An 1850s red schoolhouse hiding in the middle of the Flower District

Imagine being a school-age kid in the New York City of the 1850s. If you were wealthy, your education would be in the hands of private tutors. When you became older, private academies or finishing schools completed your education. You may have even gone to college, perhaps, if you were male.

If you were not rich, you could attend a local free school (or one of the “colored schools” set aside for African American children in the segregated city) until you were old enough to pursue a trade or profession.

Of course, you might not go to school at all—even a minimal amount of schooling was not compulsory until the state passed a law in 1874.

But if getting a basic education was your goal, 1853 would have been a pivotal year. That’s when the New York City Board of Education merged with an older school association called the Public School Society. The invigorated Board began replacing outdated public school buildings with modern facilities to better serve the children of the booming city, whose population was hovering around 600,000.

One of these new schoolhouses still survives. Appropriately painted red and long since empty of students, it sits on the commercial stretch of West 28th Street between Sixth and Seventh Avenues, one of the last vestiges of the Flower District (top photo).

As buildings go, it’s quite a beauty. “One of the three oldest public school buildings in Manhattan, its Italianate design is characteristic of the period, with a symmetrical facade featuring a slightly projecting central section with shallow pediment,” noted the Historic Districts Council of what was called School 48 in Ward 20.

What would it have been like to attend this school on wide-open, almost bucolic West 28th Street in the 1850s? The illustration above (undated, but likely produced soon after the school opened) helps us imagine it.

Newspaper archives fill in the blanks. The New York Times covered the opening ceremonies on January 30, 1856. It was a day heavy with city dignitaries and Ward 20 officials, but the Times took note of the grounds and facilities as well: a playground, library room, teachers’ reception room, and a couple of rooms “for the janitor’s family.”

A girls’ department contained eight classrooms; the boys’ department had six, all of which had bookcases and closets. The classrooms were lit by gas. “A full corps of teachers” was tasked with educating about 750 students. The “beautiful building,” as the Times deemed it, cost $55,000 to build.

Graduation was held every year and even made it into the newspapers. To help wounded Civil War soldiers, schoolkids helped raise funds and donated it to the Ladies’ Home for Sick and Wounded Soldiers on Lexington Avenue and East 51st Street.

In the 1880s, Ward School 48 became Grammar School 48, an all-girls public school in the much more populated Chelsea neighborhood.

The Sixth Avenue corner of the block became home to an elevated train station, lending a rougher edge to the area. (The third photo was taken from the el station; the school can be seen on the left.)

After the turn of the 20th century, Grammar School 48 no longer served as a school, yet the lovely schoolhouse remained mostly intact and untouched (fourth photo, from 1940).

Today, flower companies occupy the converted commercial spaces on the ground floor. Between the truck traffic and the honking of horns, it’s not hard to imagine the school when it rang with the shouts and laughter of young children.

[Second image: NYPL; third image: MCNY F2013.126.19; fourth image: NYC Department of Records & Information Services]

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14 Responses to “An 1850s red schoolhouse hiding in the middle of the Flower District”

  1. andrewalpern Says:

    Super images. Note the quaint roof over the stair down from the platform of the 28th Street station of the Sixth Avenue Elevated. Here is the view looking in the opposite direction.

    • ephemeralnewyork Says:

      Quaint indeed! I love the image showing the street in the opposite direction—it came to me via email rather than in the comments here.

  2. Peter Weiss Says:

    Who or what is occupying the upper floors and how are they being used?

  3. alewifecove Says:

    What do you suppose the string running from the middle window, top-right, to the roof is about?

  4. seanglenn47 Says:

    I love the mention of the school’s location as “The Flower District”, which was the wholesale district for flowers, and is dimishing daily. On my job in ancient times, I worked in the Flower District and all these other districts: Fur (West 30s between 7th & 8th), Accessories (purses, gloves – the side streets around the Empire State Building), Haberdashery (37th, 38th between 6th & 7th Avenues – does not even exist anymore – no more men’s fedoras being made over there), Jewelry (47th Street between 5th & 6th Avenues), Antiques & Rugs (both Madison & Fifth Avenues from 28th to 32nd Streets, the Meatpacking (Far West 12th, 14th, & Gansevoort Streets – gone now) & of course, the Garment (35th to 41st, between Broadway & 7th & 8th Avenues). It was never boring, and you met really interesting people in all of them. The Jewelry District and the Garment District are still very active – the other ones, not so much. Glenn in Brooklyn, NY.

  5. velovixen Says:

    When I worked nearby, I passed thar building. Thank you for sharing its story.

    I couldn’t help but to think the building could have been one of the “holdouts “ you have written about in previous posts.

    The schoolhouse once cultivated minds and spirits. Somehow it’s fitting that it now houses flower businesses.

    • ephemeralnewyork Says:

      I hope what’s left of the Flower District remains in place, and this beautiful former schoolhouse continues to be occupied by flower-related businesses. I worry that the entire block will be bought up by a developer, and the businesses and riff-raffy street life replaced by condo towers.

  6. Anna Lehr Says:

    Would love future article on the Lades Home mentioned at Lex and 51st Sts.

  7. David Mayhew Says:

    This brings back memories. In 1981 and 1982 I was Managing Director of an ethnic, short-lived theater company, The Greek Theatre of New York, that performed on the second floor. The space was a 100 seat Off Off Broadway theater located behind the three right-hand second floor windows. A wonderful space. The two windows to the left were the offices. Previously the theater had been home to one of the mainstays of the Off Off Broadway theater movement, The Impossible Ragtime Theatre. Brian Dennehy made his NYC debut in that theater as did many others. Around 1986 it had become a rental space. A musical called “Olympus on My Mind” premiered there with Faith Prince, Jason Graae and Lewis J. Stadlen, among others, before moving to the Lamb’s Club Theater in the Times Square area. Also in the mid-1980s the three second floor windows on the left were home to TADA!, a youth theater company that continues to this day just down the street at 15 West 28th Street. I wish I could post photos here; I have a couple of scans of IRT program pages showing the address and cast lists. Great memories.

  8. Thom Haneline Says:

    You said the ground floor is used for office space. Are the upper floors used at all? Are they in good shape?

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