Astor House

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From left to right: St. Paul's Chapel, Astor House, U.S. Post Office

The Astor House was a luxury hotel in New York City, that opened in 1836 and soon became the most famous hotel in America. [1]

History

The Astor House was originally built by John Jacob Astor, who assembled the building lots around his former house until he had purchased the full block in the heart of the city's most fashionable residential district. The hotel opened in June 1836 as the Park Hotel. It was located on the west side of Broadway between Vesey and Barclay Streets, across from New York City Hall Park and diagonally across from the offices of the New York Herald. The building was designed by Isaiah Rogers, who had designed the first luxury hotel in the United States, the Tremont House, in Boston (1829). The large four-square block[2] was detailed in the Greek Revival style, faced with pale granite ashlar with quoined corners treated as at Tremont House, as embedded Doric pillars, and a central entrance flanked by Greek Doric columns supporting a short length of entablature.[3] Astor House contained 309 rooms in its 6 stories[4] with the new gaslights and bathing/toilet facilities on each floor. Its tree-shaded central courtyard was covered over in 1852 by the elliptical vaulted cast-iron and glass "rotunda" by James Bogardus,[5] that under the direction of its proprietor "Col." Charles A. Stetson (1837–1877) was the city's most stylish luncheon place for gentlemen at its curving bar, with legendary side dining rooms entered from Vesey Street or Barclay Street, where even upper-class New Yorkers discovered that it was possible to dine stylishly in public.

Mathew Brady lived there in the 1840s and William James was born there in 1842. In 1843, the Astor House hosted the recently married Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and his wife. The couple, who renewed their friendship with fellow patron Fanny Kemble, also dined there with Nathaniel Parker Willis and his wife during their stay.[6] The Norwegian violinist Ole Bull was a returning patron at the hotel on his American tours in the 1840s, 50s and 60s. Abraham Lincoln stayed there in February 1861 on his way to his inauguration.[7] It was used as a safe haven during the Great Blizzard of 1888 and in 1916, Charles Evans Hughes stayed there while his presidential bid stood in the balance. American Civil War Confederate Admiral Raphael Semmes stayed at Astor House twice. First, in March 1861, on the eve of the war when he was searching for ships to buy for the fledgling Confederate Navy (he found none). Nearly five years later, on December 27, 1865, he again spent the night, this time as a prisoner of the North, while being escorted to The Washington Navy Yard where Federal authorities would decide whether to put him on trial.

The success of the Astor House invited competition. The St Nicholas Hotel on Broadway at Broome Street was built for a million dollars and offered the innovation of central heating that circulated warmed air through registers to every room. The Metropolitan Hotel opened in 1852 just north of it, at Prince Street, was equally luxurious. But the new hotel to put all others in the shade was the Fifth Avenue Hotel facing Madison Square.[8] By the early 1870s the Astor House was considered old-fashioned and unappealing and principally used by businessmen, but it remained such a seeming permanent fixture of New York, that it was included in a fantasy short story by J.A. Mitchell, "The Last American", set in the far future, when Persian explorers in the ruins of New York come upon "an upturned slab" inscribed ASTOR HOUSE: "I pointed it out to Nofuhl and we bent over it with eager eyes...'The inscription is Old English,' he said. '"House" signified a dwelling, but the word "Astor" I know not. It was probably the name of a deity, and here was his temple'".[9] The south section was demolished in 1913,[10] victim of subway construction,[11] and Bogardus' luncheon pavilion went with it.[12] Vincent Astor redeveloped the site at 217 Broadway as the "Astor Office Building", a modest seven stories tall, in 1915.[13] The rest was demolished in 1926 and the site rebuilt as the Transportation Building, with Art Deco details, York and Sawyer, architects, 1927.

The reputation of the hotel produced other "Astor House" establishments as far afield as Shanghai, where the first foreigners' hotel, Richard's, erected in 1846, is currently known as the Astor House Hotel.

References

  1. "Where Lincoln Tossed and Turned", NY Times, September 24, 2009
  2. " The simple, square, unornamented architecture of the Astor House, makes to my notion, the best appearance of any building in New York, observed Walt Whitman (Whitman, Whitman in 1850: Three Uncollected Articles R.G. Silver, ed, (1951).
  3. The Astor House in 1900; Bootblacks before the entrance of Astor House, 1896, photograph by Alice Austen.
  4. The sixth floor, with mezzanine windows opening in the frieze below the building's cornice, contained servants' rooms.
  5. Margot Gayle and Carol Gayle, Cast-iron architecture in America p. 117f, 1901 photograph of the "rotunda", p. 118.
  6. Tharp, Louise Hall. The Appletons of Beacon Hill. Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1973: 241–242.
  7. Strong, George Tepleton (1962). Diary of the Civil War. New York: Macmillan Company. p. 101. 
  8. Lloyd R. Morris, Incredible New York 1975:5.
  9. J.A. Mitchell, "The Last American" (New York) 1889 (on-line text at Project Gutenberg).
  10. Farewell menu, 29 May 1913.
  11. The N and R trains turn the corner under the site.
  12. Gayle, p. 120.
  13. David W, Dunlap, "Commercial Property; Former Astor Office Building Looks Back, and Up", The New York Times, 7 July 1999

Coordinates: 40°42′42.5″N 74°0′30.79″W / 40.711806°N 74.0085528°W / 40.711806; -74.0085528

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