43rd Street Entrance of the New York City Bar Association Building, c. 1900
After the New York City Bar Association was founded in 1870, it housed itself in a series of buildings in Lower Manhattan. By the 1890s, membership of the Association had grown to the point where its leadership began looking for a new House farther uptown. On December 11, 1894 the membership approved the acquisition of a large site between West 43rd and West 44th Streets for the construction of a new, larger building. The street, already home to the Harvard Club of New York City and the Century Association, was considered by the members “specially adapted to our purposes” because of the other prominent clubs and societies in its vicinity.[2]
The new House was considerably larger and grander than its precursors: it stood six stories tall; included a meeting hall with a seating capacity of 1,500; a reception hall with a standing capacity of 1,500; a library of over 50,000 volumes, and three additional floors of offices. The entrance hall and first floor stairways were constructed of marble, and the second floor hallway, reception hall, and meeting hall of granite, marble, and mahogany.
The Association opened the doors of its new House on October 8, 1896, with a gala of several thousand guests. The New York Times described it as “one of the most interesting and successful works of recent architecture…a work having the classical qualities of simplicity, purity, and serenity in a high degree.” [3]
The entrance hall of the New York City Bar Association, 2010.
The entrance hall preserves the marble Ionic columns and tile mosaic floors of the original, 1896 Eidlitz design.
The meeting hall of the New York City Bar Association, 2010.
The reception hall of the New York City Bar Association, 2010.
A bust of Lord Russell of Killowen, executed by Thomas Brock in 1901. The bust was given to the Association in 1903, and now sits above a granite fireplace in the Association's library.
^“The House of the Association.” New York, NY: The New York City Bar Association. October 8, 1996. p. 6
^“The House of the Association.” New York, NY: The New York City Bar Association. October 8, 1996. p. 10
Bibliography
“The House of the Association.” New York, NY: The New York City Bar Association. October 8, 1996.
Martin, George. Causes and Conflicts: The Centennial History of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York. New York, NY: Fordham University Press, 1997. ISBN0-8232-1735-3