Manhattan Notes

Property sold to Jonathan Edwards

Sale price 1.7 m.

Property Sold 7-18-2011

Sale price 1.7 m.

Home of Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein

Lloyd Blankfein and his wife, Laura, spent $26 million on this Lincoln Square condo in Jan. 2008.

Originator of style identified with the paparazzi lived in this building

Society photographer, Jerome Zerbe, lived in this building in 1967.

Man with the "write" stuff lived in this building

Writer and editor, William Zinsser, lived in this building in 1967.

The price was right for TV impresario who lived in this building

Television game show impresario, Mark Goodson, lived in this building in 1967.

"King James" of Variety magazine lived in this building

Journalist, Abel Green, lived in this building in 1967.

"Life" and "Time" were spent in this building for journalist

Journalist and writer, Ralph Graves, lived in this building in 1967.

Premier mural artist lived in this building

Artist, Barry Faulkner, lived in this building when he passed away in 1966.

The Issacs-Hendricks house - Oldest remaining house in Greenwich Village

Originally a farmhouse, the Issacs-Hendricks house, built in 1799, is the oldest surviving house in Greenwich Village.

Secretary of the Air Force lived in this building

Diplomat, Thomas Finletter, lived in this building in 1967.

Newsweek editor who doubled circulation lived in this building

Journalist, Osborne Elliott, lived in this building in 1967.

WNET/Channel 13 president owned this house

Journalist, John Jay Iselin, owned this house in 1967.

Influential gallery owner lived in this building

Gallery owner and proponent of Abstract Expressionism, Charles Egan, lived in this building in 1967.

Grammy Award winner only surpassed by Aretha, Barbara, and Ella lived in this building

Conductor, Margaret Hillis, lived in this building in 1967.

Great playwright and dramatist lived in this building

Playwright, Lillian Hellman, owned this house in 1967.

Pulitzer Prize winning husband and wife writing team lived in this building, must have been "A Wonderful Life"

Screenwriters, Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett, lived in this building in 1967.

Director of the ACLU and Kennedy/Nixon debate moderator lived in this building

Journalist, Quincy Howe, lived in this building in 1967.

Academy Award nominated producer and Horatio Hornblower's namesake lived in this building

Producer, Arthur Hornblow Jr., lived in this building in 1976.

Tennis and Navy great lived in this building

Tennis player, Helen Hull Jacobs, lived in this building in 1967.

Presidential advisor and syndicated columnist lived in this building

Economist and author, Eliot Janeway, lived in this building in 1967.

Pulitzer Prize judge and critic lived in this building

Author and critic, Elizabeth Janeway, lived in this building in 1967.

United States Senator lived in this building

United States Senator (NY), Jacob Javits, lived in this building in 1967.

Astronomer who introduced millions to space lived in this building

Dr. Robert Jastrow lived in this building in 1967.

Celebrated architect lived in this building

Architect, Ely Kahn, lived in this building in 1967.

First official presidential speechwriter lived in this building

Journalist, Emmet Hughes, lived in this building in 1967.

Famed caricaturist owned this house

Caricaturist Al Hirschfeld owned this house when he passed away at the age of 99 in 2003.

Member of the Gimbel Brothers department store family and longtime president of Saks Fifth Avenue owned this house

Department store executive Adam Gimbel owned this house in 1967.

Prominent Jewish leader lived in this building

Rabbi, Dr. Simon Greenberg, lived in this building in 1967.

Pulitzer Prize winning scion of famed media dynasty lived in this building

Journalist William Randolph Hearst Jr. lived in this building in 1967.

Diplomat partially responsible for U.S. involvement in Vietnam lived in this building

Diplomat Donald Heath lived in this building in 1967.

"Today Show" and Herald Tribune critic lived in this building

Film critic Judith Crist lived in this building in 1967.

Famed lithographer owned this house

Painter and illustrator Adolf Dehn owned this house when he passed away in 1968.

Academy Award winning silent film great lived in this building

Actress Lillian Gish lived in this building in 1967.

Academy Award winning patriarch of acting dynasty owned this house

Actor Henry Fonda owned this house in 1967.

Academy Award and Tony Award winning dance legend lived in this building

Director and choreographer Bob Fosse lived in this building in 1967.

First black person to perform at the Metropolitan lived in this building

Ballerina Janet Collins lived in this building in 1967.

Academy Award nominated actress lived in this building

Actress Patricia Collinge lived in this building in 1967.

Metropolitan Opera conductor lived in this building

Conductor Fausto Cleva lived in this building in 1967.

Emmy, Grammy, and Tony Award winner lived in this building

Composer, songwriter, and pianist Cy Coleman lived in this building in 1967.

Pioneering television journalist lived in this building

Television journalist Charles Collingwood lived in this building in 1967.

"YEEAH!," 2004 candidate for Democratic presidential nomination grew up in this building

Howard Dean III grew up in this building.

"Aida" star lived in this building

Soprano Mary Curtis-Verna lived in this building in 1967.

Metropolitan Opera soprano lived in this building

Soprano Phyllis Curtin lived in this building in 1967.

"Cocoon" star lived in this building

Actor Hume Cronyn lived in this building in 1967.

Random House Inc. founder owned this house

Publisher Bennett Cerf owned this house in 1967.

"Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo" writer lived in this building

Writer Robert Considine lived in this building in 1967.

House has total of 7 floors + FULL roof deck with views.

Taxes are about $38K

121 East 38th Soon to be for Sale!!!!!

House has had 5 year A to Z update.

Pioneering woman of radio lived in this building

Writer and actress Gertrude Berg lived in this building in 1966 when she passed away.

"Dark Shadows" star lived in this building

Actress Joan Bennett lived in this building in 1967.

New Republic drama critic lived in this building

Writer Eric Bentley lived in this building in 1967.

"Hello Dolly" star and Presidential Medal of Freedom winner owned this house

Actress Pearl Bailey owned this house in 1967.

Author who featured New York's social elite lived in this building

Author Louis Auchincloss lived in this building in 1967.

"Tea and Sympathy" playwright lived in this building

Playwright Robert Anderson lived in this building in 1967.

Brilliant political theorist lived in this building

Teacher and political theorist Hannah Arendt lived in this building in 1967.

Master printmaker lived in this building

Master printmaker Irving Amen lived in this building in 1967.

Pioneering art director of Fortune Magazine lived in this building

Graphic Designer Walter Allner lived in this building in 1967.

Famed Metropolitan soprano lived in this building

Soprano Licia Albanese lived in this building in 1967.

United Nations Headquarters architect owned this house

Architect Max Abramovitz owned this house in 1967.

Publishing Co. founder lived in this building

Publisher Harry Abrams lived in this building in 1967.

Composer and Julliard cellist lived in this building

Composer and cellist Claus Adam lived in this building in 1967.

Famed architect and town planner owned this house

Architect and town planner Grosvenor Atterbury owned this house in 1938.

Renowned illustrator lived in this building

Illustrator Boris Artzybasheff lived in this building in 1938.

Talented writer and publisher lived in this building

Writer and publisher Edward Anthony lived in this building in 1938.

Female explorer and pioneer in animal-human communication owned this house

Explorer and Primatologist Delia Akeley lived in this building in 1938.

ACLU founder lived here

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) founder Roger Baldwin lived in this building in 1938.

Pan American founder and Howard Hughes foil lived in this building

Pan American Airways CEO Juan Trippe lived in this building in 1938.

BEAUTY ON THE BLOCK

his is the West Harlem dream brownstone, it is a unique architectural space.

First Lady of the United Staes lived here

Jacqueline Bouvier was an infant in 1930 when she lived in this building according to the U.S.

Big Band great lived here

Big Band great Guy Lombardo paid $150 a month in 1930 to rent in this building according to the U.S.

Seminal figure of the 20th Century lived here

Publishing magnate William Randolph Hearst lived in this building in 1930.

Famed lyricist lived here

Lyricist Ira Gershwin lived in this building and paid $300 a month rent in 1930 according to the U.S.

Very famous composer lived here

Composer and pianist George Gershwin lived in this building and paid $400 a month in rent according to the 1930 U.S.

Kiefer Sutherland's former condo

Actor Kiefer Sutherland parted ways with this posh Greenwich Village condo in August, and made a $350,000 profit.

Kiefer Sutherland's former condo

Actor Kiefer Sutherland parted pays with this posh Greenwich Village condo in August after paying $3.15 million for the property in 2006.

Supermodel Linda Evangelista owns this penthouse

Canadian supermodel Linda Evangelista is the owner of this penthouse.

Actor Mongomery Clift lived here

President Theodore Roosevelt reportedly gave this four-bedroom townhouse to his daughter Alice as a wedding present in 1906.

Director Spike Lee lives here

Director Spike Lee owns this Lennox Hill home.

The Lucy Drexel Dahlgren House - Landmark

This neo-French townhouse was designed by architect Ogden Codman in 1915 and built for Lucy Drexel Dahlgren, the daughter in-law of Admiral John Adolph Dahlgren, a famous 19th-century naval officer and inventor of the Dahlgren gun.

Dana Barrett's apartment in Ghostbusters was in this building

In the 1984 smash hit Ghostbusters, Dana Barrett and Louis Tully lived in this building overlooking Central Park.

The Apartment at 1261 Madison Avenue

This Second Empire, Beaux Arts style building was designed by Buchman Fox.

Woody Allen's Manhattan home

Director and actor Woody Allen spent over $22 million for this 6,000-square-foot home in Lenox Hill.
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