In 1889, construction of five rowhouses began on West 74th Street between Central Park West and Columbus Avenue. David T. Kennedy was the contractor and his wife, Carrie S. Kennedy, handled the business end of the project. Designed by Daniel Burgess, the four-story-and-basement homes were completed in 1890. A blend of neo-Grec and Queen Anne styles, they were clad in red brick and trimmed in brownstone.
The basement and parlor levels of No. 13 were faced in rough-cut brownstone. An especially sumptuous, colorful stained-glass arched transom decorated the parlor window and an equally elegant fan of wrought and cast iron filled the tympanum of the entranceway.
A bowed oriel dominated the second floor and the stone-framed, elliptically arched third-floor windows were crowned with voussoirs. Scrolled volutes introduced the stone gable that fronted the slate-shingled mansard level. Its triangular pediment was filled with complex foliate carving.
The completed house quickly passed through several hands. On October 13, 1890, The World reported that Carrie S. Kennedy had sold it to "A. V. Goodfellow for $44,500." On November 1, the Real Estate Record & Builders' Guide reported that the house was sold to Thomas K. Egbert. And two months later, on February 3, 1891, an advertisement appeared in the New York Herald:
The elegantly decorated four story extension house, No. 13 West 74th st.; parlors hung in tapestry; will be sold at a bargain, including handsome gas and grate fixtures if desired. Apply on premises.
The buyers were Juan Sala and his wife, the former Emilia Chadric. Born in Barcelona, Spain in 1834, Sala was taken to the West Indies as a boy. There, according to The New York Times, "he established a large business both at St. Thomas and Puerto Rico."
Emilia was born in Curacao in 1854. She and Juan had one child, Aurora, born in 1881. The family moved to New York City in 1887, four years before buying 13 West 74th Street.
Upon arriving in New York, Juan Sala co-founded Sala, Hoheb & Co., export and commission merchants. Upon Hoheb's retirement, the firm was renamed J. Sala & Co.
Emilia quickly became part of Upper West Side society. On January 29, 1893, for instance, The World reported, "Mrs. J. Sala, of No. 13 West Seventy-fourth street, gave a small dance on Friday evening."
Aurora's wedding to William Eadie Kotman was held in the parlor at 8:00 on the evening of November 17, 1893. The World called the bride, "a very lovely girl of sixteen," while the New-York Tribune said she, "is only fifteen years old." Her parents were, apparently, fudging on the facts. Aurora Sala was just 12 years old. Her husband was 21. The World said, "The newly married couple will live in Mexico."
Emilia was the victim of a horrifying incident on April 10, 1895. At around 8:45 that night, she and her niece, Anita Font, intended to visit Emilia's nephew at 89th Street near Columbus Avenue. They hailed a cable car at 74th Street. Emilia had just stepped onto the lower step when the conductor lunged ahead. Anita, who had only one foot on the step, was left behind.
Emilia ordered the conductor to stop and, according to her, "He shoved me gently inside the door, saying, 'Oh, she'll get the next car, and be right up after you. I am behind time now, and can't be stopping and starting every second." At 89th Street, Emilia rose to leave the car. She later explained:
I am somewhat stout, as you can see, and may have been rather slow in my movements. At any rate, the conductor bawled out at me, 'Come, hurry up!'...I took care in stepping from the platform to the step, and had just placed one foot on the ground, when I heard the signal bell ring.
Before Emilia could completely disembark, the cable car jerked forward and left her lying upon the avenue pavement. A crowd assembled around her and two men "half led and half carried me to my nephew's home," she said later. Two doctors arrived. "They found that my left arm had been broken in two places. I was also cut and bruised about the head and face," she said. The angry socialite added, "Of course, I intend to sue the company, if only to teach them a lesson."
It appears that around the time of the unfortunate incident Aurora's marriage had failed. She was back in the West 74th Street house and in the Salas' Long Island summer estate by 1896. An ardent horsewoman, she exhibited in the annual National Horse Show at Madison Square Garden. That year her trainer showed Fanny Fern and American Fashion. (The New York Herald explained, "Unfortunately, it is not considered good form for ladies to appear in the ring of the Madison Square Garden.")
It seemed that the Sala family would be returning permanently to the West Indies in 1898. When the United States declared war on Spain following the sinking of the USS. Maine in Havana Harbor in February that year, "Sala took the matter very much to heart," according to The New York Times. However, said the newspaper, "his friends remonstrated with him, and finally induced him to remain."
Whether the stress of the Spanish-American War affected Sala's health is unknown. But he died in the house on June 17, 1898 at the age of 61. His funeral was held in the parlor on June 19.
By then, Aurora Sala Kortman was divorced from her husband. Interestingly, Aurora, rather than her mother, inherited the West 74th Street house.
Aurora married Thomas Joseph Regan in January 1905. The groom was the secretary and treasurer of the Whitney Realty Company. On the 22nd, the New-York Tribune reported that they were "among the bridal couples staying at the Lakewood Hotel this week."
The following month, on February 20, Emilia Chadric Sala died at the age of 50. Aurora and Thomas remained in the West 74th Street house. Their summer home was in Old Westbury, Long Island. Still an ardent horsewoman, Aurora annually exhibited her thoroughbreds in the New York Horse Show. She later acquired a horse farm in Lexington, Kentucky where her thoroughbreds "achieved wide recognition," according to The New York Times.
The couple quickly filled their homes with children. Tragically, their first, Thomas Jr., who was born in 1905, died in infancy. But the next year, Constance was born, followed by Jean in 1908 and Gordon in 1913.
The Regans, of course, maintained a small domestic staff. And in 1920, Aurora seems to have been having problems retaining a maid. On December 22, she advertised, "Maid, French; must be pleasant, willing and obliging. Mrs. Regan, 13 West 74th." Seven months later, on June 25, 1921, she advertised again. "Chambermaid, French, speaking no English preferred; must be willing, careful, and obliging."
In December 1924, the Regans applied with an employment agency for a butler. Jack Archer came with sterling references, including one from Mrs. William K. Vanderbilt II. Archer had been a footman for the Vanderbilts "and had given satisfaction there," according to The New York Times.
Regan, whom The Times described as "a tall, dapper Englishman who appeared to be a well-trained and trustworthy servant," started work in the Regan house at mid-December. On Christmas Eve, a week after Regan moved in, the family returned home to find him gone. They told police that the house "had been ransacked and everything of value that the thief could lay his hands on had been taken."
On December 27, The New York Times reported, "Mr. Regan and his family are most anxious to find the butler and they are even more eager to know the whereabouts of a collection of jewelry, including a pearl necklace and several pieces set with diamonds, some of which are valued as antiques and others for their sentimental as well as intrinsic value." Also missing from the house were "fine linens and some choice pieces of porcelain." The value was estimated by Regan as about $10,000--about $183,000 in 2026.
In attempting to find Jack Archer, the police went to extremes. On the day of the article, the sailing of the White Star liner Cedric was delayed by 90 minutes as detectives searched the vessel.
Just over two weeks after the crime, on January 8, 1925, The Sun reported that Jack Archer, "the suave, efficient butler," had been arrested in Montreal after he attempted to sell some of Aurora Sala's jewelry.
Archer's crime slightly tarnished Constance Regan's debutante season. Nevertheless, her entertainments continued and on January 30, 1925, her parents hosted a dinner party in her honor.
Jean Regan's photograph was published in The Spur on March 1, 1927. The caption said that she was introduced to society "this winter." (copyright expired)
The following winter season was Jean Regan's debut. Like her mother, she was an accomplished horsewoman. On October 10, 1931 before the first of her debutante entertainments, the New York Evening Post reported that she had won second prize in the jumping event at the Piping Rock Club's horse show.
A marquee had been added over the doorway as early as 1940. via the NYC Dept of Records & Information Services.
Several years before then, Aurora had sold the Kentucky farm and acquired another, Pilot Knob, near Nashville, Tennessee where she turned to breeding race horses. Calling her an "internationally known horse breeder," The New York Times remarked, "In 1928, one of her yearlings brought the world record top price for a horse of that age, $75,000." Her Pilot Knob farm stabled more than 100 thoroughbreds.
Aurora was at Pilot Knob on July 19, 1940 when she died at the age of 58. Three years later, in January 1943, Thomas J. Regan sold 13 West 74th Street.
After having been home to one wealthy family for half a century, 13 West 74th Street became a rooming house, repeatedly sold and resold. When Leon Schiffer and Sora Jalowsky purchased it from Sol Grobman in April 1952 and then resold it within the month, The New York Times described it as a "fourteen-family house."
A renovation completed in 1973 resulted in two apartments per floor in the basement through fourth floors, and one in the fifth. The configuration lasted until 1982 when the basement and parlor were combined as a duplex. Six years later, that apartment was expanded into a triplex.
Living here by 1990 was Tonne Goodman, vice president of advertising for Calvin Klein. Starting out as a model, she had formerly worked with Diana Vreeland at The Metropolitan Museum of Art Costume Institute, worked at The New York Times and as a stylist for LIFE magazine. She would go on to join Anna Wintour at Vogue in 1999 as the magazine's fashion director.
Another renovation in 2010 resulted in two triplex apartments. Although the brownstone has been painted, overall the exterior of 13 West 74th Street is remarkably intact.
photographs by the author



























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