July 6, 2025

MISCELLANY Again

 Here are the latest odds and ends to digest in our ongoing Miscellany series.

First up is this mini-ad, part of a series that ran in 1936. We have seen the other five ads before, but never this one.




The tall building is the Prospect Hill Apartments, the building that is partly credited with convincing Fred French to take a chance with Tudor City. To its left, rowhouses on 41st Street about to undergo demolition.




The parks are now home to several antique cast iron urns, once owned by Billy Rose, the theatrical impresario who lived in a No. 25 penthouse; the urns decorated his outdoor terrace. When Rose left Tudor City in the 1940s, he sold them to the Walliser family. Mr. Walliser grew fond of the urns and said they belonged in the parks, and they were given to the Greens as a gift by his widow, Mrs. Ursula Walliser, after his death. Above left, in the South Park and right, the North Park.

This item was gleaned from the newsletter of Tudor City Greens. Read the latest issue here.

  



Finally, one of the rare advertisements for No. 2, Tudor Gardens, upon its opening in the fall of 1955.   


3 comments:

  1. AnonymousJuly 06, 2025

    Thank you!

    ReplyDelete
  2. AnonymousJuly 06, 2025

    Thank you for the great stuff every week! Appreciate you!

    ReplyDelete
  3. AnonymousJuly 07, 2025

    Love it!

    ReplyDelete