By the late 1880's, development on the Upper East Side had reached as far north as Goat Hill--presumably named because its steep slope made it unworkable for planting, but quite satisfactory for grazing goats. It was also satisfactory with developers William J. and John P. C. Walsh, who nearly filled the southern blockfront of East 95th Street between Park and Lexington Avenues in 1888.
Designed in 1887 by Charles Abbott French & Co., the 12 rowhouses drew mostly from the rabidly popular Queen Anne style. The architects gave each home its own personality--giving some fronts red brick and ruddy terra cotta, and others cream colored brick and sandstone.
Among the former was 118 East 95th Street. Its undressed brownstone basement supported three floors of red brick. The three fully arched openings of the parlor floor wore brick-like terra cotta voussoirs, each with three keystones; the center of which were grotesque masks. The tympana were filled with colorful stained-glass--the street address incorporated into the design of that above the doorway.
Vibrant stained-glass filled the parlor floor transoms. The address was worked into the doorway tympanum. via the NYC Dept of Records & Information Services.
A pressed metal oriel dominated the second floor. C. Abbott French & Co. gave visual interest with bands of dog toothed patterned brickwork. The multi-paned upper sashes of the third floor openings were typical of the Queen Anne style. The center window was crowned with a terra cotta voussoir and elaborate foliate tympana with a mask. Rather than a cornice, the architects completed the design with a curvilinear gable atop a stepped brick corbel table.
On December 21, 1889, the Record & Guide reported that William Methven Leslie had purchased three of the houses, including 118 East 95th Street. The millionaire importer rented the house into the first years of the 20th century, describing it as a "three-story and basement private house; 11 rooms, two baths." Renters paid $1,200 per year, or an affordable $3,200 per month in 2026 terms.
William and Marion Digby Leslie's only daughter, Mary Digby, was married to Dr. Halstead Pell Hodson in the drawing room of their mansion at 106 West 57th Street in November 1894. Afterward, said The New York World, there was a large reception and a supper by Mazzetti." (Louis F. Mazzetti was a favorite caterer of the upper class, and the sole caterer for the exclusive Seventh Regiment.) Dr. Hodson died in 1904.
Shortly after William M. Leslie's death in March 1910, Marion Leslie and Mary Leslie Hodson moved into 118 East 95th Street. The widowed socialites appeared routinely in society pages. Like other wealthy women, they involved themselves in philanthropic and charitable causes. On January 25, 1916, for instance, the New York Herald reported that Mary had contributed $50 to the Aide Immediate, a charity that provided aid to "soldiers crippled in the war." The following year, she donated money to provide a Christmas party at the State Hospital for the Care of Crippled and Deformed Children.
Mary was an athlete, of sorts; at least so far as well-mannered Edwardian women could be. On June 29, 1913, The New York Times reported, "Mrs. Halstead Pell Hodson, who is at Heaton Hall, Stockbridge, with her mother, Mrs. William Leslie, is playing the best golf of her sex in the hills."
Marion Leslie died in the East 95th Street house on June 8, 1920. Somewhat surprisingly, six months later (only half-way through her daughter's expected mourning period), the drawing room that had been the scene of Marion's funeral saw the marriage of Mary Digby Leslie Hodson to Cyril Alfred Percy Francklyn. Mary's aristocratic groom was 72 years old.
The couple now spent their time in the Manhattan house, in resorts like Stockbridge and Newport, and at Cyril's ancestral estate in Devon, England. The couple was there for the Christmas holidays in 1922 when Cyril died on December 28.
Now twice widowed, Mary Digby Leslie Hodson Francklyn returned to 118 East 95th Street.
Mary had one sibling, William M. Leslie, Jr. He and his wife, the former Maud Prendergast, had one daughter, Barbara Digby. She and her first husband, Philip Van Rensselaer Schuyler, Jr. were divorced. On October 1, 1936, the East Hampton Star reported on her marriage to Richard Hanford Jordan. The article said, "The ceremony was followed by a small reception at the home of the bride's aunt, Mrs. Cyril Francklyn, at 118 East 95th street."
Shortly afterward, William and Maud moved into 118 East 95th Street with Mary. Born on March 3, 1863, William was an artist and his work was annually exhibited in the Guild Hall Artists' shows. He also exhibited his landscapes and seascapes at the Parrish Museum in Southampton and had a one-man show at Clinton Academy. The couple's country home, which they acquired around 1901, was in Southampton.
Maud Leslie died on September 23, 1946 and William died in the Southampton Hospital on June 16, 1947. Mary Leslie Hodson Francklyn died on February 12, 1950 at the age of 89. She left a net estate equal to about $3.4 million today, almost all of which (including 118 East 95th Street) was bequeathed to Barbara Leslie Jordon, described by The County Review at the time as the "socially prominent East Hampton matron."
Barbara sold 118 East 95th Street to Theodore S. and Anne Nelson Cutler Amussen. Born in Salt Lake City in 1915, Theodore was an editor, starting out his career with Rinehart & Company. When the couple moved in, he was vice president and director of Rinehart & Co., Inc., book publishers.
Anne Amussen suffered a fatal heart attack in the house on November 18, 1958 at the age of 41. Two years later, Theodore sold 118 East 95th Street to Joseph L. Ennis & Co. He moved to Washington D.C. where he became editor in chief for the National Gallery of Art.
Joseph L. Ennis & Co. had intentionally clouded the actual owner. Artist Mark Rothko and his second wife, Mary Alice Beistel (known as Mell), quietly moved in. Born in today's Latvia in 1903, Rothko's parents brought the family to America in 1913. By the time the couple purchased 118 East 95th Street, he was recognized as one of the most influential and important abstract expressionist painters of the time.
The year after purchasing the house, Rothko's first important retrospective was staged by the Museum of Modern Art. The couple's second child was born that same year.
The Rothkos' happiness here would be short-lived, however. In 1964, the couple separated and Rothko moved into his East 69th Street studio. Mell and the children remained at 118 East 95th Street surrounded by Rothko canvases.
On April 10, 1967, Norman Reid, director of the London Tate Gallery, told the press that Rothko "is considering donating about 20 of his pictures." He explained, "Mr. Rothko expressed a desire to have a representative group of his works displayed in a public gallery," adding, "he wants his work to be shown in London." The donation would come much earlier than anyone imagined.
On February 26, 1970, The New York Times reported, "Mark Rothko, a pioneer of abstract expressionism who was widely regarded as one of the greatest artists of his generation, was found dead yesterday, his wrists slashed, in his studio at 157 East 69th Street." In responding to the 66-year-old artist's death, William S. Rubin, chief curator of painting and sculpture of the Museum of Modern Art, said, "The loss to modern art is incalculable."
Rotkho's two-page will left "five paintings of their choice" from those created for the Seagram Building in 1959 to the Tate Gallery. It devised to Mary Alice, "the real estate owned by me at 118 East 95th Street, New York, together with all the contents thereof."
The nebulous wording of "all the contents thereof" would spark a long-lasting court battle. Mary Alice Rothko died six months after her husband. The children, Kate and Christopher, would face off with their father's foundation for years.
Rothko bequeathed his 800 paintings to The Rothko Foundation. It now sued the Rothko siblings for any paintings that hung in the house. Additionally, the executors had contracted with the Marlborough Gallery to sell 700 paintings. The foundation moved to "cancel the contract" with the Marlborough. The suit lasted for years.
The house was offered for sale in April 2021 for $7.5 million. The exterior is greatly intact, although, unfortunately, the striking stained-glass of the parlor floor has been removed. Most likely at the same time, the Queen Anne sashes of the upper floors were replaced with plate glass.
photographs by the author













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