Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load.

renters

The New York Apartment That Has Sheltered One Family for 86 Years

A rent-controlled apartment is a rare thing, and so is the family that shared their home with students and refugees, rent-free, over the decades.

A man wearing a pink shirt ad tan pants stands in a room filled with plants, a piano and bicycles. To his left, his daughter sits on a turquoise sofa.
Jonathan Slon stands in the apartment that his grandmother first rented in 1938. His daughter, Maeve (seated), is part of the fifth generation to call the place home. Credit...Graham Dickie/The New York Times

In 1938, Jonathan Slon’s grandmother found the perfect apartment. So perfect, in fact, the family never moved out.

Mr. Slon and his children represent the fourth and fifth generations to call the place home.

At different points, various combinations of generations have lived together in the Upper West Side apartment over the past 86 years.

When Mr. Slon’s mother, for instance, went off to Vassar College, her room was given to her grandmother — that is, Mr. Slon’s great-grandmother, Alice R. Botsford, who was born in 1856.

Mr. Slon, too, left the city for college and work, but when he came back to visit his grandmother, Mildred Alice MacInnis, in 1983, he saw that she was having a hard time getting through the day on her own. “I noticed she had a lot of sadness when she was alone,” he said. So he moved into the apartment and looked after her until she died.

When Mr. Slon and his wife, Renee, had their own children, he asked his mother, Jean MacInnis Slon, who was a widow living in her own Manhattan apartment, to move in with them. “I didn’t want to tell her I was worried about her living alone,” he said. “So what I said instead was, ‘I need you.’ And it was true.”

Image
Photos of Mr. Slon’s mother, Jean MacInnis Slon (left), and his great-grandmother, Alice R. Botsford.Credit...Graham Dickie/The New York Times
Image
Credit...Graham Dickie/The New York Times

Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.


Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

Already a subscriber? Log in.

Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT