In 1878-79, real estate developers Duffy & Bros. erected a row of nine, 17-feet-wide rowhouses along the north side of East 94th Street between Lexington and Park Avenues. Designed by F. S. Barus, the identical brownstone-fronted homes were three stories tall above high English basements. Barus's neo-Grec design placed the openings into architraves embellished with scrolled brackets and molded cornices. Each house terminated with its own pressed metal cornice.
The original residents of 125 East 94th Street were Philip and Annie Smith, whose residency would be short and disturbing. Philip, it seems, had a drinking problem and when intoxicated became abusive. A maid, Louise Hughes, testified several years later that on March 25, 1880 Philip was drunk and struck Annie "with his fist around the head." She said he was "in a great rage and used violent and abusive language." That night, said Louise, Annie "ran away from the house to get out of his way." She also testified that Philip would tell his wife, "I will knock your teeth out," and, "I will throw you out of the window."
The Smiths left 125 East 94th Street on May 1, 1881. The house was leased by Laura M. Boehmann to several affluent tenants over the ensuing years. Living here in the pre-World War I years was the Kroger family, who announced the engagement of daughter Matilda to Henry C. Reife in April 1916.
Laura Boehmann sold 125 East 94th Street in April 1917 to W. S. Groesbeck Fowler. He, too, used the property for rental income. In 1919, he leased it to Colonel Latham Gallup Reed and his wife, the former Mary Newbold Welsh.
Latham Reed was born in Albany, New York in 1856. His deep American ancestry included "early residents of the Plymouth Colony," according to The New York Times, and "officers of the French and Indian and Revolutionary Wars." Reed studied at Columbia University, and at Cambridge University in England where he earned his law degree. Formerly a partner in the law firm of Bowers & Sands, he retired in 1914.
Fowler sold 125 East 94th Street in May 1921. The New York Herald remarked, "The new owner will alter and occupy." The house continued to see a relatively quick turnover of residents.
Amelia Caroline Taylor Mason was the widow of Reverend Arthur Mason. Born in 1837 in Cuba, she and her husband, who died in 1907, had two children. Amelia died in the house on January 11, 1924 and her funeral was held in St. Bartholomew's Church.
Dr. Robert Ogden DuBois quickly moved into 125 East 94th Street. The 30-year-old bachelor had graduated from Columbia University in 1915 and from the College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1919. An assistant at the New York Nursery and Child's Hospital, he would not be alone here for long. On March 9, 1925, The New York Times reported that he was engaged to Elizabeth Harsen Chisolm. The newspaper mentioned that the bride-to-be "is well known in New York society."
Like Latham Gallup Reed, DuBois had a sterling American pedigree. He traced his ancestry to Robert Livingston the Elder, who arrived in Albany in 1674 and established Livingston Manor along the Hudson River in 1715. The couple would have two sons, Robert Jr., born in 1926, and Philip Mason, born in 1932.
In August 1933, Betty Menzel was hired here as a servant. The 24-year-old had previously worked in the home of Benjamin Friedman in Laurelton, Long Island. Only days after she moved in, Friedman rang the door. The Long Island Daily Press reported "on June 28 he missed a gold ring set with a sapphire worth $50, two fountain pens valued at $20, and a cigarette lighter valued at $8." When Betty quit on August 12, Friedman's suspicions "turned to her."
Faced with her former employer, Betty Menzel crumpled. The article said, "she returned the pens and lighter, and gave him a pawn ticket for the ring." That was not enough for Friedman, and Betty was arrested.
The house was next owned by Julia Smith, the widow of John Smith. She lived here with her young adult daughter, Madeleine Anne. Madeleine graduated from the College of New Rochelle and received her Master of Arts degree from Columbia University.
Madeleine was married to Lieutenant John Francis Butler in the Church of St. Ignatius Loyola on May 5, 1944. The groom had just returned from deployment overseas.
Julia Smith died in 1954. In reporting that her estate had sold the house, The New York Times remarked, "It has ten rooms, three baths, and a garden."
Novelist and poet Erica Jong purchased 125 East 94th Street following her divorce from Jonathan Fast in 1983. She moved in with the couple's five-year-old daughter, Molly Jong-Fast. Jong also maintained a country home in Weston, Connecticut.
Bernard Gotfryd created his portrait of Erica Jong in 1969. from the collection of the Library of Congress.
Dr. Du Bois's former office was still in the basement level and Jong leased it to what Molly Jong-Fast described as "sexologists." In her How to Lose Your Mother, Jong-Fast writes:
The house looked like all the other narrow brownstone houses on the sloping block, but it wasn't the same. She painted the front door bubblegum pink. People who visited the house said it looked like a haunted bordello, but that wasn't because the house was haunted--that was because my mother had terrible taste. She put floral wallpaper in each room. Later she'd hang paintings of people having sex (bequeathed by the sexologists who would move into the basement) on that floral wallpaper.
Erica Jong was best known for her novel Fear of Flying, published a decade before she purchased 125 East 94th Street. The controversial book's slant on female sexuality would greatly influence what was termed by some the "feminist wars." By 2022, the book would have worldwide sales of more than 37 million copies, according to The New York Times.
Like her mother, Molly Jong-Fast would go on to a career as novelist and journalist. By then, she and her mother would have moved on from 125 East 94th Street.
In 1997, it was purchased by Lisa and Perry Gershon--a lawyer and a real estate finance executive, respectively. In reporting on the sale, The New York Times remarked that of the 1879 row, it was "one of the two brownstones left with its rosettes intact--its stoop standing proud, its interior spaces unblemished by conversion to apartments." The article said, "the interior spaces were a bit tattered, but the house remained a single-family residence, with an office on the ground floor."
Astoundingly, given its long list of residents and owners, outwardly 125 East 94th Street survives essentially intact.
photographs by the author




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