Showing posts with label neo-georgian architecture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label neo-georgian architecture. 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.

Saturday, December 1, 2018

The Women's National Republican Club - 3-5 West 51st Street


photo by Dmadeo

When William P. Clyde, head of the Clyde Steamship Line, died in his five-story mansion--formerly the home of Andrew and Louise Carnegie--at No. 3-5 West 51st Street in 1926 he left an estate of more than $11.6 million.   The once exclusive neighborhood was much changed; now one of business buildings, hotels and shops.  Nevertheless, his widow lived on in the imposing mansion which snuggled up against the rear wall of the former Vanderbilt triplex facing Fifth Avenue.

Mrs. Clyde's fatal heart attack in the house on February 3, 1931 sounded the death knell for one of the last private mansions in Midtown.  Within five months it was sold to the newly-formed 3 West Fifty-first Street Corporation for $295,000--a considerable amount considering the ongoing Great Depression, equaling about $4.75 million today.

Seen from across the rubble of other former mansions, razed to make way for Rockefeller Center, the Clyde mansion still stood in November 1932.  photo from the collection of the New York Public Library
At the time the The Women's National Republic Club had its headquarters No. 8 East 37th Street.  Founded by Henrietta Wells Livermore in 1921, the club was based on the idea that women--who had earned the right to vote just a year earlier--should fully comprehend the issues and the candidates.  Mrs. Livermore's ideals were not entirely without bias, as reflected in the club's name.
Members of the New York Women's Republican Club posed with President Calvin Coolidge on the White House lawn on December 1, 1924.  from the collection of the Library of Congress

The Women's National Republican Club sold $300,000 in bonds to pay for a new clubhouse.  On February 1, 1933 The New York Times reported that the goal had been reached and construction on the site of the Clyde mansion would be commenced "as soon as permits have been granted by the city."  Society architect Frederic Rhinelander King had already submitted his plans.

Three months later the mansion was no more and on May 25, 1933 the cornerstone of the new structure was laid by former club president Maude K. Wetmore.  The speakers were Republican National Committeeman Charles D. Hilles, and former Representative Ruth Pratt.  Among the items placed within the stone were a copy of the United States Constitution, and an American flag.

The New York Times took the opportunity to hint at what was to come.  "The new building will be eleven stories high and will include thirty bedrooms, an assembly room, to be called the George Washington room, and a library dedicated to the memory of Calvin Coolidge."

The Women's Republican Club was completed in March 1934.  King had produced a severe neo-Classical structure faced in stone.  Sparse Georgian detailing hinted at the 18th century-styled interiors.  Despite its otherwise patrician facade, two shops were incorporated at street level to add income to the club.

The second floor featured three sets of dramatic floor-to-ceiling French doors, unified by a shallow cast iron balcony.  Above the center opening a bas relief disc flanked by eagles announced the club's name and date of founding.  A setback at the fifth floor partially hid the uppermost floors from street level, giving the clubhouse a more domestic aura and preventing a detached skyscraper feeling.

A postcard revealed the former mansions on either side of the newly-completed complex which would be soon demolished.

On March 25, 1934 The New York Times remarked on the prominent figures who would be attending the formal opening--former Secretary of the Treasury Ogden L. Mills; former Secretary of State Henry L. Stimson; Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., son of the deceased President; Senator George R. Fearon; Speaker of the State Assembly Joseph A McGinnies; and others.

The article mentioned the 18th century furnishings which had been transferred from the former clubhouse saying "they are valued at more than $60,000."  There were three floors of bedrooms ("each with a private bath"), dressing rooms for out-of-town members, a main dining room and two smaller private dining rooms.  The Washington Assembly Room occupied the full width of the second floor.  Here, said The Times, "will be held the club's School of Politics, which attracts hundreds of women each Monday morning."  In the Calvin Coolidge Memorial Library on the fourth floor was hung a portrait painted by Wayman Adams a year before Coolidge's death.  An amenity for members was the solarium "with red, white and blue wicker furniture."

The Calvin Coolidge Library as it appears today.  photo via wnrc.org

The opening was attended by "several thousand persons," according to newspaper accounts.  In her address that evening Mrs. George A. Wyeth proclaimed "The opening of the club marks the rebirth of the Republican party."

The Women's National Republican Club was never intended to be a social club; however its well-to-do members sometimes achieved their goals through social activities.  Such was the case on September 20, 1934.  The Times reported "An advertising supper dance entitled 'The Taxpayer's Temptation in Wonderland' will be held at the Women's National Republican Club...to raise money for the Republican Educational League."   Debutantes appeared in costumes advertising American products and New York shops.

The following summer the club initiated a novel class.  On July 22, 1935 the Rockland County Journal-News reported "In New York a class in political speaking has been opened at 3 West Fifty-first street, the home of the Women's National Republican Club and Mrs. Caraway is confident that before the Autumn is well under way, the other 26 States represented on the national council of the club will follow suit."

Mrs. Henry R. Caraway was president of the club at the time.  A resident of Carmel, New York she was no stranger to club leadership.  During World War I she was president of the Women's University Club and had been president of the University of Chicago Alumnae Association for ten years.   As reported by the Bronxville Press on February 21, 1936, she not only gave "fortnightly talks at the club's headquarters" and held "classes for the Republican Business and Professional Women," she "has campaigned extensively throughout the country and is also a lecturer on current political events."

Speakers who appeared before the Women's National Republican Club were often fiery and at times more than a bit overzealous in their partisanship.  Representative James W. Wadsworth addressed the club on March 26, 1936 to denounce the Democratic administrations's "heavy expenditures and resultant tax program."  He shockingly accused Franklin D. Roosevelt of attempting to "establish a dictatorship fashioned after those set up by Hitler and Mussolini."

William M. Chadbourne, president of the National Republican Club, was no less dire in his warning to 250 club members on July 16, 1940.  He called the current political situation "more perilous than any since the foundation of the Republic--more perilous even than in 1860," referring to the then-impending Civil War.  He urged the women to "bend every effort" to put Wendell L. Willkie into office.

"If we fail," he warned, "no one knows what will happen."

His prediction of doom was echoed by Supreme Court Justice Joseph M. Proskauer, who spoke at a rally in the building on October 29 that same year.  Roosevelt, he said, was bent on absolute dictatorship.  "There is a pattern by which democracies decay, and dictators, whether conscious or unconscious, good or bad, ride in.  I indict the New Deal of using that pattern."

Vicious party politics was put aside when the nation was drawn into World War.  A month after the attack on Pearl Harbor, Marion Martin, director of the club's women's activities, addressed a group of 150 members.  She told the women to cease worrying "about candidates" and begin working for the country as a whole.

"The one thing that should be uppermost in our minds is to prove our patriotism by cooperating in the sale of defense bonds and stamps, by cooperating with the Office of Civilian Defense and by doing everything we can to aid the Red Cross and other recognized agencies."

Later that spring a dance for servicemen on leave was held in the clubhouse.  On the evening of March 27 the Furlough Frolic gave officers of the Army, Navy and Marine Corps. a break from the war.

In the post-war years The Women's National Republican Club continued to host lectures, sponsor educational seminars, and classes.  Then, in 1974, The Lambs lost its lavish clubhouse at No. 128 West 44th Street to foreclosure.  The group of theatrically-involved members moved into Nos. 3-5 West 51st Street with The Women's National Republican Club.  More of the building was shared when the top floors--once the bedrooms for members--were converted to the 3 West Club, a boutique hotel.



Despite the mostly shuffling inside, the exterior of Frederic Rhinelander King's stoic limestone clubhouse remains unchanged--worthy of inclusion on the National Register of Historic Places in 2012.