William Salomon House

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

refer to caption
William A. Salomon Town House

The William Salomon House was a mansion located on 1020 Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, New York City.

The house was built in the 1880s as a four-story brownstone home.[1]:147 It was formerly the residence of Richard Arnold, founder of Arnold Constable & Company department store, who died in 1886.[2] The site was sold to banker William Salomon Sr. in 1900; he hired Trowbridge & Livingston to renovate the existing house.[1]:147[3] In 1901 he acquired furnishings in Florence, Italy, for the home.[4] The house was completed by 1906.[5] The site measured 62.6 feet (19.1 m) on Fifth Avenue and 100 feet (30 m) on 83rd Street.[6]

During his later life, Salomon acquired large amounts of Old Master paintings for the house.[7] After Salomon died in 1919,[8] the Duveen Brothers bought 15 Old Masters in January 1923 for about $1 million.[7] Salomon's possessions were sold for $1,292,847 in April 1923, but there were no bids for the mansion itself.[9] The site was sold in May 1924.[6] Built at the same address was 1020 Fifth Avenue, an apartment building completed in 1925.[10]

Further reading

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI