Showing posts with label east 80th street. Show all posts
Showing posts with label east 80th street. Show all posts

Friday, March 1, 2019

The 1930 Clarence Dillon House - 124 East 80th Street


photograph by the author
Clarence Lapowski was born on September 27, 1882 to Polish Jewish immigrant Samuel Lapowski and the former Bertha Stenbock.  When the family became naturalized citizens in Texas in 1891, they changed their surname to Dillon. 

Young Clarence had a privileged education, graduating from Worchester Academy in Massachusetts and from Harvard University in 1905.  On February 4, 1908 he married Anne McEldin Douglass.  The couple would have two children, Clarence Douglass Dillon, born in 1909, and Dorothy Anne Dillon, born in 1912.

The same year that Dorothy was born 1912 Dillon joined the brokerage firm of William A. Read & Company in Chicago; relocating to the company's New York office two years later.  After Read died in 1916, Dillon purchased the majority of stock and rose to the head of the firm.  In 1921 it was renamed Dillon, Read & Co.

By then Dillon's success and resultant personal fortune was reflected in his club memberships.  In 1920 he was a member of the Metropolitan, Riding, Sleepy Hollow Country, Harvard and Esssex Hunt Clubs of New York; and the Metropolitan and Riding Clubs of Washington D. C.  The family was living fashionably at No. 635 Park Avenue.

In 1925 Dillon diversified, purchasing the automobile maker Dodge Brothers Company for $146 million.  Two years later he merged the company with Chrysler Corporation.  It was time for the Dillon family to have a residence on par with their financial and social status.

Dillon purchased the three old houses at Nos. 122 through 126 East 80th Street, between Park and Lexington Avenues in 1928.  The block had already attracted the attention of wealthy homeowners.  Vincent Astor had constructed his Regency-style stone mansion at No. 130 in 1926.

Now Dillon turned to Astor's architect, Mott B. Schmidt, to design a mansion to replace the houses at Nos. 124 and 126 (he sold the third property to George Whitney who would erect his own handsome townhouse there in 1930).  Schmidt famously designed residences in 18th century styles; most notably, perhaps, several neo-Georgian mansions on Sutton Place earlier in the decade.

Completed in 1930, the four-story 80th Street house imitated a Georgian townhouse.  Faced in brown-gray Flemish bond brick, its aloof 18th century design featured a handsome doorway with fluted pilasters and bold arched pediment.  There would be little other  stonework on the facade.  Mott created the quoins along the sides and the imitation blocks of the Gibbs-type surround of the second floor opening in brick.    Only two bandcourses, a single keystone and the third floor cornice were stone.

Dillon simultaneously commissioned Schmidt to design the 20,000-square-foot neo-Georgian mansion on his 118-acre summer estate, Dunwalke, in New Jersey. 

The new city house required additional servants.  The Dillons had made do with five on Park Avenue; but when they moved into the 30-room 80th Street house the staff grew to 14--plus two security personnel.  Clarence Dillon was understandably concerned about the safety of his family.  The 1920's saw radical Marxists and anarchists targeting capitalists with violence--as vividly exemplified by the September 1920 terrorist attack on the J. P. Morgan & Co. building on Wall Street.  In response, Dillon augmented the household staff with a night watchman and a private motorcycle cop who made rounds throughout the night.

Young Clarence was attending Harvard University when the house was completed.  On January 14, 1930 the school's wooden locker house burned to the ground.  Clarence telephoned home and urged his father to replace the building.  The resultant brick field house cost half a million dollars during the Depression years.

Clarence Douglass Dillon did not wait for graduation to marry.  On March 11, 1931 The New York Times reported that he and Phyllis Ellsworth had been wed in Boston.  The promising young man would go on to an impressive career--serving in the Eisenhower, Kennedy and Johnson administrations as Ambassador to France, Under Secretary of State, and Secretary of the Treasury.  During the Cuban Missile Crisis he sat on the Executive Committee of the National Security Council.

In the meantime his father did not slow down.  He was a director in five banks and several corporations including the National Cash Register Company.  With the outbreak of World War II he served in Washington on the War Industries Board and in 1941.

Anne McEldin Douglass died in 1961.  Clarence survived until April 14, 1979 when he died at the age of 96 at Dunwalke. 

The Republic of Iraq had purchased No. 124 East 80th Street two years earlier.  It was the beginning of a bizarre chapter in the history of the elegant mansion.  Although home to the country's ambassador to the United Nations, there were no diplomatic receptions, no glamorous entertainments. 

Any maintenance of the building stopped in 1991 when the United States slapped sanctions on Iraq.  Famed interior decorator Mario Buatta, a neighbor, later grumbled to writer Laura Shaine Cunningham "There was no décor at all.  Sad, very sad.  The Iraqis did not do a thing inside.  It's in bad shape--has been since they got in in '77.  The house could have been beautiful; it was beautiful before they bought it."

There was one decorative item visible through the windows--a life-sized portrait of Saddam Hussein.   Wires dangled from each of the windows, prompting one reporter to question whether the Iraqis were "stealing cable."  The rear garden--unlike the manicured back yards of its neighbors--was used to store small propane tanks.  Neighbors watched as men silently moved from limousines to the door, never responding to greetings. 

Ambassador Mohammed al-Douri was a vocal supporter of his boss and detractor of the United States, saying at one point America wanted to "kill everyone in Iraq.  He refused to answer questions from specific reporters, calling them "Israelian Jews."  In silent protect several homeowners on the block hung American flags in their windows.

Al-Douri walked out of the United Nations in March 2008 accusing the United States of "criminal aggression" and intentions of "a real war of extermination" against Iraq.  That would be his last chance to grandstand.

On April 2, 2003 al-Douri no doubt sat in No. 124 watching televised coverage of the fall of Baghdad and the toppling of the statues of Saddam Hussein (who was suddenly no where to be found).  Suddenly the former ambassador had no country, no position and was about no have no home. 

The following week the Iraqis were ousted from New York, although al-Douri did not go peacefully.  Crying "I love New York" on April 9, he refused to accept his subpoena, while at the same time lamenting "the game is over."  The following day the 80th Street block was packed with reporters and cameramen waiting for the last appearance of the fallen diplomat.

Al-Douri would suffer one last humiliation.  When the door of No. 124 finally opened, he ran through the crowd heading straight to his limo.  But his driver had not parked in the accustomed spot and al-Douri was left to look left and right before spotting it up the block.  To make things worse, he was unable to get in--the door was locked and his driver was temporarily unable to unlock it.

Years passed and the vacant mansion became even more forlorn as dirt accumulated on the proud facade.  Then, in 2014, it appeared that a change was coming.  Kim Velsey, writing in The New York Observer on September 19 noted that "to the consternation of neighbors" the house had sat empty since 2003; however Omar Humandi, special assistant to the current ambassador, said "they've started talking to engineers and architects about finally renovating the place."

Any renovations were not what the moneyed neighbors had in mind.  In 2017 the Department of Buildings received several complaints that the Republic of Iraq was operating the mansion as "a commercial gym."  The operation was ended and the Dillon mansion was again abandoned--a wistful reminder of a grand past.

Wednesday, February 6, 2019

The Lewis S. Morris House - 116 East 80th Street


The fanlight above the main entrance and the window above the service entrance continue the pattern of arches set by the ground floor openings. 
Lewis Spencer Morris could claim a long and dignified American pedigree.  His wealthy ancestor Richard Morris, arrived in New York around 1670.  He purchased a 500-acre farm in what is now the Bronx (the family name survives in the Morris Heights and Morrisania neighborhoods).  Another ancestor,  Lewis Morris III, signed the Declaration of Independence.

The son of Henry Lewis Morris and the former Anna Rutherfurd, Lewis was born on August 21, 1884,  He attended the exclusive Browning School before going on to Princeton University, graduating in 1906.  The following year, on April 6, he married Emily Pell Coster, the daughter of Charles Henry Coster, a partner of J. P. Morgan.  Morris joined his father's law firm, Morris & McVeigh in 1917.

He and Emily were living at No. 182 East 64th Street when, on June 5, 1921, The New York Herald reported that he had purchased the old three-story brownstone houses at Nos. 116 and 118 East 80th Street from Mary U. Hoffman.  The article noted that Morris "plans to improve the site with a modern residence."  Indeed he did.

The architectural firm of Cross & Cross evoked the Morris family's august heritage with brick and stone.   The 36-foot wide residence was designed in the neo-Federal style; its Flemish bond brickwork and 18th century design elements displaying dignified refinement.  The projecting central bay provided dimension; while a brick and stone pediment above the cornice disguised the fact that the house was four stories high.  Within the pediment were terra cotta festoons which draped over a large bas relief medallion--the portrait of which is possibly Lewis Morris III.

Historians speculate on the identity of the likeness; possibly Lewis Morris III.

Completed in 1922, the interiors were designed by Elsie Cobb Wilson, who deftly blended the 18th with the 20th century.  Furnishings and other details echoed the designs of Sheraton and Adam, yet managed to embody the bright, sleek taste of the 1920's.

Certain spaces, like the stair hall and library, were traditional.  from the collection of the New-York Historical Society

Like other wealthy couples, Lewis and Emily were on the move.  On September 26, 1932, for instance, the Rockland County Evening Journal noted "Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Spencer Morris are expected in Tuxedo Park September 28.  They Summered at Southampton, L. I. at Villa Marla."

Along with his legal practice, Lewis was chairman of the board of the Fulton Trust Company of New York.  He was chairman of the New York Society Library, and a director of the Northern Insurance Company.  Morris held memberships in the exclusive Knickerbocker, Down Town, Racquet and Tennis, Tuxedo, Princeton and Brook Clubs.

Other spaces, like the dining room, melded 19th century designs with 1920's domestic taste.  photos by Samuel H. Gottscho from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York 
As war broke in Europe, Emily became involved in relief projects.  In 1940 she was president of the American branch of the French Red Cross.  Among its efforts was a benefit dinner and entertainment entitled "A Night in Trouville" on June 25 that year at the Cafe Trouville to benefit the Mobile Surgical Unit, Inc.

Another conflict was brewing much closer to home at the time.  On December 20, 1941 The New York Times reported that Emily "obtained a divorce today from Lewis Spencer Morris."  The grounds, said the article, were cruelty.

In fact, Lewis had fallen in love with another woman.  Five weeks later, on January 21, he married Louise Stephanie Stewart Trevor Lord.  The Times noted the following day that "No announcement had been made of the engagement."

Morris sold the 80th Street house later that year.  His life with Louise would not be long.  His health soon failed, and after an extended illness he died in Roosevelt Hospital on November 28, 1944.

No. 116 East 80th Street continued life as a private residence.  It sold in 1988 for $11 million (more than twice that amount today) setting the record for the highest price paid for a single-family residence.  The purchaser was financier Sir James Goldsmith.

Goldsmith's reputation for corporate raiding (his attempted hostile take over of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company in 1986 which reaped his company's $90 million) resulted in his being the inspiration for character Sir Larry Wildman in the 1987 film Wall Street.



Goldsmith died on July 18, 1997.  The 80th Street house was placed on the market the following year for $16 million.  The handsome mansion remains a single family home.

photographs by the author

Thursday, January 17, 2019

The 1912 Allen Wardwell House - 127 East 80th Street




In the first years of the 20th century the three-story brownstone at No. 127 East 80th Street, between Park and Lexington Avenues, was home to Alfred and Sophie Wagner.  On December 23, 1911, after the couple sold the architecturally out-of-date residence to Allen Wardell, The New York Times commented that he "will alter and occupy the house."

The Wagner house was similar to No. 125, partially seen at right.  from the collection of the New York Public Library

Wardell's father, William T. Wardwell, had died the previous January.  He had been for years the treasurer of the Standard Oil Company.  Allen had graduated from Yale University in 1895, and then from the Harvard Law School.  He and his wife, the former Helen Rogers, were married in 1903 and had two children, Edward and Clarissa.

If, indeed, the Wardwells initially intended to remodel the 20-foot wide Victorian house, they quickly changed course.  On April 20, 1912 The Real Estate Record & Builders' Guide reported that Delano & Aldrich had filed plans for a new five-story residence to cost $25,000--in the neighborhood of $652,000 today.   Allen Wardwell and William Adams Delano may have already known one another; they were in the Yale graduating class.

The family moved into a rather austere brick-faced house.  The architects gave the facade nearly no decoration.  The centered entrance wore a Georgian-style fanlight, an iron balcony fronted the two second story windows, and two decorative half-round balconettes sprouted from the fourth floor openings.   A severe brick parapet took the place of a cornice and provided privacy to the terrace of the mansard level.  Inside were 17 rooms and five baths.


The all-brick facade was rather uninviting.  The American Architect, March 16, 1915 (copyright expired)

Aside from his legal practice, Allen Wardwell was highly involved in social programs.  He was treasurer of the Legal Aid Society, the mission of which was to provide legal assistance to those unable to afford it; and was president of the Red Cross Hospital on Central Park West at 100th Street.  In October 1915 he petitioned to have the name of the hospital changed to the Park Hospital, saying the change would give the facility "a wider scope and permit it to accomplish more good."

His involvement with the Red Cross intensified following the Russian Revolution and the United States's entering World War I.  With the rank of major he headed the Red Cross Mission to Russia in 1917, traveling to Moscow to help free hopeful emigrants.  On December 26, 1918 The New York Times described the nation as "starving, disrupted Russia, where food is denied to persons not regarded as 'class-conscious workmen' and all persons not in sympathy with Bolshevism are dispossessed."  The article noted "Major Allen Wardwell of the American Red Cross... was looking after the interests of foreign prisoners."

The first and second floor plans show a dramatic staircase hall and just two rooms massive rooms on the second floor.  The American Architect, March 16, 1915 (copyright expired)
Wardwell's expertise on the situation in Russia continued at home, following the war.  He was consulted by the Council on Foreign Relations in April 1919, for instance, regarding the Bolsheviks, Lenin and Trotsky.  He warned the group, in part, "One of the Bolshevik principles is the international revolution, namely, an attempt to create similar revolutionary movements in other countries"

In the meantime, Helen busied herself within society.  She was affiliated with the Women's Auxiliary of St. George's Church and opened the house for the group's yearly sewing classes during Lent.  She was a trustee and secretary of the Manhattan School of Music, as well.  The Wardwell country estate, Grey House, was in Lawrence, Long Island, where Helen was president of the Garden Club of Lawrence.  An ardent gardener, she routinely won prizes for her blossoms.

The 80th Street house was the scene of a somber event on January 26, 1921 when the funeral of Helen's father, Edward Leighton Rogers, was held here.

Clarissa and Edward received the educations expected of the children of wealthy families.  Clarissa attended the Brearley and the Ethel Walker Schools before going on to Bryn Mawr College.  Like his father, Edward entered Yale University.  While Allen had been a member of the Scroll & Key, Edward joined the Skull & Bones.  He had a theatrical side as well and was a member of the Yale University Dramatic Association.  Edward appeared on stage when that group presented the play Out o' Luck as its annual entertainment at the Plaza Hotel in December 1925.

Allen Wardwell continued to balance his partnership in the law firm of Stetson, Jennings, Russell & Davis with his outside interests.  In February 1926 he was named president of the Legal Aid Society.

Edward graduated from Yale in 1927, the year of his sister's two coming-out events.  That fall she was introduced to society at a dance at Grey House, and then on December 10 a reception was held in the 80th Street house.

Allen Wardwell's many involvements expanded when, by 1926, he became vice president of the American-Russian Chamber of Commerce. (Edward joined him as a director and member of the executive committee in 1929.)  Allen was also a member of the Active Campaign Committee of the American Society for the Control of Cancer.

Edward married Lelia A. P. Morgan on June 10, 1930 in St. James's Church on Madison Avenue.  Clarissa was the bride's maid of honor.  The following year, on December 8, 1931 the Wardwells announced Clarissa's engagement to F. Livingston Pell, Jr.

But, as always, there were pressing issues for Allen to attend to.  Two weeks later, on the day after Christmas, he sailed for Berlin.  A headline in The New York Times read "To Advise On Reich Debts" and the article explained "Allen Wardwell, counsel for the American subcommittee on standstill arrangements with Central European debtor banks, will...participate in the negotiations now going on there for a new agreement to replace the current Stillhaltung."

Despite Allen's exhausting travel and work schedule, he and Helen occasionally managed to fill their social responsibilities.  On July 14, 1933 they gave a dinner followed by a musicale highlighted by a recital by famous mezzo-soprano Eva Gauthier at Grey House.

Allen Wardwell was aware that the house had a security weakness.  The rear of the house was outfitted with a fire escape which he occasionally used to enter the house without waking the household.  Whenever he found himself at the front door without his keys, he would go around to the back, pull himself onto the fire escape ladder, and then climb up to the bedroom window.  But in 1935 a burglar used the same tactic to get in and steal "gems of small value" from the room.  So Wardwell had a bar installed which, when locked at night, ensured that the window was secure.

Unfortunately, on April 30, 1937, Helen had not yet locked the bar when she went down to dinner at 7:00.  Allen was at his office, so she was alone in the house with three servants.  None of them heard a thing as a stealthy burglar climbed the fire escape, entered the bedroom, and made off with between $5,000 and $7,000 in Helen's jewels, some of them family heirlooms.

Only when a maid entered the room at 7:30 and noticed a drawer open and its contents gone was the theft discovered.  Helen telephoned her husband who returned home and notified police.  Among the missing items was a diamond brooch that had belonged to Helen's mother valued at around $34,000 by today's standards.  Detectives' only clue were the footprints of a single man on the fire escape.

The following summer the Wardwells sold No. 127 to Mrs. Christine Fischer.  In reporting on the sale on August 1, 1938 The New York Times noted the exclusive nature of the neighborhood.  "Homes in the same block are owned by Vincent Astor, Lewis Spencer Morris, George Whitney and Clarence Dillon."

Christine Fischer would not be among them for long.  She lost the house in foreclosure in June 1940.  It could be that she overspent on her renovations; for when Dr. Frank H. Netter purchased the house in November that year, major changes had been made.  Delano & Aldrich's severe red brick facade had been embellished with a rusticated limestone base, French doors at the second floor, and molded stone frames around the openings.

Christine Fischer made significant changes to the appearance of the house. The New York Times, November 26, 1940 
The updates did not end with the outward appearance.  On November 26 The New York Times noted "Among its features are a large penthouse studio and library, an elevator, a salon in which extensive paneling recently was installed, landscaped terraces off the dining room and a roof garden off the penthouse.  Extensive alterations have been made in kitchen and pantry.  The kitchen walls are of glass tiles."

Dr. Netter was widely known as a medical illustrator.  He had recently completed an exhibition, the "Transparent Woman," for the 1939 San Francisco World's Fair.  His wife, known professionally as Mary MacFadyen, was also a physician, as well as a newspaper columnist.

Frank H. Netter's exhibition in the San Francisco World's Fair - Popular Science, May 1939

The Netters did not stay long in the house.  They sold it to Chester A. Bolles and his wife, the former Martha Lee Sims, in February 1945.  The purchase came just in time for the arrival of a son on April 8 that year.

The 44-year-old Bolles was chairman of Continental Industries, Inc.  The wealthy executive traveled in his own private airplane.  It was around the time that he purchased the 80th Street house that he hired a new pilot, 26-year-old Air Force veteran Jerome Casper. 

Just six months after the birth of his son, on Monday evening, November 19, Bolles and four financial consultants were in his airplane during a driving rainstorm when it crashed into the Hudson River near Edgewater, New Jersey.  Two days later authorities had still not located the wreckage nor any bodies.  A briefcase was discovered floating in the river, along with several seat cushions, but, as reported by The New York Times on November 21, "It was believed that the plane was imbedded in the mud of the river bottom and the bodies were strapped to their seats in its cabin."

It appears that only one body was ever discovered; that of Walter A. Hurley which was found on a riverbank.  Bolles was declared deceased, but his net estate of over $1 million was not settled until February 1951.

In the meantime Martha Bolles had sold No. 127 in June 1946 to the family of William S. Glazier.  They remained here until May 1955.  It received a significant interior renovation (costing about $93,000) beginning in 1998 by architect Lawrence F. Guthartz.


Outwardly the Wardwell house is little changed since the 1940 remodeling that added a touch of personality to formerly dour facade.

photographs by the author
many thanks to reader John Malecki for requesting this post