photo by The New York Observer |
America was the land of opportunity to Mussa Schinasi and his brother Solomon in 1891. The young men hailed from Manisa in Asia Minor and conditions for the Sephardic Jews in Turkey had noticeably declined by the end of the 19th Century. New York City promised a new life.
The young men arrived in New York via Alexandria, Egypt with no jobs but extensive knowledge of tobacco processing. They founded the Schinasi Brothers, Inc., a cigarette and cigar manufacturing company. Using imported Turkish tobacco rather than the Virginia-grown leaves American smokers were accustomed to, they produced cigarettes under the brand name “Natural” and before long were highly successful.
Mussa quickly changed his name to Morris. By 1907 both brothers both millionaires and Solomon purchased the red brick and white marble Isaac Rice mansion on Riverside Drive. Morris, the same year, hired architect William Tuthill to design a new mansion at Riverside Drive and 107th Street. This one, like his brother’s, would be free-standing as were several other of the enormous Riverside Drive residences.
The January 1908 issue of the Building Trades Employers Association Bulletin announced that Charles T. Wills had been awarded the contract to construct the house. “The structure will be of white marble in the style of the French Renaissance, and will cost about $180,000,” the article said. “The roof will be of mansard terra cotta and tile, with steel girders and copper cornices.”
The article was right. Tuthill. who had been trained for several years in the offices of Richard Morris Hunt, produced a French Renaissance palace of blinding white Vermont marble. Two and a-half stories high, it boasted sophisticated stone balconies, a steep tiled roof and conspicuous projecting dormers, along with picturesque cresting and finials. The house was completed in 1909, a year after construction began.
In decorating their home, Schinasi and his wife Laurette drew from both their familiar homeland as well as their adopted country. Jewish historian Aviva Ben-Ur recalled a close friend of the family describing “a harmonious mélange of Middle Eastern elegance and American sophistication.”
The Schinasi Mansion in the 1930s -- photo NYPL Collection |
Interior details included intricate, marble trimmed mosaics -- photo by The New York Observer |
While contemporary architecture critics praised the structure, Schinasi himself was apparently not so happy. Although by 1911 the brothers would own two cigar factories and were multi-millionaires, Morris Schinasi refused to pay Tuthill for his architectural design work.
Tuthill sued his client for $5,655.65 for “work, labor, and services as an architect between the 1st day of March, 1908, and the 1st day of July, 1909…of which no part has been paid.”
Tuthill sued his client for $5,655.65 for “work, labor, and services as an architect between the 1st day of March, 1908, and the 1st day of July, 1909…of which no part has been paid.”
Schinasi’s refusal to pay Tuthill is puzzling; he was highly generous with his fortune, giving large amounts to both Christian and Jewish charities. And the magazine La America pointed out that the brothers routinely made “sacrifices for their workers.”
Morris Schinasi died on September 10, 1928 leaving an estate of about $8.5 million. Among the charities in his will, he provided for the construction of the International Morris Schinasi Hospital in his homeland of Manisa.
Two years later the family sold the mansion to the Semple Realty Corporation for $200,000. Mrs. Rosa Gunter Semple moved in and established the Semple School for Girls in the house; a finishing school for well-bred young ladies. It was here in her rooms that Mrs. Semple died at the age of 93 on October 10, 1956.
The home became a day care center for Columbia University in 1960, “The Children’s Mansion.” When the school decided to sell in 1979, Columbia law professor Hans Smit and his wife, Beverly, purchased it for a reported $325,000.
Smit initiated what would become a two-decade interior restoration. The carved oak newels with their pineapple and tobacco leaf motifs, the mosaic wall details, and the parquet floors came back to their 1909 appearance. That intriguing tunnel to the Hudson River, however, remained sealed.
Hand-painted ceiling panels were inset into Egyptian marble -- photo The New York Observer |
In 2006 the couple offered the mansion for sale at $31 million; and after going on and off the market for several years, the last privately-owned free-standing mansion on Riverside Drive was relisted in 2011 for $24.9 million.
The house was designated a New York City landmark in 1974.