions like laborers and drivers. One tenant in 1878, 16-year-old John Powers, however, had a much more unusual job. That January, Elizabeth Cooley Ross, who was a dressmaker on Broadway, approached him with a proposition. Her husband, Reuben Ross, operated a tea store at Third Avenue and 23rd Street. Powers later explained that Elizabeth was jealous and suspected that her husband "was not true to his marriage vows." She paid the teen (who looked "much older," according to The New York Times) to spy on Reuben Ross.
Powers's covert surveillance went undetected by his quarry, but not by Joshua Davenport, who lived near the Ross tea shop. Every time he left his home, reported The New York Times on February 1, 1878, he "noticed a strange young man standing in the doorway." When Davenport came home for lunch on January 31, "he found as usual the stranger standing in the doorway, with his face muffled up in a woolen comforter with which he was trying to protect it from the fierce and raging storm." Davenport had reached his breaking point. Grabbing Powers by the collar, he demanded to know what his business was.
The New York Times reported, "The reply, which was not couched in very mild language, was to the effect that it did not concern in the least Mr. Davenport who he was or for what purpose he was there." Davenport found Officer McKenna, who agreed that Powers was acting suspiciously and arrested him. The next morning, Elizabeth and Reuben Ross were both summoned to court to testify about what they knew about the case. Elizabeth admitted that the marital relations between her and Ross "were not the happiest kind," and that she had been employing the teen for three weeks "to dog her husband's footsteps." But before dismissing the case, Justice Smith gave the teenager some advice. The Times said, "His Honor told him to be more careful hereafter, as his present business was not an enviable one, from the fact that he was liable to be 'thrashed' at any moment."
Two months later, the Wisenner family suffered horrific tragedy. On May 3, 1878, the New York Herald reported, "Maggie Wisenner, two and a half years old, of No. 347 East Ninth street, was run over and instantly killed yesterday, at the corner of Eighth street and First avenue, by car No. 15 of the Crosstown line."
By 1881, a restaurant occupied one of the first floor spaces and the other was home to a cigar store. Five years later, while the cigar store was still here, the restaurant had been supplanted by Lawrence H. Metzel's fish store. A frightening incident happened on July 24, 1886, when an oil stove "exploded," as worded by the New-York Tribune in the fish store. The article noted, "In putting out the flames Metzel burned his hands severely."
That year, Harrison M. Hayden arrived in New York from Chicago and took an apartment here. His residency would be very short-lived. On September 6, 1886, The New York Times reported that Hayden, "or Harry S. Smith," had been remanded at the Jefferson Market Police Court "to await the arrival of an officer from Chicago." While boarding at the house of H. F. Liddell there, he stole $1,200 of property "by ransacking the house," according to the charges. He had fled to Cleveland where he committed a similar crime. The investigation of the Chicago police let him to New York "and it was found that the thief was Hayden."
An interesting tenant signed a lease in 1900. On March 17, The New York Times reported, "The New York Checker Club will have a 'housewarming' in its new rooms, at 347 East Ninth Street, this evening." That night the match for the "championship of Greater New York" would be played, said the article, "and $25 a side will be placed between the first and second prize winners." (The price money would translate to about $950 today.) A year later, the New-York Tribune reported on the preparations for the 1901 checker championship tournament to be held here.
The building received a significant updating in the spring of 1914 when indoor plumbing was installed. A building inspector, T. J. Donaghue, certified that a "peppermint test" had been done on the work, that included a first floor bathroom, and water closets upstairs.
The modifications were part of necessary repairs caused by a two-alarm fire on February 24. At the time, the ground floor spaces held a saloon and a restaurant. Describing the building now as a "rooming house" by the New-York Tribune, the upper floors were operated by John and Edith Lemminn.
A two-alarm fire had broken out in the building that night. The New-York Tribune said, "There were two thrilling rescues," including three men trapped on the roof who "were hauled to safety on a clothesline." Edith Lemminn saved her son, seven-year-old John, by carrying him out of the second floor window and carefully navigating across the sills. Tragically, two kitchen workers in the restaurant, Ernest Schick and Adolph Erumo, were fatally burned.
The residents of 345-347 East 9th Street were predominantly honest and hard-working. An exception was Nicholas W. Raditsky, who lived here at the time. On September 9, 1914, he was arrested for stealing $1,462 from his employer, Gregory Kunashezsky, a steamship broker. The New York Times explained, "The money was the price of seven steamship tickets sold on August 23, to seven German reservists." When arrested, Radisky had the exact amount in his pocket.
Criminals would be less uncommon in the building by the Depression years. Joseph Schmidt was 35 years old and living here when, at 10:50 on the night of May 28, 1930, he and Andrew Fidorko assaulted and robbed Harry Roman of $175 in Jamaica, Queens. Roman telephoned a detailed description of the gunmen to police. It triggered a cops-and-robbers type standoff only a few minutes later. The New York Times reported,
After sixty policemen armed with machine guns, rifles and tear gas bombs had spent several hours last night maintaining a cordon around a residential block in Jamaica in an effort to trap a gunman who fired at detectives, the fugitive turned up at his East Side home at 1:45 o'clock this morning and was caught, following a chase of several blocks, during which the police fired twenty shots. One took effect.
Joseph Smidt was hit in the back and was taken to Bellevue Hospital where his condition was deemed "not serious."
The hallway windows can be seen in this 1941 photograph and the wooden storefronts were intact. via the NYC Dept of Records & Information Services.
Another resident who ended up behind bars was Henry Fourens. He and Jacob Goldfarb were charged with grand larceny on January 17, 1934 after they broke into about 60 parked automobiles. In reporting the arrest, The New York Times mentioned, "A bottle of germs valued medically at $10,000, was thrown away recently as worthless by two automobile burglars who found it in a physician's car, according to detectives."
A renovation completed in 1970 resulted in just two apartments per floor and the combining of the stores. It was most likely at this time that the former hallway windows were closed off. In the late 1980s, the ground floor was home to The Gold Bar, described by New York Magazine on May 4, 1987 as an "intimate bar, with no sign and sparse decor."
Today a modern storefront and replacement windows testify to the late 20th century renovations. An unattractive fire escape, installed after the fatal fire of 1914, distracts from the early flat building's design.
photographs by the author







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