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notes
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Landmarks
Preservation Commission. Designated June 30, 1998; LP-1993
Summary
This relatively modest Federal style
rowhouse is a rare survivor of its type and era. Built about 1829 as one
of a group of three for Isaac Ludlam, a New York City surveyor, the house
occupies a twenty-foot wide lot on the south side of East Broadway, not
far from the East River. Two-and-a-half stories high and three bays wide,
the house has characteristic features of the Federal style including
Flemish bond brickwork, brownstone lintels and sills at the window
openings, and a sloping roof with two pedimented dormers containing arched
window openings. At the time the house was built, this was a fashionable
residential district. Ludlam lived in the house from 1836 to 1853. Between
1864 and 1903, the house was owned and occupied by shoemaker George Leicht
and his family. Leicht's shop was in the basement. Between 1909 and 1977,
it was the home and offices of two different doctors. The house has been
owned since 1977 by the Henry Street Settlement, which undertook
renovation and restoration work on the house beginning in 1996. Thus, this
house reveals through its architecture and its owners the rich and diverse
history of the Lower East Side. |