A look at some editorial content that ran in The New Yorker in 1929.
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The first piece is by Marcia Davenport, who wrote a column for the New Yorker called New Apartments for several years. It was the style for the author to use a pseudonym, and she chose the name 'Penthouse.'
Most of the buildings ‒ coming under the hotel, instead of the tenement, law ‒ have one and two-room apartments, with serving pantries where you serve, remember, not cook. At least three houses, however, have standard kitchens and apartments of up to five rooms.
The average rent of the one-room apartment is $1,200 a year, but you can pay much more, or get a single room for as little as $750, in the Cloister. Woodstock Tower, the newest house (with a Gothic village church concealing the water-tower above the thirty-first floor), has some pretty gorgeous views for modest-salaried girls and boys. The management does everything with a smile, from making your beds to supervising the play of your children and their pets. Prospective workers in the new Chanin and nearby buildings are among those invited to consult the renting office, right on the crest of the Tudor City wave, in Prospect Tower.
‒Penthouse
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The next piece ran in the Talk of the Town, and was unsigned, written by an unknown author. Titled "Chelsea and Tudor," it told the story of how the sites for London Terrace and Tudor City were purchased, one house at a time.
. . . We recall that there was a somewhat similar situation when they were getting ready to build Tudor City. The French people tiptoed around, buying land. They approached one astute man we know and he set what he thought was a pretty fancy price on a house he had been holding for speculation. It was instantly accepted. He chortled over a thirty-five-thousand-dollar profit until another property owner began to do a lot better. An identical house next door was owned by an aged lady who took boarders. She was hard of hearing, said she was too old to move, and didn't want to be bothered anyway. She sold finally at one hundred thousand dollars more than our acquaintance got. Now he mutters mostly.
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In the midtown zone we note that Tudor City keeps on growing and that, with the added park areas upon which the various units face, it becomes more and more attractive. The latest addition, on the south side, is a replica of the building just north of it, but unfortunately the view from the lower floors on the river side suffers somewhat from the interposition of one of the New York Edison plants.
Prospect Place, as the enclosed park is called, is a gratifying oasis.
―T-Square
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Finally, we're re-publishing a Gluyas Williams cartoon that appeared in the New Yorker's April 27th issue. Titled Industrial Crises - A Resident of Tudor City is Discovered not Walking to Work, it ran for a full page.
Tudor City had arrived.