Joshua Isaacs owned considerable land in Greenwich Village in the decade following the Revolution. In 1799 he began construction of his substantial free-standing home at the corner of the recently opened Bedford and Commerce Streets. Two years later, Isaacs transferred title of 77 Bedford Street and the abutting vacant lots to his son-in-law, Harmon Hendricks. Following Hendricks's death in 1821, the Bedford Street properties were left in trust to his daughter, Hettie, who was married to Aaron L. Gomez.
Charles Oakley was perhaps the most prolific builder in the district in the 1830s. In 1836 he leased the lots at 73 and 75 Bedford Street from the Hendricks-Gomez family. He erected two Greek Revival style homes on the sites, each two-and-a-half stories tall and faced in Flemish bond brick.
The doorway of 73 Bedford sat above a short stoop and was flanked by narrow sidelights. A squat attic level took the place of the dormers that would have been seen in the Federal style of a few years earlier. The ends of the paneled, brownstone lintels were given modified Greek key designs.
The first occupant of 73 Bedford Street was silversmith Charles M. Williams. He had been a partner of John I. Monell in the mid-1820s in Monell & Williams, but seems to have been working alone by now.
The silver top of this cut glass canister in the collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art is stamped with Charles M. Williams mark.
Charles M. Williams disappears from directories in 1837, suggesting he died that year or shortly afterward. The house became home to Henry and Eliza Haines. Their only son, John Henry, died on February 4, 1839. His funeral was held in the parlor the following day.
The next year, Deborah Coley, the widow of William G. Coley, and her son William Jr. occupied 73 Bedford Street. William ran a fruit business at 195 Washington Street. The Coleys would remain into the late 1840s, after which another widow, Diana Traphagen, leased the house.
Diana was the widow of William D. Traphagen. Living with her was her daughter Ellen D., who became a teacher in the early 1850s. In 1854 she taught in the primary department of School No. 41 on Greenwich Avenue at Charles Street, earning $175 a year (about $6,500 in 2025).
Not surprisingly, Diana Traphagen took in boarders. In 1851, for instance, they were Charles W. Juhnke, a varnisher, and Elizabeth Van Pelt, a nurse. Elizabeth was the widow of John Van Pelt.
Hettie and Aaron L. Gomez still owned the land on which 73 Bedford Street sat. On October 28, 1853, their daughter Rosalane (known as Rosalie) was married to Gershom Seixas Nathan. Diana Traphagen's lease apparently expired in 1858 and the following year Rosalie and Gershom Nathan moved into the Bedford Street house. (Diana did not move far away. In 1859 she was living at 67 Bedford Street.)
Like his wife's family, Gershom's had supported the American Revolution. His father, Simon Nathan, arrived in the colonies in 1773 and immediately threw his support to the cause. He also was active in the Jewish community and was a trustee of Shearith Israel Congregation.
Gershom was born on September 26, 1821. He and Rosalie had seven children, Frances, Clarence Seixas, Stella, Edgar Joshua, Benjamin, Elvira and Solis.
Shortly after moving in, Rosalie advertised for domestic help. Her ad on October 4, 1859 read, "Wanted--A cook; one who understands plain cooking, making bread and to do the washing of a small family; wages $7 per month." (The broad list of duties would earn the servant the equivalent of $265 a month today.)
On July 12, 1864, five years after the family moved in, Gershom died at the age of 42. It is unclear how long Rosalie and the children remained at 73 Bedford Street. She eventually moved far north to 113 West 87th Street where she died on April 16, 1890.
As early as 1871, the former Nathan house was home to Hudson W. Ball, a real estate agent, his wife, the former Katherine Kane, and their son Hudson H. Ball, who was a clerk. The family rented the house until 1887 when they moved to 51 Morton Street.
Terrence H. Forrest leased 73 Bedford Street in the 1890s, paying $187.50 per quarter, according to Gomez documents. The rent would translate to nearly $26,000 per year in today's money. Forrest ran a laundry business on the East Side of Manhattan. On June 4, 1896, The World said, "In Bedford street, where many of the old settlers still dwell, despite the attractions of Harlem and other newer neighborhoods, Terrence is a man of influence, both social and political."
For several years, according to the article, Forrest had suffered from dropsy (known today as edema). Nothing had alleviated the condition and, "with each relapse his strength faded away, until he retained hardly any of his former strength." Finally, in the spring of 1896, Forrest's condition was dire. The World reported, "It was decided that the last sacraments of the Catholic Church should be administered to the dying man."
Father McCabe of the Church of St. Anthony of Padua arrived at the house. Along with the items for administering extreme unction, he brought a relic of St. Anthony in a gold case. The World reported, "He anointed the sick man's body with it while all around prayed, with heads bowed."
On June 4, The World recounted, "Almost immediately, it is said, the man rallied, and from that moment grew stronger and stronger until now, his family declare, he enjoys his former health." Neither Father McCabe nor Terrence Forrest would discuss the matter. "In the neighborhood, however, the case is much talked about, and Mr. Forrest is looked upon by many as one saved from the grave," said the article.
Forrest's name was back in the newspapers the following year when his turnout (a two-wheeled carriage) ran down bicyclist Annie W. Browne uptown on 62nd Street. The New York Journal and Advertiser reported, "Her bicycle was wrecked, but she was not injured." Forrest was initially arrested, "but upon his promise to pay for the damage he was liberated."
The Forrest family remained at 73 Bedford Street through 1899, after which it was operated as a boarding house for more than a decade. Interestingly, in 1917 Rosalie and Gershom Nathan's son, Clarence Siexas Nathan, leased his childhood home "for a term of years."
In October 1923, the Gomez family began liquidating about a dozen properties, including 73 through 77 Bedford Streets. On November 18, 1923, The New York Times reported, "Greenwich Village has a new community art center. It is in Bedford and Commerce Streets, where the noise of motor traffic on Seventh Avenue never penetrates." A group of artists, writers and performers had bought up the Bedford Street houses and hired architect Ferdinand Savigano to remodel them.
Savigano raised the attic to a full floor, its vertical wall composed of more glass than brick. Artists' studio spaces like this were highly popular in Greenwich Village. Seven years later, Bedford Street was widened, requiring the removal of the stoop. The entrance to 73 Bedford Street was moved to the rear, accessed through a gateway on Commerce Street.
Shorn of its stoop, the former entrance of 73 Bedford Street hovered above the sidewalk in 1941. image via the NYC Dept of Records & Information Services.
Living in the remodeled house were Warren C. Clark, an investment statistician and graduate of Williams College; Joseph Cox, the managing editor of Adventure magazine; and Kathleen Keenan (known as Katy to her friends), who was a dietician for Child's Restaurants. In October 1927, The Lyre of Alpha Chi Omega described Kathleen's "cozy little apartment at Greenwich Village."
Another remodeling in 1938 resulted in one apartment in the basement and two each on the upper floors. One of the units was rented by actress and dancer Joan McCracken in 1944. Her husband, Jack Dunphy, had been called to military duty. In her 2003 biography of McCracken, The Girl Who Fell Down, Lisa Jo Sagolla writes:
McCracken focused on settling into her ground-floor garden apartment at 72 Bedford Street. To McCracken, home was a haven in which to escape. She had a knack for turning her urban apartments into snug little oases, filled with plants and flowers. She papered her apartment walls herself, made her own slipcovers, and filled her home with the products of her favorite hobby--antique furniture shopping. One of her prized pieces was an antique Pennsylvania Dutch cupboard. Collecting seashells and unusually shaped pieces of driftwood was another of McCracken's hobbies, and her New York apartment sported specimens she and Dunphy had picked up along the shore during their honeymoon in Provincetown.
McCracken had a contract with Warner Brothers, but had been allowed to return to New York to work on the Broadway play Bloomer Girl.
Joan McCracken as Daisy (right) in the Broadway production of Bloomer Girl. Life magazine, November 6, 1944.
Jack Dunphy would never join his wife at 73 Bedford Street. In 1948 he met Truman Capote at a cocktail party and the two would have a relationship until Capote's death. Joan McCracken went on to film, Broadway and television roles to general acclaim. But health complications brought an end to her career. She died in 1961 at the age of 43.
In 1985, the house was renovated again, at which time the stoop was refabricated. There are now a duplex apartment in the basement and first floor, and one apartment each on the upper floors.
photograph by the author