The Jersey City Reporter
11/27/2007
Model maker who was model citizen
The legendary Theodore Conrad being honored with dedication at
courthouse
By: Ricardo Kaulessar, Reporter Staff Writer 11/27/2007
When there was a historical landmark or quality-of-life issue
in Jersey City that needed to be addressed, the late Theodore Conrad was
usually either in the middle of the fray or leading the charge.
Among some of Conrad's accomplishments as an activist for the last 35 years of
his life was helping in the creation of Liberty State Park, helping preserve
the Landmark Loew's Jersey Theatre in Jersey City, and stopping Kennedy
Boulevard from being turned into a superhighway.
And then there was his effort in the 1960s to save the old Hudson County
Courthouse at 583 Newark Ave. from being demolished to make way for either a
building or parking lot. He fought for about 20 years to save the courthouse
(now known as the Justice William J. Brennan Court House) until it was
restored to its original glory and reopened for business in 1985.
He was also responsible for having the courthouse listed on the National
Register of Historic Places in 1970, preventing it from demolition.
This coming Thursday, Nov. 29 at 7 p.m. he will be honored for his efforts at
a dedication ceremony. The courthouse rotunda will be known as The Theodore
Conrad Memorial Rotunda, with a plaque describing who Conrad was.
Ceremony coming
Sam Pesin of the Friends of the Liberty State Park, who spurred the
ceremony by mentioning at a Hudson County Freeholders meeting last year that
there had never been a dedication, called Conrad a "pioneer" for his
activism. Conrad passed away on Aug. 19, 1994 at the age of 84. A memorial
service in honor of Conrad was held at the courthouse a month after his
passing.
Conrad's daughter, Doris Brown, said last week the news of the dedication
ceremony is a testament to the dedication her father showed in serving his
community, and the example he set for activists to follow.
"I hope people will learn, when they study what my father and others like
Audrey Zapp, Morris Pesin, and Dr. Ethel Lawner did, are that it is the
efforts of regular people who can make change in the world," Brown said.
Born in 1910, designed NYC building models
Conrad was born on May 19, 1910 to German immigrants in a house on 31
Griffith St. in the city's Heights section. According to Brown, her father's
interest in architecture and design was piqued at an early age by seeing his
grandfather construct homes and buildings in his neighborhood.
Conrad studied draftsmanship at Dickinson High School in Jersey City, and then
attended Pratt Institute in New York City. He then landed a job with the
prestigious architectural firm of Harvey Walley Corbett in 1932 during the
Great Depression. There, he designed the models for the Metropolitan Life
Insurance building and Rockefeller Center, and became a respected figure in
the architectural world, working alongside such giants as his good friend
Phillip Johnson as well as developing friendships with icons such as the late
John F. Kennedy.
Even with his success in the field of model making, he still maintained a deep
love for his hometown, always keeping a home on Ogden Avenue, which his family
still owns. "Everything that he did was a passion because his family had
lived [in Jersey City] for so long," Brown said. It was that love that
led to him, upon turning 50, to pursue a new chapter in his life: activism.
Brown said it started with his beloved Riverview-Fisk Park, located on Ogden
Avenue not far from his longtime home, being considered as the site for a
senior housing complex.
Nearby residents like Conrad fought that plan and it was scrapped. Then, he
heard of plans to take down the old Hudson County Courthouse on Newark Avenue.
Saving the courthouse
Conrad called the courthouse in an article he wrote in the 1960s an
"architectural gem." As a student of architectural history and a
world-class model maker, he had good reason to make such a claim. Built in
1910, the courthouse designed by Jersey City resident Hugh Roberts was
constructed in the beaux-arts or "Modern Renaissance" style for $3.3
million.
Resembling Italian Renaissance palaces of old, the six-story courthouse
exterior of the courthouse was built with granite walls, bronze window frames
and doors, Corinthian columns, and a low flat copper dome. Also, eight columns
of Italian green marble rise from the second to the fourth floor in the center
of the building forming an interior court covered by a dome.
But the highlight of the courthouse is the works of muralists Edwin H.
Blashfield, Charles Yardley Turner, Kenyon Cox, and Howard Pyle throughout the
building, depicting the history of Hudson County.
However, in the 1960s, Hudson County government looked to relocate courtroom
operations to the then recently opened Hudson County Administration Building
next door at 595 Newark Ave.
The historic theater
Conrad's protégé, Colin Egan, met Conrad in the early 1980s. They worked
alongside each other throughout the 1980s and 1990s until Conrad's death to
save the historic Loew's Theatre in Journal Square from being demolished. Egan
had many conversations with Conrad about the efforts to save the courthouse,
and looks forward to Thursday's dedication ceremony.
"The courthouse battle set the mold for all other preservation battles to
come," Egan said. "When Ted and others were fighting to save the
courthouse, not many people knew about preservation."
Egan said among the things that Conrad did to save the courthouse was go to
numerous freeholder meetings, lead the collection of 20,000 signatures to stop
demolition and pulled off one of the great citizen-led coups over the Hudson
County government run by legendary powerbroker John V. Kenny.
"When Ted stood up at a freeholders meeting and says they can't tear down
the courthouse because he put it on the National Register, I could only
imagine the gears of the political machine at the time grinding to a
halt," Egan said.
Brown said her father in later years looked back with pride at what he did in
saving the courthouse but without being boastful. "Dad had a thing where
while he had a sense of accomplishment, but to him, it's what you're supposed
to do," Brown said. "He always told me, 'If you live in a community
and you're not participating, then you have no right to complain about it.'
"