photograph by Anthony Bellov
When he sat down to his drafting table to design a four-story house at 108 East 33rd Street (renumbered 153 in 1859) the architect addressed a challenge. The stoops of the English basement-style houses immediately to the east, running towards Third Avenue, meant the homes sat back from the property line. The stoop-less American basement-style residences on the west side of the plot did not.
The architect solved the problem of a potentially unattractive blank wall on one side or the other by designing the three-bay wide facade in a stylized piano lid shape. The eastern bay, which held the arched entrance two steps above the sidewalk, was flush with its neighbors. The architect projected the western two bays forward and rounding the corner. Now this section, too, conformed to the houses on that side. The house's Italianate design would have included molded lintels and a bracketed cornice.
The brickwork of the rounded corner was deftly executed. Originally, curved glass panes would have conformed to its shape. photograph by Anthony Bellov
The house was briefly operated as a rooming or boarding house. Living here in 1855 and '56 were Sam Ellis, a carman, for instance, and engineer Solon Farrer. The desperate lost-and-found ad of another tenant in 1856 hints at their general financial status:
$5 Reward--Lost in one of the Third Avenue stages, or near the corner of the Bowery and Grand street, twenty-three dollars in gold, rolled in a piece of calico, the property of a poor girl. The above reward will be paid by leaving it at 108 East 33d st.
(The chance that the girl recovered the lost coins was slim. The value of the gold would translate to about $840 in 2025, and the reward would equal just under $200.)
Around 1860, Matthew Bennett Wynkoop moved his family into 153 East 33rd Street. Born in Zanesville, Ohio on February 16, 1830, he came to New York City as a boy. The New York Times would later say, "He went into the printing business in a small way until he had amassed considerable money." When he and his wife, the former Susan Vincent, moved in, he was the senior member of the printing firm Wynkoop & Hallenbeck. The couple had an infant daughter, Madeline May, born on June 29, 1860.
Isaac and Margaret K. Van Cleef (sometimes spelled Vancleef), purchased 153 East 33rd Street around 1866. Isaac was born in Seneca, New York in 1786.
In 1867, they advertised, "To Let--Half of a four story house furnished, No. 153 East Thirty-third street, between Lexington and Third avenues." The ad was answered by 25-year-old James Herbert Morse.
Born in Hubbardston, Massachusetts in October 1841, Morse graduated from Harvard in 1863 and received his M.A. degree in 1866. He founded the Morse & Rogers Classical School in 1868, advertising in The New York Times on November 5:
J. H. Morse, A. M., graduate of Harvard and of long experience as a teacher, will open Monday, October 5, at Nos. 621 and 623 6th-av., a select English, Mathematical and Classical School for boys; number limited to twenty; highest references given. Address J. H. Morse, No. 153 East 33rd-st.
Morse lived with the Van Cleefs until his marriage to artist Lucy Gibbons on May 12, 1870. James Herbert Morse would go on to become a noted poet, author and educator.
Four months before Morse's wedding, on January 23, Isaac Van Cleef died at the age of 85. His "sudden" death in the house, as reported by the New York Herald, hints of a heart attack or stroke.
Margaret remained here until about 1875. The following year, 153 East 33rd Street was occupied by Peter Maguire, an "inspector;" printer Daniel A. Nolan; Mary Van Buskirk; and the Pierce family. William H. Pierce did not list a profession, suggesting he was retired, and Elizabeth Pierce was a physician, as was Mary Van Buskirk. (The two women most likely worked together).
Dr. Van Buskirk placed an understated advertisement in the New York Herald on September 13, 1877: "Dr. Mary Van Buskirk, 153 East 33d st., between Lexington and 3d ave." Her advertisement three months later on January 7 in The New York Telegram was more specific: "Dr. Mary Van Buskirk treats female complaints scientifically. 153 East 33d st, between Lexington and third avs." In fact, the "female complaints" she treated were unwanted pregnancies.
She narrowly escaped serious problems in the fall of 1870. On September 19, Dr. Benjamin W. West, "Madame West," and Dr. Enoch Eastman were arrested and charged "with complicity in an attempt to commit an abortion on Maggie McLoon," as reported by The New York Times. The 20-year-old woman had gone to a Dr. Eastman on July 8. When his attempt to abort the fetus failed, according to McLoon, "he took her on August 18 to Mme. Van Buskirk, at No. 153 East Thirty-third-street, telling her that the Madame would relieve her, as she had the proper instruments." While Maggie McLoon sat in Mary Van Buskirk's waiting room, another woman recommended that she go to Dr. West. She left without consulting with Dr. Van Buskirk.
The house was purchased by George F. and Augusta W. Keim in 1879. Keim listed his profession as "flowers." He could have been either a florist or a dealer in artificial flowers, used as trimmings for women's millinery. In 1888, the couple hired architect William B. Tuthill to do "interior alterations," and the following year commissioned contractor P. F. Loonam to erect a one-story addition to the rear.
Augusta Keim's estate sold 153 East 33rd Street in May 1897 to Robert H. Roesel and his wife, the former Katharine Lichtenberger, for $12,250 (about $478,000 today). Roesel was the principal in Roesel & Sons, upholsters and makers of furniture covers. Robert's sons, Edward R. and Henry C. Roesel were partners. The Roesels had two daughters, Elsie Caroline and Margaret.
Edward and his wife, the former Elizabeth Anacker, lived here with his parents. He died on July 4, 1917 and his funeral was held in the parlor four days later.
The Roesels took in roomers, apparently just one at a time. Their tenant in 1917, Gus Politaker, quickly disappeared when America entered World War I. Four years later, he was still listed on the Government's list of draft evaders, noting that he was also known as Gus Polelakees and Gus Politakes.
Their roomer in 1922, 42-year-old Edward McGann, also found himself on the wrong side of the law. He worked as a waiter in a First Avenue restaurant. On December 14 he faced Magistrate Joseph E. Corrigan in Yorkville Court after serving a drink to an undercover Prohibition agent. A search found a quart bottle of whiskey and McGann was charged with illegal possession of liquor.
Prohibition also affected Joseph Crowley, who roomed with the Roesels in 1928. On October 10, The New York Times reported that the 43-year-old "was found with a broken nose and suffering from alcoholism at East Tenth Street and Third Avenue."
The Roesels made renovations to 153 East 33rd Street in 1938. It was possibly during these modifications that the cornice was removed, and the elliptically arched upper windows changed to flat-headed openings and their 1850s lintels shaved off.
As early as 1941, the Roesels had modernized the facade. via the NYC Dept of Records & Information Services.
After their family had owned the building more than half a century, Henry C. Roesel and his sister, Elsie, sold 153 East 33rd Street in November 1950 to the Armenian Missionary Society of America, Inc. The New York Times reported, "The buyer plans to use the property for a parish house for the Armenian Evangelical Church at 136 East Thirty-fourth Street."
In 1952, the ground floor was converted to a commercial space with a separate entrance. It was given a coating of stucco and the doors received Spanish-influenced iron grills. In the early 1970s the ground floor space was home to the Mexican restaurant Chili Charlie's, followed by Mimosa around 1976. Today a Thai restaurant occupies the space.
Sadly abused, the structure's brick facade has been painted and its windows replaced. Little remains of the Italianate design created by a resourceful architect around 1854.
many thanks to historian Anthony Bellov for suggesting this post




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From talking to a local Brooklyn Heights resident, the cost of replacing rounded glass windows is in the thousands.
ReplyDeleteIt doesn’t appear even in the records photo that the window sashes themselves were curved. It certainly would require custom carpentry for the jambs, head and sill and not a stock window in any era.
ReplyDeleteCurved sills and panes were commonplace in the 19th century, and the novelty and expense were part of the allure. In NO case have I seen a 19th century curved wall that held flat panes. It would be stylistically and aesthetically offensive, just as it is today.
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