There are several significant landmarks on 85th Street.
East Side The building at 100 East 85th Street, originally known as
Lewis Gouverneur and Nathalie Bailey Morris House, is a large brick red townhouse that was built in 1913–14 in a neo-
Federal style. Its architect was
Ernest Flagg. It was designated a landmark by the
New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission in 1973, and added to the
National Register of Historic Places in 1977.
Congregation Kehilath Jeshurun (originally "Anshe Jeshurun"), a
Modern Orthodox synagogue founded by Russian Jewish immigrants in 1872, is located at 125 East 85th Street, between
Park Avenue and
Lexington Avenue, in a building built in 1902. The lower division of the
Ramaz School, a coeducational, private Modern Orthodox Jewish prep school, shares a building with the congregation. The
German American Bund, an American
Nazi organization, had its national headquarters at 178 East 85th Street from 1936 through the early 1940s, and occasionally paraded in the neighborhood in
Nazi uniforms. Park Lane Tower, the 35-story L-shaped high-rise apartment building shown in the opening credits of the television show
The Jeffersons (1975-1985), is located at 185 East 85th Street and
Third Avenue. Designed by architect
Hyman Isaac Feldman and completed in 1967, the beige-brick structure features distinctive rounded balconies at its corners and angled balconies on its sides. The
sidewalk clock at East 85th Street and
Third Avenue, dating from the late 1800s and likely produced by
E. Howard & Co., was designated a landmark in 1981. Constructed to resemble a pocket watch, it is high including its base. Instrument maker
Vincent Bach manufactured trumpets and trumpet mouthpieces at 204 East 85th Street in the early 20th century. The building at 209 East 85th Street was constructed in 1919 aS the union hall of the
Musical Mutual Protective Union.
Minnie Marx and
Sam Marx, the parents and manager of the
Marx Brothers, lived at 330 East 85th Street. The
clapboard shingle house at 412 East 85th Street was built around 1855. It was restored in 1988 by architect
Alfredo De Vido. Author
Louise Fitzhugh lived at 524 East 85th Street, between East End and
York Avenues, and her heroine "Harriet" in
Harriet the Spy lived in the area. The glassy
Modernist building at 525 East 85th Street was built in 1958. Its architect was Paul Mitarachi. In the early 1880s, most of the cross-town traffic in the area traveled on it.
Southwest Reservoir Bridge, at 85th Street in Central Park, was designed by
Calvert Vaux and is decorated with elegant iron floral scroll ornamentation along its of railings and
spandrels. (Egbert Viele, circa 1857) The site of
Seneca Village is in Central Park near West 85th Street. The three lots on which the village was established were purchased in 1825 by Andrew Williams for $125 ($ in current dollar terms), and sold by him to the City of New York three decades later for $2,335 ($ in current dollar terms). In the mid-19th century it was a shanty-town, and it may have been populated by
free blacks in the early 1800s. The
African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church was at this location. '''Mariners' Gate''' is at Central Park and West 85th Street, at an entrance to the park. The name for the gate was chosen as reflecting one of the types of people it was expected would be enjoying the park, at the time the park was built.
West Side Rossleigh Court at 1 West 85th Street, constructed between 1906 and 1907, was designed by
Mulliken and
Moeller and built by Gotham Building and Construction. It followed the popular "French Flat" model in a
Beaux-Arts style. Novelist
Ellen Glasgow lived in the building for a few months every year in the early 20th century. 44 West 85th Street was the location of the
Nippon Club of New York City, a private social club founded in 1905 by
Jōkichi Takamine for Japanese Americans and Japanese nationals, in the early 20th century. At 140 West 85th Street, a
Dawn Redwood (
metasequoia glyptostroboides) endangered
coniferous tree can be seen.
Mannes College of Music is a
music school located at 150 West 85th Street, which moved there in 1984 seeking larger quarters. 329, 331, 333, 335, and 337 West 85th Street were built in 1890–91. They are
brownstone and brick
Queen Anne-
Romanesque Revival architecture. Journalist
Heywood Broun and feminist
Ruth Hale lived at 333 West 85th Street. It was one of the first
apartment buildings in the area, supplanting the earlier
row houses. ==See also==