Eufrasia Aguilar Leland and Emma Martha Leland were born in 1836 and 1844 respectively, two of the nine children born to Francis Smith Leland and Eufrasia Bernardina Aguilar Piriz. Emma married Charles Howland Wesson, who died in 1873 when their only child (also named Eufrasia) was just three years old.
In 1906, the sisters purchased the two 20-foot-wide dwellings at 123 and 125 East 79th Street and hired the architectural firm of Foster, Gade & Graham to replace them with a double-wide mansion. Simultaneously, Emma's daughter, Eufrasia, and her husband, artist Allen Tucker, commissioned Robins & Oakman to design a residence next door at 121 East 79th Street. The two firms' neo-Georgian designs worked together in creating a harmonious effect.
Writing in The Architectural Record in November 1911, critic Montgomery Schuyler praised, "see how a big house and a little house may dwell together in amity on account of the employment of the same materials in both, when the designs of them have nothing in common beyond a loose and general agreement on 'style.'"
The Wesson-Leland mansion coexisted happily with its smaller neighbor. The Architectural Record, November 1911 (copyright expired)
Faced in Flemish bond brick and trimmed in marble, the sisters' residence was three stories tall above a shallow basement. Its Georgian inspired elements included fully-arched openings at the first floor, layered and splayed stone keystones at the second, and a dignified balustrade atop the cornice.
The women moved within society as a pair. On July 7, 1918, for instance, the New York Herald reported, "Mrs. Charles Howland Wesson and her sister, Miss Eufrasia Leland of 123 East Seventy-ninth street, after a stay in Lenox, have gone to Poland Springs."
Eufrasia Aguilar Leland died in the East 79th Street mansion at the age of 88 on November 14, 1924. Her funeral was held at the Church of the Incarnation on Madison Avenue three days later. The following month, on Christmas Day, Emma died in the house. Interestingly, her funeral on December 27 was held in the Church of the Resurrection on East 74th Street.
Dorothy May Jordan Robinson purchased the mansion. Born in Boston in 1885, she was, according to The New York Times, "daughter of the late Eben D. Jordan, merchant of Boston and at one time a member of the famous dry goods firm of Jordan, Marsh & Co." The newspaper said she "inherited a handsome fortune from her father."
Dorothy was estranged from her husband, Monroe Douglas Robinson, whom she married in 1916. She had custody of their only daughter, Dorothy, who was eight years old in 1925. Before moving in, Dorothy hired architect Mott Schmidt to add a fourth floor. Set back from the roofline, the addition was greatly hidden behind the balustrade.
The new addition peeks above the balustrade in this 1940 photograph. via the NYC Dept of Records & Information Services.
Dorothy Robinson would not be alone with her daughter and servants in the commodious home for long. She obtained her divorce in December 1925, and on March 4, 1926, The New York Times reported that she and Elbridge Gerry Chadwick had been married in the house "in the presence of a few friends."
Chadwick, too, was born in Boston (he in 1881) and had lived in New York City since the turn of the century. He was a partner in the real estate firm of Brown, Wheelock, Harris, Vought & Co. "Mr. Chadwick and his bride left the city immediately after the ceremony," reported The New York Times, "and on their return they will make their home at 123 East Seventy-ninth Street." The couple's country home was in Syosset, Long Island.
Both Dorothy and Elbridge sat on the board of the Philharmonic Symphony Society of New York, and entertainments in the mansion often centered around music. In 1937, conductor Arthur Rodjinski of the Cleveland Orchestra was invited by the society as a guest conductor. On February 19, The New York Post reported, "Mr. and Mrs. Elbridge Gerry Chadwick will be hosts at the reception in his honor to be held at their residence, 123 East Seventy-ninth Street."
On February 5, 1938, The New York Post reported, "One of the largest as well as most important weddings of the late season in town is that of Miss Dorothy Douglas Robinson, a grand-niece of President Roosevelt and cousin of Mrs. Roosevelt, to Randolph Appleton Kidder." (Monroe Douglas Robinson, who came from Paris to give her daughter away, was the son of Corinne Roosevelt Robinson, sister of Theodore Roosevelt.) The article said, "there will be a large reception at the residence of the bride's mother, Mrs. Elbridge Gerry Chadwick."
Elbridge Gerry Chadwick died in the East 79th Street mansion at the age of 63 on March 23, 1945. Within a few years, Dorothy sold the house to Ronald and Marietta Endicott Peabody Tree.
The couple, who had recently divorced their spouses, were married on July 26, 1947. They had one child, Penelope, born in 1949. Marietta brought her daughter from her previous marriage, Frances Fitzgerald, into the marriage.
Tree's name at birth was Arthur Ronald Lambert Field Tree. He was born in England of American-born parents, Arthur Tree and Ethel Field, daughter of Marshall Field. Ronald served as a Member of Parliament from 1933 to 1945. The family also maintained a home in Barbados, "Heron Bay."
Marietta Tree was as much involved in politics as she was in society. She became county Democratic chairperson and in 1952 was involved in the presidential election campaign of Adlai Stevenson.
Stevenson, of course, was defeated in that election. On January 21, 1953, The New York Times reported, "A half-hour before the inauguration of the man who defeated him at the polls, Adlai E. Stevenson left New York for Barbados." The article said, "He will stay at Mr. and Mrs. Tree's home in St. James Parish, Barbados." On the plane was Marietta Tree. "Mr. Tree will join them Saturday," said the article.
Marietta Tree and Adlai Stevenson before boarding the airplane to Barbados. The New York Times, January 21, 1953
In fact, Marietta and Stevenson were having a romantic affair, one reportedly acknowledged and accepted by Ronald Tree, who was bisexual. The New York Times would later explain that Marietta "served as unofficial hostess at dinners Mr. Stevenson gave in his apartment in the Waldorf Towers."
In 1954, Marietta was elected to the Democratic State Committee and on April 13, 1959, she was sworn in as a member of the New York City Intergroup Relations Commissions. President John F. Kennedy appointed her to the United Nations Commission on Human Rights in 1961. The New York Times said, "She arrived at the United States mission almost every day in a chauffeur-driven Rolls Royce."
Marietta Tree and Adlai Stevenson were together in England on July 14, 1965 when, as worded by The New York Times, Stevenson "dropped dead on a London street." The article said, "She tried vainly to revive him with mouth to mouth respiration." According to her biography by the Human Rights Commission, that evening she wrote in her diary, "Adlai is dead. We were together."
Ronald Tree died on July 14, 1976 and Marietta moved to One Sutton Place South where she would remain until her death on August 15, 1991.
No. 123 East 79th Street next became home to John S. Samuels III. Born in Galveston, Texas in 1933, Samuels received his law degree in 1960. He and two other investors borrowed $4.5 million in 1973 to buy the Leckie Smokeless Coal Company. Within a year the firm's earnings were reported at $50 million and in February 1979, three years after moving into 123 East 79th Street, he appeared on Fortune magazine's list of America's wealthiest men. It reported his personal fortune to be as much as $300 million (about $1.3 billion in 2026 terms).
A month before that article, on January 9, 1979, The New York Times headlined an article, "House Ransacked," and reported, "The town house of John S. Samuels 3d at 123 East 79th Street was ransacked over the weekend by burglars who took gold and silver flatware, trays and place settings, according to the police, who estimated the value of the items as $500,000." (By the time of the heist, Samuels was, as well, the chairman of the New York City Opera Company and the City Center.)
The East 79th Street mansion was one of five residences owned by Samuels. He had two country estates on Long Island, a townhouse in London, and a home in Galveston, Texas.
In 1979, John Samuels and his wife, the former Ellen Richards separated. (They had four children, including actor John Stockwell.) At the time, he was already experiencing financial problems. An article in The New York Times on March 26, 1981 explained, "A series of reverses, starting in the late 70's, forced him to liquidate many of his personal and corporate assets." Just two months later, the newspaper reported, "The fine town house at 123 East 79th Street, formerly the home of Marietta Peabody Tree, a former member of the United States delegation to the Union Nations, and the home since 1976 of John S. Samuels 3d, has been bought at auction for $4.05 million by the Brazilian Government."
The article said that the mansion "will be the residence of Brazil's United Nations head of mission." The Wesson-Leland house remains the property of the Government of Brazil.
photographs by the author







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