Showing posts with label Grand Street. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grand Street. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Nikola Tesla and The Alienist

While researching the neighborhood surrounding Tesla's laboratory at 175 Grand I found he had something in common with a main character in the 1994 thriller, The Alienist. First, some background.

From 1889-1891, Nikola Tesla worked out of a laboratory at 175 Grand Street in Manhattan. It was here that he did much of his seminal work on the radio and invented the Tesla coil.

The location of Tesla's laboratory at 175 Grand. The address is highlighted in light green near the upper left corner. From: Lionel Pincus and Princess Firyal Map Division, The New York Public Library. "Atlas 107. Vol. 1, 1894." The New York Public Library Digital Collections. 1884- - 1894.

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1890

I strove to understand who were the immediate neighbors of Tesla's laboratories and what sort of neighborhood it was. The 1890 edition of Trow's Business Directory of Manhattan is available online. Although it does not list anyone at 175 Grand, these are the neighboring businesses to either side.

173 Grand, McKee & Harrington (Joseph McKee and Charles F Harrington), p. 180 (Trow's Directory)
173 Grand, Panse & Gnadt (Frederick W Panse & John G. Gnadt), p. 234
173 Grand, Saulson Designing Co (Joseph Samuelson proprietor), p. 265

177 Grand, The New York Brass & Wire Works Company (Kopankiewicz & Dobrowski proprietors) p. 217
177 Grand, Pomeroy Mfg Co. (Pomeroy & Hall proprietors) p. 243
177 Grand, Standard Rubber Co. (Lena Levi proprietors) p. 286

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1894

Tesla moved his operations to South Fifth Avenue in 1891. Directories are not available for the years 1891 to 1893, but here is a glimpse of the businesses listed at 175 Grand in the 1894 City Directory.

175 Grand, Handel Louis sawyer, h 1060 Halsey, Brooklyn, p.573
175 Grand & 155 Baxter, Klein Fred A. cutler, h 228 Garden, Hoboken, p.754
175 Grand, Reinhorn David bands, h 42 Delancey, p.1155
175 Grand, Bliem William, plater, h 1022 Summit av., p.124
also listed as: 175 Grand, J. C. BLIEM & BECKER, platers, p.124.
and: 175 Grand, Bliem William, plater, h 64 Paterson, J. C., p.89

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1896 and The Alienist

Tesla's Grand Street laboratory also had a notorious, albeit fictional, neighbor.

Caleb Carr wrote a wildly popular thriller set in 1896 Manhattan called The Alienist. Near the end of the book, the killer, Japheth Dury (aka John Beecham), is traced to his home at 155 Baxter Street. This address is two doors away and just around the corner from 175 Grand. Fred Klein, cutler (above) is listed at both addresses in the 1894 directory. In fact, the two buildings touched, a detail made more significant considering that the killer moved between rooftops.

Here is the description of the arrival of the investigators at Dury's building.

"Number 155 Baxter Street was an unremarkable New York tenement, though in any other neighborhood the women and children who were hanging out its windows on that seasonable night would have been laughing or singing or at least screaming at one another. Here they simply sat with their heads in their hands, the youngest of them looking as worldly and tired as the oldest, and none of them exhibiting any interest in what occurred on the street. A man who I placed at about thirty was seated on the stoop, swinging a nightstick that looked to be authentic police issue. It wasn't difficult to judge after getting a glimpse of the man's blow-twisted features and surly grin just how he'd laid hands on the trophy."
page 422, The Alienist, Caleb Carr, copyright 1994, Random House Paperbacks.

Was Tesla's Grand Street laboratory in a rough neighborhood? This location borders the areas where Jacob Riis documented Manhattan's poverty in the 1890s. In the broader map shown above, Tesla's laboratory was four blocks from the Bowery, famous for its vice and crime. He was three blocks from the famously vicious area known as Mulberry's Bend. Interestingly, at the same time that Tesla worked here, he lived at the Astor House, perhaps the most luxurious hotel in Manhattan at the time.

The above map cropped. Tesla's laboratory was located at the site of the light green block in the upper left corner. Dury's residence on Baxter Street is highlighted in forest green.



Rag-Picker's Row at 59 Baxter Street (c. 1898 Jacob Riis) about three and one half blocks south of the corner of Grand and Baxter.

Bandit's Roost by Jacob Riis, photographer (ca. 1890). At Mulberry Bend, three and one half blocks south of Grand and Mulberry.

Martin Hill Ortiz, also writing under the name, Martin Hill, is the author of A Predatory Mind. Its sequel, set in 1890s Manhattan and titled A Predator's Game, will be available from Rook's Page Publishing, March 30, 2016. It features Nikola Tesla as detective. (More details soon.)
His recent mystery, Never Kill A Friend, is available from Ransom Note Press. His epic poem, Two Mistakes, recently won second place in the Margaret Reid/Tom Howard Poetry Competition. He can be contacted at mdhillortiz@gmail.com.

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Tesla's Grand Street Laboratory, Updated 11/23/15

Updates at the bottom of the page include photos of buildings from the area, including one that has Tesla's lab in the extreme corner. Also, historic "Bird's Eye View" maps have been added.

After describing the fate of Nikola Tesla's Houston Street laboratory in yesterday's post, I thought, to be complete, I should include information on his other laboratories.

Tesla's second laboratory was located at 175 Grand Street. From Carlson's biography:

When Tesla returned to New York [August 1889], he went to work in a new laboratory at 175 Grand Street. This lab consisted of one room divided by partitions; Tesla’s backer, Brown, complained that the space was too small for the work he thought needed to be done. Along with moving his laboratory, Tesla also changed his residence to the Astor House on Broadway between Barclay and Vesey streets.

From: Carlson, W. Bernard. Tesla: Inventor of the Electrical Age (p. 118). Princeton University Press.

This laboratory was located at the second building down on the south side of Grand, east of the corner of Grand and Baxter. Its location is shown in this 1893 map (Tesla's laboratory, in the upper middle, is highlighted in purple):


Plate 5. Atlas of the City of New York, Volume Four. South of Fourteenth Street. 3rd Edition. E. Robinson and R.H. Pidgeon. Published by E. Robinson and Co., New York, 1893.

Which doesn't look much different from this 1956 map, although the building at 175 seems to be divided in two:

From: Bromley, George Washington. Atlas of the city of New York, Manhattan Island. 1956. New York Public Library Archives.

This was an interesting and is a mostly preserved neighborhood. Between Center and Baxter on Grand was the I.O.O.F Hall, the International Order of Odd Fellows (shown in the 1893 map). It still stands. Across the street from this was the Center Street Market. The new police headquarters was built across from this (having moved from 300 Mulberry) in 1909, an ostentatious building which still stands. Also preserved are several buildings on the north side of Grand between Baxter and Mulberry. Finally, at the southwest corner of Grand and Mulberry there was the Banca Stabile which served the community of Little Italy from 1882 to 1932 and in recent years has become the Italian-American Museum. (New York Times, September 9, 2008, Regional) This was the sixth address down from Tesla's laboratory suggesting that Tesla's address can be seen at the far right of this photo.

Banca Stabile, corner of Mulberry and Grand. The right side of the photograph looks down Grand Street. Tesla's lab would be the third address down in the taller building at the edge of the photo. Photo dated 1885 in CUNY webpage. From the Italian-American Museum.

1904 Grand Street, Mulberry at far right.
Excerpted from Bird's Eye View of New York City, 1904, New York Public Library.


Above map, annotated. 1. Building with Tesla's laboratory, 175 Grand Street. 2. Banca Stabile. 3. Odd Fellows Hall. 4. Future site of Central Police Headquarters. 5. Center Street Market.

In 1990, a new building was constructed which covered this territory (source: New York Times 11/20/2009, Real Estate). The upper floors are part of LaGrande Condominium. Even though  there are several storefronts along the first floor, they each bear the address 179 Grand. Among these, the business that corresponds to the former site of 175 Grand is Villy Pharmacy.

Villy Pharmacy at the site of Tesla's 175 Grand Street laboratory.

Part One: Tesla's East Houston Street Laboratory.
Part Three: Tesla's South Fifth Avenue Laboratory.
Part Four: Tesla's Liberty Street Laboratory.
Part Five: A Clear Photo of the Building that Housed Tesla's East Houston Laboratory.
 Odd Fellows Hall, ~1975. Edmund V. Gillon, photographer. Corner of Center and Grand.

A Predator's Game is available in soft-cover and ebook editions through Amazon and other online retailers.


A Predator's Game, now available, Rook's Page Publishing.

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Nikola Tesla, Arthur Conan Doyle and Dr. Henry H. Holmes are all characters in my thriller, A Predator's Game.

Back page blurb.

Manhattan, 1896.

When the author Arthur Conan Doyle meets Nikola Tesla he finds a tall, thin genius with a photographic memory and a keen eye, and recognizes in the eccentric inventor the embodiment of his creation, Sherlock. Together, they team up to take on an "evil Holmes." Multi-murderer Dr. Henry H. Holmes has escaped execution and is unleashing a reign of terror upon the metropolis. Set in the late nineteenth century in a world of modern marvels, danger and invention, Conan Doyle and Tesla engage the madman in a deadly game of wits.

Martin Hill Ortiz, also writing under the name, Martin Hill, is the author of A Predatory Mind. Its sequel, set in 1890s Manhattan and titled A Predator's Game, will be available from Rook's Page Publishing, March 30, 2016. It features Nikola Tesla as detective.