photograph by Americasroof
Four years after the end of the Civil War, pioneering developers were beginning to transform Harlem from country estates and farms to an attractive suburb. Two of them, James Meagher and Thomas Hanson, erected two 20-foot-wide, three-story homes on East 127th Street between Madison and Fifth Avenues in 1869. Designed by Alexander Wilson, their Italianate design was handsome, but unexceptional. Throughout the city, similar rows of nearly identical homes were being constructed, their monotonous appearance sometimes befuddling inebriated homeowners who could not find their own house.
Like its neighbor, 20 East 127th Street was clad in brownstone. A high stone stoop rose to the double-doored entrance below an arched pediment supported by elaborately carved corbels. The segmentally arched openings sat within molded architraves and a bracketed pressed metal cornice crowned the design.
The house became home to the Walter C. Palmer, Jr. family. A printer, publisher, author and bookseller, he and his wife, Mary G., had at least one child, Mamie, born in 1867.
Palmer's business focused on religious topics. Several of the works he published were related to the American Holiness Movement, co-founded by his mother, evangelist and author Phoebe Palmer. (The movement stressed the doctrine of John Wesley, called "Christian perfection.") He not only published Phoebe Palmer's works, but in 1869-70 he co-edited The Guide to Holiness Magazine with her.
In 1874, Mamie Palmer contracted scarlet fever. The seven-year-old died on March 25 and her funeral was held in the parlor two days later.
The Palmers left West 127th Street by 1876 and No. 20 became home to Alexander Gaw and his unmarried daughter, Louisa. Gaw's wife, the former Elizabeth Campbell, had died at the age of 65 on November 9, 1874. Alexander Gaw was in the paint business and was, additionally, a trustee of the West Side Savings Bank.
The parlor was the scene of another funeral in 1880. Louisa Gaw died on October 18 and her funeral held here on the 21st.
In May 1886, an advertisement offered 20 East 127th Street for rent. It described it as a "Three story brown stone House, good order, to let; nine hundred dollars." The figure would translate to about $31,800 per year today.
The house was leased by E. Jeanrenaud, who converted it to The Harlem Collegiate School. The private boys' school accommodated 30 students including six "boarding pupils."
The venture was short lived and on September 14, 1889, an advertisement in the New-York Tribune announced the opening of the Mount Morris School, headed by Frank Clifford Lyman and George B. Towle. The ad said in part:
In the resolve to have a school of telling merit, the principals rely on the highest standards, enthusiastic interest, liberal recitation methods and advanced methods. The start in Classics a specialty.
Frank Clifford Lyman and his family occupied space on the upper floors. The ad said, "A school home of rare advantages is offered to a very few boys in the principals' household." Only three boys were accepted as boarding students.
Frank Clifford Lyman would continue to operate The Mount Morris School in the house into the mid-1890s. It became home to the Nussbaum family at the turn of the century, and to Dr. John Staunton Blackmar by 1906.
Born in Connecticut in 1874, Blackmar graduated from the College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1898 and served in the Spanish-American War as a first lieutenant and Assistant Surgeon in the Third Connecticut Voluntary Infantry
He became associated with Harlem Hospital in June 1900 and by the time he moved into 20 East 127th Street was doing clinical work in the Harlem Hospital Dispensary. It was likely his marriage to Mildred Martin in 1910 that ended his residency here.
Edward Goldschmidt, who owned 20 East 127th Street, continued to lease the house. From 1910 to 1914 it was home to Reverend Edward H. Cleveland of the New York Protestant Episcopal City Mission Society. The American Church Almanac and Year Book said he was "Missionary to Riverside Hospital, North Brother's Island, and Branch Workhouse, Riker's Island."
A major change came when Edward Goldschmidt leased the house to Henry Riddle in August 1914. He rented rooms in the upper portion and installed "the Funeral Parlors of Henry Riddle" in the lower floors. Riddle operated the funeral home and chapel through the spring of 1920, when the Goldschmidt estate sold the house.
No. 20 East 127th Street saw a flurry of residents over the subsequent two decades. Then in 1947, musician William Emerson Harper, his wife, the former Ethel "Toy" Dudley Brown, and poet Langston Hughes co-purchased the house for $12,500 (about $180,000 today).
Trumpeter W. Emerson Harper was known as much for his labor activism as for his music. He routinely contributed articles to periodicals regarding the financial struggles of musicians.
He and Ethel, a costume designer and seamstress, had become close friends of Langston Hughes in the 1930s. At the time, Hughes was emerging as a significant writer and poet. His first novel, Not Without Laughter, published in 1930, earned him the Harmon Gold Medal for literature. His close relationship with the Harpers was evidenced by his dedicating his 1940 autobiography, The Big Sea, to them.
Langston Hughes in 1942. photograph by Cal Varn Vechten from the collection of the Yale University Library.
Hughes occupied the upper portion of the house. Among the works he produced here were Shakespeare in Harlem in 1942; Montage of a Dream Deferred, published in 1951; a series of humorous books about character Jess B. Simple written from 1950 through 1965; and works about Black culture, like the 1952 The First Book of Negroes; the 1954 Famous American Negroes; and The Book of Negro Folklore, published in 1958.
Langston Hughes entered the Polyclinic Hospital for prostate surgery in the spring of 1967. The operation was "apparently successful," according to the New York Amsterdam News, but complications developed. He died on May 22 at the age of 66. In reporting his death, newspapers nationwide lauded his work. The San Francisco Chronicle, for instance, wrote:
A versatile and prolific writer, Hughes was equally fluent in the lyric voice of the poet, sharp-humored posturing and rhythms that echoed folk music and jazz, and the plaint of Simple, the Harlem philosopher who was his best known creation.
The Harpers remained in the house, transferring the title to their son, James Emerson Harper in 1980. He sold it to Dr. Beverly Prince, an ear, nose and throat surgeon at Harlem Hospital, and her husband, Les Rolfe, five years later.
An automobile sits in front of the stoop of 20 East 127th Street in 1940. via the NYC Dept of Records & Information Services.
By the 2000s, the vintage brownstone house was showing significant deterioration. In 2019, Brett Leggs, executive director of the African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund of the National Trust of Historic Preservation, first visited the house. Seven years, later, on March 19, 2026, The New York Times reported that Dr. Beverly C. Price and the National Trust "are undertaking a meticulous restoration of its timeworn exterior."
(In the meantime, the I, Too Arts Collection had occupied the top three floors from 2016 to 2019. The group offered to buy the house, but, "Dr. Prince did not want to sell," said The New York Times.)
The ivy that covered the facade in this photograph damaged the surface of the brownstone. photograph via 6sqft.com
The Times article explained that the restoration is also addressing the cast iron fencing and stoop railings, the brownstone (damaged from decades of clinging ivy), and roof repairs.























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