New York
Architecture Images-Greenwich Village 39 and 41 Commerce Street |
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architect |
D.T.Atwood | ||
location |
39 and 41 Commerce Street | ||
date |
1831-2 | ||
style |
Second Empire | ||
construction |
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type |
Houses | ||
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images |
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Legend has it that they were built by a sea
captain for his feuding daughters, with a garden in between in hopes
they would reconcile. Sadly, they were actually built in 1831 by milkman
Peter Huyler; history does not record how his children got along. The
roofs date to early 1870s, added by a Huyler descendant.
A New York minute on Commerce Street is filled only with the sound of a woman's heels clicking against the pavement and the distant barking of a neighborhood dog. The horns, the sirens, the purr of engines and the whoosh of the subway below that permeate the bordering Seventh Avenue South are all but muted on this one-and-a-half-block Greenwich Village street. A plaque affixed to the brick wall of one home during the 19th century could apply to the street today: "On this site in 1897 nothing happened." Very little commerce is transacted on Commerce Street these days, unless you count the walking tours that bring tourists down the quaint street lined with trees and Federal-style houses. Almost all of the business, which was never much more than a wood workshop, a brewery and a factory, left in the late 1800's along with the wealthy landowners who erected the houses and planted the cherry trees. But history and the movement of the city did not remove all of the commerce off this backwater street. Still prominent among the old brick houses are two restaurants, Casa and The Grange Hall, a real estate office and The Cherry Lane Theatre, the oldest continuously running Off-Broadway theater in New York City. People who do find their way down the curved street between Barrow and Seventh Avenue, whether on purpose or by happenstance, will feel as though they have arrived in a different era-save a few cars and the quick exit back into a 21st-century New York.
Commerce Street, like the rest of Greenwich Village, grew during the early 1800's when a series of cholera and yellow fever epidemics hit the city center, in what is now called Lower Manhattan. As people moved north, banks and businesses flourished in the area. The street was paved in 1826 after a wealthy and prominent attorney, Charles Oakley, petitioned the Common Council to pave Commerce Street in front of the houses he owned. The paving was officially extended to Barrow Street the following year, according the Greenwich Village Historical District designation report. Although the history of the street's name is still debated among residents and scholars alike, no one disputes its origins as an affluent Manhattan address. Like most everything in New York City, what had seemed firmly established changed. By the turn of the century, immigrants working along the Hudson River and bohemians, writers and artists, drawn by cheap rents and large apartments, had moved into the area and changed the makeup of the Village and Commerce Street, where people like the writer Washington Irving and photographer Berenice Abbott lived. While New York has changed and grown up around it, Commerce Street has not lost the quiet charm or sleepy and established repose that continues to make it a rare place in a city that supposedly never sleeps. thanks to Beth Schepens and Andy
Glockner According
to the Greenwich Village Historic District report, Commerce Street
features a mix of small two- and three-story houses and four- to
six-story townhouses and buildings, creating a visually appealing
"skyline" with varied architectural styles. The majority of the
houses on the north side (odd-numbered) of the street were built in the
late Federal style - smaller houses with basements adorned with
intricate wrought iron latticework and elegant doorways. The south
side (even-numbered) of Commerce Street is populated more heavily with
later-19th and early-20th century townhouses built in more classic and
French Second Empire styles. These houses feature rounder arches
and steeper roofs, with steps leading to double-doored entranceways. |
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