Duke Town House, January 20, 1938
In the 1870s, upper Fifth Avenue opposite Central Park was a shanty town, but by World War I it had become “millionaire’s row,” lined with the mansions of the captions of industry. Constructed to last for centuries, these urban villas soon gave way to apartment buildings, as the wealthy chose the ease of apartment living over the costs and constraints of palace life. Abbott’s photograph of the mansion of tobacco king James B. Duke contrasted these two ways of life. Built in 1912 to resemble a French chateau, the house was occupied in 1938 by Duke’s widow. Across 78th Street was 969 Fifth Avenue, a new 15-story luxury apartment building. In 1958, the Duke house became New York University’s Institute of Fine Arts.