On April 1, 1854, builder John L. Smith sold the newly-erected house at 46 Stuyvesant Street to optometrist Samuel Elliott for $10,700 (about $401,000 in 2025 terms). Smith had acquired the oddly-shaped lot a year earlier. His handsome Anglo-Italianate facade successfully disguised the triangular-shaped interior layout.
The entrance, above a short stoop, was centered within a rusticated brownstone base. The openings of the red brick-faced upper levels wore simple stone lintels. A bracketed Italianate cornice finished the design.
If Samuel Elliott, ever lived in the house, his residency was short-lived. In May 1855, he moved to Staten Island and sold 46 Stuyvesant Street to Seba Smith for $17,000, making a tidy profit.
Seba Smith was a humorist and author, and his wife was author and poet Elizabeth Oakes Smith (who went professionally by her first initial). Also living with them was their adult son, Appleton Oaksmith and his wife, Isofta. (All six of the Smiths' sons were given the merged surnames of their mother and father.) Mary Alice Wyman, in her 1927 Two American Pioneers--Seba Smith and Elizabeth Oakes Smith, writes, "The sons, now grown to manhood, were at home intermittently when not occupied in business elsewhere." The second eldest son, Sidney Oaksmith, was consul to Haiti at the time.
Born in Maine in 1792, Seba Smith founded the Portland Courier in 1830. His series of satirical books about the fictional character Major Jack Downing, the first of which was published in 1830, were highly popular.
Seba Smith, from the collection of Northeastern Illinois University
This portrait Elizabeth Oakes Prince Smith was painted by John Wesley Paradise around 1845, from the collection of the National Gallery of Art
Wyman writes,
In the Stuyvesant Street house...Mrs. Oakes Smith did much entertaining and included among her literary guests several other foreign patriots who had visited this country for help or who, because of political troubles in their own land, were living as exiles.
Indeed, in her autobiography, E. Oakes Smith writes, "Italians, Spaniards, Cubans were amongst our guests, and in an unheroic period filled the imagination of my household with heroic ideas--with admiration for men and women who could turn their backs upon ease and frivolity, and give place to earnest, self-sacrificing endeavor." The subjects discussed, she said, included women's suffrage, civil rights and slavery.
When the family moved into the Stuyvesant Street house, 27-year-old Appleton listed his profession as "merchant." A year later he was described by the New-York Daily Tribune on October 14, 1856 as, "the Representative of Nicaragua in this country." William Walker had established himself as president there and he made Appleton Oaksmith Minister Plenipotentiary to the United States.
A year later, the Oaksmiths suffered tragedy. On September 6, 1857, Buchanan, the only child of Appleton and Isofta, died a month before his first birthday. His funeral was held in the parlor on September 8.
In 1858, the Smiths hired 12-year-old Rosa Simpson as a servant girl. They paid her $2 per month wages to her father, John Simpson. Two years later, Rosa ran off. In what today might be called "tough love," Seba Smith charged the teen with vagrancy and she was sent to the House of Refuge. He said that "after a suitable time for her reformation," he "proposed to adopt her and take her from that Institution."
On January 31, 1860, John Simpson sued the Smiths, alleging they "forcibly detained [Rosa] at No. 46 Stuyvesant-street" and that "Mrs. Smith was an improper person to have the care of the child." Rosa Simpson testified on the Smiths' defense. Calling her, "an intelligent little girl," The New York Times reported that she stated, "that she would rather remain with Mr. Smith's people than return to her relatives; she was well treated and comfortable where she was, and her father had no means for her support."
The Smiths left 46 Stuyvesant Street in 1860 after purchasing a Colonial home in Patchogue, Long Island that year, which they named "The Willows." A year later, in December 1861, Appleton Oaksmith was captured by Union forces on Fire Island for colluding with the Confederacy. Somewhat astonishingly, given his mother's marked stance against slavery, he was accused of using former Nicaraguan ships for gun-running and transporting slaves. The Smiths were outspoken regarding his innocence.
In the meantime, 46 Stuyvesant Street became home to the Charles L. Curtis family. A hardware merchant, Curtis also volunteered with Hook and Ladder Company No. 4. Soon after moving his family into the house, he traveled to Washington D.C. with two other firefighters in hopes that their newly-formed Second Regiment Fire Zouaves would be accepted by the Union. Although firefighters were exempted from the draft, he and 700 others formed the regiment. The volunteer soldiers served throughout the conflict.
The Curtis family remained at 46 Stuyvesant Street through 1864, when 15-year-old Charles Frederick Curtis was attending Public School 35.
Dr. Lansing P. Munson briefly followed the Curtises. In 1865, he advertised his office hours as 8:00 to 10:00 a.m. and 4:00 to 7:00 p.m. Later that year, however, on October 11, an advertisement in the New York Herald offered, "A fine office to let--suitable for a physician or dentist."
The house became home to State Assemblyman Thomas J. Creamer. Born in Ireland in 1843, he came to America as a boy and attended public schools. After working in a drygoods firm, he was elected to the State Assembly in 1865, the same year he moved into 46 Stuyvesant Street.
Thomas J. Creamer, The American Government: Biographies of Members of the House of Representatives of the Forty-Third Congress (1874) copyright expired
In 1867, the Creamers took in two veteran boarders--John G. Brosnahan, of the U.S. Navy; and A. H. Fisher, of the U.S. Army.
The following year, Creamer was elected to the New York State Senate and served to 1871. He was elected to Congress in 1873. At the end of his term on March 3, 1875, he returned to the Stuyvesant Street house.
Early in October 1878, an attempt to steal the body of millionaire Alexander Turney Stewart from its tomb was made. The following month, on November 14, the crime was successful and Stewart's body was held for "a large ransom," as reported by The New York Times.
Now, Creamer connected two incidents outside his window to the crime. On November 16, The New York Times reported, "Ex-Senator Thomas J. Creamer...told to a Times reporter yesterday two seemingly important stories...concerning the mysterious boarders of No. 44, next door, and their departure on Thursday morning with a black trunk, supposed to contain the remains of A. T. Stewart." Creamer recalled that on the night of the first attempt, he had been reading on his sofa on the second floor at around 2 a.m. when a carriage pulled up to his front door. "He saw three men get out of the carriage and talk to the driver."
Not appearing to be nosey, he returned to his reading. But when the carriage did not leave, he got up, opened the window and asked the driver what he wanted. The driver drove off, but returned a few minutes later. The three men returned, got into the carriage and left. The Times said, "Mr. Creamer thinks that this was the occasion of the first attempt, and that the driver, seeing him watching so persistently, drove around as a signal of danger, which caused the robbers to desist."
On the night of the actual robbery, Creamer had a houseguest, "an old lady, of the highest respectability, whose name the ex-Senator would not mention." Creamer was out of town and the guest arose early the following morning. At 7:20, she heard a carriage pull up. Thinking it might be Creamer, she looked out of the second floor window. Two men came out of 44 Stuyvesant Street. "They carried a black leather trunk, which they handled very carefully, yet appeared to be in a great hurry," recounted the article. They loaded it into the carriage and the drove "rapidly off" towards Second Avenue. The New York Times added to the story, saying, "a peculiar smell was discovered in the room vacated by the mysterious strangers, and they left their water running behind them as though to wash down all traces of some dirt which they had been cleaning into the basin."
William J. Morris purchased 46 Stuyvesant Street in November 1880 for $9,950 (about $306,000 today). He leased it to a "Mrs. Feltheimer" who operated it as a boarding house.
In 1890, Annie Steinhof arrived from Germany and was hired here as a servant. Each month she deposited her wages into the Dry Dock Savings Bank, "trying to save money enough to send for her father and mother and sister, who are living in poverty in Germany," explained The New York Sun later. Among the boarders the following year was Joseph J. Mulligan. He was friendly to Annie and, despite being born in Ireland, "used to try to talk to her in German," said the newspaper.
She told him about her dream to bring her family to America, and on March 6, 1891, she told him she had saved up $100.55, enough to buy steamship tickets. Mulligan baited the girl, musing that while he was "a first-class printer," he had no money, yet Annie, "who could not write her own name," had enough to start a small business. Indignant, Annie wrote her name on a sheet of paper to prove she was not illiterate.
Shortly after the incident, Mulligan and his roommate left the boarding house. On March 19, Annie went to the bank to deposit her $10 wages for February and discovered $60 had been withdrawn. It was taken out on March 7. Above Annie's signature on the blank page, Mulligan had written a letter, authorizing the holder to withdraw the funds. Mulligan was arrested on March 24. Annie's hard-earned funds were gone, but he "offered to repay the money by installments if spared prosecution."
The Morris family retained possession of 46 Stuyvesant Street until 1921 when they sold it to Herman Groh. It operated as a rooming house for decades.
George Monisco roomed here in the fall of 1931 when he suffered a bizarre accident. The 51-year-old could not sleep on the night of September 18. At 4:30 a.m., he got up and took a walk to John J. Murphy Park along the East River. The New York Sun reported, "he fell over an iron fence on the retaining wall and into the water." Monisco flailed in the water as the current carried him about a block, to 16th Street. His cries attracted three employees of the Willard Parker Memorial Hospital, who dived into the river and pulled him 40 feet back to shore. He was taken into the hospital, "suffering from submersion," said the article.
A renovation completed in 1961 resulted in a duplex apartment in the cellar and first floor, and one apartment each in the upper floors. The house, with its extraordinary history, survives virtually unchanged.
photographs by the author