Springside: Broadway estate once hosted Irving School for Boys, now iconic Sleepy Hollow High
This mid-1860s mansion, shown in an undated early 20th century photo,was built by chocolate magnate William Lawrence Wallace on his 10-acre Springside estate in what is now the Village of Sleepy Hollow, N.Y. It was home to 13 Wallace children born to three different wives. After 1904 it became one of three main buildings on the Irving School for Boys campus. The Irving School, named for co-founder Washington Irving, was established in 1836 as the Irving Institute. The name was changed in 1891 (Photo courtesy Westchester County Historical Society, special thanks to Patrick Raftery, WCHS Assistant Director and Librarian) |
Springside enjoyed Hudson River vistas, a 10-acre tract on the east side of North Broadway just inside today’s Village of Sleepy Hollow. It would become home to one of the nation’s top private boarding schools, The Irving School for Boys, in 1904 and it's where Sleepy Hollow High School opened in 1957.
This 1868 north-south oriented map shows the 10-acre Springside estate established by Manhattan confectioner William Lawrence Wallace on what is today the Sleepy Hollow side of its Andre Brook border with Tarrytown. Springside featured a gatehouse near its southern gate on Broadway with a stable for horses and carriages at its southeastern intersection with the Croton aqueduct. The main mansion is just above the L in W.L.Wallace above Springside.The estate continues east beyond the aqueduct. The site would become home to the Irving School for Boys in 1904 and Sleepy Hollow High School in 1957. Springside surrounded two of the three sides of the First Reformed Church and parsonage property (center top) off North Broadway that is the Korean Church of Westchester today. The property on the immediate north side of the First Reformed Church would become the Larchlawn estate of John Myers Furman after 1891 when he bought the Irving Institute on nearby Pocantico Street. Furman would buy Springside in 1904 and make it the campus of the renamed Irving School which it remained until 1955. Furman turned the old Springside gatehouse into the Irving School's infirmary soon after buying the estate and bought the nearby church's parsonage in 1929 for school use as well. (Frederick W. Beers, 1868, David Rumsey Historical Map Collection) |
Wallace manufactured and retailed his own chocolate in Manhattan and built his mansion before 1868 at 210 North Broadway diagonally across from Patriots Park on what is today's Tarrytown/Sleepy Hollow border. He was living in the general area no later than 1853.
The Richmond, Va., native might best be remembered today for the $60,000 ($2 million today) he spent to build the Tarrytown Music Hall at 13 Main Street, Tarrytown – a block west of Broadway – which opened in December 1885 and still operates at a high level today. When he first built it, it was called Wallace’s Opera House. It is the oldest operating theater in Westchester County and has been a staple on the Tarrytown scene for the better part of 140 years.
Wallace’s first confectioner's store was at 29 Cortlandt Street in Manhattan, a couple of blocks east of today’s One World Trade Center, the former Freedom Tower. When Wallace’s chocolate empire was at its peak, the Trade Center site had been home to the Washington Market since 1813. The market generated massive foot traffic and sales for Wallace.
Later, Wallace and Company opened a chocolate manufacturing operation at 1149 Broadway, a four-story building that still stands, in February 1885. The company’s mantra was “Wallace and Company: Manufacturers of fine chocolates, chocolate bon bons and French confectionery by steam process.” The ground floor at 1149 Broadway – between 26th and 27th streets – was Wallace’s retail shop. The factory was in the top floors. Today the ground floor remains a retail shop, as of late 2023 the Fellow Barber NoMad Flatiron salon.
William Lawrence Wallace, c. 1885 |
Wallace married three times and was widowed twice. He had four children with his first wife, 28-year-old Caroline Jannett Hooff of Washington, D.C. She was his first cousin – his mother’s brother’s daughter – and he eloped with her against his father’s wishes. Wallace’s father disowned him as a result . Caroline died at 37 on May 4, 1860 in Manhattan, nine days after giving birth to the couple's fourth child, son Carolyn Stuart.
Carolyn – yes, a boy – was preceded by sisters Eliza Hooff and Isabella (who would die at age four), and brother William Halsey Wallace. The name Carolyn apparently confused census takers; in the 1860 U.S. Census, the three-month-old infant’s identity is handwritten, incorrectly, as “Calvin, Son.”
Wallace next wed Caroline Goldsborough Gardner, 34, in 1862. Her father Col. John L. Gardner had just retired from an artillery command for the Union Army, capping a 48-year career that had begun during the War of 1812 and ended with seven months service in the Civil War.
Wallace married for a third time, c. 1875. His wife, Emilie Frances Savage, may have been as young as 18 at the time and at any event was several months younger than Wallace’s eldest child, daughter Eliza. Emilie was 27 years younger than Wallace and the couple had four children, sons Robert Newby and Maury Savage and daughters Emilie Laurette and Jessie Hunter.
Wallace's will at his death in November 1890 saw the late businessman name Eliza and Emilie two of three co-executors of his estate -- a male neighbor was the third -- and noted that Eliza had faithfully and diligently helped raise many of her half-siblings. None of Wallace’s daughters married during his lifetime, except Kate, who eloped against her father’s orders and was disowned by Wallace, just as Wallace's own father had once disowned him.
Kate ran off with Harry Hamilton Wood in 1889, just over a year before her father’s death from pneumonia. Kate, 24, and Harry, 23, wed in Jersey City, New Jersey and made their home in Harry’s hometown of Ossining, not far from Kate’s father’s estate. She eventually reached a $15,000 settlement with her family to end her litigation over the will. Brother Carolyn Stuart was left a nominal $50 in the will because his father said in the will he’d advanced him extensive funds while he was living. The son also sued and reached a $15,000 settlement with the estate. The rest of Wallace’s $1 million estate – the equivalent of $34 million in 2023 – was supposed to be divided equally among surviving family members after the North Broadway estate was sold.
Eliza never did marry. She ended up as a boarder in a house in Mount Vernon, N.Y. The Woodses’ ill-fated union ended in divorce after three children and a little more than a decade. Kate ended up living out her days in a rented apartment in Manhattan and Harry wound up a field hand for an Indiana farmer, dying of a fractured skull suffered in a farm accident in 1929.
In life, Wallace, an Episcopalian, served as Senior Warden at St. Mark’s Memorial Church – known colloquially at its inception as Washington Irving Memorial Church. It became Immaculate Conception Roman Catholic Church in 1957 and today is St. John Paul II Maronite Catholic Church at Immaculate Conception. It remains at 199 North Broadway, Sleepy Hollow, near Wallace’s old estate.
After Wallace’s death in 1890, the chocolate factory moved to Brooklyn where it continued to operate through the first half of the 20th century.
This postcard, c. 1917, shows the Irving School for Boys campus on the old Springside estate of William Wallace with its three main buildings. The Springside mansion (left) came with the purchase of the estate and was used by the school. The building at center is believed to be the first building constructed on the property after the move and consisted of the main body, which was new construction, as well as the left and right wings which were moved from the school’s old campus on Pocantico Street off Beekman Avenue. The final building, which housed the school’s gymnasium, among other things, was the South Building, right, which was built in 1912. (Postcard courtesy Westchester County Historical Society) |
The Irving Institute, “An English and Classical Boarding School for Young Gentlemen,” was founded in 1836 by author and diplomat Washington Irving, writer, journalist and editor William Cullen Bryant of the New York Evening Post newspaper (The New York Post today), Scarborough estate owner and U.S. Navy Vice Admiral Alexander Slidell Mackenzie, and Daniel Webster (Congressman, orator, U.S. Secretary of State under three presidents), among others. It began its first term in 1837 in a building on the site of today’s Van Tassell Apartments, 95 Beekman Avenue, Sleepy Hollow, and remained there until after the Civil War when it moved less than two blocks away to the northeast corner of Pocantico Street at its intersection with Howard Street when the institute was purchased by a new headmaster, David S. Rowe.
The old Beekman Avenue building remained the site of schools for some six more decades. It was F.J. Jackson Military Academy until about 1900 and from then to 1926 it was St. Teresa’s Parochial School, affiliated with St. Teresa of Avila Catholic Church. The church remains at 130 Beekman Avenue today.
Rowe bequeathed the Irving Institute to son-in-law Frank Armagnac in the early 1880s. Armagnac sold the school to John Myers Furman in 1891. Furman purchased the former 10-acre Wallace estate from Wallace’s heirs in 1904 and moved the newly renamed Irving School for Boys to that location where it would remain until closing its doors in 1955.
The Irving School for Boys’ proprietor and headmaster Rev. Dr. John Myers Furman is shown in a 1925 photo. (Irving School yearbook Sketch Book 1925) |
According to a prospectus for the school published in the Aug. 24, 1836 edition of The New York Evening Post newspaper, it was noted for its healthy, country location while still being accessible, “being visited morning and afternoon by steamship from New York.” The railroad would not come to Tarrytown until 1849.”
The campus of the Irving School for Boys is shown in a c. 1914 postcard after the school’s move to the campus – formerly the Springside estate – in 1904 by owner and headmaster, Episcopal Rev. Dr. John Myers Furman. The original William L. Wallace Springside mansion is at left center with mansard roof. Furman added the other two main school buildings right center and right by 1912 after buying the 10-acre estate from Wallace’s heirs. The old gatehouse from Springside, bottom left, was turned into the school's infirmary. Furman changed the college preparatory boarding school’s name from Irving Institute when he bought it in 1891 The school was founded in 1837 and the property and buildings sold to the Public Schools of the Tarrytowns in 1955. Since September 1957 the campus has been the site of Sleepy Hollow High School, 210 North Broadway, Sleepy Hollow, N.Y. At far left, front, is the former First Reformed Church, which is now the Korean Church of Westchester. The Reformed Church's parsonage, not pictured, was at the back of the church and was purchased by Furman in 1929 for school use, likely as a dormitory. (Image courtesy The Historical Society, Inc., Serving Sleepy Hollow & Tarrytown) |
The prospectus continues: “A commodious brick edifice has been erected expressly for (the school). The grounds are ample, offering abundant opportunity for sports in the open air, and quite retired from the village (today’s Tarrytown, the village wasn’t incorporated until 1870). The site being elevated, the prospect is extensive and delightful, commanding a view of the river from New York (City) to the (Hudson) Highlands (of Orange and Putnam counties).
“… The moral welfare of youth being always a consideration of the first importances, it is an object of solicitude with the Principals (headmasters William P. Lyon and Charles H. Lyon) to bring their pupils under the salutary influence of moral and religious principles, without interfering at all with the tenets of particular denominations. Each pupil must be provided with a Bible and will be required to attend at family prayers morning and evening, and public worship on the Sabbath in one of the churches (of which there are four) in the village, such place as may be agreeable to the wishes of parents or guardian.
Miss Metcalf’s School for Girls occupied this house, shown in an undated Russell & Lawrie Druggists postcard, likely c. 1900, which still stands at 15 College Avenue, Sleepy Hollow, directly behind the former St. Mark's Memorial Episcopal Church, today’s St. John Paul II Maronite Catholic Church at the Immaculate Conception at College and Broadway, across the street from the Irving School. The Irving School purchased the Miss Metcalf house in 1919 for use as a dormitory for its boarding students. On the bottom right of the photo, note what appears to be a sort of sidewalk extension into the street that includes a block for people to step down from a horse or carriage and to its left a hitching post for horses. (Postcard courtesy Westchester County Historical Society) |
“The studies (offered) are: Orthography, Reading, English Grammar, Rhetoric, Geography, Astronomy, History, Composition and Elocution; Arithmetic, Algebra, Mensuration, Geometry, Trigonometry, Surveying, Penmanship and Bookkeeping; Chemistry, Natural Philosophy (today’s physics), Botany, Geology, Mineralogy, Natural History; Latin, Greek, Hebrew, French and Spanish languages; Greek and Roman Antiquities; Ancient Geography and Mythology.
“… The year is divided into two sessions – one commencing on the 1st of May, and the other on the 1st of November, each succeeded by a vacation of three weeks …
“… Terms, $100 per session ($3,412 today) … This will include tuition, board, washing mending, fuel, light, etc., and also the use of the library. There will be no extra charges. Pupils … can remain in the family of the Principal during the vacations, if desired – subject to charge for board.”
This artist's rendering of Sleepy Hollow High School and its campus is shown shortly after its opening on a postcard c. 1958. |
Fascinating and thorough account. Thanks, once again Mark Donovan.
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