photograph by Ted Leather
In March 1876, real estate operator Andres Dold purchased a 204-foot long parcel on East 57th Street between Lexington and Park Avenues from Frederick Zittel. The following year he completed a row of two- and three-bay wide houses on the site.
Among the narrower examples was 122 East 57th Street. Just 16-feet-wide, it rose four stories above a high English basement. Faced in brownstone, its neo-Grec design included stone architraves with molded cornices and bracketed sills.
The houses along the block became home to well-heeled residents. The Betts family first occupied 122 East 57th Street and, like their neighbors, their movements were closely followed by the society pages. On September 6, 1883, for instance, The Evening Telegram reported, "Mrs. H. W. Betts and family, of 122 East Fifty-seventh street, have left the Mansion Home, Monticello, N. Y., and are now at Saratoga."
Before long, Meyer and Emilie Hoffman purchased the house. Living with them were their adult children, Clara, Maurice J. (known as Morris), and Julia May and her family. Julia and her husband, Charles Brownold, had two children, Claudia and Irma.
Clara's wedding to Nathaniel Henry Wolfstein was held in the ballroom of Mazzetti's at 59th Street and Sixth Avenue on January 16, 1890. The New York Times described the venue as being "prettily decorated with palms and clematis, and the bridal party stood under a canopy of white roses and lilacs." Maurice Hoffman was Wolfstein's best man and Charles Brownold was one of the ushers. The socially visible event drew guests from as far as Cincinnati and Philadelphia.
Maurice J. Hoffman died unmarried on January 21, 1892 at the age of 31. His funeral was held in the parlor of 122 East 57th Street three days later.
It would not be the family's last funeral to be held here. On November 28, 1904, Meyer Hoffman died at the age of 74 and his funeral was held on the 30th; and Charles Brownold died on June 24, 1913. (While The New York Times noted that his funeral would be held in the house, it said it would be "strictly private.")
By the time of Emilie's death around 1916, the neighborhood around 122 East 57th Street had become decidedly commercial. On May 1, 1917, The New York Times reported:
The rapid transformation of East Fifty-seventh Street from residential to business purposes is further illustrated by a lease of the four-story dwelling, 122 East Fifty-seventh Street...for the estate of Emilie Hoffman to Harry Turner...The building will be altered by the installation of stores on the lower floors and apartments above.
Architect Herbert J. Krapp made $6,000 in renovations (about $151,000 in 2026 terms). While the stoop remained, the basement and parlor levels were converted to shops. They were quickly leased. On August 5, 1917, The New York Times reported that Georges Chevrier, "cleaning and dyeing" had rented the ground floor store and milliner Frances B. Lankland had signed a lease on the "parlor floor."
Each of the upper three floors held two apartments. An advertisement in July 1918 described one of them as having "Two very large rooms, kitchenette and bath."
In 1919, the Paris-based boutique Jeannetton, Inc. occupied one of the store spaces. Its manager was looking for help in October 1920, advertising, "Girl for errands and shopping, white; experience required; $20 weekly." (How much experience a young woman would need to run errands is unclear.) The weekly pay would translate to about $320 today.
Charles Finkelstein assembled a syndicate, the 122 East Fifty-seventh Street, Inc., in 1935 to purchase the building. In reporting on the transaction on April 11, The New York Times noted, "The new owner will alter the building."
Before the end of the year, the stoop had been removed and a new two-story storefront installed. The apartments, still two per floor, got a renovation at the time.
The 1935 renovations did not affect the 1877 neo-Grec window details. via the NYC Dept. of Records & Information Services.
Shortly after the renovations were completed, 122 East 57th Street was the scene of a dramatic rescue. On November 13, 1935, The New York Times reported that an "exploring expedition undertaken by a white Persian cat" had thrown the block into upheaval. The feline was valued by its owner, Louise Kersch of 110 East 57th Street, at the equivalent of $7,000 today. It had crawled from the window of the Kersch apartment and jumped sill-to-sill until stopping in front of an apartment at 122 East 57th Street.
The New York Times reported that its rescue entailed, "the calling of a police emergency squad." The residents of the apartment were not at home, so police "rigged a life net of tarpaulin below the window in fear that the cat, some sixty feet above the sidewalk, might fall." Traffic on the block was stopped and crowds gathered to watch the drama unfold. Finally, police "forced a door" into the apartment and rescued the cat from the window.
At the time of that drama, the store spaces were occupied by two high-end antiques dealers. Henry V. Weil occupied the parlor floor and Alfred Rich & Sons was in the shop at street level. Weil advertised "genuine American antiques" in 1937, and that year The New York Sun remarked, "The firm of Alfred Rich & Sons...has made a specialty of cameo glass."
The constant search for rare glassware and china caused Alfred Rich & Sons to become a victim of a prolific crook in 1945. Harry Francis Burke, who lived in a furnished room on East 50th Street, was "a collector of rare china," as reported by The New York Sun on June 22. He had been arrested the previous day and police said his room was packed with valuable stolen glassware and china, including "an 1850 dessert dish from the J. P. Morgan collection." The article noted, "The police said he also had stored several barrels of the merchandise in warehouses."
Burke confessed that he had sold several items to Alfred Rich. The New York Sun said that Rich "was unaware that they were stolen," but he was given a summons "for failing to keep proper books."
At the time of the embarrassing incident, the second floor space had been home to the East India Curry Shop for four years, having opened in May 1941. Writing in The New York Times on April 3, 1944, Jane Holt reported that in addition to the many varieties of curry offered at the East India Curry Shop, "the establishment sells a concentrated curry sauce, which it blends itself."
Living here around midcentury was pioneer aviator David Hugh McCulloch. Born on April 23, 1890, he was a pilot for the Curtis Airplane Company in 1910, and trained flyers for the U.S. Navy during World War I. He served as co-pilot during the U.S. Navy's attempt in 1919 to cross the Atlantic Ocean by air, and continued to train pilots at Floyd Bennett Field until his retirement in 1946. McCulloch was still living here on September 21, 1955 when he died following what The New York Times described as "a long illness."
In the meantime, the ground floor continued to house upscale antiques dealers. In 1949, Martin J. Ullmanns expanded its offerings by "making a specialty of designing mounts and shades" for antique vases and figurines to be converted into table lamps.
From the mid-1960s until 1983, Philip Colleck of London occupied space here. On November 25, 1965, The New York Times reported, "A sizable section of newly acquired pine paneling, once in a chateau in the environs of Paris, has been installed in the shop of Philip Colleck of London." The article said the Louis XV paneling turned the shop "into an atmospheric stage for handsome furniture."
In 1994, the lower two floors were combined as a restaurant and the upper floors converted to office space. It was possibly at this time that the window details were shaved off. Today the brownstone is painted and only the 1877 cornice survives to remind us of a time when the building was home to a wealthy family.
many thanks to reader Ted Leather for suggesting this post


.jpg)


.jpg)





.jpeg)
















.png)