| photo by Alice Lum |
But Debevoise had at least one more building to finish.
The Board of Education was frantically trying to keep pace with the expanding population of the city. In the past 35 years over eight million immigrants had arrived in New York and the city rapidly pushed northward, taking over rural country estates.
One of these was the James Beekman mansion, Mount Pleasant, built in 1763. In 1874 the home’s land value outweighed its historic value and it was demolished. It was on this land that Primary School No. 35 would be built to service the expanding residential district.
On September 10, 1892 The New York Times noted that “The vacation season is one of idleness for the children, but for the Board of Education it is a period of high-pressure activity. Not only must new schools be planned and built to accommodate the rapidly increasing army of knowledge gatherers, but all the old schools must be gone over and put in as nearly apple-pie shape as possible.”
Although three new public schools were ready for the new school season, one would not be completed until November 1, said the article. That was Primary School No. 35 at 1st Avenue and 51st Street. Debevoise had designed a large and handsome, up-to-date structure capable of accommodating 1,354 pupils. The building alone cost the City $116,207 while furniture and heating brought the total to $134,207.
Debevoise had designed a dignified Romanesque Revival structure of buff-colored pressed brick and brownstone. Expansive windows flooded the classrooms with natural light. Carved panels and bands added interest to the four-and-a-half story structure, giving it a decidedly non-institutional look.
At a time when the public demanded “fireproof” structures, especially for public buildings, the architect used metal ceilings and iron-and-stone stairways. Because it was a primary school, the ground floor was dedicated to “playrooms.” The three upper floors held the classrooms with the main assembly hall on the fourth floor. Above were the apartments for the janitor and storerooms.
| photo by Alice Lum |
Builder Patrick Gallagher received the commission to construct the school. While the quality of his work was, perhaps, excellent, his timeliness was not. He had already missed the opening of the school season when The Times wrote its article; and then the November 1 opening date came and went. Finally around February 1 he turned over the building to the Trustees of the 19th Ward. All that had to be done now was the interior finishing. Throughout February carpenters, varnishers and painters were busy with the finishing details. The Favorite Desk Company was on site installing wood and cast iron desks and seats in the classrooms. On February 19 the work was nearly completed and opening ceremonies were scheduled for March 1.
But that opening date, too, would not come about.
In order to quicken the drying of the plaster of the walls and ceilings, Frederick Weiss, the “fireman” in charge of the steam heating apparatus, had kept the boilers going for several weeks. On February 19 he left for lunch, returning around 2:45 in the afternoon. Upon entering the building he smelled smoke.
Weiss rushed upstairs to find the upper floors of the central section of the school filled with smoke. He ran to the fire alarm box on the opposite corner and, by the time he returned, flames were bursting through the second floor windows. Weeks of constant running of the heating system had caused the fire brought on by an overheated flue.
Engine No. 39 arrived and quickly sent out a second alarm. Before long a third alarm was issued.
The conflagration was finally extinguished; but not before $15,000 to $20,000 in structural damages had occurred. Not only were the second and third floors of the central section heavily damaged, the enormous amount of water that poured down through the floors caused as much damage as the fire.
Ten thousand dollars worth of shiny new furniture, never used, was destroyed. The City had no insurance on the building. And Primary School No. 35 would not open until May.
| Birds, foliage and an urn of fruit decorate the ornamental panels -- photo by Alice Lum |
At 11:50 on the morning of December 7 Mrs. Allen was in a top floor classroom when the janitor, Patrick Carney, approached her and whispered “The school is on fire. The building is full of smoke.” As he spoke, smoke began seeping into the room.
The principal ordered, “Ring four bells, the rapid dismissal alarm.”
The Evening World reported that “The teachers responded promptly, and in a few minutes every class-room was cleared and the scholars in the street before they fully realized the reason for all the excitement.”
Not everything went with cool discipline, however. “At the big hall leading into First avenue a shout of ‘fire’ was raised by somebody, and the children dashed into the street in a mass. All got out without accident, however, and then Mrs. Allen sounded the signal for the firemen,” said The Evening World.
The fire fighters searched for half an hour while the coatless children waited outside. In a rather anti-climactic end of the ordeal, they finally found an ash can of burning rubbish in the playground.
The newspaper praised the principal, nonetheless, calling Mrs. Allen “a young woman of extraordinary bravery, as was evidence by her prompt action when she had reason to believe that her charges were in imminent peril.”
By 1897 the school had become Public School 135. The Assembly Hall served as the site for free public lectures every Monday and Thursday evening. Nearby residents were invited to learn anything from “The National Yellowstone Park (illustrated by stereopticon views) to “The Planet Mars: Is There Life There?” The lecture program continued for years here.
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| An 1897 bulletin announces the times of the free lectures. "School Children not admitted" was clearly stressed. |
In November 1906 John Martin conducted a course on “Modern Cities and Their Government” as part of the free lecture program, beginning with a study of the government of London. A year later Dr. Edwin E. Slosson contributed to the program with his lecture that gave updates on the work being done on the Panama Canal.
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| A partial listing of 1897-98 lectures revealed a wide-range of topics. |
The Sun noted for hesitant parents, however, that “Baseball, basketball, Indian clubs, dumb-bells and wands have not been prohibited, as the boys still prefer them to what they term ‘girls’ fol-d-rol.’ They are, however, relegated to a minor place during the hours allotted to physical culture, while teachers and pupils glide through the mazes of the waltz, skip through the two-step, or pirouette, hop and swing through the numerous fold dances popular at present.”
Ms. Witney had two ulterior motives in her dance scheme: the children liked dancing better than regulated exercises and they acquired grace.
“The children who have learned to dance with very few exceptions seem to have acquired also a certain ease of manner and a knowledge of many little courtesies of which before they had been entirely ignorant,” reported The Sun.
A class of girls in bloomers exhibited their folk dances to the reporter on August 11, 1907. “The children at 135 are for the most part of American and German parentage,” he subsequently wrote, “and their dancing is characterized, as the irresponsible visitor remarked, by accuracy, precision and sedateness rather than by wild enthusiasm and untrammeled grace. It was obvious that they enjoyed it.”
| photo by Alice Lum |
Public School 135 responded with a preemptive strike. On November 26, 1916 the New York Tribunepublished photographs of children wrapped in blankets and wearing knit caps while all the windows of the classroom were open wide. The caption read “It’s cold here—but the children are not. Sleeping bags, woolen caps, gloves and stockings, and a large quantity of fresh air, keep the body temperature high.”
Another photo showed two girls studying grammar at their desks which had been moved to a balcony. “Fresh air inside, but sunshine, too outside,” read the caption. “A grammar lesson mixed with a little of that sunshine is the more endurable.”
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| Two little girls, wrapped against the cold, study in the "fresh air" to prevent tuberculosis -- New York Tribune November 26, 1916 (copyright expired) |
In 1948 the ground floor of Public School 135 was redesigned as fully-equipped school unit for children with cerebral palsy. After extensive renovations, it became the first New York public school to offer such a facility. The unit opened with 25 students, some referred by cerebral palsy clinics and others chosen from long waiting lists. In addition to classrooms and a lunchroom specifically for these students, the newly designed floor offered a physical therapy room and medical room.
A new lunchroom for the existing students was constructed on the second floor.
In 1960 a new school, P.S. 59, was constructed about a block away at 52nd Street and 2nd Avenue. The regular students of P.S. 135 were transferred to the new school, leaving only about 50 of the children with cerebral palsy in the hulking building. Later the building was used for a while as the United Nations International School, and then briefly as a private school. But in the late 1970s the Board of Education sold the site to a developer who announced plans to demolish it.
Nearby residents were not so quick to accept the announcement. The Coalition to Save 931 (the school’s address) was formed from groups including the Sutton Area Community, the Beekman Place Association, Community Board 6 and the Turtle Bay Association. It succeeded in earning the school a listing on the National Register of Historic Places. Soon the Board of Estimate voted unanimously to support the preservation efforts.
Towards the end of 1983 the City again put the school building and land up for auction with the condition that the façade be preserved. For a full decade failed plans came and went, none of which satisfied everyone: the City, the preservationist groups, the neighborhood or the developers.
In 1996 developer Dennis A. Herman initiated plans for a luxury high-rise apartment building, incorporating the exterior walls of P.S. 135. Finally in 2004 the 64-apartment, 20-story Beekman Regent, designed by architect Costas Kondylis, opened. The soaring structure tries hard to meld in with the vintage base by means of color and material; but not everyone was pleased.
The AIA Guide to New York City called it a “brick and brownstone Romanesque Revival multistory schoolhouse, crushed visually by a super ziggurat of apartments.” The Guidesuggested, “Stand close to enjoy the old school.”
| The Beekman Regent, named with a nod to James Beekman's country estate that stood on the site, looms above the former school building -- photo by Alice Lum |


