Having studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris, brothers George and Edward Blum opened their architectural office, Blum & Blum, in 1909. The following year, they received an important commission from A. M. Jampol, president of the newly formed 875 Park Avenue Company.
On September 23, 1910 The New York Times reported that they had filed plans, "for a twelve-story fireproof elevator apartment house to be erected at the southeast corner of Park Avenue and Seventy-eighth Street." Projecting the construction costs at $1 million (about 34 times that much in 2025), the article said, "The building will have a facade of brick with limestone and terra cotta trimmings of the modern Italian Renaissance style."
Park Avenue was seeing its private homes replaced with upscale apartment buildings for the wealthy at the time. This one would have to compete. The article said that the residents of the 48 apartments would enjoy, "four electric passenger elevators and a refrigerating plant, heating plant, vacuum cleaning plant and large laundry in the basement with steam dryers and all the latest electrical appliances for washing and ironing."
Construction would take two years to complete. The Times was generally correct in saying the style would be Italian Renaissance. But in designing 875 Park Avenue, the Blum brothers revealed their knack of stepping away from the expected, a trait that would become their trademark. Creative brickwork and terra cotta elements created vertical piers and what architectural journalist Christopher Gray would later call "a haunting series of hieroglyph-like medallions.
The apartments ranged from seven to ten rooms "with foyers," according to the New York World's Apartment Album. "These apartments are designed to fill the needs of those who wish to combine the advantage of a private house with the comforts of an apartment," said the article, which added, "all porcelain plumbing fixtures [are] similar to those used in the Vanderbilt Hotel." It noted that 875 Park Avenue provided "ample servants' accommodation."
Most floors had four apartments. The World's New York Apartment House Album, 1910 (copyright expired)
Rents ranged from $2,500 to $4,500 a year--equal to about $7,000 to $12,500 per month today. Although construction was not completed until September 1912, by the end of March that year 15 apartments had been leased. Among those initial residents were John F. Stevens, head of the construction company that bore his name; Percy Seldon Straus, Jr. and his wife, the former Edith Abraham; and Baroness de Graffenried.
Born in 1876, Percy Selden Straus was the son of Isidor and Ida Straus. Percy was a member of the R. H. Macy & Co. department store in which his father was a partner. Edith Straus was the daughter of another department store mogul, Abraham Abraham, founder of Wechsler & Abraham. In 1888, Isidor Straus and his brother, Nathan, purchased Joseph Wechsler's portion, creating the Abraham & Straus department store.
The Strauses had two sons when they moved in--Ralph Isidor, born in 1903, and Percy Selden Jr., who arrived three years later. In 1916, a third son, Donald Blun, was born.
The couple filled their 875 Park Avenue apartment with a magnificent collection of Renaissance art. Living with them was Edith's widowed mother, Rose Abraham, who was active in philanthropic work. (Edith's father died in 1911.)
Baroness de Graffenried was the former Gertrude Van Cortlandt. Her first husband, whom she married in 1877, was Schuyler Hamilton, Jr. She and her current husband, Baron Raoul de Graffenried, had been estranged for several years. (The Baron was living in Switzerland.) Gertrude and Hamilton had four children together, Violet Loring, Gertrude Ray, Helena Van Wyck, and Lilian Gardiner. Moving into 875 Park Avenue with their mother were Violet and Gertrude, 30 and 25
years old respectively.
Expectedly, the residents' names often appeared in the society columns. On December 3, 1913, The New York Times reported, "The Baroness de Graffenried was the hostess last evening at an informal and small dance at 875 Park Avenue, for her daughters, the Misses Gertrude and Violet Hamilton." The article noted, "A buffet supper was served at midnight." Although the event was considered informal and small, the article named 68 guests.
Similarly, on December 14, 1913, at the height of the debutante season, The New York Times reported, "Mrs. Robert T. Ford is to give a tea for her daughter, Miss Julia Ford, on Friday afternoon, at 875 Park Avenue."
In 1915, Percy Straus Sr. and Jr. went to the Far West "on a pleasure trip," according to The New York Times. On September 24, Percy Jr. became suddenly ill on the train in New Mexico. "He was believed to be suffering from spinal trouble, and physicians declared his life could not be saved without an immediate operation," said the article. Percy Straus Sr. had the nine-year-old boy taken off the train at Albuquerque and he chartered a special train of three coaches to rush his son to Denver. The New York Times said, "The special covered 528 miles in less than twelve hours. At times the train ran eighty miles an hour." At the hospital, physicians discovered an abscess in the boy's neck and performed a successful operation.
Living here at the time was Dr. Whitney Lyon, the 51-year-old son of wealthy tooth powder manufacturer, I. W. Lyon. A widower, Dr. Lyon was also the president of I. W. Lyon & Sons. His son and daughter were attending Yale and Wellesley, respectively, in 1915. Lyon also maintained "a handsome country place at New Canaan, Connecticut," as described by The New York Times, and "a fine estate in Fleming Park, Larchmont Point [New York], overlooking the harbor and the Larchmont Yacht Club."
Dr. Lyon gave up his apartment here in 1917. He was married to Maude Cecil Vollman on January 28 at the Larchmont estate. The New York Times said, "It is expected later that they will make their home in Larchmont, where Dr. Lyon owns considerable property." The article noted, "After the marriage, Dr. Lyon and his bride motored toward Connecticut."
Other socially visible residents were Dr. Robert Cunningham Myles, his wife, the former Edith Georgiana Russell Platt, and their sons, Robert Jr. and Beverly Russell. Born in Covebrook, Mississippi in 1853, Myles received his medical degree at the age of 21. Specializing in nose, throat and ear diseases, he "was known as a pioneer of modern treatments," according to The New York Times, and invented several types of surgical instruments. The family's country home was in Garden City, Long Island.
Dr. Robert Cunningham Myles as he appeared around 1893. from the collection of the New York Academy of Medicine Library.
Robert Jr. left Yale to enter the banking firm of Harriman & Co. He married Dorothy Greer in the St. James Chapel of the Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine on November 8, 1916. The New York Times said that, although a large ceremony in St. Bartholomew's Church had been planned, "owing to mourning," it was a smaller wedding. In reporting on the ceremony, the journalist noted, "On his father's side he is a descendant of Paul Russell of Hereford, England, who founded the family of that name in New England, of which James Russell Lowell was a member."
On the night of February 25, 1916, the Yale Chapter of the Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity gave a large dance at Sherry's that started at 10:30. The New York Times said, "Those from the university town arrived here in a special car in time for a dance given by Dr. and Mrs. Robert Cunningham Myles at 875 Park Avenue, from 4 until 7 o'clock."
As early as 1918, Thornton Niven Motley and his wife, the former Kathryn Lena Kennard (born in 1858 and 1868 respectively) lived in 875 Park Avenue with their unmarried daughter, Kathryn Thornton, who was born in 1898. Motley was the head of Thornton N. Motley & Co., manufacturer of railroad cars and steamships. The family's summer home was in Newport where, in 1887, Thornton Motley won the Newport Yachting Cup.
The social spotlight shone on the Motleys in 1919 when Kathryn's engagement to Matthew Comstock Jenkins was announced. Three days before the wedding in St. Thomas's Church, on February 19, 1920 her mother gave a dinner, the guest list of which included "the entire bridal party," according to the New-York Tribune. The following afternoon, she gave a luncheon at the Plaza Hotel for the bridesmaids.
Although attorney Nelson Beardsley Burr and his wife, the former Helen M. Morris, had no children of their own, in 1914 they became wards of Helen's nephew, Monson Morris Jr. Helen's brother, Major Monson Morris, was a real estate operator "and prominent socially," according to The New York Times. His wife died in 1914. Prior to traveling to Europe in November 1917 with his regiment, he gave Helen custody of his four-year-old son. Possibly thinking he may not survive the conflict, he wrote in part, "I promise to give you entire charge of his bringing up and education until he becomes of age."
On May 10, 1922, The New York Times reported that Morris had sued Helen Burr for custody of the now nine-year-old boy. The article mentioned that Morris "has been married twice since his first wife's death." The custody battle would extend for two years. Perhaps State Supreme Court Justice Bijur's decision had much to do with the young Morris's telling him that he did not like his father's newest wife. In 1924, Nelson and Helen Burr was given full custody of the boy, with his father having regular visitation rights.
Rose Abraham died in the Straus apartment on May 26, 1938 at the age of 86. She bequeathed $10,000 each to her three grandsons--a quarter of a million each in 2025 dollars.
By the time of his mother-in-law's death, Percy Selden Straus was chairman of the board of R. H. Macy & Co. He suffered with heart disease, which worsened in 1939. On the night of April 6, 1944 he died in the apartment at the age of 67. Tributes poured in from businessmen and department store heads, among them from Walter Hoving, president of Lord & Taylor; and Samuel J. Bloomingdale.
Edith Straus inherited a life interest in Percy's "books, paintings, pictures, sculptures and household furnishings." Particular artworks, however, he left to his sons. Percy Jr. received the Fred Spencer Portrait of Andrew Jackson; Ralph was bequeathed Renoir's Portrait of Maurice Grimpel and Pacheco's Portrait of a Chorister. Donald was given the Gilbert Stuart Portrait of Thomas Jefferson and Jean Baptiste Simeon Chardin's Still Life.
Upon Edith's death 75 of the masterworks in their collection--paintings by Hans Holbein the Younger, Sir Joshua Reynolds, Van Dyke, Botticelli, Bellini, Fra Angelico and sculptures by Michelangelo, Cellini, Houdon, Luca Della Robbia and others--were to go to the Museum of Fine Arts of Houston.
A reserved resident was Estelle Whitfield, of whom The New York Times said, "her name practically never appeared in the newspapers." A daughter of John A. Whitfield, a wholesale merchant, she had grown up in a Gramercy Park mansion. Among her father's close friends was Andrew Carnegie, who married Estelle's sister, Louise, in 1888.
Never married, in 1928 Estelle sailed to visit her widowed sister at Skibo Castle in Dornock, Scotland. (Andrew Carnegie had died in 1919.) While there, Estelle caught pneumonia. She died at Skibo Castle on July 14 at the age of 66.
Other residents at the time were Katharine C. Harper, the widow of publisher James Thorne Harper; and former opera singer and widow of stock broker James H. Benedict, Mary von Buehler Benedict. Before her marriage to Benedict at the turn of the century, Mary was known on the European stage as Madame Billoni. After a command performance in St. Petersburg, the Czar presented her with a pair of diamond earrings hidden in a bouquet of roses.
Following her divorce from Paul Felix Warburg in 1934, Jean Stettheimer Warburg moved into 875 Park Avenue with her daughter, Felicia. In 1948, Felicia (and her mother by extension) scored a social coup by being presented at the Court of St. James. Two years later, in April, Jean announced her daughter's engagement to Robert William Sarnoff. One year later, nearly to the day on April 6, 1951, Jean married Lawrence J. Steinhardt.
Among the residents by the mid-1960s were real estate executive and president of the J. H. Taylor Construction Company, William Korn and his wife, the former Fannie Mayer. Among the structures Korn's concern built were the office building at 1407 Broadway and the apartment building at 240 Central Park South. In the 1930s and '40s, Fannie was instrumental in organizing the "Congress houses," shelters for incoming refugees from Nazi Germany. In 1963, she was a co-winner in the first Louise Waterman Wise Award of the American Jewish Congress.
Fannie Mayer Korn died in their apartment at the age of 85 on August 21, 1972. Five months later, on December 18, William Korn died here at the age of 88.
In time for the building's centennial in 2012, a facade restoration was completed by FSI Architecture. The project entailed restoration or replacement of the deteriorated terra cotta and stone ornaments, repointing and other preservation work.



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Doug Floor Plan
ReplyDeleteLooking at the 1910 rendering (photograph?), it appears the 2012 facade restoration did not restore the balconettes. Or were they never there?
They were intact in the 1941 tax photograph.
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