Getting in on the building boom on Upper East Side in the first years after the Civil War was Dr. William S. Wood. He purchased three narrow building plots on East 71st Street—Nos. 168 through 172—between Lexington and Third Avenues and hired architect Frank S. Dwight to design respectable middle-class homes.
Within the next decade the surrounding streets would see scores of speculative Italianate brownstones erected; all essentially cut from the same cloth. Dwight, however, stepped out of that box. Starting with the overall Italianate model, he outlined each home with quoins and floated carved lintels over the elliptical-arched openings of the second and third floors. The skinny doorways were framed by paneled pilasters and surrounded by stone carved to resemble blocks. The highly-unusual entrances were much sterner and geometric, despite the foliate brackets, than the more common Italianate doorways in the neighborhood.
The homes attracted financially-secure, respectable families. As the turn of the century approached, the block was becoming noticeably higher-end as mansions arose along Fifth and Madison Avenues and the fashionable neighborhood spread eastward. When Mary F. Goodwin sold No. 168 to “Mrs. Hawkins,” the wife of Eugene T. Hawkins, in 1897, former Park Commissioner Abraham B. Tappen was living at No. 170 and architect William Alciphon Boring was living at No. 172.
A retired lawyer, Tappen and his family were humiliated on April 6, 1895 when he was arrested and charged with bribery and conspiracy, along with seven other commissioners and former commissioners. To satisfy his $30,000 bond he gave his house as security. The figure would amount to over $800,000 today.
The Tappen family would soon leave No. 170. On May 4, 1902 an advertisement in the New-York Tribune offered “handsomely furnished rooms, reasonable.” At some point next door neighbor William Boring purchased the house; perhaps to protect his own property.
In the meantime No. 168 had changed hands a few times. Hawkins sold it in 1902 to P. J. Cuksley, who sold it to Charles S. Faulkner who sold it in 1906 to Austin W. Lord. But that was all about to change.
On November 5, 1910 the New-York Tribunereported that William A. Boring sold the house at No. 170 East 71stStreet. The buyer was Dr. Adrian Van Sinderen Lambert who simultaneously purchased No. 168. At the time wealthy New Yorkers were buying up the old brownstones in the area and converting them to upscale mansions. Lambert had the same idea.
A month before the sale of No. 170 was completed; the Real Estate Record and Builders’ Guide reported “La Farge & Morris, architects…are still taking bids for alterations to the residence of Dr. Adrian Van S. Lambert.” Unlike other makeovers that resulted in neo-Federal or Georgian homes, Lambert’s would be less architecturally-dramatic. He instructed the architects to simply combine the brownstones into a single, expansive mansion.
Dr. Lambert's completed mansion looked, frankly, like two separate, renovated brownstones. |
Lambert was a highly-respected surgeon, having been educated at Yale and Columbia Universities. He was, by now, Associate Professor of Surgery at Columbia and was Visiting Surgeon to the Presbyterian Hospital.
Dr. Lambert’s expertise would be called upon on July 18, 1917. Mrs. Arthur Woods was no ordinary patient. She was not only the wife of a Police Commissioner (they had married just one year earlier); she was daughter of William Pierson Hamilton (great-grandson of Alexander Hamilton) and Juliet Pierpont Morgan (daughter of J. P. Morgan). Earlier in the week she left her summer estate for a visit with at her parents’ home at No. 32 East 36thStreet. Shortly before midnight on the 18th she complained of feeling ill and Adrian Lambert was summoned.
Lambert recognized the problem—appendicitis—and, as reported in The Sun, “He advised an immediate operation.” The doctor operated on the young socialite in the Hamilton mansion in the dead of the night. In the morning The Sunreported “The operation was entirely successful and Mrs. Woods is reported to be recovering nicely.” It was the sort of acclaim that provided Adrian Lambert with the means to afford a wide mansion in one of Manhattan’s most fashionable neighborhoods.
The Lamberts would stay on in the house for decades. On November 29, 1938 it was the scene of an impressive wedding. The Lamberts' niece, Elizabeth Miller Mitchell, was the widow of Brigadier General William L. “Billy” Mitchell; who earned the nickname “the father of the U. S. Air Force” and had died two years earlier.
The groom was Thomas Byrd of Winchester, Virginia; a descendant of one of the "First Families of Virginia." His brothers, who served as his two best men, possibly stole the spotlight from the couple that day. One was United States Senator Harry Flood Byrd; a powerful figure in Virginia politics, newspaper publisher and land owner. The second was Rear Admiral Richard Evelyn Byrd, Jr., who earned his fame less through his naval service than through his polar expeditions.
Within two years Dr. and Mrs. Lambert moved on and No. 168 became home to famed conductor Walter Damrosch and his wife, Margaret. Mrs. Damrosch was the daughter of James G. Blaine, Secretary of State under Presidents Garfield and Arthur. It was, of course, Walter Damrosch who garnered the attention. Called the “Dean of American Conductors,” he was a composer, conductor and pianist. He began conducting at the Metropolitan Opera House in 1885 and later became conductor of the New York Symphony Orchestra. He formed the Damrosch Opera Company to stage Wagner compositions in 1895 and composed four operas.
But was most remembered for bringing classical music to the common people. In the infancy days of NBC Radio he created the N. B. C. Music Appreciation Hour and he later noted “I do not have to tell you of the miracle that radio has worked in this country. The results have been awe-inspiring. Beethoven and Bach as well as Wagner and Verdi have brought their magic into the humblest and remotest dwellings.”
But was most remembered for bringing classical music to the common people. In the infancy days of NBC Radio he created the N. B. C. Music Appreciation Hour and he later noted “I do not have to tell you of the miracle that radio has worked in this country. The results have been awe-inspiring. Beethoven and Bach as well as Wagner and Verdi have brought their magic into the humblest and remotest dwellings.”
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Walter Damrosch -- photo Library of Congress |
Among the first entertainments in the house was a double ceremony on May 18, 1940 to celebrate Walter’s and Margaret’s 50th anniversary and to introduce their granddaughter, Margot Damrosch Finletter to society. The afternoon reception was a socially-important one and all four of the Damrosch daughters were there to help in the receiving line.
“The house was filled with a profusion of flowers for the occasion,” reported The Times, “yellow roses predominating to enhance the congratulatory spirit of the golden wedding celebration.”
Earlier that year the house was again internally divided into two separate homes. And for good reason. A month after the anniversary party, on June 10, daughter Alice Damrosch Wolfe married Herman Kiaer in a civil service downtown. The newlyweds moved into the eastern side of the house. The New York Times mentioned the following day that “Mr. Kiaer and his bride will make their home at 170 East Seventy-first Street.”
Earlier that year the house was again internally divided into two separate homes. And for good reason. A month after the anniversary party, on June 10, daughter Alice Damrosch Wolfe married Herman Kiaer in a civil service downtown. The newlyweds moved into the eastern side of the house. The New York Times mentioned the following day that “Mr. Kiaer and his bride will make their home at 170 East Seventy-first Street.”
The aging Walter and Margaret Damrosch divided their time between East 71stStreet and their summer home in Bar Harbor, Maine. On his 80th birthday in 1942, the conductor was feted with a reception by the Directors of the Metropolitan Opera Guild and a dinner by the American Academy of Arts and Letters, of which he was President.
Margaret died in July 1949 and a year later, on December 22, Walter Damrosch suffered a fatal heart attack in the East 71st Street house. On reporting his death The New York Timessaid “Few men in musical life played so significant a role as Dr. Damrosch in reaching in to hamlet, town and city and creating a profound appreciation for good music.”
In his will he provided $5,000 to Felicia Geffen, the secretary to both him and Margaret; and $1,000 each to Mary O’Donnell, their waitress; Germaine Marie, the cook; and their maid Elisha Pinski. The four daughters received the bulk of the estate.
Daughter Anita and her husband Robert Littell moved into No. 168 East 71stStreet and were still here when their third grandchild was born. An additional floor was added before the end of the 20th century and the brownstone façade has been painted; but otherwise the combined houses are little changed since the 1910 renovation.
photographs taken by the author
photographs taken by the author