Every so often, I find an animal story of Old New York that is so silly or absurd, I start laughing out loud. I hope this following tale of a neighbor dispute on Putnam Avenue in Bushwick, Brooklyn will also leave you laughing. (And if you want something more serious, I explore a bit of this neighborhood’s history after the cat tale.)
The story takes place at an existing 4-story tenement building on the corner of Putnam Avenue and Bushwick Avenue. Unlike today, the building had a large yard in the back, where Mrs. Bertha Grimm, a resident, allowed her many cats to roam free. This situation did not sit well with Mrs. Jennie Simmons and her French poodle, Prince.
According to Mrs. Simmons, she believed that her dog had every right to enjoy playing in the yard without being hassled by the dozen or so cats that belonged to Mrs. Grimm. She tried to work out a schedule with the cat lady so that dog and cats could have equal yard time, but Mrs. Grimm reportedly would not budge.
One day, Mrs. Simmons was in the yard with Prince, whom she referred to as “the most innocent little dog on earth.” She carried a whip in her hand “to control the animal’s charming disobediences.” Sure.
As she was walking through the yard, a large white cat came flying down “like a cannon ball.” Next, a Maltese cat landed on the back of Mrs. Simmons, and a large black Tomcat with orange spots landed on the back of Prince, claws out, ready to fight.
Another cat bounced off the head of Mrs. Jennie Butler, a fellow resident who found herself in the wrong place at the wrong time. A total of 5 cats came flying down, landing in the yard.
No one was seriously injured, including the canine and felines (albeit, Mrs. Simmons told the judge that her little dog may never recover from the shock to his nerves).
Mrs. Simmons called the authorities and charged Mrs. Grimm with tossing the cats from her apartment window. At the Gates Avenue Court, Mrs. Grimm first said the cats were all sleeping on the window ledge, and they all simultaneously proceeded to fall into the yard. She later changed her absurd story and admitted that she had tossed them out the window “in a gentle and perfectly ladylike manner,” but she did not intend to harm anyone. Sure.
Mrs. Grimm said she did not object to the dog playing in the yard, as long as the cats were given some consideration. Magistrate Harris slapped her with a $200 bond to keep the peace for two months straight, and accepted her promise that her cats would never again rain down on the yard.
A Brief History of the Suydam House of Bushwick
The apartment building where Mrs. Grimm lived with her many cats was (and still is) on the corner of Putnam and Bushwick Avenues. Putnam Avenue was originally called Jacob Avenue, in honor of Jacob Suydam, who settled in Brooklyn in the late 1700s.
The written history of Bushwick goes back to 1661, when, according to “The Eastern District of Brooklyn,” several French men (Huguenots) were granted permission by Dutch Governor Peter Stuyvesant to settle in an area between Mespath Kill (Newtown Creek) and Norman’s Kill (Bushwick Creek).
This area became known as Boswijck (means heavy woods), or Bushwick, and was primarily used for grazing purposes. However, there was also a village, called Het Dorp, or Bushwick Green, toward which all the principal roads converged. Here was a church, a town hall, a school, a cemetery, and several houses.
During the Dutch colonial period, the common lands of the town–called Boswijck Nieuw Loten (New Lotts of Bushwick)–were divided among several freeholders. In 1700, a freeholder named William Van Nuyse selected a secluded spot along the first road in the settlement–called New Bushwick Lane (now Evergreen Avenue)–to build the first house in the town.
Sometime around 1724, Leffert Pietersen Van Haughwout (aka Leffert Lefferts), a French Huguenot immigrant and patriarch of the Lefferts family in Brooklyn, purchased the house and three lots from Van Nuyse. He also purchased about 70 acres of the New Bushwick Lotts and an additional 10 acres of woodland in Bushwick.
Over the years, Lefferts added to the property until the farm totaled about 136 acres. He also owned 25 acres of woodland in the town of Newtown. Lefferts lived in the home until his death in 1754.
In 1768, Leffert’s son–also named Leffert Lefferts–sold the home and the large parcel of farmland to Jacob Suydam.
Jacob Suydam, who worked as some type of smith in Flatbush, had 13 children with his wife, Seytje Jacobs. One of his sons, Hendrick, inherited the property and was living in the home when the British occupied Long Island during the Revolution.
To avoid becoming a prisoner, Hendrick took an oath of conformity and allowed the Hessians to lodge with him and his family. About 20 Hessians and a woman who cooked for them shared one room, and the Suydams lived on the other side of the house.
Jacob died in the home in 1811 at the age of 71. The last of the Suydams to occupy the house was Adrian Martense Suydam, a grandson of Jacob who was born in the home in 1826. At this time, the family farm extended from Knickerbocker Avenue to Broadway and from Jefferson Avenue to Palmetto Street.
In 1869, the Suydam house was still the only house on the large farm. During this time, Evergreen Avenue was just a turf road for farmers that comprised small ruts for the wagon wheels and two narrow paths for the horses. The road was often covered with flocks of white geese.
Wishing to transform the farm into building lots, Jacob gave one of the lots to a man on the condition that the man would build and occupy one house on the land. Within 15 years, more than 125 frame homes had been built on the former Suydam farm.
The Suydam house was demolished in 1899 to make way for the Second German Dutch Baptist Church. According to the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, the heavy blue stone blocks that formed the old house were reportedly used in the foundation of the new church.
When Coney Island’s Dreamland amusement park on Surf Avenue opened to the public in May 1904, the most popular of the many disaster simulation attractions at the resort was a stunt spectacular called “Fighting the Flames.”
The large attraction, which the press called a “mimic fire,” simulated a major conflagration at a 6-story hotel in which a cast of firefighters in full uniform (many of them retired from the FDNY) used extension ladders to rescue guests trapped on the collapsing roof while other guests jumped into nets to escape the flames shooting out the windows.[i]
The Dreamland attraction was a huge crowd-pleaser among the paying spectators, who each paid a quarter to sit in the large, 1,500-seat amphitheater and watch the complete progress of the fire. In addition to hundreds of paid human actors, the show also featured elephants: one elephant turned in the fire alarm and another elephant dragged up a ladder for an impending rescue act.[ii]
The show began with a marching band leading a parade through a city square. Moments later, a man would come running from the hotel screaming “fire” at the top of his lungs. The sleeping firemen would awake in the two engine houses, tumble into their clothing, and slide down the polls as the harnesses dropped onto the horses.
Within a few seconds, the fake city street filled with fire engines, ambulances, fire horses, and a large crowd that had gathered to watch the firemen in action.
The Brooklyn Standard Union summarized the show as follows: “The fire features are thrilling. High jumping into the life net from each floor and the roof of the hotel is fraught with danger. Tongues of flame lick the front of the hotel, surrounding the jumpers as each one makes the desperate leap to safety.”[ii]
“Fighting the Flames” was so popular in its first year, promoters expanded it in 1905 to include an entire block of fire-ravaged buildings with a crowd of 600 spectators and more than 100 firemen led by Chief Sweeney. Sweeney’s Dreamland fire department was equipped with 4 engines, including Engine 54 (from a former volunteer company organized in 1895), and one ladder truck.[i]
Harry Saves a Life
On June 18, 1905, 7-year-old Anna Ryan of Coney Island was nearly crushed by Engine 54 while playing with other young performers in the fire show. It was Harry, one of the 3 white horses drawing the engine, who came to her rescue.[i]
According to numerous reports of the incident, the driver had given a warning shout as the engine approached the crowd, giving everyone adequate time to move aside for the fast-moving apparatus. Although the adults moved quickly, the noise and turmoil of the show had mesmerized the children, causing a delay in their response.
Anna completely froze directly in the path of the responding engine, petrified with fear. People in the audience stood up and gasped, expecting to see the child crushed to death. The driver didn’t see Anna, but Harry did.
When the engine was about 10 feet from the girl, Harry swerved to the left, nearly throwing the other horses off their feet. The sudden movement turned the front wheels of the engine just enough to avoid a serious accident.
As one newspaper noted, the incident with Engine 54 “was not part of the programme, and the action of the horse was unrehearsed—just simply a bit of intelligence on the part of the well-trained animal.”[i] Anna’s mother told the press this would be the first and last time her daughter performed in the fire show.
Sadly, poor Harry, who became the favorite pet of the fire brigade and children after his heroic deed, died only 2 months later.[i] The grieving firemen buried their beloved Harry with honors. Little Anna served as the chief mourner.
The following year, Dreamland replaced the fire spectacle with “The Destruction of San Francisco,” which simulated the great earthquake that had taken place only a month before on April 18, 1906.[ii]
[i] died only two months later: “Mimic Fire Horse Is Dead,” New York Times, August 4, 1905; “Fire Horse Hero Dead,” Brooklyn Citizen. August 4, 1905.
[ii] which simulated the great earthquake: “The Quake to be a Coney Spectacle,” New York Times, May 21, 1906.
[i] “was not part of the programme”: “Fire Horse Saved Little Girl’s Life,” Buffalo Sunday Morning News, June 25, 1905.
[i] It was Harry: “Real ‘Horse Sense’ at Dreamland,” New-York Tribune, June 19, 1905.
[i] “Fighting the Flames” was so popular: “Great New Dreamland at Coney This Year,” New York Times, April 23, 1905; Gary R. Urbanowicz, Badges of the Bravest: A Pictorial History of Fire Departments in New York City (Paducah, KY: Turner Publishing Company, 2002), 245.
[i] The attraction was a huge crowd pleaser: “Dreamland by the Ocean,” New York Sun, May 8, 1904.
[ii] “The fire features are thrilling”: “Orphans Were Guests at Dreamland,” Brooklyn Standard Union, August 2, 1904. Note: In 1904, American Mutoscope and Biograph produced a four-minute film of the attraction directed by G.W. Bitzer, which features Harry and two other white fire horses. The film, titled “Fighting the Flames, Dreamland,” is currently available for viewing on YouTube.
[i] a cast of firefighters in full uniform: “Fighting the Flames, Dreamland,” IMDB, accessed May 24, 2023, https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0231582/plotsummary?ref_=tt_ov_pl.
[ii] the show also featured elephants: “Elephants Help in Fire-Fighting Show,” New York Times, August 9, 1904.
John Sigel and his wife may not have wanted to add any more family members to their household in January 1918. But when their three children carried a freezing, starving waif cat into their small apartment at 1 Peck Slip (aka 314 Pearl Street), they couldn’t resist.
A few weeks later, during a fatal fire on February 9, the gracious street cat helped save the lives of the Sigels and about 10 other residents of the four-story sailor’s lodging house on the northeast corner of Pearl Street and Peck Slip.
According to the press, Sigel and his family were asleep in their second-floor apartment when he was awakened by the cat’s wails. Sigel opened the door to let the cat out, but then immediately shut it. Flames had filled the hallway and were leaping up the stairs.
After slamming the door shut, Siegel woke his family members and led them out the front window onto the roof of a fruit stand. One his children held tightly to the nameless cat as they made their escape through the window.
Once he was safely outside with his family and their hero cat, Sigel yelled out for a pedestrian to pull the fire alarm box. Then he began yelling to waken the proprietors and the other residents of the lodging house.
Unfortunately for many of the residents of the boarding house, the alarm box did not work, so it took a longer time for the firemen to respond. And even though there were laws on the books requiring every multi-story residential building to have fire escapes, 1 Peck Slip did not have any. (Fire department officials told the press they were astonished that such a violation could have been overlooked by the Tenement House Department).
At the time of the fire, there were about 20 residents in the building, many of whom were alerted by either the cat’s cries or Sigel’s yells. When they tried to make their escape, however, they found that all the stairways were cut off.
For some, there was no choice but to jump out a window. Others could not even make it to a window before the fire department arrived. When the firefighters arrived, they found several lifeless bodies on the street and in the apartments.
Some of the people who did survive were rescued by Captain Michael J. O’Donohue of Ladder 10, who ran up to the second floor of the adjoining building at 316 Pearl Street. O’Donohue opened the window and placed a scaling ladder on the ledge of a third-floor window on that building. Then, while standing on that ladder, he swung over to a third-floor window of 314 Pearl Street (aka 1 Peck Slip).
He and other fireman rescued several trapped residents. One of those rescued was Joseph Keller, whom O’Donohue carried down to the street.
Five people died in the fire, including the building’s proprietors, Mr. and Mrs. Casper Russell, and Charles Bennett, an oyster opener employed at the Fulton Market. Two unidentified Polish sailors also perished in the flames. Firemen found the victims’ bodies at the rear of the second, third, and fourth floors, respectively.
According to the press, the fire had reportedly started in a wood closet under the stairway on the ground floor, allowing the fire to quickly spread up the stairwell. The interior of 1 Peck Slip was completely destroyed.
All 14 lives (5 human and 9 feline lives) of the Sigel family were saved thanks to a cat that was rescued from the cold and cruel streets of Old New York.
A Brief History of Peck Slip
The news archival history of 1 Peck Slip goes back to the 1840s, when it was the State Coffee House and Hotel. In 1849, the building became a boarding house for sailors. Other accounts report that a drug store owned by Bradhurst & Watkins occupied the building in the late 18th century (a fire in 1806 destroyed the contents of the drug store).
Peck Slip, originally called Peck’s Wharf, was named for Benjamin Peck, a local landowner who, in 1737, purchased water lots abutting his houses on Pearl Street (then called Queen Street).
Back then, the East River shoreline was located between Pearl and Water Streets–referred to as the high water mark and low water mark, respectively. Thus, much of today’s Peck Slip was beneath the East River. Peck was granted a 50-foot stretch of “water and soil under the water from high to low water mark.”
Incidentally, one hundred years earlier, around 1630, a farmer named Cornelius Dirckson had established Manhattan’s first ferry service from this point on the East River to Brooklyn. Those who wanted to pay the three beads of wampum to cross the river in Dirckson’s two-passenger canoe had to summon the ferryman by ringing a shell horn.
The portion of Peck Slip between Pearl and Water Streets was laid out as early as 1744 and known as Ferry Street for more than 100 years. Using dirt and gravel landfill, Peck Slip was officially laid out and graded in 1755 from Pearl Street east to Front Street. South Street was graded last, in the 1800s.
A new ferry to Brooklyn was established at Peck Slip in 1774. Peck Slip also had the city’s first brick market, the Peck Slip Market, established in 1763.
The Loockermans Farm About a century before Benjamin Peck purchased his land, this part of Lower Manhattan along the East River was owned by Govert Janszen Loockermans and William Beekman.
Govert Loockermans was an assistant of the cook on the ship “De Soutbergh” when he arrived in New Amsterdam in 1633 at the age of 16. Director-General Wouter Van Twiller was fond of the hard-working young man, and he gave Loockermans a position as a clerk for the West India Company. Lockermans went on to become a shipping merchant and one of the wealthiest citizens of that time period.
In 1642, Loockermans acquired a patent from Director Willem Kieft for a large parcel of land along the East River between today’s Fulton Street and Catherine Slip, as shown on the map below. He reportedly planted the first cherry orchard in the New World, from the East River westward up the crest of Cherry Hill (Cherry Street).
In 1650, Loockermans built a house at the southwest corner of Pearl and Hanover Streets, where Captain William Kidd once lived in the 1690s.
When Loockermans died in 1671, his farm was divided into three lots. William Beekman, for whom both William and Beekman Streets are named, was a German immigrant who purchased Lot 3 of Loockermans’ farm. He established tanneries on this land and made his residence near the corner of present-day Pearl and Frankfort Streets.
His land, comprising Beekman’s Swamp (a marshy area that drained into the East River) and farmland called Beekman’s Pasture, is shown on the map below.
A Brief History of Fire Escapes in New York City The following is an edited excerpt from my new book, “The Bravest Pets of Gotham: Tales of Four-Legged Firefighters of Old New York” (Rutgers University Press, September 2024). Contact me directly at pgavan@optonline.net if you would like to purchase a signed copy. A portion of the proceeds will go toward the Tunnel to Towers Foundation.
Prior to the 1860s, when fire escapes on New York City tenements were first required by law, there were few forms of safe escape from a multistory building fire. Narrow interior stairs often burned away in a hot fire, making dangerous ladder rescues from windows and roofs a necessary option. (A lack of fire escapes is what led to the death of five people in the 1918 fire at 1 Peck Slip.)
Inventors had designed all kinds of creative escape mechanisms—including rope and basket devices, cloth chutes, parachute helmets, and extension ladders on wheels—but most were flimsy and would never instill confidence in people faced with a life-or-death situation.
One invention that did make sense came from the Pompier Corps, a German volunteer firefighting corps that used a “pompier ladder” or scaling ladder system in which a fireman would climb the first ladder resting on the sidewalk and use additional ladders with iron hooks to attach to upper-story windowsills as he climbed higher.
In 1884, the FDNY finally adopted the pompier ladder system—also known as the Hoell Life Saving Appliance. (Scaling ladders were used to help rescue the occupants of 1 Peck Slip).
The first city law requiring fire escapes, called “An Act to Provide Against Unsafe Buildings in the City of New York,” was enacted on April 17, 1860. Under this law, all dwelling houses built for more than eight families required exterior fireproof stairs or balconies connected by fireproof stairs on the outside of every floor. This law was updated in 1862 to add more requirements and was applied retroactively to all existing dwelling houses.
Unfortunately, most of the straight-ladder fire escapes of this era were shoddily built, and enforcement and maintenance were lacking. In 1868, for example, there were close to 20,000 tenements in the city, of which more than 1,000 did not yet have some type of fire escape in place.
The tenement laws also didn’t carry over to other buildings, such as hotels, office buildings, and theaters. An 1897 law requiring rope fire escapes in every New York hotel room was seen by some as a better alternative to leaping to the sidewalk, but the ropes were mostly ineffective, as Puck Magazine (at left) called attention to in 1887.
During the horrific Windsor Hotel fire on March 17, 1899, in fact, numerous people fell or slid hard and fast to their deaths while using the ropes. Notice the ladders placed on the building pictured below; none of them came close to reaching the upper floors.
With the passage of the Tenement House Act of 1901, regulations for residential fire escapes were more strictly enforced, albeit some buildings continued to be without fire escapes. And despite a $10 fine for any encumbrance, fire escapes became an extension of the living space, as tenants turned them into mini patios, gardens, storage space, summer sleeping quarters, and play spaces for children.
A 1968 change in the city’s building codes banned the construction of external fire escapes on almost all new buildings, placing the focus on fire prevention and the use of sprinklers and fireproof interior stairways. In recent years, developers have removed fire escapes from older buildings as part of their efforts to restore them to their original glory.
Ten years ago, I wrote about my favorite hero cat of Old New York, Jerry Fox. Described as an enormous tiger cat “of striking appearance,” Jerry Fox performed heroic deeds during his 28-year reign as Brooklyn’s official cat.
Although he was nearly blind and wore glasses, Jerry even helped save Brooklyn City Hall (today’s Brooklyn Borough Hall) from burning down in 1904.
Not only is Jerry Fox featured in my first book, The Cat Men of Gotham, but his amazing story is also the last one I tell on my Cats About Town walking tour of Brooklyn Heights.
As my tour guests sit on the steps of the very building that Jerry helped save, I share how the beloved mascot of Terry Fox’s cafe made the rounds of the neighborhood every day, always checking every floor of every government building to make sure nothing was wrong.
One day in May 1904, our hero cat came upon an open office in City Hall, where a careless judge had left a burning cigar on his desk. Papers on the desk caught fire, and had it not been for Jerry’s cries for help, the entire office may have gone up in flames–or even worse.
At the end of every tour, I ask my guests to visit our Cats About Town website and sign the petition (see the link at the very top of the page) to help ensure Jerry Fox’s remarkable story is remembered and celebrated. Our hope is to collect enough signatures to submit the petition to local government officials and representatives so that they will consider placing a plaque or maybe a spectacled cat statue at Brooklyn Borough Hall.
If you would like to help honor a true hero cat of Brooklyn, please take a minute to sign our petition. Wouldn’t the steps of Brooklyn Borough Hall look fabulous with a statue like this one? We sure think so!
If you would like to check out some scenes from the Cats About Town walking tour of historical Brooklyn Heights, check out the story and video featured on NBC News.
If you follow my blog, than you are no doubt a cat lover and probably also someone who is interested in New York City history (at least a tiny bit). That is why I am “feline groovy” and thrilled to let you know about my latest venture: Cats About Town (CAT) historical walking tours of Brooklyn and Manhattan!
I have partnered with Dan Rimada of Bodega Cats of New York, a popular community dedicated to celebrating the city’s beloved bodega cats, to bring our followers and other cat fans guided tours for cat lovers. Through our tours, we’ll explore the city’s history and share amazing stories of heroic and hard-working cats of the late 1800s and early 1900s.
Launching this August, our first Cats About Town tour will take participants on a captivating journey through Brooklyn Heights, uncovering the hidden stories of the legendary felines of America’s first suburban neighborhood.
Cats About Town Brooklyn Heights Tour Highlights:
• Ned, the Brooklyn Bridge Cat: Learn about the stray cat that bravely crossed the Brooklyn Bridge one month before its official opening, symbolizing the adventurous spirit of NYC’s cats.
• Jerry Fox, the Hero of Borough Hall: Discover the story of Jerry Fox, a 28-year-old blind cat who saved Brooklyn Borough Hall from burning down, showcasing the bravery and intelligence of cats.
• Minnie, the mascot cat of the Hotel St. George: Meet Minnie, the beloved cat of the historic Hotel St. George, who had 160 kittens (some of whom are no doubt the ancestors of today’s cats).
• The Promenade Cat of Brooklyn Heights: Find out how a pampered cat inspired the creation of the Brooklyn Heights Promenade, a scenic spot enjoyed by locals and tourists alike.
• The Cat of Henry Ward Beecher: End the tour with the tale of the cat adopted by the famous preacher of Plymouth Church, adding a unique charm to the church’s history.
• In addition to these fun stories, the tour will provide insightful commentary on the historical significance of each location, making it a perfect blend of feline lore and NYC history.
• Following the tours, guests can spend time at the Brooklyn Cat Café with modern-day felines if they choose to register for this additional event.
This fall, we will be running our Brooklyn Heights tours primarily on weekends (save for Labor Day), but next spring we’ll be adding some Manhattan tours. We will also invite some guest tour guides and speakers, such as Tamar Arslanian, author of Shop Cats of New York, and Robert A. K. Gonyo, a theatre director, actor, voiceover artist, tour guide, and cat man.
Once we’re fully up and running, Cats About Town tours will be offered a few times a week, including weekends and weekdays. (And when I retire from my full-time job, I’ll be doing most of the tours!)
Whether you’re a longtime New Yorker or a visitor to the city, the Cats About Town tour is an experience you won’t want to miss! For updates and more information, be sure to follow us on Instagram and visit our website. You can also share your tour experiences using the hashtag #CatsAboutTownTours and connect with fellow feline history enthusiasts.
Tour Details
Ticket Prices: Adults $40, Seniors $30
Duration: 1.5–2 hours
Distance: Approximately 1.5 miles
Booking Information: Visit Cats About Town Tours for more details and to book your tour