Lipsius-Cook House (New York City, New York)

USA / New York / New York City, New York

Wedged between the elevated JMZ subway tracks, a Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant, an empty lot and a World War I memorial is one of Bushwick’s most notorious mansions. The once-grand manse on the corner of Bushwick Avenue and Willoughby sits empty behind a chain-link fence. The windows are boarded with plywood and graffiti scars the brick façade. But, as any passerby can guess, there is a story behind the Bushwick Mansion.

Bushwick, founded in 1661 by Peter Stuyvesant as Boswijck (“Town in the Woods”), was one of Brooklyn’s six original towns. By the late 1800s, a sizeable community of German immigrants thrived on the success of local breweries and many grand residences and churches rose up along the town’s main residential street, Bushwick Avenue.

Among the most regal of Bushwick’s stately homes was the estate built by Frederick A. Cook on the corner of Bushwick and Willoughby. Cook, a physician and explorer, was better known for the controversy surrounding his Arctic expeditions than his medical expertise. In 1908, Cook claimed to be the first explorer to reach the North Pole with two Inuit tour guides. Lack of documentation and evidence led many to question his claims. Under a cloud of suspicion for fabricating expedition tales, Cook later spent time in prison for stock fraud during the 1920s. As the years passed, the condition of Cook’s mansion deteriorated along with his reputation.

As breweries closed and the German community disbanded in the second half of the twentieth century, Bushwick slipped into disrepair. The New York City blackout of 1977 sealed Bushwick’s fate – 35 blocks along Broadway were destroyed, two set entirely ablaze, and hundreds of homes and businesses were torched and damaged.

The Cook Mansion, one block off the Broadway thoroughfare, has endured its own hardships over the years. Seemingly abandoned, weeds have overtaken the small lawn and the garage has collapsed. But lately there are signs of life on the corner of Willoughby and Bushwick. A wheelbarrow and construction materials sit behind the empty house and new windowpanes have replaced several plywood coverings. Are the owners restoring the mansion to its former glory or will the Cook residence meet the fate of the manor that was torn down across the street?

Property records indicate that Cook Mansion has been under the same ownership since May of 2000, but calls to the listed owners yielded no response. Hopefully the activity stirring at 670-675 Bushwick Avenue means Cook’s legacy will endure in this Brooklyn neighborhood – but history buffs might want to stop by soon just in case.

www.atlasobscura.com/places/lipsius-cook-house
www.cbsnews.com/newyork/news/bushwick-lipsius-cook-mans...
www.bkmag.com/2023/09/04/confessions-of-a-former-landma...
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Coordinates:   40°41'49"N   73°55'55"W

Comments

  • That is Cook Mansion! In the great NYC tradition, home of a famous hoaxster. you can read more about it at: http://www.blockmagazine.com/neighbor.php?title=lstronggfrederick_cook_and_the_cook_mans&more=1&c=1&tb=1&pb=1
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