In 1929 Cobham Realty hired the architectural firm of Murgatroyd & Ogden to design a 16-story-and-penthouse "brick hotel" on the site of five vintage structures at 41 through 49 Christopher Street. Something derailed that project and the following year Boak & Paris filed plans for a 16-story apartment building with stores on the site. The architects projected the construction costs at $500,000--about $9.3 million in 2026.
The firm's Art Deco design included a two-story rusticated stone base. The entrance, centered between stores, was flanked by shallow pilasters decorated with stylized palm trunks. Verticality of the brick-faced upper portion was emphasized by thin ribs that rose to romantic stone balconies. Terraced penthouse apartments shared the roof with a creatively designed water tower.
Despite the ongoing Depression, 45 Christopher Street filled with financially-comfortable residents. Among the first were the family of George E. Heidt, who leased a penthouse in August 1931; newspaper columnist Louis Sobal, who rented "a duplex apartment in the penthouse," as reported by The New York Times; and attorney John Langley Ridley.
Ridley was the nephew of multimillionaire Edward Albert Ridley. In 1932, Edward hired his personal secretary, Lee Weinstein. Less than a year later, on May 10, 1933, the 88-year-old Ridley and Weinstein were discovered murdered. The younger Ridley's suspicions were raised when his uncle's will was read. For one thing, the recently written document was not drawn up by the elderly man's trusted attorney, and his bankers knew "nothing about it." The new will bequeathed $200,000 to Weinstein and completely ignored Ridley's relatives (including John L. Ridley). The New York Times estimated the estate at about $7 million (nearly $170 million today).
John L. Ridley filed a caveat against the probate of the will in May 1933. An investigation revealed that Weinstein "had been the head of a conspiracy" to drain Edward Ridley's fortune. He slipped the fake will into a stack of papers for the elderly man to sign. Unfortunately for Weinstein, his conspirators' greed ended not only his employer's life, but his own. In November the estate was distributed among the millionaire's relatives. John Langley Ridley received "one-third of his uncle's large real estate holdings," reported The New York Times.
Among Ridley's neighbors in the building at the time was Navy Lieutenant Eric Hoag, who lived on the fifth floor. He was attached to the Brooklyn Navy Yard. Early in November 1933, a friend, Lieutenant John Dyer Foley, was married in Seattle, Washington. A naval surgeon, he and his bride would be relocating to the Civilian Conservation Camp at Montpelier, Vermont. Two weeks after their wedding, the newlyweds visited Eric Hoag.
At 2:00 on the morning of November 13, Mrs. Foley awoke and found "my husband was gone," she later explained. "I aroused the household. We looked out a kitchen window and saw my husband lying three stories below on a balcony."
The 31-year-old was conscious when his wife and Hoag reached him. At St. Vincent's Hospital he said, "I didn't know anything until I struck [the balcony]. I must have been walking in my sleep." Newspapers across the country reported on the sailor's nocturnal plunge. Mrs. Foley telegraphed her parents in Seattle, assuring them, "The newspaper accounts made the injuries appear more serious than they were."
Jeanette Bair, who worked for Feer Realty Corp., was the agent for 45 Christopher Street at the time. A representative of the firm later testified, "Her instructions included the refraining from entering an apartment...unless she had a prospective tenant." But around noon on August 8, 1934, she violated that rule and entered Penthouse E, the home of Zara Reigga, who was on vacation.
Four months earlier, Bair's husband had obtained a divorce. He told officials, "on several occasions she attempted to effect a reconciliation," but he refused. The despondent Jeanette Bair opened the gas jets of Zara Reigga's stove and oven. It appears that she intended to kill herself by inhaling gas, but the plan went horribly wrong.
Louis Sobol was on the sofa in his penthouse next door at 12:38 when a massive explosion blew out the wall between the two apartments and threw him to the ground. The New York Times said it "shook buildings within a half-mile radius...For several minutes after the blast, plate and window glass, fragments of Venetian blinds, and bits of brick and mortar rained down on Sheridan Square." About an hour after the explosion, "a piece of roof coping weighing between twenty and thirty pounds plunged through the sidewalk canopy and was shattered," said the newspaper.
Terrified residents attempted to flee, but police stopped them in the lobby. "You can't leave," once policeman said. "Some one has blown the roof off this place with a bomb and everyone must be questioned." It would be a while before investigators realized the source of the explosion.
Jeanette Bair, of course, was killed. Amazingly, 37-year-old Louis Sobol suffered only cuts, and his maid, Anna Filsingeo was "cut and bruised." Other residents were injured by being hit by glass or falling items, or from being thrown from their feet. Ethel Jackson, a maid in one of the other penthouses, was "hurled through the bathroom door" and suffered painful bruises.
Fred C. Kuehnle, chief inspector for the Building Department, estimated the damages to Zara Reigga's furnishings and artwork at $5,000 (about $117,000 today). Understandably, she did not return to 45 Christopher Street. Following the major repairs to the building, an advertisement in The New York Sun on October 6, 1934 offered the vacant penthouse. It touted a "sunken living room over 20 ft. sq.; wood-burning fireplace, spacious dining foyer, extensive terrace."
Perhaps the first artist to move into 45 Christopher Street was Russian-born illustrator Boris Mikhailovich Artzybasheff and his wife. Born in 1899, his father, Mikhail Artsybashev, was a noted author. Mikhailovich came to America in 1919 and quickly began earning a reputation for his book and magazine illustrations. His work appeared in magazines like Time, Fortune and Life, and he would ultimately create 219 Time covers.
In reporting on the arrival of the steamship Washington on June 25, 1936, the New York Post commented, "Also on the liner was Mrs. Boris Artzybasheff, wife of the artist and daughter-in-law of the famous Russian novelist." The article mentioned that she worked as a broker.
Another resident artist was sculptor Walter Rotan, here as early as 1944. Born in 1912, he has been described as "an Impressionist and Modern artist." He was living here in March 1944 when his bronze head Henry received the Ellen P. Speyer Memorial Prize in the 188th Annual Exhibition of the National Academy of Design.
A colorful resident was James J. McCormick, a widower who lived here with his widowed daughter, Hazel Jacobs. McCormick had been a Tammany leader for 22 years and "a power in the Hall," according to The New York Times.
His career had come to an abrupt halt in 1931 when the Seabury Investigation, which delved into city government corruption, discovered his graft and extortion. The investigators discovered that he held 30 bank accounts containing "more than $257,900," according to The New York Times. Almost all of that had been obtained from couples whom "he had married as chief of the Marriage License Bureau." Other money came from "gratuities given him by 'friends' whom he aided when they became involved in difficulties over violations of building regulations." He had, additionally, failed to file income tax returns for 1929 and 1930, during which time he received $69,000 "in gratuities."
In January 1939, McCormick suffered a cerebral hemorrhage. He died in St. Elizabeth's Hospital a week later, on January 22.
As Jeanette Bair had been, in 1939 Adelaide Tate was the building's renting agent. She, too, was a divorcee and, she too, was troubled. Among the tenants she placed here was Standard Oil Company chemical engineer Age Skiolvig, who moved into one of the penthouses. According to Skiolvig, "he had taken her to several parties." The eligible bachelor, however, had a much different take on their casual relationship than did Tate.
On November 22, 1939, Skiolvig flew to Cleveland, Chicago and St. Louis on business. Adelaide accompanied him to the airport. In each city, he received telephone calls and telegrams from the smitten Adelaide. At some point, Skiolvig "became suspicious that the calls and telegrams were originating from his apartment," reported The New York Times. He telephoned the building's superintendent, who entered the Skiolvig apartment and found Adelaide there. Skiolvig insisted "he did not know how she got into his apartment." Apparently, as the renting agent, she had kept a copy of the key.
Adelaide gave the superintendent the key and promised to leave. Then, according to The New York Sun, "Skiolvig became "annoyed and a bit alarmed at the tone of a telegram Mrs. Tate had sent him" and he hurried back to New York, arriving in New York at 7 a.m. on the morning of November 29.
He walked into his apartment to find Adelaide was asleep in a chair, still wearing a hat and coat. When he wakened her, "she asked for a glass of tomato juice, which he gave her," according to The New York Times. He then "reprimanded her" for the $100 bill of "telephone and telegraph tolls" she had run up. Twenty minutes later, she walked into the bathroom and jumped from the window to her death 17 floors below.
Snow falling on the day this 1940 photograph was taken gave it a polka-dot effect. via the NYC Dept of Records & Information Services.
Among the shops in the 1940s was the National Flower Decorating Company florist shop and Irving Weiss's liquor store. Victor Emanual was the cashier of the flower shop in 1940 when a man who "appeared to be carrying a pistol in his pocket," according to The New York Times, walked in and demanded money. The 26-year-old cashier handed over $1,281 and the robber fled.
Irving Weiss was not so lucky four years later. At 12:15 on the afternoon of January 15, Maxine Golberg walked into the liquor store to find Weiss dead on the floor with two gunshot wounds in his head. This was not a robbery, however. Detectives said that Weiss was found "in a sitting position behind his swivel chair" and no cash appeared to be missing.
Living here by the late 1940s was newspaper man and playwright James Gow and his wife, the former Olga Alexander. The couple married in 1941. With Arnaud d'Usseau, he wrote the 1943 Tomorrow the World and Deep are the Roots, which premiered in 1945. The former dealt with how post-World War II German children could be reassimilated into normal life after their indoctrination by the Nazis. The latter play dealt with Blacks within the South. He wrote screenplays for motion pictures including Ballerina and Paramount on Parade.
Another resident in the theater field was Carroll McComas. Born in 1886, she made her stage debut in 1907. While she was a dancer and singer in vaudeville, she was best known for whistling. She went on to Broadway, where she would play in more than 24 roles, and made her first silent movie in 1916 in When Love is King.
Carroll McComas with Frank Craven in the 1916 Seven Chances. from the collection of the New York Public Library
While living here, she appeared on Broadway in Design for a Stained Glass Window, Arms and the Man, The Glass Menagerie and The Innocents; and in the 1953 film Jamaica Run and The Miracle Worker, released in 1962. She died of a heart attack in her apartment here on November 9, 1962 at the age of 76.
Other residents in the 1960s were artist Ben Bishop; fashion consultant Gastona Marie Rossilli; and labor historian and economist Dr. Lewis L. Lorwin.
Bishop was born in the Bronx in 1923 and held a BFA in art history from the University of Nebraska and did graduate work at Columbia University, the New York University's Institute of Fine Arts, and the University of California at Berkeley where he received his Masters in painting in 1954. His paintings hang in the collections of the Syracuse Museum, the Russell Sage Museum, the Brandeis University Museum, the Jewett Art Center and several other institutions.
Gastona Marie Rossilli attended the Traphagen School of Fashion and held a degree from Seton Hall University. A "fashion-behavioral consultant," she had made field studies in the West of "the relation between clothing and behavior of American Indians," as explained by The New York Times. She also conducted research in Europe and other parts of the U.S. While living here, she consulted for department stores and the Fashion Institute.
In 1987, 45 Christopher Street was converted from a rental building to condominiums.
In 1997, management of the Stonewall Inn attempted to circumvent the zoning rule that "prohibits cabaret licenses for places with entrances within 100 feet of a residential district." The intention was to install a dance floor on the second floor of the bar On August 6, The Villager reported, "But residential neighbors at 45 Christopher St., are opposing the permit. Their lawyer, Stewart O'Brien, explained, "We have no problem with an eating and drinking establishment on the second floor, but a disco makes a lot of noise."
The imposing building that soars high above its neighbors, has become an architectural landmark within the Greenwich Village neighborhood.
photographs by the author














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