Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Lost and Found: The Villagrand Family, Part II





















The search for anything Jerome Villagrand (1776-1845) and his daughter Marie Antionette Estelle Costar Villagrand Johnston (ca. 1802-1848) continues.

Checking through period New York directories, one can find Jerome Villagrand listed for 1815; in 1820, de Cressac is added. In 1827-28, he's listed as Jerome Cressac de Villagrand at 28 and 26 Park-place. For 1829-30, the address is rendered as 30 Chapel. He's listed again as Jerome Villagrand De Cressac in 1835, and in 1839-40, 30 Chapel is again given. By 1845, he's removed to Washington, DC.

I came across a small handful of later accounts pertinent to the Villagrands when they lived in Manhattan.

According to John Franklin Sprague: "About 1812, a refugee Frenchman, Jerome Cressac de Villagrand, kept a hotel in College Place, which was a favorite rendezvous and place for discussion. It was here that Fitz-Greene Halleck, representing the Astor family, received and entertained Prince Louis Napoleon." (Sprague, New York, the Metropolis. The New York Recorder, 1893, page 59).

From an 1890 account: "There is still to be seen at 30 College Place, (old Chapel Street,) on the corner of Park Place, a house, which in olden days was known as Villagrand's Hotel. Jerome Cressac de Villagrand was the Delmonico of those times, and his table d'hôte was much frequented by Frenchmen from 1825 to 1840. The place was the headquarters of all distinguished French refugees. A barber's shop, a bar, and a restaurant are now in the historical old manor where Joseph Bonaparte, as Comte de Survilliers, and numerous other celebrities ate many a meal." ("Former French Visitors: Notable Men Who Have Sought Freedom in America," New York Times, November 9, 1890).

And another: "The one house that may be found in the lower part of the city which is associated with any distinguished person already mentioned is the large, old-fashioned manor house, No. 30 College Place (old Chapel Street), on the corner of Park Place. This place was Villagrand's Hotel. Everybody knew Villagrand's from 1825 to 1840. Jerome Cressac de Villagrand served the best French cookery in town. [NYC's approximate population in 1830: 202,589]. All the French refugees made the place their headquarters. Jerome Bonaparte, ex-king of Naples, and known while in exile as Count Survilliers, was frequently a guest at this house; and politics were often discussed there over the throwing bowl till far into the night. And it was at Villagrand's that Fitz-Greene Halleck lodged and lived nearly all the years he managed the business of Mr. Astor in Vesey and Prince streets. It was at Villagrand's that Halleck gave a dinner to Prince Louis Napoleon in 1837, when he too was a wandering exile and lived at the old City Hotel in Broadway. The building is all that remains of antiquity in the neighborhood; and it still maintains a public character, for there is a well-patronized bar and restaurant in the basement and barber-shop on the first floor. Fifty years ago some of the wealthiest men in the city lived in the immediate vicinity."   (
F.B. Stanford, "Where Noted Men Have Lived in New York," The Illustrated American, October 25, 1890, pages 242-243).

Last but not least, the observations of "the American Byron," Fitz-Greene Halleck, circa 1816-17: "Finding that there were too many Americans at Madame Berault's, and that my wish of learning the French language was in vain while I continued there, I left her house on the 1st of February, and went to Mons. Villagrand's, in Chambers Street, where I still reside. Nothing but French is spoken here, and I have already nearly completed my knowledge of it. I now speak it with facility, and have often been taken, or rather mistaken, for a Frenchman by Frenchmen themselves. The family consists of the husband and wife, two sons, and a daughter. The wife and daughter are very agreeable, and both rather pretty. The former is somewhere from thirty to one hundred. One can never distinguish between youth and old age in a French woman. The dress of mother and daughter is alike, even to the roses on their hats and the morning paper-curls for their hair. The same amusements is common to each, each moves in the same social circle, and one would rather believe them playmates and companions than mother and child. I shall probably remain with them for years, until circumstances may render some other residence necessary."  (James Grant Wilson, The Life and Letters of Fitz-Greene Halleck, New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1869, page 175).

(Illustration above: Les Modes Parisiennes, circa early-to-mid 1840s, via costumes.org) 

Note: as of the time of this posting, I can be reached at efrance23@gmail.com

1 comment:

  1. The transition from Manhattan to Washington, D.C., may be put in context by the November 11, 1842 announcement of Jerome D. Villagrand's bankruptcy two days earlier. (New York Daily Tribune).

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