TEXT A In a few weeks or so the
wreckers will come. They will tear down the two venerable brick and brownstone
mansions that have stood hard by the First Presbyterian Church in West Twelfth
Street for more than 100 years. No. 12, nearest the churchyard,
was built in 1849 for James W. Phillips, son of the Rev. William Wirt Phillips,
who held the pulpit next door from 1826 to 1865. No. 14, built at the same time
as a twin, except for the’interior, was the home of Charles C. Tabers, a
prosperous cotton merchant. The two buildings are the last
remaining two town houses in this city of the many designed by Alexander Jackson
Davis. A modest man, he conceded that the interiors of his Twelfth street
designs were "remarkable’. Even in their last stages of neglect the unpracticed
eye can see that. They are lovely. The buildings had famous
tenants, too, at one time or another. Thurlow Weed, nineteenth--century war-
wick--he was called that in his own day for his genius in moulding political
careers--lived in No. 12 from 1866 to 1882. Most of the important men and women
of his time were his guests there. Down the street lived Gen. Windfield
Scott. Probably the chief feature of that old Weed house was the
octagonal stairwell with the stained - glass skylight at tile top. The stairwell
in the other house oval, but it has the same glowing dome skylight. In both
dwellings you find rich stucco molding, handsome fireplaces, magnificent
woods. Just outside the old Weed study there stood, in his
lifetime, a handsome willow brought from St. Helena near the grave of Napoleon.
It was uprooted long ago to make play place in the churchyard for the children
of the church school. Incidently, alter the old mansion come down, a new church
school will rise on the spot. The Davis mansions are now a five -trap.
The most famous dweller in No. 14 was John Rogers, a nineteenth -century
sculptor, a kind of Edgar Guest who worked in stone, His studio was on the
second floor. It looks today pretty much as it did when he worked iii it from
1888 to 1895, turning out such groups as "Checkers up at the Farm," "Fetching
the Doc, tot". A part of his work are in the church office. Each has the Twelfth
Street house address worked into it. Though church folk dislike
the idea of having the old mansion torn down, and architects in town frown on
the notion, too, they know they must go. The place is sorely needed for the
children. So, one by one, the master works of the great architects vanish from
the city--Davis did preliminary sketches for the old tombs, worked on the old
Custom House, on many hospitals and colleages. All that will remain of his
dreaming on paper, when the Twelfth Street Mansions go down in rubble, will be a
few villas up in the Hudson River Valley. The chief feature of the two mansions was ______.
A.the stairwell and the skylight B.the rich stucco molding C.the handsome fireplaces D.the magnificent woods