The population explosion in the Greenwich Village district beginning in the 1820s made ordinary businessmen part-time real estate developers--like hatter James Haslet (sometimes spelled Hazlet). In 1829, he signed a 21-year lease with the Reformed Dutch Church for a portion of the Bleecker Street blockfront between Amos (later West 10th Street) and Charles Streets. (The church, erected two years earlier, occupied the remainder of the block.) The lease demanded that he "immediately" improve the lots with "six good and permanent brick or stone buildings at least two stories in height." Haslet was prohibited to erect any structure that would be a "nuisance," like a factory.
He erected six 17-foot-wide houses that were completed in 1830. Faced in Flemish bond brick, they originally rose two-and-a-half stories tall. Their Federal design included peaked roofs with dormers (most likely just one per home). It is unclear whether all the houses included a shop, but that was the case with 343 Bleecker Street (renumbered 361 Bleecker in 1867).
The original occupant was Alpheus Hawley, who operated a dry goods store. The Hawley family's residency would be relatively short. As early as 1836, Peter P. Ramsey and his family occupied the upper floors while his shoemaking shop was on the ground floor. Living with the Ramseys was Stephen Keeler, a shoemaker who most assuredly worked for Ramsey. In 1840, a different shoemaker lived with the family--Cornelius Cooper.
The same owner-worker relationship continued in 1850 when shoemaker Alfred Brush took over the house and store. Living with his family for the next six years was shoemaker Luke Concklin. (Luke changed the spelling of his surname to Conklin in 1852.)
Brush's shoe and boot shop seems to have been thriving, because in 1852 through 1854 he had a second employee, John F. Purdy, who lived nearby on Amos Street. Outside of his business Brush was involved in civic affairs and in 1855 and 1856 served as a city councilman.
E. Downes took over the shoe store around 1857. Unlike his predecessors, he did not live over the shop. He and his family lived at 72 Bedford Street. There were now two tenants in the upper floors. The Smith family and Chauncey B. Scranton, a clerk. (Both John and Conklin Smith were hatters, although they operated separate shops--Conklin's on Park Row and John's on Canal Street.)
After decades of its being a shoe store, in 1864 Edward P. Welch moved his confectionary shop into the ground floor. There were still two tenants upstairs--George Barnett, a clerk, and carpenter Thomas C. Whitman. At the time, Peter Asmussen's coffin business was at 291 Bleecker Street.
Around 1867, Asmussen acquired this property (he would continue to purchase Greenwich Village real estate throughout the coming decades). He moved his undertaking shop in and established his family in the upper floors. Asmussen was, as well, a sexton in St. John's Lutheran Church on Christopher Street.
Interestingly, given Peter's apparent religious bent, the Asmussen's shared the upper portion of the house with the Stadtmuller family in 1867 and 1868. Henry Stadtmuller listed his profession as "beer." Daughter Annie Stadtmuller taught in the girls' department of School No. 20 on Chrystie Street.
By 1873, John F. Asmussen, presumably Peter's brother, had joined the business. That year Peter and his wife moved far north to 160 East 63rd Street and John moved into 361 Bleecker Street with his wife, the former Mary Meyn, and their eight children.
The Real Estate Record & Builders' Guide reported on November 6, 1875 that Peter Asmussen had hired architect Henry Grube to remodel 361 Bleecker Street. The attic was raised to full height, the facade "rebuilt of brick," and a fashionable Italianate cornice installed. Corniced, sheet metal lintels were included in the remodeling.
Renting rooms from the Asmussens 1879 were a young couple named Crawford. The husband was a bookkeeper by profession, but he lost his job around September that year. His resultant frustration became directed to his wife, Ellen. On September 30, the New-York Tribune reported that Ellen, "a respectable-looking woman, age twenty-two years," had been arrested and charged for attempted suicide, "by throwing herself from the sea wall of the Battery Park."
In court, Ellen explained to Justice Morgan that her husband was, "improvident in his habits, and rude in his manners toward her; and that when intoxicated he would beat her brutally," as reported by the New-York Tribune. The judge was moved by her story and dismissed her case. How Ellen Crawford's domestic life played out is unknown.
In 1888, Peter Asmussen sold the similar building at 355 Bleecker Street to John. The family moved the undertaking business to that property. (The following year John erected a livery stable at 56 Barrow Street, which also housed the company's hearse, wagon and horses.)
Peter Asmussen leased the store at 361 Bleecker Street to John J. Keyes as early as the mid-1890s. Keyes ran a drugstore in the space. Living upstairs was the family of William L. Reid, who ran an express business at 103 Bank Street.
Herman Meyersfield took over the drugstore in 1895. He had a scare on the Fourth of July 1896. The following day, the New-York Tribune reported on the many small blazes that were set off by children playing with fireworks. Among the casualties was "Herman Morris's [sic] awning at No. 361 Bleecker-st." The article said he suffered $25 worth of damage, or about $963 in 2026 terms.
Peter Asmussen died in 1903. His estate continued to lease 361 Bleecker Street.
Charles Schulz's contracting business had replaced the drugstore about three years earlier. He and his family lived upstairs. At the turn of the century, he listed his profession as "painter," but he was much more than that. Highly involved with Tammany Hall, he was awarded profitable contracts with the city. He was still living here, for instance, on June 12, 1905 when he received contracts to paint two public schools, Nos. 77 and 123.
The Peter Asmussen estate sold 361 Bleecker Street and two other properties in October 1909.
In the post-Depression years, a modern arcade storefront was installed. The shop became home to Ruggiero's Fish Market.
The new arcade storefront made window shopping easy for passersby. from the NYC Dept of Records & Information Services.
Following the fish store was Helène, a boutique-style lampshade shop run by Helène Lenart. The New York Times described her wares as "made-to-order, simple in design and moderately priced." Lenart moved to West 4th Street around 1950.
An unexpected tenant arrived in the ground floor space in 1954--Elektra Records, founded by Jac Holzman in 1950 in his shop, the Record Loft. In their Folk City--New York and the American Folk Music Revival, authors Stephen Petrus and Ronald D. Cohen explain:
In 1954, after producing seven or eight records, Holzman decided to focus on record production rather than retail, so he closed the Record Loft and moved Elektra around the corner to larger offices at 361 Bleecker Street.
The authors note, "Elektra became a center for gatherings of folk musicians." Recording artist Theo Bikel recalled, "Folkies would meet with cheap wine and beer and no eats, smallish rooms, just large enough to have some elbow room so you could play a guitar or banjo, and most everybody played and sang."
As early as 1959, sculptor Alfred Van Loen lived and worked at 361 Bleecker Street. Born in Germany in 1924, he studied sculpture at the Royal Academy of Amsterdam. He taught at Vassar, Hunter College and Columbia--and in his studio here.
On November 12, 1959, The Villager reported, "Classes at sculptor Alfred Van Leon's studio, 361 Bleecker St., have begun for the fall and winter schedule on Mondays and Wednesdays." The article noted, "An exponent of direct carving, he also has a class at the North Shore Community Art Center, Roslyn, L.I." Van Loen's work is included in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art.
A renovation completed in 1965 resulted in an "art gallery with artist's studio and office" on the ground floor, and one apartment each on the upper floors.
The entire building, however, became the Kelter–Malcé antiques shop by 1973. Jolie Kelter and Michael Malcé sold "quilts, folk art, garden furniture, and other antiques," according to Elaine Louie of The New York Times, adding that the couple "are a walking, talking encyclopedia of 19th- and 20th-century decorative arts." The pair, who originally lived above the store, closed it in the spring of 1992. The New York Times reported on May 7, "They will conduct their antique business from their 1850 Italianate town house [on Jane Street]."
At some point, the arcade storefront was modernized. In the early 2000s, the space was home to Sleek, an apparel boutique, and by 2010 a James Perse clothing shop occupied it. It was replaced by Rains, another boutique. Through it all, the unassuming building with its remarkable history remains relatively intact since its 1873 remodeling.
photographs by the author










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