The contracting firm of Breen & Mason was composed of James R. Breen and Alfred G. Nason. In 1881, they acquired the 40-foot-wide wooden structure at 155-157 East 71st Street. The partners acted as their own architects for this project, designing two four-story-and-basement, neo-Grec-style homes on the property. Completed in December 1881, the high-stooped brownstones were distinguished by the windows, which sat within shallow architraves atop paneled spandrels and capped with prominent cornices.
The James R. Breene family moved into 157 East 71st Street just in time for a wedding. On December 8, 1881, the New-York Tribune reported, "James R. Breene's daughter, Ariana A., was married yesterday at 7 p.m. in her father's house, No. 157 East Seventy-first-st., to John H. Bellamy."
By 1890, Charles Brenneman and his family occupied the house. He and his wife, Elizabeth, had a daughter, Emma. On February 3, 1903, Emma's engagement to William Thomas Fritte was announced. Four weeks earlier, on January 25, The New York Times reported that Brenneman had sold 155 and 157 East 71st Street.
The buyer, Dr. Andrew J. McCosh, resold 157 East 71st Street to Otto and Carrie Strack in the spring of 1904. The couple's residency would be short-lived and tragic. The family had not fully settled in when, on May 18, 1904, five-year-old Walker Strack died in the house.
A year later, on June 22, 1905, The New York Times reported that Otto Strack had sold the house to John L. Martin. His ownership, too, would be short.
Frank Guerin Lloyd purchased 155 and 157 East 71st Street in March 1907. In October, he commissioned the architectural firm of Trowbridge & Livingston to update the residences. No. 155 would be used as rental income and 157 East 71st Street would become the Lloyds' home.
The architects' plans for 157 East 71st Street included new plumbing, windows and a "one-story partition." The New-York Tribune said that the "making over" of the house would transform it "into an American basement dwelling house." The plans included "remodeling the interior." American basement houses differed from English basement houses in their lack of stoops. While Trowbridge & Livingston left the upper floors untouched, the entrance was now slightly below grade. Now fronting the second floor, or piano nobile, was a trio of French windows fronted by an iron railing. The renovations, completed in April 1908, cost Lloyd $15,000, or about $517,000 in 2026.
Francis Guerin Lloyd was born in New Jersey in 1848. He married Matilda Hedenberg Herbert on August 9, 1875. The couple had two surviving children. (Two others had died in childhood.)
Lloyd was hired by Brooks Brothers, the men's clothing firm, when he was 14 years old. He worked his way up, and in 1879 was made a partner. Upon the death of John E. Brooks in 1896, Lloyd became senior partner. By the time he purchased 157 East 71st Street, he was president of Brooks Brothers. The family's country home was in Bernardsville, New Jersey.
Moving into the house with the Lloyds was their daughter-in-law, Julia A. Trowbridge Lloyd. Daniel Herbert Lloyd died in 1907, a year after the couple's marriage. According to the New-York Tribune, when Julia's father, who was a physician, died, he "left his daughters independent fortunes." Additionally, said the newspaper, Daniel Lloyd, "left a large estate." Julia maintained her own country home, Driftwood, in Noroton, Connecticut.
Near Driftwood was the summer home of Thomas Crimmins, son of millionaire John D. Crimmins. The properties were, apparently, close enough for a romance to blossom. On February 12, 1910, the New-York Tribune reported that the pair had been quietly married in Augusta, Georgia.
Now sharing the house with Francis and Matilda were James Henry McKinley, a "well known tenor and teacher of singing," and his wife, the former Laura Celestine Fiske. The relationship between the two families is unclear, but they would live together in the East 71st Street house for years.
Perhaps unexpectedly, the Lloyds did not routinely entertain. An exception came on April 3, 1915. Matilda's niece, Emilie Mathilde Roe, was married to Duncan MacIntosh Hay in St. Thomas's Church that day. The New York Times reported that the ceremony was "followed by a breakfast at the home of Mrs. Francis G. Lloyd, 157 East Seventy-first Street."
On the morning of October 6, 1920, Francis Lloyd left the house, heading to his office. On the way, the 72-year-old suffered a fatal heart attack.
Matilda H. Lloyd moved permanently to the Bernardsville estate where she died on October 25, 1945. The McKinleys remained at 157 East 71st Street. Laura's uncle, Alexander P. Fiske, moved in with the couple. He died at the age of 89 on May 30, 1922 and his funeral was held in the parlor the following day.
On August 18, 1928, the Real Estate Record & Builders' Guide reported that James and Laura McKinley had purchased a brownstone at 626 West End Avenue. The article mentioned that they had "resided at 157 West 71st St. for the past 25 years."
When the house was sold in August 1941, The New York Times reported that the buyer, Inez C. Robb, president of the Callaway Holding Corporation, had hired architect John S. Burrell to covert "the old residence into a modern apartment building for ten families."
The renovation resulted in two apartments per floor. Among the residents was the building's owner, Inez C. Robb. An advertisement in The New York Sun on March 13, 1942 described the one-room, kitchen and bath apartment 2-E saying, "Decorator will lease beautifully furnished, comfortable, large living-bedroom. Full-sized kitchen, bath, wood burning fireplace. Fully equipped."
Robb sold the building in September 1956. It was updated in 1982, while preserving the configuration of two apartments per floor.
Then, in September 2000, Todd Romano Antiques & Decorations opened in the ground floor. The New York Times said it, "offers furnishings from 18th-century French to 1970's Lucite, with upholstered pieces of his design." Romano later moved his operation to East 59th Street.
On the exterior, little has changed to 157 East 71st Street since Trowbridge & Livingston remodeled it nearly 120 years ago.
photographs by the author



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