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Collected Writings and Historic Images of Washington, DC's Famed Dupont Circle Neighborhood
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Levi and Mary Leiter: Washington, DC's Quintessential Parvenus and Buccaneers
The current site of the large International-style hotel at 1500 New Hampshire Avenue was once home to one of the largest and grandest mansions in Washington, built by Levi Ziegler Leiter (1834-1904).
Levi Ziegler Leiter |
William LeBaron Jenney’s Leiter Building in Chicago. Erected 1889. Photo: HABS |
Leiter married Mary Theresa Carver in 1866. Mary was the daughter of Benjamin Carver, a wealthy banker from Utica, New York and a descendant of John Carver, the first president of the Plymouth Colony. The couple had four children: Joseph, Nancy, Marguerite (Daisy) and Mary Victoria.
Like so many of the nouveau riche of that period, or parvenus as Mark Twain referred to them, the Leiters decided to establish themselves in Washington, DC. While not exactly born poor, Levi Leiter was considered a self-made man and Mrs. Leiter, a former school teacher. Even in light of significant contributions to the city of Chicago, they would never fully be accepted by Chicago’s high society.
Architect T.P. Chandler. Photo: Author’s collection. |
In 1891, the Leiters decided to move to Washington permanently and purchased a lot at 1500 New Hampshire Avenue, NW for $83,276.53 (again an astronomical price to pay for any real estate at that time). Undoubtedly, when folks saw Leiter coming, prices would likely skyrocket knowing that Leiter would never balk at any price asked.
Shunning the architects of Chicago and Washington, DC, Leiter chose Philadelphia architect Theophilus P. Chandler to design his own palatial mansion in DC. The original house was three stories plus basement, 55 rooms, 96’ across the front, 75’ deep, and 62’ in height and cost $125,000 to construct.
A rare image of Mary Leiter |
Joseph Leiter attempted to corner the wheat market in 1897. Photo: LOC |
Upon his graduation from Harvard, Levi offered his son Joseph one million dollars to see what he could do with it. He soon had thirty million dollars’ worth of properties. But, he did make one large financial miscalculation. In 1897, he tried to corner the wheat market, but with concerted efforts by his competitors, the wheat market collapsed the following year. He lost at least ten million dollars and was bailed out of the debt by his father. By the time of his death, he was reportedly earning about one million dollars annually.
In 1904, Levi Leiter died of heart disease while vacationing at the Vanderbilt cottage in Bar Harbor Maine, which the Leiters had taken for the summer season. He was interred in Rock Creek Cemetery, in Washington, DC. Leiter requested a very particular way to be buried. Out of fear that his remains would be dug up by grave robbers and held for ransom, a 12-foot deep hole was dug with two feet of concrete poured in, then covered over with a grid of
steel beams onto which the casket was lowered. More steel beams were bolted across the top of the casket before the
entire chamber was then filled with concrete. Essentially, Leiter was completely encased in a steel-reinforced concrete block.
In 1909, Mary Leiter added a two-story brick addition to the rear (19th Street side) of the house and continued to live in the house and throw lavish parties there until her death in 1913. The house then passed to their son Joseph and his wife who occupied it until Joseph’s death in 1932. It was then left to Joseph’s son Thomas, with the provision that his mother be allowed to live there until her death. After she passed in 1942, the house was then leased to the U.S. Government for use as an office building. It was then sold in 1944 to Dupont Plaza, Inc. for $190,000, who razed it in 1947 to construct the current building on the lot, then an apartment building and now a hotel.
Site of the Leiter mansion today. |
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