In 1891, developer Francis J. Schnugg hired Louis Entzer, Jr. to design nine abutting houses on the northern side East 95th Street between Park and Madison Avenues. Along with the eight homes the pair created a year earlier, they would nearly fill the blockfront.
Completed in 1892, Entzer's row would compliment the earlier houses. The four designs were configured in an A-B-C-C-D-D-B-A pattern. Among the B models was 117 East 95th Street and, like its architectural siblings, was three stories high above a basement. The undressed stone blocks and the heavy voussoirs over the arched parlor windows were Romanesque Revival in style. Above the double-doored entrance, a stained-glass transom incorporated the address.
Entzer gave the planar sandstone of the upper two floors interest by striating it with bands of rough cut stone. A sheet metal oriel dominated the second floor--its whimsical bosses along its base and the artistic panes of the upper sashes were Queen Anne in design. The architect continued to blend styles by placing Gothic Revival, square-headed drip moldings above the top floor windows. An elaborate and highly unusual pressed metal cornice completed the design.
The house became home to the John Stich family. Born in 1856, Stich was the head of the John Stich Building Company. He and his wife, the former Rose Herrmann, had two daughters: Mildred, born in 1882, and Nellie, born in 1886.
The 1899-1900 winter social season saw 18-year-old Mildred's debut. Debutante entertainments often stretched for weeks, and on January 7, 1900, the New York Herald reported, "Mr. and Mrs. John Stich, of 117 East Ninety-fifth street, gave a musical and dance on New Year's night in honor of their daughter Mildred."
Two years later, on October 1, 1902, the New York Herald reported that John and Rose had announced Mildred's engagement to Saul Manovitch. It may have been that article that provided Mary Smith the alternative identity she needed.
Shortly afterward, Mary Smith, described by The New York Times as "stylish and twenty-five years old," went on a shopping spree in the Stern Brothers' dry goods store on West 23rd Street. She was arrested on October 25, 1902 "charged with obtaining goods under false pretenses." The article said she confessed "to having obtained a large quantity of goods by representing herself to be the daughter of Mrs. John Stitch [sic] of 117 East Ninety-fifth Street."
John Stich sold the 18-foot-wide residence in April 1903 to Hyman (who often angelized his name to Herman) Adelstein. He was born in Russia (in an area that would later become part of Poland) on December 7, 1868 and came to America in 1887. He was a partner with Herman Avrutine in an iron foundry.
Hyman and his wife, the former Rosa Solvey, had six children--the eldest, Michael, was 13 years old when the family moved into 117 East 95th Street and the youngest, Sidney, was three. Also living with the family was Ida Ksofsky, a niece. Ida's time here was relatively short. On February 4, 1906, Hyman and Rosa announced her engagement to Ezekiel Yachnowitz.
The Adelsteins were supplanted by the Jacob Lunitz family as early as 1912. Lunitz was president of the Laclun Realty Company. Like Hyman Adelstein, he was born in the Russian Empire around 1865. He arrived in the United States in 1878. Jacob and his wife, the former Betsie Horwitz, had six surviving children. Two others, Feige and Salie, had died in 1894 and 1900, respectively. The family maintained a summer home in Tannersville, New York.
Jacob and Betsie announced daughter Pansy's engagement to Louis Propp on March 1, 1920. The Lunitzes were already planning a move and on July 10, the Record & Guide reported that they had sold 117 East 95th Street to Ernest and Oscar Sondheim.
Brothers Ernest and Oscar Sondheim were partners in The Imperial Metal Manufacturing Corporation, the factory of which was located in Long Island City, and in the Perfumers & Jewelers Box Company on West 14th Street.
The bachelor brothers purchased 117 East 95th Street as a family home. Living with them here were their widowed mother and their unmarried sisters.
Ernest Sondheim was the last of the family to occupy the house. He died in 1954, 34 years after moving in, and his estate sold the house to George Axelrod. He resold it eight years later, in August 1962, to designer Stephen Kyle and his wife, entertainer, lyricist, playwright, and screenwriter Betty Comden.
The couple, who were married in 1942, had created their own names. Stephen Kyle was born Siegfried Schutzman and Betty Comden was born in Brooklyn in 1917 as Basya Cohen. They had two children, Susanna and Alan.
Betty Comden formed a troupe, the Revuers, in 1938 that included Judy Holliday, Adolph Green, and Leonard Bernstein. Comden and Adolph Green partnered to write musical plays. Their first Broadway production was the 1944 musical On the Town. They relocated to California and, working for MGM, wrote screenplays. Among their output were The Barkleys of Broadway, Singin' in the Rain, and The Band Wagon.
Now, back in New York City, Betty and Stephen became close friends with Leonard Bernstein. When his wife, Felicia Montealegre, died in 1978, Betty wrote a moving letter that ended,
You are so much, Lenny--so many qualities and gifts and inner voices not given to many human beings. You will find your strength somehow in them--and in the beautiful elements added to them by the co-mingling of your life and Felicia's.
Much love, always, from Steve and from me. Betty
A year after that letter, Stephen Kyle died of pancreatitis.
Betty Comden and Adolph Green received the Kennedy Center Honors in 1991. She died in the New York Presbyterian Hospital on November 23, 2006 at the age of 89.
The following year, an apartment was installed in the basement level. When the house was offered for sale in 2011, The New York Times described the main portion as having five bedrooms and three baths. Outwardly, little has changed to the 134-year-old residence.
photographs by the author





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