The Mount Morris Bank of New York City was located at the northwest corner of 125th Street and Park Avenue was taken between 1889 and 1899.
The Mount Morris Bank, which was chartered in 1880 to serve the growing community of Harlem, originally was situated at 125th Street between Park and Lexington Avenues. Still a suburb at that time, Harlem had had its own railroad stop at 125th Street and Park Avenue since 1837.
The bank prospered and in 1883 built a building (above) that combined bank offices (on the lower three floors) and apartments (the top four floors) across from the station at 125th and Park.
Designed by Lamb & Rich, it was one of Manhattan’s most picturesque buildings, a great Queen Anne-Romanesque architectural stew of red brick, rock-faced brownstone, stepped gables, window bays and chimneys projecting above a peaked roof. The building had three arched entrances on 125th Street: one for the apartments, one with steps leading down to the vault area and one at the corner – a grand, projecting brownstone porch that served as the main entrance to the bank.
There were some exquisite details on the upper floors: brick with rivet-heads moulded in, terra-cotta panels with radiant forms, a date stone with the year 1883 in script set against a basket-weave pattern. In 1889, the building was extended in the rear following the same style.
The interior, still intact in the 1950′s, was embellished with mahogany, Numidian marble and bronze. Like other banks of the period, the Mount Morris had special windows for ladies to save them ”the inconvenience of waiting in line,” according to King’s Handbook of New York City published in 1893. The handbook described Mount Morris as successful, with nearly $3 million in deposits. In 1890, The Real Estate Record and Guide called the building ”hardly surpassed by the great bank buildings erected in Wall Street during recent years.”
By 1900, Harlem was no longer a separate village, with a need for separate institutions. In 1913, the Corn Exchange Bank – with 22 branches – took over the single-office Mount Morris Bank. About that time the porch -which extended beyond the building line -was cut back.
By the late 1920′s Harlem was emerging as a black community. New housing in New York was historically restricted to whites; blacks were restricted to older neighborhoods with deteriorating housing. But because of overbuilding in residential housing a couple of decades earlier, owners of many new buildings in Harlem were opening their doors to blacks.
By the 1950′s, however, 125th Street – and Harlem in general – was in trouble. Residential buildings that were new in the 1910′s and 1920′s were deteriorating. Chemical Bank had taken over the Corn Exchange Bank in 1954, and closed out its operations in the old Mount Morris Bank building.
The city acquired the property in 1972, and by 1975 a delicatessen and the Samuel Temple Church of God in Christ were the only occupants of the building. Complete vacancy followed several years later.
The Landmarks Preservation Commission considered the building for designation in 1984, but never acted.
The workmen began using cinderblocks to seal up the lower two floors; at the request of the Community Board, the Department of General Services was simply sealing up the building. Because no one at the city has a particular plan for the building and there is no outside time limit beyond which the city must sell property it has acquired, the fate of the bank is uncertain.
As of this writing the building is being demolished.
(Photo taken in the 1890′s), by the Cornell University Library.











































the demise of that most beautiful and rare designed building is the direct result of the stupid and self defeating housing policy of the city of new york. when the city acquired title it should have properly and professionelly sealed the building. instesd it did a quicky job of just sealing
the lower floor with cinder block . it …covered… the windows with pieces of wood . it did nothing to protect the upper two stories which were made of wood and most beautiful. it made the terms of purchase so difficult that the private user who attended the many auctions hoping to acquire it impotent and frustrated all throughout the 1990′s the city knew that squaters were breaking in and destroying the interior. but the city refused to what was necessary to save the property. and why did the city look the other way. by the late 1990′s the economic revival of harlem was evident. many opposing forces were fighting for land and vacant buildings.
city hall was being bombarded with requests and proposals. the hacks had to make a decision. they knew that no matter who it was given to there would be many unhappy people. the pols feared that somone might loose their job; might get demoted. no one wanted to take the fall. everyone at city hall prayed that the building would just vanish so they would not have to make a decision. ……….. suprise……….. shortly thereafter there was a ………………. fire …. in the property the upper two floors ..ashes .the city rushed in bricked up the first floor covered the windows with wood but some how they ……………….’forgot’ to place a roof on the massive and open top. ten years passed with the building being battered by the elements…. then out of the blue a brick came loose. it was determined that the upper floors were unsafe. ..quick quick do something
the lpc met in the middle on the nite to order the buiilding demolished down to the first floor which is where the building is today. still no roof
sidebar note when the fire occured i wrote a tetter to the new york times which was published and said when the open roof causes the building to be demolished the city will haven gotten its way and noone will be blamed.. it took ten years but the bureaucrats won.
Sid,
It’s a sad story. our appreciation for our rich national, regional and local history is appalling.
Thank you,
HW
Pitiful…. once again “seemingly” Harlemites and whomever don’t appreciate what they have. But with the ills and distractions “forced” on Harlemites thru the years its no wonder this got by…
Thnaks for sharing – now maybe the institutions of harlem like its jazz, lindy hop/swing culture and more will be honored and respected – and rexamined aonce more so that wuil not fall by the wayside and be taken over by “you know who”