The house was commissioned for
Henry Seligman, a prominent banker. He was born in 1857 and his father and uncles had cofounded the banking firm
J. & W. Seligman & Co. in
Lower Manhattan in 1864. The Seligman family was a prominent German- and Jewish-American family during the late 19th century and was nicknamed the "American Rothschilds". In March 1899, Henry Seligman married 40-year-old Adelaide Walter, who went by the nickname "Addie" and had previously been married to Henry's cousin David.
Seligman residence In September 1899, Henry Seligman bought two four-story rowhouses at 30 and 32 West 56th Street from James Lenox Banks and Mrs. Sheppard Knapp, respectively. He planned to build a new residence on the site. Seligman hired C. P. H. Gilbert to design his house. At the time, many wealthy residents around Fifth Avenue in Midtown were commissioning New York City's top architects to design their houses. By September 1901, the house had been completed. The Seligman couple's children Gladys, Rhoda, and Walter lived in the house, as did various waitstaff. as did Rhoda's marriage to Frederick Lewissohn in 1907. Henry Seligman was involved in numerous clubs and
Republican Party politics. Addie Seligman was also involved in the leadership of various clubs and societies, including the St. Cecilia Club musical organization, the Mount Sinai Training School for Nurses, and political organizations. She held various events at the house for these clubs. a dinner in which New York governor
Charles Seymour Whitman was a guest, and a
contract bridge party to raise money for the
YMCA. The family also constructed houses at
Elberon, New Jersey, and
Palm Beach, Florida, which were respectively used as summer and winter homes. some of which were accompanied by musical programs and special guests. The annual December receptions ended when Henry Seligman died of a heart attack at his 56th Street home on December 23, 1933. Addie Seligman, who had been ill for several weeks at the time of her husband's death, died a month later on January 31, 1934.
Mid-20th century Adelaide Seligman's estate auctioned the furniture and tableware in April 1934; the dinner plates alone netted $2,660.92 (). Early that June, the association opened its new quarters with a housewarming party. Adelaide Seligman's estate sold the house in February 1935 to politician
Joseph L. Buttenwieser, for about $77,500 (), while the house was still under lease to the Beethoven Association. According to the
New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC), Buttenwieser did not live in the house and only owned it for investment purposes. as well as benefit concerts. The house was renovated in 1939 for private clubhouse usage. Arthur D. Kunze acquired the house in May 1941. At the time, it was occupied by the Horizon Club, described in
The New York Times as "a social organization composed of Russians". The ground floor was also occupied by Camillo Restaurant, which moved into the space in 1940. After acquiring the house, Kunze renovated the upper stories into residential apartments, which became home to various garment industry workers, actors, musicians, and singers. at an assessed value of $135,000 (). By July 1947, a restaurant named Leslie House had opened within the building. Monaco Restaurant opened in the house in 1949. The light court in the rear was enclosed the next year, at which point the ground floor was occupied by Blair House Restaurant.
Late 20th century to present By 1964, the restaurant space was occupied by Korean restaurant Arirang House.
Romeo Salta took over the restaurant space in 1971 for his own Italian restaurant. The restaurant had relocated from another address on the same block, which it had occupied for nearly two decades previously. With its relocation to 30 West 56th Street, Salta was able to expand its space. Around the same time, Italian clothing manufacturer
Cerruti 1881 also had a store in the building. The block's restaurant row declined in the two decades following the mid-1970s. Romeo Salta moved out of the house in 1994. a fashion company operated by Alberta Ferretti. The new tenant, Fashion Service USA, chose the house because it contained enough space for meetings and a showroom. The company planned to restore the space to its original condition; at the time, the rooms were mostly unchanged, but the center staircase had been demolished. On July 24, 2007, the
New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission designated the former Seligman residence at 30 West 56th Street as a city landmark, along with the Frederick C. Edey residence at 10 West 56th Street. The Seligman house was transferred to Ferrim USA Inc in 2012 for $13.35 million. Aeffe USA then leased the building from Ferrim USA for 15 years, paying $900,000 a year. By the 2020s, Aeffe USA planned to relocate its showroom into a smaller space in
Tribeca. ==See also==