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A History of The Ansonia
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Mr.
Stokes' Marvelous Creation
The Ansonia was built by Phelps-Dodge copper heir William
Earl Dodge Stokes, a noted builder and one of the leading
developers of Riverside Drive, the Upper West Side, and
the Broadway Mall. It was designed in accordance with
his specific
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instructions
by the prominent European architect Emile Paul DuBoy, who also
designed the Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument on Riverside Drive
at 89th Street. Construction began in 1887, and upon its completion
in 1904 (when it was named for the Connecticut community founded
by Stoke's grandfather, Anson Green Phelps of the Ansonia Brass
& Copper Company), The Ansonia was the largest residential
hotel of its day. Legend has it that Mr. Stokes wanted The Ansonia
to be much taller, but stopped at the 17th floor because he
liked the view. |
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A
Hotel Unlike Any Other
In addition to 400 original residential suites and 1,218 rooms,
The Ansonia had every luxury of the period, including a pneumatic
tube system that |
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allowed
tenants to exchange messages and gossip; Turkish baths;
six passenger elevators, as well as large service elevators
and dumbwaiters for delivery to apartment kitchens; several
restaurants decorated in the Gilded-Age style of Louis
XIV; two swimming pools, including the world's largest
indoor pool; basement shops; fresh eggs, courtesy of the
chickens in Mr. Stokes' rooftop farm; and seals that frolicked
in its lobby fountain. A list of The Ansonia's past guests
and residents reads like a "who's who" of the
art and entertainment world. Some of its most |
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famous residents included musical immortals Enrico Caruso, Sergei
Rachmaninoff, Igor Stravinsky, Arturo Toscanini, Gustave Mahler,
Yehudi Menuhin, Lily Pons and Ezio Pinza; theatrical notables
Sol Hurok, Florenz Ziegfeld, Sarah Bernhardt, Bille Burke, Moss
Hart, Tony Curtis and Paul Sorvino; sports legends Babe Ruth
and Jack Dempsey; and writers Elmer Rice, W.L. Stodard and Theodore
Dreiser. |
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Glamour
Eccentricity
Intrigue
From the moment of its completion, The Ansonia inspired
a unique aura of glamour, eccentricity and intrigue. Legends
about its famous residents abound: Danish tenor Lauritz
Melchior used its halls for target practice; Theodore
Dreiser wrote An American Tragedy during his residence;
the Secret Service foiled a German plot to blow it up
on the eve of the Atlantic Fleet's Naval ball just before
World War I; The Ansonia was the site of the Chicago White
Sox conspiracy to throw the 1919 World Series; the building's
vast size permitted ladies man Flo Ziegfeld to keep his
wife and mistress in separate apartments; |
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Bette Midler and Barry Manilow began their careers at the legendary
Continental Baths; and Babe Ruth's neighbors were grateful for
its thick, soundproof walls after living in The Ansonia inspired
him to take up
the saxophone. |
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What
a Babe!
The Ansonia was Babe Ruth's first home in New York after the
owner of the Boston Red Sox "sold" him to the Yankees
to raise money to invest in the original production of No
No Nanette in order to impress his girlfriend. This is the
origin of "The Curse of the Bambino," which many believe
is the reason the Red Sox did not win a World Series until 2004,
exactly 100 years after the Ansonia opened. Living
the life of a bachelor, Babe Ruth sowed his wild oats at The
Ansonia, then New York's most elegant residential hotel. Legend
has it that he chased women up and down the halls and had one
employee dedicated to sorting his fan mail--"Keep the dough
and the pictures of the broads, and throw the rest out,"
were his reputed instructions. He also became the beloved linchpin
of "murderers row," the 1927 Yankees team that included
Lou Gerhrig. |
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Beloved
Landmark and Movie Star
The Ansonia is listed in the National Registry of Historic
Places and was designated as a New York City landmark
on March 14, 1972 by the New York Landmarks Preservation
Commission, which called its effect one of "joyous
exuberance profiled against the sky." The Ansonia's
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landmark
designation was supported by a petition with over 25,000
signatures. The
Ansonia has been in numerous films and commercials. It made
its film debut in The Sunshine Boys. After starring
in Single White Female, it was featured in the Natalie
Cole video Take A Look, played home to Michael Keaton
and Marissa Tomei in Ron Howard's The Paper, and
had a cameo role in White Man's Burden, Gregory Hines'
directorial debut.
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