photograph by the author
In 1867, developer James Mulry completed construction of three identical homes at 106 through 110 East 10th Street on land leased from the Stuyvesant estate. Designed by D. & J. Jardine, the brick-faced homes rose four floors above rusticated brownstone basements.
A bit more strait-laced than many upscale Italianate-style rowhouses at the time, these were proper and restrained. At the parlor level, where some architects placed full-height parlor windows fronted with lacy cast iron balconies, the Jardines' windows sat upon brownstone panels. And rather than the elaborate foliate brackets and arched pediments above other Italianate-style entranceways, these houses received straightforward cornices.
More expected of the style, the brownstone lintels of the windows were capped with handsome molded cornices atop foliate brackets, and each house wore individual Italianate cornices with fussy leafy corbels.
James Mulry initially leased 106 East 10th Street to Pedro San Juan, who operated a "segar" business on East 14th Street. Then, in 1871, Emilie (know familiarly as Emma) Steinbach, the widow of Christian Steinbach, leased the house. Moving in with her was her adult son, Albert. Like most of her neighbors, Emilie took in select boarders. In 1873, for instance, William D. Nichols, an iron dealer, and a woman who called herself Madame Selby (despite her being English), boarded here.
On March 9, 1873, Madame Selby placed an unusual notice in the New York Herald:
An English lady of experience, about returning to France, where she has resided many years, would take with her several young ladies desiring a finished education in music or the fine arts, offering them every comfort and elegant society, as she is highly connected in the artistic world. For particulars, please call from 2 to 4 P.M. or address Mme. Selby, 106 East Tenth street, New York.
Later that year, Albert Steinbach was the victim of an 18-year-old thief and presumably was forced to come home in the winter air without a coat. On December 14, The New York Times reported that John D. Ricco had been arraigned "for stealing a coat and scarf, valued at $23, from Albert Steinback [sic], of No. 106 East Tenth street." (The cost of the pricey garments would translate to about $625 in 2026 terms.)
Popular actor Edward Job Arnott and his wife, Emma Elizabeth Champness, were members of Wallack's Theatre troupe. They were married in June 1874 and engaged rooms from Emilie Steinbach. (Arnott failed to tell his bride that he had earlier abandoned his wife, also named Emma, and their two children in England in 1873.) Theirs would not be an idyllic marriage. On November 25, 1877, the New York Herald reported that Emma had begun divorce proceedings, charging in part that Edward "so ill-treated deponent and struck her so often again that [she] could not live with him." Moreover, she accused him of having "carnal connection" with Rose Lyle "at divers times and places" and with other unnamed women.
In court, Edward Arnott coldly testified that he had never been married to Emma and "never agreed or contemplated a marriage with her." Importantly, he said, "I was already a married man, and told her so in the early days of our acquaintance."
Unfortunately for Emma Arnott, the judge ruled, "I must exercise my discretion by denying the present application." Edward Arnott, while continuing his successful acting career, went on have additional bigamous marriages and scandals.
Around 1881, James Mulry leased the house to J. C. Ketcham. The banker was highly involved in the Royal Arcanum, a fraternal organization. On December 16, 1883, The New York Times reported on the meeting of the club at its Council Room on East 15th Street. "At the close of the meeting a collation was provided at the house of Treasurer Ketcham, No. 106 East Tenth-street," said the article.
Ketcham and his family left in 1886, after which Mulry leased the house to Kate E. Wagner. She sublet it to a "Mrs. Wenreth" who operated it as a boarding house.
Among her first boarders was Charles M. Plumb, the organizing secretary of The Central Committee for Protecting & Perpetuating the Separation of Church & State. The group was formed by citizens concerned about the erosion of the Founding Fathers' principle.
Edward Arnott's messy divorce hearing had been the only taint to the respectable reputation of 106 East 10th Street until the arrest of 23-year-old Charles Deira on May 18, 1896. At 3:00 that morning, S. P. Benedict, who lived at 61 Charles Street, awoke to see Deira standing by his bed. The Sun reported, "Benedict demanded what he was doing there, and sprang out of bed."
"I'm in the wrong house, I guess," said Deira. "I thought this was 61 Perry street."
Benedict spat, "I don't believe you."
"You must excuse me. I made a mistake a block," said Deira and he rushed out of the house. Because he was in his night clothes, Benedict did not follow. However, the sight of a man running down Charles Street at 3:00 in the morning raised the suspicions of a policeman. Deira was arrested and charged with attempted burglary. The Sun said, "He entered Benedict's house by means of a skeleton key."
More than 30 years before he constructed 106 East 10th Street, James Mulry's estate sold it at auction to Frederick Henssler on January 19, 1899. Henssler paid the equivalent of $238,000 in today's money.
Shortly afterward, Herman A. Fisher, his wife and daughter, rented rooms here. Fisher was the treasurer of William Wicke & Co., a maker of cigar boxes and cigar ribbons. On the night of November 20, 1900, Francis Dillon was walking along 164th Street in Brooklyn when he came across a man lying in a vacant lot "with a bullet hole in his right temple," as reported by The New York Times. It was 40-year-old Herman Fisher. The New-York Tribune noted, "The police believe the man committed suicide."
The following year, resident E. C. Curtis, who was a paperhanger, experienced what could be described only as a wild ride. He was removed from the house in an ambulance on the night of May 18, 1901, after he "became suddenly ill from kidney trouble," according to the New-York Tribune. At the corner of 21st Street and Second Avenue, the ambulance was blocked by a lumber truck and so the driver "steered the horse on the sidewalk." Curtis's ride to the hospital became violent.
The ambulance swung from side to side as it went up and then down the curb, and the reins broke. The driver picked them up, and had to reach away out of the wagon to hold them. He drove as fast as the horse could go. The horse knew the way, and dashed through the gateway of Bellevue so fast that the traces [the straps that connected to horse to the ambulance] broke.
In December 1904, Frederick Henssler leased 106 East 10th Street to Rosetta Hertz, who continued to lease rented rooms within the house. Although never converted to apartments, the owner was given a violation in 1937 for operating a "multiple dwelling."
Little changed on the outside, today the handsome structure is a single family home.

























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