Wednesday, November 6, 2024
The Puzzling Anomaly at 41 Bank Street
Tuesday, November 5, 2024
Schwartz & Gross's 1917 300 West End Avenue
On New Year's Day 1916, the Record & Guide reported that the Paterno Construction Company had commissioned Gaetan Ajello to design an apartment house at the northeast corner of West End Avenue and 74th Street. "The structure will be equipped throughout with every modern appliance, containing quarters for thirteen families," said the article. But something went awry. Ten months later, on October 14, the journal noted that Schwartz & Gross was now working on the plans.
Apparently the building manager didn't know who I was. Julie and I moved our furniture in first, then showed up to take occupancy. Within hours, the building manager became aware he had a Negro as a tenant. He passed on the word to the building's owner, who didn't like this at all.
Julie and I would live in that cavernous apartment for nearly half a century, raising our children and entertaining a glittering array of guests. Among our first were Martin and Coretta King...Martin would come to think of it as his home away from home, staying with us on many of his New York trips...Soon, Senator John F. Kennedy would come to visit, seeking my endorsement in his race for president. Eleanor Roosevelt would come to visit, too, though more often we went to see her, driving north to the family compound in Hyde Park, New York, for some of the most rewarding evenings of my life.
Monday, November 4, 2024
The Lost Astor Building - 10-12 Wall Street
Saturday, November 2, 2024
The James Webb House - 43 Charlton Street
Friday, November 1, 2024
The William Jay House -- 22 East 72nd Street
Although he was an attorney and partner in the law firm Jay & Candler, William Jay was most often referred to by his military title, Colonel. During the Civil War, he had served on the staff of General George Meade and saw action in the Battles of Gettysburg, Chancellorsville, Mine Run and Appomattox. He was born on February 12, 1841 into a socially prominent, old New York family. A great-grandson of Founding Father and first Chief Justice of the United States, John Jay; his grandfather was Judge William Jay; and his father, John Jay, was a lawyer and Minster to Austria.
The fact that Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Fuller Potter of this city and Southampton had been divorced became known yesterday following the announcement that Mrs. Potter was married last Saturday to Henry Wainwright Howe...The report of the divorce and the marriage of Mrs. Potter came as a surprise to society.
Thursday, October 31, 2024
The 1871 M. A. Glynn Livery Stable - 224 East 38th Street
M. Jordan & Co. operated the livery stable in the 1890s. By World War I, however, horses were almost completely replaced on the streets of Manhattan by motorized vehicles. In 1918, the building was converted to a garage and repair shop for the Dearborn Truck Sales Company, Inc. (The firm also leased the building next door at 220-224 East 38th Street, presumably as its showroom.)
Auto repair shop, service station, fully equipped machine shop; excellent location; satisfactory four-year lease; entire building, three floors, 6,000 square feet; quick action; immediate possession. 224 East 38th St., near 3d Av.
Wednesday, October 30, 2024
The Much-Altered Belevedere Stables - 727-729 Washington Street
On November 29, 1890, the Real Estate Record & Builders' Guide reported that Francis C. Lawrence, Jr. had purchased "two three-story brick stores and tenements" with two two-story frame dwellings in the rear at 727 and 729 Washington Street. He paid Robert and Annie E. Pollock $16,000 for the properties, equal to about $553,000 in 2024. Three years later Lawrence replaced the structures with what the Record & Guide described as a "five-story brick stable." The Romanesque Revival design featured a symmetrical ground floor with two large, arched carriage bays that flanked two smaller arched openings--a doorway and window. The windows of the second and third floors were square-headed, while those of the two upper floors were fully arched.