When Herman Newell Tiemann (son of Julius) took this photograph in 1901, the fate of venerable house was near. from the collection of the New York Public Library.
Sprawling summer estates dotted the upper portion of Manhattan Island in the 18th century. Others were established following the Revolution, like that of Archibald Gracie on the East Side, begun in 1798. Around the same time, a dignified, two-story frame country house was erected on the Bloomingdale Road far north of the city. Its Federal style architecture included a raised basement, columned veranda, and an octagonal cupula atop the slightly hipped roof.
An advertisement in the New York Herald on September 19, 1854 read:
To Let--A large house and four acres of land, on Bloomingdale road, between 100th and 101st streets, and possession given immediately.
The tenant filled the house with elegant furnishings. When the family moved out in April 1868, an auction was held of "all the magnificent household furniture in the mansion," a worded by the announcement. Among the items were "rich rosewood and walnut Chamber [i.e. bedroom] and Parlor suits; Velvet and Brussels Carpets, Pier Mirrors, rosewood Piano," and such.
At the time of the ad, Julius William Tiemann was a partner in in D. F. Tiemann & Co., founded by his father Johan Anton (known as Anthony) Tiemann in 1807. The firm operated the Manhattan Paint & Color Works near the Hudson River around 120th Street. Born in 1817, Tiemann grew up in the family's town house at 40 East 23rd Street and in their summer home in Manhattanville, which was not far from the plant.
Julius W. Tiemann married Marie Antoinette Megie on March 28, 1860. The couple would have 12 children. Tiemann purchased the Bloomingdale Road estate while retaining their town home at 125 West 43rd Street.
Outside of the paint business, Tiemann was highly involved in civic affairs. He was, for instance, the president of the Twenty-second Ward Council of Political Reform in 1871. In August 1881, he co-founded The Drug, Paint and Chemical Exchange, described by New Remedies as "a new organization in this city to facilitate the business of these allied industries."
By the mid-1890s, the Tiemann's residence that once sat upon four acres was surrounded by business and residential buildings. Around 1896, Tiemann sold the property to N. Reynal, who lived in White Plains, New York. He converted the house to The Arbor, an inn and meeting place.
The Arbor was the gathering spot for political dinners and meetings. On October 30, 1899, for instance, the New-York Tribune reported that the Independent Club of the 21st District would hold a dinner that night. The New York Times noted, "The Rev. Dr. John P. Peters, pastor of St. Michael's Episcopal Church, and Acting President of the Club, presided." The location was highly convenient to Reverend Peters, since he listed his address here, apparently renting rooms upstairs. (The same year that that dinner was held, the Bloomingdale Road was renamed Broadway and The Arbor received the address of 2648 Broadway.)
Decades after the Tiemann house was demolished, filmmaker Stanley Kubrick painted a romanticized conception. This black-and-white depiction was published in Look magazine's article "Art by Celebrities." via the Museum of the City of New York.
Other organizations that used The Arbor as their headquarters were The Speakers' Club and The Citizens' Union. When the latter held its convention on October 1, 1901, The New York Times remarked that it "was held at 'The Arbor,' 2,648 Broadway. There were about sixty delegates present, and reporters were barred."
The end of the line for the venerable house came in 1907. On January 9, The New York Times reported that the Franklin Building Company had leased the blockfront on the "east side of Broadway, between 100th and 101st Streets" for 21 years. The newly formed company "will erect stores and offices on the Broadway front and a garage on the remainder of the plot" on the site, said the article.
Those resultant structures were apparently what were known as "taxpayers"--most often low rise, temporary buildings erected to garner enough rental income to pay the property taxes. They were demolished in 1925 and replaced with a 15-story and penthouse apartment building.

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