photograph by Carole Teller
Developers sometimes lobbied the Board of Aldermen to rename a block or two upon which their new upscale homes sat. Their goal was to create the sense of exclusivity. In 1836, Longworth's American Almanack noted, "Part of Fourth [Street], between the Bowery and Avenue 2d, has the soubriquet of Albion-place."
Among the fashionable homes on the block was 411 Albion Place, aka 411 Fourth Street. Erected around 1834, it was two-and-a-half stories tall above an English basement. Clad in Flemish bond brick, its Federal design included a peaked roof punctured with two dormers. (The address would be a moving target for letter carriers and visitors. It was changed to 427 Fourth Street in 1850, and to 85 East 4th Street in 1864.)
Hanna Brown lived here as early as 1836. Born in 1774, she was the widow of Adam Brown. Hanna had moved here from 38 Rivington Street. After living here alone with her servants several years, she began suffering what The Evening Post would call, "a lingering illness." She died at the age of 65 on December 16, 1839. Two days later, a one-line notice appeared in the Morning Herald:
The widow of the late Adam Brown, a highly respected and deeply lamented lady, will be buried today, from 411 Fourth street.
(The fact that only the Adam Brown's name, not Hanna's, was mentioned in her funeral notice would be highly surprising and offensive today.)
Four months later, on April 21, 1840, Hanna Brown's things were auctioned in what today we would call an estate sale. Auctioneer E. H. Ludlow described, "splendid fashionable furniture," damask and silk window curtains, and bronze candelabras among the offerings.
The house next became home to the Graydon family. Born in County Tyrone, Ireland around 1781, John Graydon ran a "tingood" business on Beaver Street. He married Elizabeth Whitley around 1803 and the couple had nine children, at least five of whom lived with their parents. John W. was an attorney; Joseph and Samuel ran a dry goods business on William Street, William was listed in directories as "merchant" at 61 Cedar Street, and Jane Graydon Sherrerd was the young widow of Archibald Sherrerd, who died in 1836, three years after their marriage. The Graydon family's country home was in Ridgewood, New Jersery.
It was likely the Graydon's who replaced the Federal style doorway (which was now falling from fashion) with an up-to-the-minute Greek Revival example. Engaged, fluted Doric columns upheld a substantial entablature and cornice.
The family received an unexpected package at the basement door on June 4, 1855. The New York Times reported, "The practice of dropping babies has become almost a mania of late in the City. Monday evening there was one found at No. 427 Fourth-street, and taken to the Almshouse."
It was likely the substantial Grayson population within the house that prompted its enlargement in 1857. The attic was demolished and a third and fourth floor erected. Construction was completed in 1858. The alterations included a fashionable Italianate cornice.
John Graydon died in the Ridgewood house on January 29, 1864 at the age of 83. His funeral was held in the Fourth Street house three days later.
In 1867, Hannah Hosier operated 85 East 4th Street as a boarding house. Although well-to-do businessmen, like John D. Billings, a lawyer, and piano maker Edington B. Decker, boarded here in 1867; Hannah seems to have catered to college students. In 1869, six Columbia University students lived here.
Jane E. Carman took over the operation of the boarding house in 1871. On May 18, the New-York Tribune reported, "The Boarding-House for Sewing Women has been removed from No. 262 East Broadway to No. 85 East Fourth-st." The house doubled as the headquarters of the Young Woman's Aid Association.
On December 16, 1875, The New York Times reported that Michael Ryan had purchased the house for $14,000 (or about $424,000 in 2026). He and his wife Agnes operated it as a boarding house and his tenants were highly varied. Living here in 1879 were the Gantzberg family--Albert was a weaver, Bertha a nurse, and Julius a teacher--as well as Charles Laroche, who was an actor; physician Alexander Weldmann; and a tax collector and two clerks.
The Ryans sold 85 East 4th Street to Charles F. and Marie Kremer in February 1883 for $15,500. They converted the basement level to the Second Avenue Club. The Documents of the Senate of the State of New York described it in 1887 as a "club and coffee house."
Two years later, in March 1889, the Kremers leased the house to Paul Wilzig. By then, the once refined neighborhood was Manhattan's center of the Socialist movement. Within days of Wilzig's signing the lease, on March 30, 1889 the Record & Guide reported that he had commissioned architect H. W. Fabian to renovate the interiors at a cost equal to $180,000 today.
The result was Witzig's Hall, also known as Witzig's Assembly Rooms. It quickly became a favorite meeting space. On June 23, 1891, for instance, The Evening Post reported, "The Convention of the International Machinists' Union of North America was continued this morning at Witzig's Assembly Rooms." And on August 31, the New-York Tribune reported, "A meeting of the new Socialist Central Union was held at No. 85 East Fourth-st. yesterday morning, and it was permanently organized under the name of the New-York City Federation of Labor."
The Kremers leased 85 East 4th Street to Robert L. Worm in July 1908. He converted it to Casino Hall, while continuing to cater to labor and Socialist groups. On July 30, 1909, the New-York Tribune reported, "A benefit concert and entertainment for the unemployed of this city will be given this evening in Casino Hall, No. 85 East 4th street, under the auspices of the International Brotherhood Welfare Association."
Labor disputes in the early 20th century often involved violence. In 1910, the Cloakmakers' Union went on strike. Rather than march in the picket lines, five workers went to Hunter, New York where they found employment. It did not sit well with union bosses. The New York Times reported, "When the information was received by the union, men were sent to Hunter to bring back the five members."
Herman Liberwitz was one of those workers. When the train pulled into Grand Central Station, three of his comrades were able to escape. Liberwitz and the other man were not so lucky. They were brought 85 East 4th Street and beaten by Morris Stupniker, described by the newspaper as a labor union "strong-arm man." Herman Liberwitz was "beaten over the head with a club and died of a fractured skull the next day," reported The New York Times. The other man was "badly beaten."
Terrified of "starkers," (the lingo for a union goon who enforced union rules, patrolled picket lines and dealt with strike breakers), workers refused to give any information to authorities. It would be four years before detectives got enough evidence to arrest Stupniker and union vice-president Max Sigman for Liberwitz's murder in April 1914.
A persistent Deputy Police Commissioner Frank Lord was not done. A year later, on May 12, 1915, The New York Times reported that he "went out last night to arrest east side gangsters, who, it is alleged, have been hired to do 'strong arm work,' and even commit murder." Indictments against 34 men, "eleven of whom were gangsters, and twenty-three labor union officials in the textile trade," had been returned.
In the meantime, Casino Hall continued to be a popular meeting place. On June 29, 1914, an obviously unsympathetic New-York Tribune reported, "A number of groups of anarchists and other radical people met yesterday at Casino Hall, 85 East Fourth st."
Later that year, The New York Times reported that the Anarcho-Syndicalist League of Greater New York had been formed here. "The symbol of the new league is a representation of the pyramid and mailed-fist urn in which were placed the ashes of Caron, who was killed when a bomb exploded in his flat."
On August 4, 1921, the New York Herald reported that B. H. Cohen had leased 85 East 4th Street for 21 years. The article said he "will remodel it into a catering building." Cohen initially kept the name Casino Hall. It also continued to cater to Socialist groups.
On December 16, 1922, for instance, The Daily Worker, published by the Community Party, reported on the "fifth evening of the big six-day Russian bazaar" in Casino Hall. That night would include a concern by composer and pianist I. Arnstein.
By 1927, the name of the venue was Royal Hall. On December 2, 1929, The New York Times reported, "The injection of communism into a mass meeting of nearly 300 subway construction workers precipitated a clash yesterday afternoon in Royal Hall." The article said, "chairs and water classes were used as weapons as scores of workers belabored each other." Although no arrests were made, there were "plenty of black eyes and bruised noses, and several men were cut by chair rungs."
Another name change came by the early 1930s. On May 5, 1934, The Daily Worker reported on a "gala entertainment and party for the benefit of the victims of Austrian fascism, at Palm Casino, 85 East Fourth Street." (Reportedly, the Palm Casino was, in fact, a speakeasy owned by Italian-born gangster Charles "Lucky" Luciano.)
After decades of catering to Socialist and labor groups, a portion of 85 East 4th Street became home to the United Ukrainian Organizations of the United States around 1939.
The space that had seen raucous meetings and celebrations for decades became a theater at midcentury. On May 7, 1955, The New York Times reported that actor Will Geer would sponsor a tribute to the late Vernon Rice "at the Folksay Theatre, 85 East Fourth Street." The venue became the Downtown Theatre in 1956, to the East End Theatre around 1960.
On January 16, 1965, the New York Amsterdam News reported that the American Theatre for Poets had leased the East End Theatre, saying it "plans to remodel the theatre, enlarging the stage, and installing special new lighting and sound systems." Once again, the theater was renamed. On August 21, the New York Amsterdam News reported that Arise, Arise premiered "at the newly named Cinematheque East Theatre."
In the meantime, the rest of the building was known as Ukrainian Hall, home to the American-Ukrainian Heritage Society and the East Side Forum. Appearing in the Forum in September 1967, was editor-journalist James Aronson who spoke on "1968: New Politics and Revolution?"
Less political events, of course, were held here. On May 3, 1973, The Daily World reported on the Spring Candlelight Dance held here, sponsored by the American-Ukrainian Heritage Society. Around 1981, Ukrainian Hall was renamed Ukrainian Labor Home.
As a boy, Denis Woychuk was brought to the Ukrainian Labor Home by his father, who was looking for work. Years later, in 1983 and after becoming an attorney, Woychuk bought the building. He opened the Kraine Art Gallery here and converted the theater space to the Kraine Theater.
Around 1993, Woychuck opened the Kraine Gallery Bar, aka KGB. It was followed by a black box theater on the third floor called The Red Room. That space was remodeled in 2013 as a speakeasy-inspired performance venue.
Sharing the building in the 21st century are the New York Neo-Futurists which, according to The WNET Group's website, "create theater that is fusion of sport, poetry and living-newspaper;" a branch of the New York Comedy Club; and the long-lasting KGB Bar.
Despite its many iterations and several unsympathetic alterations like the parlor-floor entrance, it is not difficult to imagine the house when the wealthy Graydon family occupied it a century-and-a-half ago.
many thanks to artist Carole Teller for suggesting this post
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