photo by Alice Lum |
Joseph Schwartzler was an active real estate developer in
the 1870s and ‘80s and in 1887 he replaced the two houses with a modern
apartment house. Designed by architects
Thom & Wilson, the handsome structure sat back from the property line like
its older neighbors; providing for a inviting fenced garden space. The eye-catching design was a few years ahead
of its time, making full use at the lower levels of horseshoe arches—suggesting
a Moorish touch—bulbous, ballooning bases to the pilasters and piers, and
flowing lines that foreshadowed Art Nouveau.
photo by Alice Lum |
Schwartzler’s 40-foot wide apartment building was no
tenement house. The five-story building
was built for just ten families. The
Real Estate Record and Builders’ Guide noted it had “modern improvements.”
Joseph Schwartzler’s ambitious speculations soon caught up
with him. Early in 1889 he was forced to
declare bankruptcy. In July five houses
he erected on 97th Street west of Third Avenue were lost to
creditors. And before that, in April,
No. 80-82 Perry Street was sold at auction.
The architects blended terra cotta tiles (seen at top), carved panels, and sensuous lines -- photo by Alice Lum |
By 1908 the George Washington Lewis family was here. The well-off Lewis and his wife,
former Maria Elizabeth Sharkey, sent their son Leicester Crosby Lewis to
Trinity School for preparation for college.
Young Lewis went on to Columbia University where he busied himself in
good works—as a freshman he was a Settlement Worker in the Speyer School, a
year later he was Secretary of the Churchmen’s Association, and by the time he
graduated would be a member of the Christian Association, King’s Crown, Barnard
Literary Society and Anthon Club.
The respectful lad would do graduate work at Columbia
before entering the General Theological Seminary to prepare for the Episcopal
ministry.
In 1916 ethnic gangs ruled certain neighborhoods in the
city. Although Edward Belli lived at No.
80-82 Perry Street, relatively far from the Italian gangs of the Lower East
Side, his presence there on the night of October 6 would spell his doom.
Belli was the secretary of a vaudeville bicycle rider known
as Diavalo. The Italian theatrical set
often socialized in the Italian Gardens in the Occitental Hotel. The Gardens, more precisely called a saloon, was owned
by Guiseppi Verrazzano.
The bar was located at No. 341
Broome Street and sat across the street from the Maiori Royal Theatre, an Italian
vaudeville house.
On October 6 there were about 23 men and women sitting at
tables there. Among the actors and
theater workers like Belli and actor Louis Badaloti was Dominico Pepo who ran
another saloon at Elizabeth and Kenmare Street.
Unfortunately for the other patrons, Pepo was an enemy of gangster Mike
Gaimari who was being held for the murder of Michael Rofrano, a deputy street
cleaning commissioner.
Word on the street was that Pepo was targeted for gangland
revenge. And tonight would be the night.
Two or three men burst through the doors, drew revolvers from
their pockets and began firing. Pandemonium
ensued and Dominico Pepo attempted to hide “behind a table at which half a
dozen actors and actresses…were seated,” said The Times.
Guiseppi Verrazzano, known as “The Big Man,” to his patrons,
tried to take cover, “but toppled over with a bullet in his heart,” said The
Evening World the following day. “Edward
Belli…sitting at the actors’ table, fell dying with bullets in his left leg,
left shoulder and back. Louise Badaloti
was shot in the right leg.”
The gunmen followed Pepo as he continued to seek
shelter. “There was panic in the
restaurant,” said The Times, “but the men continued shooting until they saw
Pepo fall.” The targeted man suffered
wounds in the head and heart.
Although fatally injured, Belli identified one of the gunmen
from his hospital bed.
A scar at the second floor outlines the missing blind horseshoe arch that once mimicked the entrance below -- photo by Alice Lum |
When the United States entered World War I, Corporal Raymond
J. Horton left his wife, Elizabeth, in their apartment here as he shipped
overseas. The corporal’s name appeared
on the list of casualties reported by General Pershing in 1918.
Throughout the 20th century the building
continued to attract a wide variety of tenants.
Joseph J. Carlotti, living here in 1920, was an engineer. Both James McNamara, a 22-year old who lived
here in 1935, and Sylvester j. Bayer, a resident in 1948, were firemen. In 1936 Hyman N. Glickstein lived in the building,
a lawyer and counsel for the Association of Workers in Public Relief Agencies.
photo by Alice Lum |
Perhaps the most celebrated resident was Donald
Cameron. An actor, he had played leading
roles on Broadway for many years, working opposite actresses like Peggy Wood
and Eva La Gallienne. The New York Times
recalled that “During the silent film era he was leading man to a succession of
actresses, including Lillian Walker and Leah Baird,” names mostly forgotten
today.
After serving in World War I he had “another brief interlude
in motion pictures, opposite Billie Burke, before he returned to the legitimate
stage,” said The Times. His lengthy
Broadway career included the plays “Peter Pan,” "The Three Sisters,” “My Sister
Eileen,” and “Hamlet” with Maurice Evans.
Cameron retired from acting in 1945 and spent much of his
time in West Cornwall, Connecticut. But
he kept his Perry Street city apartment until his death in July 1955.
Thom & Wilson’s highly-interesting apartment building
has suffered a few regrettable changes.
The wonderful carved stone horseshoe arch at the second floor is gone,
and the cornice has been lost leaving a scar and uncompleted look. But astoundingly, the original ten
apartments, now cooperatives, remain—never divided.
A decorative cornice would have originally completed the design -- photo by Alice Lum |
A building I've always admired. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteAlas for the endless parade of "cornice-ectomies." Were I as wealthy as Mayor Bloomberg, they would all be restored with cast fiberglass. This might explain why I will never be as wealthy as Mayor Bloomberg.
ReplyDeleteI lived there 1943 to 1956/ The Clancy brothers lived on the 1st floor, I on the 2nd.
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