Born in Austria, architect Sylvan Bien emigrated to San Francisco to work on the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition. He relocated to New York City in 1919. By the 1930s he was designing mostly apartment buildings and hotels. As the Great Depression wound down, in 1938 Bien was hired by East Lane Inc. to design an apartment building at 150 through 158 West 21st Street, just east of Seventh Avenue.
Construction was completed the following year at a cost of $140,000 (about $3 million in 2026). Bien executed his Art Moderne design almost entirely through contrasting brick and cast stone. The centered entrance below a bronze grill was recessed within a dramatic polished black stone frame. Matching bronze grills covered the windows on either side of the entrance. Cast stone piers with reeded bands rose to create a frieze atop a reeded bandcourse.
The brickwork of the first floor was laid in a basketweave pattern. Geometric bands of salmon-colored brick contrasted to a cream-colored brick background. Multi-paned casement windows contributed to the Art Moderne geometry.
Bien divided the upper five floors into three vertical sections by decorating the four-bay-wide central section with rows of salmon brick that vertically connected the windows with those above and below. A parapet took the place of a cornice. Two rows of brick bosses decorated the central section and Art Moderne railings provided interest above each of the two end bays.
Bronze grills at the entrance, multi-paned casements, and a bold parapet contributed to Bien's design. from the NYC Dept of Records & Information Services.
An advertisement in The New York Sun on June 10, 1939 touted, "Just Completed -- Latest home comforts." Prospective tenants could choose apartments that ranged from one-and-a-half to three rooms.
Catherine Donohue was among the initial residents. The 35-year-old was a close friend of the Croke family that included 35-year-old Catholic priest Rev. John Croke. He lived at 201 West 95th Street and was attached to the Rosary Hill House in Hawthorne, New York.
Shortly after she moved into 150 West 21st Street, on October 3, 1939 Catherine was riding in Rev. Croke's automobile in New Jersey. Croke was driving south along Route 9 West in Englewood when they were hit head-on by a car driven by 19-year-old Frank Grande. The teen's 14-year-old brother, Joseph, was in that car. It was a horrific crash. Rev. Croke died in Englewood Hospital the following morning. The New York Times reported that Catherine was "in the hospital with critical injuries."
Frank Grande, tragically, should not have been on the road at all. He held a conditional driver's permit, which prohibited him to operate a vehicle without a licensed driver in the car. He and his brother were only slightly injured.
Four days later, The New York Times updated readers, reporting that Catherine Donahue had succumbed to her injuries. Frank Grande's joy riding with his brother resulted in his being arrested "on two charges of causing death by automobile and on a charge of driving without a license," said the article.
Another initial tenant was Daniel B. Stampler. The building was extremely convenient, since he was manager of the Empire Bar & Grill down the block at Sixth Avenue and 21st Street. At the time, employees were paid in cash. In most cases they received their pay envelopes on Friday evening or on Saturday. Crooks, who were sharply aware of the practice, would stake out businesses and learn the schedules of bookkeepers or managers tasked with transporting the cash.
On the morning of July 5, 1940, Stampler drove to the National Safety Bank & Trust Company at 27th Street and Seventh Avenue and withdrew $5,206 in cash (about $116,000 today). As he got back into his automobile, another pulled up beside it. The New York Times reported, "At the point of pistols the thugs forced him to drive to Twenty-eighth Street and the North [i.e., Hudson] River. Putting Mr. Stampler out of the car, the bandits drove off." It is unclear whether the robbers were captured or if Stampler's automobile was recovered.
Vitter Cucio and his wife were also initial residents. In the winter of 1939, they were the target of what The New York Times described as "two of the city's boldest robbers." Salvatore Oddo, who was 33 years old, and his partner 25-year-old Dominick Mundo, were not only bold, they were dangerous.
The Cucio apartment was one of several the pair burglarized. Fortunately for the couple, they were not at home at the time. Mundo and Oddo made away with $500 in cash and jewels. (The cash would translate to about $11,000 today.) The criminals were captured and sentenced "to long prison terms," according to The New York Times on June 13, 1942. Among Mundo's charges was the "shooting [of] a police lieutenant last February, after his arrest in the hold-up of a garage," said the article.
Residents of 150 West 21st Street continued to be victimized. Dorothy Shugard was an athlete, described by The New York Times as "formerly a sprinter." On Sunday night December 21, 1947, she was walking along Broadway near the Broadway Central Hotel when 27-year-old Arthur W. Seymour, who worked as a seaman, "seized her handbag, containing $50 in cash and a bracelet," according to The New York Times, and knocked her to the sidewalk. Dorothy screamed out, "Stop, thief!" (The article said she, "was hampered in the chase by her high heels.")
Happily for her, walking along the block was 27-year-old Emanuel Hauser and his bride. Hauser, an Air Force veteran, had been sworn in as a police officer two days earlier and married the next day. Hauser's wife exhorted, "Go get him, Mannie!"
The young police officer, who had not yet served a single day in uniform, chased Seymour, capturing him at Broadway and Waverly Place. Dorothy Shugard was right behind. At Police Headquarters, Seymour admitted stealing the handbag and told Officer Hauser, "Once more around the block and she'd have caught me."
At the time of the incident, America was seeing the rise of what would be called the Red Scare, or McCarthyism. The Cold War prompted fears of Communism and they ballooned into hysteria. It all resulted in Government investigations, blacklisting, and accusations.
Minna Finkelstein lived here at midcentury. The teacher had been with the New York Public Schools since 1932 and taught at Public School 11 in the Bronx. In 1951, Superintendent of Schools Dr. William Jansen initiated a personal "investigation into Communist influence in the city school system," as reported by The New York Times, and Jansen told the newspaper, "quite a bit of work" had to be done "before the school system was completely free of possible subversive influence."
By October 1952, when Minna Finkelstein was summoned to be interrogated, 15 teachers had already been fired. She and two other educators "balked at questions" put to them. Three months later, on January 31, 1953, The Times reported that the three instructors had been suspected and "charged with insubordination and conduct unbecoming teachers." The school system's assistant corporation counsel, Saul Moskoff, explained that Minna had "refused to answer all questions about alleged past or present party membership."
In the second half of the 20th century, the building underwent an unfortunate modernization. The bronze grills were removed from the entrance, the casement windows replaced, and the parapet stripped of its Art Moderne personality.
photographs by the author





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