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On December 6, 1913, the Real Estate Record & Builders' Guide reported on the death of one of America's foremost architects, George B. Post. The lengthy obituary mentioned, "His town house was at 129 East 69th street." Developers Brixton Building Corporation wasted little time in acquiring the mansion from the Post estate, along with five other residences that faced Lexington Avenue. In November 1915, architect Emile L. Capel filed plans for an 11-story apartment building on the site. They estimated the construction costs at $450,000--about $14.5 million in 2026 terms.
The building's design is the first on record (at least in New York City) of the recondite architect. Capel filed plans for only one more building and two renovations before 1920, when he sat on the board of directors of the newly formed New York Architectural Club, Inc. He falls into obscurity after that.
Emile L. Capel produced a neo-Georgian-style structure faced in red Flemish bond brick and trimmed with creamy terra cotta. The dignified arched entrance sat between double-height, paired and fluted pilasters with palm leaf capitals. The large terra cotta spandrels of the two-story base on the 69th Street side were decorated classical urns.
An intermediate cornice introduced the midsection, its frieze ornamented with alternating urns and anthemions. The urn motif reappeared in the stepped lintels of the third floor and in the spandrels between the 10th- and 11th-floor openings.
Among the initial residents was Major Frank C. Grugan. Born in 1842, he was educated in France and upon returning home in 1861 enlisted in the Union Army. The New York Herald reported, "He fought in twelve important battles, including Gettysburg." A life-long military man, he would see combat "against the Indians in the West," as worded by the New York Herald, and in Cuba during the Spanish-American War. When he moved into 129 East 69th Street, he was a widower.
In July 1918, Harold Garrison Villard and his wife, the former Mariquita Serrano, took a duplex apartment here. The son of millionaire journalist and financier Henry Villard, he and Mariquita were married in 1897. They had three children, Henry Serrano, Vincent Serrano and Mariquita Serrano. The children were 18, 17, and 13 years old respectively when the family moved in.
Henry Villard was overseas at the time. He had left Harvard to volunteer as a driver in the Italian Ambulance Service. At the war's end, he returned and graduated in 1921.
Harold Villard's mother, Fanny Garrison Villard, died on July 5, 1928. The bulk of her estate, "estimated to be worth more than $10,000,000," according to The New York Times, was divided between Harold and his brother, Oswald. (The figure would translate to about $183 million today.) Additionally, she left $50,000 to Mariquita and $10,000 each to her grandchildren. Mariquita's inheritance would equal about $185,000 today.
Vincent Serrano Villard was married to Katharine A. Tomkins on August 2, 1928. The New York Times remarked, "Owing to the recent death of Mrs. Henry Villard, only members of the families and a few intimate friends were present at the ceremony."
In the meantime, a 10th-floor corner apartment of "8 large rooms and foyer" with three baths was advertised in January 1920 at $5,600 per year, about $7,300 per month in today's terms.
Among the tenants at the time were Impressionist artist Francis Sterling Dixon and his wife, Rosalie Turner Hooker. The couple was married on August 10, 1915 "a short time after she had obtained a divorce in Idaho from Professor William Welling of Trinity College," according to The New York Times.
Dixon was born in September 1879 and studied at the Art Students League. With deep American roots, he was a member of the Society of Colonial Wars and the Sons of the Revolution. His artistic proclivity earned him memberships to the Allied Artists of America, the Connecticut Academy of Fine Arts, the Salmagundi Club, and the Players.
The Dixons had a son, Francis Jr. Unfortunately for the marriage, as had happened in 1915, Rosalie had a wandering eye. She traveled to Paris in 1925, obtained a divorce, and announced her engagement to British Captain Rowland W. Cash. Then, on January 26, 1926, The New York Times reported that the engagement had been broken. Instead, in April she married Prince Levan Melikov de Somhetie, described by the New York Evening Post, as the "claimant to the non-existent throne of Georgia."
Domestic problems were plaguing another socially prominent couple in the building at the time. Born in 1894 to millionaire Oliver Harriman Jr., Oliver Carley Harriman was described by the Syracuse, New York Journal in 1926 as "the son of Mrs. Oliver Harriman, one of the most admired and popular women in New York society," adding, "His father, Oliver Harriman, and his grandfather, also named Oliver Harriman, were powers in Wall Street."
Harriman married socialite Loise Roberts Bisbee on June 7, 1915 and they had two daughters. According to the Journal, "at the time of his marriage, he was the youngest member of the New York Stock Exchange, and said to be earning a large income from various sources." The young broker was also a "prominent figure at the horse shows and polo matches at Westchester, Long Island and Newport," said the newspaper.
Oliver Carley Harriman was career driven and according to the Journal, his "intense ambition" caused him to "frequent rather mixed company in the evening." In fact, the "company" that kept him away from the couple's apartment on many of those nights was not always a business associate. On July 28, 1923, Loise read a news article about a trolley car accident. Among the witnesses was "Mrs. Harriman." A puzzled Loise dug into her husband's nocturnal nightlife.
Fashion model Harriet Hewitt lived in an apartment at 206 East 61st Street, the rent of which was paid by Harriman. The residents of the building knew Helen as "Mrs. Harriman." An indignant and angry Loise left 129 East 69th Street and filed for divorce in December 1923. Even before the divorce was granted, rumors within high society said that Oliver Carley Harriman intended to marry Helen Hewitt. And he did.
A disturbing and bizarre incident happened here in the fall of 1928. Antiques dealer William F. Cooper and his wife, Martha, had previously lived in an apartment on East 66th Street. In 1923, Martha suffered a stroke but recovered. Then in 1927 William was hospitalized for three months after an operation, during which Martha "fretted herself into a nervous breakdown," according to The New York Times. Both she and her husband recovered.
In September 1928, they moved into a seventh-story apartment in 129 East 69th Street. Unlike the quiet block of 66th Street, "all day long the clang of the surface cars floated in through the apartment windows," said The New York Times.
On September 22--the Coopers' first Saturday night in the apartment--they had friends over. After their guests left, William went to bed. Martha wrote a note to her husband, sealed it and left it on the dining room table. She then took a photograph of William from its frame and "carefully cut out the likeness of his face." Clutching it, she then leaped to her death from the apartment window. Her note explained, "she could not stand the eternal sound of the street cars."
Lloyd Paul Stryker, his wife, the former Katherine Traux, and their daughter occupied an apartment here as early as 1929. Born in Chicago in 1885, Stryker graduated from New York Law School in 1909. The Yale Biographical Dictionary of American Law said he "became famous as a flamboyant criminal lawyer." In March 1929, he was nominated by President Calvin Coolidge as a Federal judge for the Southern District of New York.
Stryker came into the national spotlight in 1948 when he was the lead defense counsel in the two criminal cases against Alger Hiss. Life magazine published an article on Stryker in 1947 titled: "Trial Lawyer: Lloyd Paul Stryker is Archetype of Vanishing Courtroom Virtuoso."
Another prominent attorney in the building at midcentury was Frank Lyon Polk. He and his wife, the former Katherine Hoppin Salvage, whom he married in 1934, had three sons: Frank Jr., Samuel S. and William M. Polk's father was Under-Secretary of State under Woodrow Wilson and he headed the American delegation to the Paris Peace Conference after World War I. Frank was also the great-nephew of President James Knox Polk. The family's summer home was at Fishers Island, New York.
Polk became ill in 1952 and was hospitalized in Doctors Hospital. Calling him "a member of a socially prominent family," on September 20 The New York Times reported that he had died there at the age of 40.
Katherine Polk and her sons remained in the apartment. In December 1959, she announced Frank Jr.'s engagement to Nancy Holliday Wear. In reporting on the event, The New York Times commented on Frank's maternal pedigree. "He is a grandson of Lady Salvage of Glen Head, L. I., [and] the late Sir Samuel Agar Salvage.
Three years later, it was Katherine Polk's turn to wed. Her marriage to John Currie Wilmerding, the former husband of Lila Vanderbilt Webb, was celebrated in Old Westbury on April 28, 1962.
Never married, Florence Wardell also lived here at midcentury. Born in Brooklyn and having graduated from Bryn Mawr College in 1898, she had been active in Republican women's activities for decades. She was vice chairman of the Republican Women's State Executive Committee in 1922, was a delegate to the National Republican Convention in 1928, and worked on Herbert Hoover's Presidential campaign.
Following World War I, Hoover requested her to go to Washington to help him provide relief for the Belgians. She was later decorated by the Belgium Government for her service. She fell ill in 1959 and died in her apartment at the age of 82 on February 12.
Investment broker Francis F. Randolph and his wife, Mary Hill Hadley, who lived here by the 1960s, filled their apartment with a remarkable art collection. Although he sat on the boards of several corporations and was a trustee of institutions, he and Mary were best known for their involvement in the arts. Francis was chairman of the finance committee of the Metropolitan Opera Guild, a patron of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Pierpont Morgan Library. The New York Times mentioned that they "gave a number of works of art and incunabula to Vassar College."
The building, designed by a nearly unknown architect, survives almost entirely intact.






























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