In 1827, as Greenwich Village rapidly expanded, the Greenwich Reformed Dutch Church erected a church at the northeast corner of Bleecker Street and Charles Street. Two years later, the congregation leased the northern portion of the Bleecker Street blockfront to James Haslet (sometimes spelled as Hazlet). The 21-year lease demanded that Haslet (who was a hatter) immediately fill the lots with "six good and permanent brick or stone buildings, at least two stories in height." He was prohibited to erect a nuisance, like a factory or stable.
Haslet's builder leaned into the currently ubiquitous Federal style. Two-and-a-half stories tall and just 17-feet-wide, the houses were faced in Flemish bond brick above a storefront. Their peaked attic roofs would have been punctured by one or two dormers.
The southernmost of the row, 337 Bleecker Street became home to Frederick Pattillow and his family. (The address would be renumbered 355 in 1867.) Born in 1788, Pattillow was a tailor and he moved his shop into the ground floor.
As was common, the Pattillows took in a boarder. In 1836, Saloma, the widow of William McLaughlin, lived here; and in 1840 and '41, Francis Squire boarded with the family. He was a moulder, or brickmaker.
The Pattillows left Bleecker Street in 1849 (Frederick would die on Long Island in 1873 at the age of 85.) The "two-story brick house," as described in the auction announcement, was sold to Magdalene Ramsey (sometimes spelled Ramsay) on February 21 for $3,850--or about $163,000 in 2026 terms.
Magdalene opened a "fancy store." Like the Pettillows, she took in one or two boarders at a time. In 1852, for instance, they were James Pope, a mason, and Nelson Marselis, a clerk.
A female boarder in the spring of 1854 was seeking employment. Her well-written advertisement in the New-York Tribune on May 22, read:
A person of respectability, a middle-aged widow, an Episcopalian, and well-educated, is desirous of obtaining a situation as seamstress, or companion to a lady; would be willing to make herself generally useful, and be found trustworthy and confidential. Salary not so much an object as a comfortable home. Please address post-paid, Mrs. J. A. No. 337 Bleecker-st., and appoint an interview.
Magdalene Ramsey had narrowed the offerings of her fancy store by 1855 when she listed it as "hair and perfume." She remained here until selling the building to Peter Asmussen around 1867.
Around the same time, Asmussen acquired another of the 1830 row, 361 Bleecker Street. He moved his family and his undertaking business into that building. Asmussen leased the store here to a string of cigar shop owners. In 1870, Henry F. Evers operated his "segar" store from the space. August Hammerstedt took over the store in 1873, followed by Charles Mezger in 1879.
In 1875, Asmussen hired architect Henry Grube to enlarge 355 and 361 Bleecker Street. He raised the attics to a full story, installed matching Italianate cornices, and placed pressed metal lintels and molded cornices over the windows.
Charles Mezger still operated the cigar store in 1888. Living upstairs that year were John H. Decker, a builder; engineer George W. Downes; and Charlotte Guest, the widow of James W. Guest. But they would all soon have to leave.
That year, Peter Asmussen sold 355 Bleecker Street to John Frederick Asmussen, presumably his brother. John had been involved in the undertaking business with Peter for years. Now with Peter retired, he headed the operation and moved it into the former cigar store.
John F. Asmussen was born in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany on June 12, 1838. His family emigrated to the United States when he was 14. After working in a tannery and a grocery, he joined Peter's undertaking business. He was a sexton of St. John's Evangelical Church on Christopher Street, having succeeded Peter Asmussen in that position.
John and his wife, the former Mary Meyn, had four sons, at least two of whom, Jacob H. and Charles C., lived with them. (The youngest, Charles, was only 12 years old when they moved in in 1888.) Jacob did not enter the family business and in 1894 opened a men's furnishing goods store at 367 Bleecker Street.
Funerals were always somber affairs, but one held here in the winter of 1884 was especially heart-wrenching. On February 15, the New-York Tribune reported that J. Clement Uhler had claimed the body of his wife, Emma, "from the dead house of the New-York Hospital." The article graphically said, "The features of the dead woman were somewhat swollen and discolored; indeed, Mr. Uhler had had some difficulty in recognizing her by the fitful light of the lamp when he visited the dead house."
The Uhlers were poor and, apparently, had no family nor friends. Uhler asked the pastor of St. John's Lutheran Church "to do what sacred offices were possible under the circumstances." That night, at 7:00, a "sorrowful little party assembled in the back room of Asmussen's shop," said the article. Other than the pastor's wife, only two other people were present. After a "short fervent prayer," the pastor's wife and the other woman in the room placed white flowers into the casket and it was sealed.
Charles C. Asmussen entered the business upon his graduation from public school. When Frederick retired in 1902, the 26-year-old took over. Historian William Smith Pelletreau said in 1907, "since that time he has been the sole manager of the manifold interests connected with it. He is enterprising and progressive in his ideas, and enjoys a great measure of popularity among the large circle of friends."
The Asmussen funeral parlor was taken over by World War I by John K. Nusskern. It continued as a well-regarded establishment. Following the suicide of artist and writer Hans Stengel on January 29, 1928, for instance, The New York Times announced his funeral would be held "at the undertaking establishment of J. K. Kusskern at 355 Bleecker Street."
"John H. Nusskern Undertaker" is stenciled on the window in 1940. from the NYC Dept of Records & Information Services.
John H. Nusskern's operation would remain here into the 1940s, after which it was taken over by Fred Dannecker. Dannecker died at the age of 51 on August 30, 1952. In 1957, the funeral home became Horne-Dannecker and moved 336 West 23rd Street.
In the meantime, the Funaro family had occupied the six rooms on the top floor as early as 1936. William Funaro's name appeared annually on the Special Committee on Un-American Activities list of Communist Party members.
In December 1960, Fernando Funaro, presumably William's son, filed an appeal to the State Rent Administration, complaining of the rent hikes he had endured. Living with him in the apartment were his wife, their adult daughter and her husband, and their eight-year-old daughter.
Funaro said that from 1939 to 1951, he had paid $50 per month. The rent rose to $57.50 per month in 1951 and in 1958 jumped to $75.00. In retaliation to his appeal, the landlord filed an eviction order. Happily for the Funaro family, the State revoked the eviction. (The $75 monthly rent would translate to about $795 today.)
There are four apartments in the building today. Where funerals were held for decades, a "custom scene laboratory" occupies the ground floor. Other than an iron fire escape, the exterior of 355 Bleecker Street is mostly intact since its remodel in 1875.
photographs by the author

































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