Around 1846, two nearly identical, 25-foot-wide Greek Revival homes were completed at 154 and 156 Twelfth Street (renumbered 4 and 6 East 12th in 1855). Similar to mansions erected on the north side of Washington Square a decade earlier, their wide stone stoops rose to handsome porticos supported by fluted columns with palm leaf capitals. The floor-to-ceiling parlor windows were, most likely, fronted by cast iron balconies. The encroaching Italianate style was reflected in a tiny detail--the foliate brackets that co-existed with the Greek Revival dentils of the cornices.
The eastern house was erected by Peter Riker Bonnett, a wealthy grocer whose operation was at 202 Front Street. Born in 1801, he married 20-year-old Maria Saltonstall in August 1835. The couple would have eight children: Charlotte Augusta, Louisa, Daniel (who died in 1843 at the age of four), Daniel Blake, Mary Jane, Lucretia Saltonstall, Charles Pierre, and John Bingham.
Sadly, the family had just settled into their new home when John died on May 21, 1846, just two months after his fourth birthday. His little casket sat in the parlor until his funeral on Saturday afternoon, May 23.
Margaret Targee lived with the couple in the 1850s. Born in 1814, she was the daughter of the well-known silversmith John Targee, who died in 1850. Never married, it is unclear whether she boarded with the Bonnetts or was simply a close friend. She died at the age of 45 on May 25, 1859 and her funeral was held here two days later.
Peter Bonnett died on September 4, 1871 at the age of 70. Interestingly, his funeral was not held in the parlor, but in St. George's Church three days later.
Maria Bonnett left 6 East 12th Street in 1878. She rented the house for two years to metal dealer George A. Crocker, starting that year. Then, in 1881, Reverend Philip A. H. Brown, minister-in-charge of St. John's Chapel, leased the property. He also sat on the executive committee of the New York Protestant Episcopal City Mission Society, which was listed here.
By 1885, Brown shared the house with the offices of the Young Women's Christian Association. Its "industrial department" gave lessons on sewing, which provided them a means to earn a living. On March 25, 1886, The Christian Union announced:
The Young Women's Christian Association, now at 6 East Twelfth Street, New York, has an industrial department, where sewing of all kinds is given out to competent workers who are compelled to be self-supporting. Orders will be received by mail, materials as well as labor furnished.
Operating from a residence quickly revealed its shortcomings. On January 11, 1886, the officers of the Young Women's Christian Association met at the house of "Miss Stokes." The New-York Tribune explained, "The meeting was held at a private house, as the accommodations of the rooms now occupied by the Association are too small for the officers and their friends." The article continued, "All the classes connected with the institution have been given up this winter, as there is not room for them in the present quarters at No. 6 East Twelfth-st."
The association moved into new, larger accommodations and Reverend Brown remained here at least through 1890. By 1895, Reverend Howard Duffeld of the nearby First Presbyterian Church occupied 6 East 12th Street. The erudite clergyman was a member of the elite Century Association.
Reverend Duffeld left in 1896 and the house was next rented to the socially prominent Augusta Lovett Kingsland Jones. Born in 1839, her husband, Herman LeRoy Jones died in 1880. (The Jones family had been at the pinnacle of New York high society since the early 19th century and were reputedly the inspiration of the term, "keeping up with the Joneses.") Living with Augusta was her son, Herman Jr., and her daughter and son-in-law, Mary Kingsland Jones and William Bradford, Jr.
That the Bradfords lived with Augusta is somewhat surprising. Mary had wed Bradford in 1891 "without the knowledge of her mother," said the New-York Tribune. When the extended family moved into 6 East 12th Street, the Bradfords' only son, William Jr., was three years old.
In what must have been an unwelcomed case of déjà vu for Augusta, on March 12, 1896, the New-York Tribune began an article saying, "Society was treated to a mild sensation yesterday by the announcement of the marriage of Mrs. Margaret Dunscombe Hone to Herman Leroy Jones." The couple was married on February 16 and, according to Herman, they had told their families only a few days before the article.
Herman, assuredly, would have faced a confrontation had he informed his mother before marrying Margaret. Although she had a sterling social pedigree, being the eldest child of former Mayor Philip Hone, she came with what many socialites would consider unforgiveable baggage.
Known to her friends as Rita, she married Archibald Kennedy Kearny Mackay in 1890. The event was "one of the fashionable affairs of the winter season," according to the New-York Tribune. Only weeks later, in May, she divorced him and within one or two days after the divorce was granted, she married an actor, Paul T. Wilkes. In 1894, Rita divorced Wilkes and, as if society was not already sufficiently shocked, she "appeared on the stage under the name of Virginia Paul," as reported by the New-York Tribune.
The newlyweds moved into the East 12th Street mansion. Having two Mrs. Herman Leroy Jones at the address caused some confusion. Newspapers that reported on an incident that took place in the winter of 1899, for instance, did not distinguish which Mrs. Jones was involved.
On December 7, the New York Herald reported that Mrs. Jones engaged a cab "to do some shopping." The cabbie, John Downey, became frustrated with his female client. The newspaper said, "after driving to half a dozen stores his actions became so disagreeable that Mrs. Jones called a policeman and caused his arrest." The incident drew attention nationwide, partially because well-bred women went to lengths to keep their names out of newspapers for reasons other than social events.
The following day, The Chicago Tribune wrote, "Mrs. Herman Leroy-Jones, society woman, of 6 East Twelfth street...was courageous enough to appear today in the Jefferson Market Police Court." The article revealed that Mrs. Jones was not only courageous, but sympathetic. As she noticed tears running down Downey's checks, she paused by him.
"Please, ma'am," he said. "Do be merciful. It is the first time I have ever done such a thing, and it will be the last time, believe me, ma'am."
Mrs. Jones first turned to the magistrate and said, "He has been punished enough. I will not prosecute him." Then she turned back to Downey and said, "Now, here is the dollar I owe you. Let this be a lesson to you and all cabmen who are rude to women."
On March 20, 1900, seven-year-old William Bradford Jr. died and, once again, a funeral was held in the parlor of 6 West 12th Street.
Although she provided a home to her children and their spouses and despite her personal wealth, it appears that Augusta Kingsland Jones intended that they stand on their own financial feet. On January 14, 1903, The New York Times reported that Herman Leroy Jones, "a well-known society man," had filed for bankruptcy, "with liabilities of $87,965 and assets nominal." (The debt would equal $3.2 million in 2026.)
At the time, the ladies' tailor Haas Brothers had been attempting to receive payment of his wife's bills. Now with Jones in bankruptcy, the firm sued Margaret directly. Mentioning that she lived in "the old Jones mansion," on December 15 The Evening World reported that Margaret "failed to appear for examination in supplementary proceedings to-day." Her bill, which stretched back to 1897, would equal about $30,000 today. The article commented, "The Herman Le Roy Joneses are conspicuous in fashionable society."
The pressure apparently took a toll, and Margaret suffered a breakdown. She was committed to a sanitarium for nervous exhaustion until May 6, 1904. The Evening World reported that upon her release, "She was under rigid restraint and surveillance in her mother-in-law's mansion, at No. 6 East Twelfth street...She was allowed to go nowhere without some member of her immediate family or a servant in her company."
Ten days after Margaret returned home, Herman thought a trip to the races would do her good. And so, on the afternoon of May 16, 1904, the couple accompanied millionaire Robert L. Cutting to the races at Morris Park. What Herman expected to be pleasant afternoon turned to anything but when Margaret disappeared.
After the first race, Herman and Cutting left Margaret in their box to go to the betting ring. When they returned, she was gone. When she did not return after a considerable period, the two men became alarmed. They searched the ground and the clubhouse and made repeated inquiries, but no one had seen her. Finally giving up, Herman returned home around 6:00.
About half an hour later, a boy rang the bell with a note from Margaret, written on stationery of the Brevoort Hotel just four blocks away on Fifth Avenue. In it, according to Robert Cutting, she "declared her intention of leaving her husband and working for her own living." The two men rushed to the hotel, but the clerk said a woman matching Margaret's description had merely stopped in and used the writing room.
On May 26, Jones received information from a woman who lived in a 22nd Street boarding house that his wife was living there. He and Cutting went there and examined the room and Jones recognized some of Margaret's clothing. They waited in the parlor until she returned. She arrived at about 6:00 that evening and Herman brought her back to 6 East 12th Street. Neither he nor Cutting would discuss the incident.
The Joneses moved out in 1907 and on April 9 that year, The New York Times reported that the Bonnett Estate had leased the house to Samuel Medlin for five years. By then, the Lower Fifth Avenue neighborhood had drastically changed as millionaires migrated northward and commerce invaded the once exclusive district.
Medlin converted the basement for commercial use. In 1909, Morris F. Pfaelzer operated his fur business, M. F. Pfaelzer & Company, here. He would remain here until 1913 when M. L. Weiss, "dealer in cornices and skylights," moved his operation in.
After being in the family for more than seven decades, on February 19, 1918, the New York Herald reported that Charles P. Bonnett had sold 6 East 12th Street to M. L. Weiss, "who occupies the lower floor of this building." Weiss resold the house to Thomas Snell who leased it and the house next door at 4 East 12th Street to the Winifred Warren Company in 1919. The New-York Tribune reported that the firm "will alter the houses into studio apartments."
Among the first tenants was Jessie Franklin Turner, a fashion designer, here in 1919. Turner established workrooms and showrooms in both houses.
An advertisement in the New-York Tribune on September 26, 1920, offered an available apartment in 6 East 12th Street: "Two large rooms with bath in Colonial house for studio or professional offices."
In 1925, Belfast-born poet Joseph Campbell and Michael Walsh established The School of Irish Studies in the building. Among the initial courses it offered were the "History of Ireland from the Earliest Times to the Latest Developments," and "Irish Literature from the Ancient Hero-Tales to Post-James Joyce." It additionally presented lectures on Irish history, language, literature and art. It would operate here through 1927.
The canopy of the Blue Heaven Restaurant that resulted from the 1936 renovation can be seen in this 1940 photograph. via the NYC Dept of Records & Information Services.
An renovation by architect Hans C. Volz in 1936 resulted in a restaurant, the Blue Heaven, in the basement and one apartment per floor on the upper portion. It was likely during this remodeling that the upper floor windows were enlarged. The configuration lasted until 1945 when the basement was converted to an apartment.
The ever-changing basement became the Peridot Gallery, headed by Lou Pollack in the 1949. (It was likely during this renovation that the stoop was removed.) The gallery featured avant-garde and Abstract Expressionist art. In the 1960s, writer Robert Phelps and his artist wife Rosemarie Beck occupied an apartment here. An Abstract Expressionist, Beck's works likely appeared in the gallery downstairs.
The basement level was renovated again in 2009 when it became part of a duplex apartment with the parlor level.
photographs by the author












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