photo by Ted Leather
An advertisement in The Evening Post on September 14, 1847 offered, "The large, new, modern style Dwelling House and Lot in fee, No. 58 East 16th st., near Union square." The ad described the 25-foot-wide, four-story residence as being, "Finished in the best manner, with carved statuary mantels, plate glass, mahogany doors, all the recent improvements, including dumb waiter, gas, furnaces, &c.,--One of the most desirable residences in the city."
Construction of the Greek Revival home had started a year earlier. Faced in red brick and trimmed in brownstone, it was one of a row of identical houses. A lacy, full-width cast iron balcony fronted the floor-to-ceiling parlor windows and a simple, bracketed cornice completed its design. Distinguishing the row from scores of similar homes rising throughout the city at the time were their entrances, the entablatures of which were crowned with highly unusual cornices with stylized egg-and-dart decoration.
No. 58 East 16th Street (renumbered 134 in 1863) was purchased by Sarah Faulkner, the widow of William Faulkner. Like many widows of the time, she operated her home as a boarding house.
Among Sarah's earliest tenants was Edward Chauncey Marshall, who boarded here as early as 1850. He was on the faculty of the Free Academy of the City of New York as the Assistant in the Department of History and Belles Lettres. In 1850 he earned $700 per year, or about $28,200 in 2025.
The other boarders that year were three attorneys--Charles T. Shelton, Horace Andrews, and Cheselden Ellis-- and one merchant, John G. Williams. Some, most likely, were married and would have shared one or two rooms with their wives. Unmarried women were generally not welcomed in respectable boarding houses.
It appears that one married couple had a baby in 1852. The new arrival prompted its parents to find their own home. (The decision might have been made at Sarah Faulkner's urging.) Sarah placed an advertisement in The New York Times on December 9, 1852 that read:
A Family who are about going to house-keeping will vacate two pleasant rooms in one of the most desirable boarding houses in the City, and would like to find someone to take them. The dinner hour is 2 o'clock.
Sarah's daughter, Catherine, moved into the house following the death of her husband, Henry, in 1862. She died here the next year, on August 2, 1863 at the age of 53. Her funeral was held in the parlor of "the residence of her mother, Mrs. S. A. Faulkner, No. 134 (late 58) East 16-th st., on Tuesday, Aug. 4, at 3 o'clock P.M., without further invitation," reported The New York Times.
Boarding here at the time was David H. Brown, a clerk. Two months after Catherine's funeral, he was called to testify in support of Alexander Simpson. On October 14, Simpson and Margaret Larkin faced off in court--she accusing him of setting fire to Wilson's Bakery on the night of January 1, and he charging her of perjury.
Larkin testified that she saw Simpson "with straw in his hands, the straw having tar, or some other combustible material spread over it." The New York Times reported, "After the straw was lighted, she saw Mr. Simpson set fire to the stairs, baskets, &c." Simpson swore that Mrs. Larkin's statements were "wickedly and maliciously false." The Times said that David H. Brown "corroborated the statements of Mr. Simpson."
On March 15, 1865, David H. Brown and another boarder, John Strong, were inducted into the Union Army. Happily for them, the war ended less than a month later. Brown returned to 134 East 16th Street.
Catharine G. Read purchased 134 East 16th Street in 1867 for $23,250, according to the New York Dispatch on March 3. (The price would convert to about $600,000 today.) Sarah F. Brown continued to take in boarders. David H. Brown would remain here through 1869. Sarah Brown's other boarders that year were Robert McCartee (who listed his profession as "treasurer"), and John Murphy, a tobacco merchant.
The fact that Sarah Brown had only three boarders reflected the upscale tenor of her operation. The fewer the tenants, the more exclusive the home. She leaned on Sarah Faulkner's sterling reputation in advertising a vacancy on September 14, 1873:
134 East Sixteenth Street (late Mrs. Faulkner's) to let, with Board, a suit of rooms on second floor till November 1; also rooms for gentlemen.
The boarding house was taken over by Isaac Bush, Jr. in 1877. Its respectability continued to be unreproachable. Although Bush occasionally accepted unmarried females, they were always school teachers--Mary J. Gallagher in 1879, Mary G. Pursell in 1888, and Isabel McConnellogue in 1890. All of them taught in public schools.
An interesting resident was Count Lucian Della Sala, who boarded here in 1883. He summered at the Guigou House in the Catskill Mountains at least once. As the end of the season neared in 1883, the resort listed him and other respected Manhattanites like General George H. Sharpe, Italian Consul General G. B. Raffo, and Colonel G. Thurston, as references.
On May 5, 1900, The World ran a lengthy article condemning "the immense profits made by The Tammany Ice Trust." (Tammany Hall had given Charles W. Morse's American Ice Company a virtual monopoly over the ice supply in Manhattan.) The article was headlined, "Grip of the Great Ice Trust, Now First Felt by the Public." Among those interviewed for the article was Isaac Bush, Jr., who grumbled, "I had a special arrangement to get ice at 25 cents, and now comes a notice that the price is 50 cents."
Among the boarders in the early years of the 20th century were Reverend W. H. Van Antwerp and his wife, who arrived in September 1903. Born in 1833 in Geneseo, New York, Van Antwerp was ordained on June 30, 1858 and earned his Master's at the General Theological Seminary. He and Charlotte Augusta Jones were married in St. Thomas Church in 1862. The couple traveled to Des Moines, Iowa in January 1882 where Van Antwerp built a new church.
Another interesting boarder was artist A. T. Weston. His advertisement in Printers' Ink on November 27, 1907 read, "Drawings. Comic drawings--bright, catchy and original. Tell me what you want and I will submit sketches."
That year Catharine G. Read died, leaving the title "free of a mortgage" to 134 East 16th Street to her daughter, Gertrude E. Kellogg. She retained possession at least through 1912, when she leased the house to Minnie Hoffman.
In the post-World War I years, 134 East 16th Street operated as a rooming house. Not all the residents were as upstanding as those who had occupied rooms in the 19th century.
On August 14, 1925, for instance, Platon Sorotay was arrested and "charged with driving [a] car while intoxicated," as reported by the Daily Argus of Mount Vernon, New York. And on the night of April 28, 1944, Nicholas Marino was arrested in the subway station at Broadway and 72nd Street. The New York Sun reported, "Marino was shown by the records to have been arrested twenty-four times previously" for pick-pocketing.
A renovation completed in 1961 resulted in a duplex apartment in the basement and parlor levels and two apartments each in the upper floors. The duplex was divided into two apartments in 1965.
Although the iron stoop railings have been replaced, the original Greek Revival-style areaway fencing suggests their appearance. The iron balcony was removed prior to 1940 and the brick facade has been painted. Nonetheless, of the 1847 row, only 134 East 16th Street has outwardly survived mostly intact.
many thanks to reader Ted Leather for suggesting this post




























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