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The entrance hall and stairway of the John S. Rogers house.
The entrance hall and stairway of the John S. Rogers house.

The John S. Rogers House

A Brief Literature Search

Copyright © 1998 by Christopher Gray

Given here are the results of a limited literature search on the John S. and Catherine Rogers house at 53 East 79th Street, designed in 1916 by Trowbridge & Livingston and purchased and remodeled in 1936-1937 as the fourth home of the New York Society Library.

The Rogers family lived at 29 West 57th Street and Tuxedo Park in 1916 when Mrs. Rogers, the former Catherine Dodge, took title to two old brownstones at 53 and 55 East 79th Street, which they demolished. The Rogers house was completed in 1918.

This survey, although not exhaustive, is designed to capture most articles in major architectural and decorating journals of the period. Bard Rogers Hamlen (10 Maxfield Street, West Roxbury, MA, 02132), a grandchild of John and Catherine Rogers, kindly checked her holdings of family material, and reports that she has family photographs, plus family diaries, a wedding service booklet, some correspondance and a silver nursery tea set.

What is keenly missed in this report is an account from an architectural or library journal about the scope, concept and assumptions of the 1936-1937 renovation, but that may turn up in a more dedicated search.

Christopher Gray
October 9, 1998

THE ARCHITECTURAL REVIEW
VOL. VII, No. 2
PLATE XXII

NYSL: Exterior

GENERAL VIEW OF EXTERIOR

RESIDENCE FOR JOHN S. ROGERS, ESQ.,
53 EAST 79TH STREET, NEW YORK

TROWBRIDGE & LIVINGSTON, ARCHITECTS

 

THE ARCHITECTURAL REVIEW
VOL. VIII, No. 2
PLATE XXIII

NYSL: Entrance Hall, Stairway

ENTRANCE HALL, STAIRWAY

NYSL: Stairway Landing

STAIRWAY LANDING

RESIDENCE FOR JOHN S. ROGERS, ESQ.,
53 EAST 79TH STREET, NEW YORK

TROWBRIDGE & LIVINGSTON, ARCHITECTS

 

THE ARCHITECTURAL REVIEW
VOL. VIII, No. 2
PLATE XXIV

NYSL: Entrance Hall

ENTRANCE HALL

RESIDENCE FOR JOHN S. ROGERS, ESQ.,
53 EAST 79TH STREET, NEW YORK

TROWBRIDGE & LIVINGSTON, ARCHITECTS

 

 THE ARCHITECTURAL REVIEW
VOL. VIII, No. 2
PLATE XXV

DRAWING ROOM

RESIDENCE FOR JOHN S. ROGERS, ESQ.,
53 EAST 79TH STREET, NEW YORK

TROWBRIDGE & LIVINGSTON, ARCHITECTS

 

 THE ARCHITECTURAL REVIEW
VOL. VIII, No. 2
PLATE XXVI

NYSL: Reception Room, 1919. The Architectural Review

RECEPTION ROOM

RESIDENCE FOR JOHN S. ROGERS, ESQ.,
53 EAST 79TH STREET, NEW YORK

TROWBRIDGE & LIVINGSTON, ARCHITECTS

 

THE ARCHITECTURAL REVIEW
VOL. VIII, No. 2
PLATE XXVII

NYSL: Library, 1919. The Architectural Review

LIBRARY

RESIDENCE FOR JOHN S. ROGERS, ESQ.,
53 EAST 79TH STREET, NEW YORK

TROWBRIDGE & LIVINGSTON, ARCHITECTS

 

THE ARCHITECTURAL REVIEW
VOL. VIII, No. 2
PLATE XXVIII

NYSL: Dining-Room Fireplace, 1919. The Architectural Review

DINING-ROOM FIREPLACE

RESIDENCE FOR JOHN S. ROGERS, ESQ.,
53 EAST 79TH STREET, NEW YORK

TROWBRIDGE & LIVINGSTON, ARCHITECTS

 

THE ARCHITECTURAL REVIEW
VOL. VIII, No. 2
PLATE XXVIII

NYSL: Dining-Room, 1919. The Architectural Review

DINING-ROOM

RESIDENCE FOR JOHN S. ROGERS, ESQ.,
53 EAST 79TH STREET, NEW YORK

TROWBRIDGE & LIVINGSTON, ARCHITECTS

 

Fourteenth Census of the United States
1920: 17 residents (10 staff)

NameRelation to headSex/Race/AgeNativityArrival year
(if not USA)
Occupation
John S. RogersheadM W 43New York  
CatherinewifeF W 31New York  
John S. Jr.sonM W 12New York  
Frederick (?)sonM W 10New York  
CatherinedaughterF W 9/12New York  
Alfred GolleyservantM W 28England1911private servant
Mathilda ClarkservantF W 43Ireland1894service
Frances LippservantF W 23Germany1905kitchen maid
Henriette BalscuservantF W 38Switzerland1906governess
Bella DavidsonservantF W 34Scotland1909maid
Mary A. JonesservantF W 34England1907nurse
Mary JedgeservantF W 33Ireland1902domestic
Nora MurphyservantF W 23Ireland1914laundress
Aurora MickelsonservantF W 34Finland1915cook
Fred JohnsonservantM W 25New York houseman

 

Augusta Owen Patterson
American Homes of To-Day (1924)
[excerpt: pages 172, 173; 2 plates]

The town house of Mr. and Mrs. John S. Rogers at 53 East 79th Street has another very fine library. This, as has been observed, is in the period of the Regency. It is very large, very graceful, very comfortable, with a grate fire to give that fitful light on the color of the books on a winter afternoon. The house has, according to the architects' own statement, been built around the furniture and tapestries, which are confined mainly to the drawing room which is not illustrated. The library is on the second floor, facing on Seventy-ninth Street. The walls here are in walnut, as in the Burden residence. A special feature is the rounded corner, shown in the illustration. The books are flush with the wall, the openings for them utilized for the introduction of delicate curves and light decoration. The dark wood of the walls is connected quite beautifully with the light cream of the ceiling by a cove, colored a deep ivory, with delicate beadings and corner ornamentation. The room is filled comfortably with furniture, all good, all suitable. Several of the chairs are of the Louis XV type in walnut, with needle point and tapestry seats and backs, the wood here and there revealing a glint of gold. The hangings are old blue and gold damask. The rugs are richly oriental, deepen ing in color and tone as they near the stone fireplace. Admirable as the details'of the furnishings are, it is, however, the room itself which represents the real, achievement. It is at once domestic, spacious, elegant, entirely right. It is a room well worth doing.

The dining room in the Rogers residence is composed of panels painted by the famous Jansen of Paris, the architects having supervised the moldings and other architectural details. Jansen also designed and painted much of the furniture. The tone of the room is the green which Corot brought to such a point of appreciation, the floral and landscape decoration introducing soft natural colors which do not interfere with its abstract beauty. The silk hangings keep the scale of the panels, touching a note a little higher on the keyboard of color, yet still a gentle, subdued note that is neither dull nor dead. The one tone rug more definitely touches on the gray in the Corot green. A small and compactly modeled marble mantel with rounded corners, in a very original design of dwarfed pillars, is an attractive decoration for a particularly charming room. The residence throughout represents this quality of charm and tone.

NYSL: The dining room in the Rogers residence.
Photo. by Tebbs / TROWBRIDGE & LIVINGSTON , Architects

DINING ROOM IN THE TOWN HOUSE OF MR. AND MRS. ROGERS
This is composed of panels painted by Jansen of Paris, the architects having supervised the moldings and architectural details. Jansen also designed and painted much of the furniture. It is all cool and essentially polite. The theme is Corot green, with the sense of gray noted in the rug.

LIBRARY IN THE TOWN HOUSE OF MR. AND MRS. ROGERS
A very perfect redering of the French feeling in a New York house. This room is very large, very graceful, very comfortable. It derives from the Regency. The walls are in walnut, the rounded corners a special and delightful feature. The books are flush with the wall, the openings utilized for the introduction of delicate curves and light ornament. Note the fine corner decoration of the cove connecting the dark wood and the ceiling.