The former B. Siegel mansion is transformed into the Detroit Historical Society's 1998 Fall Designer Showhouse. LISA BRODY Special to The Jewish News I magine a time when it wasn't unusual to have a butler answer the door; when ladies, dressed to the nines, had time to visit for afternoon tea; when people didn't go anywhere without being squired to the door by their chauffeurs. Next month, we can glimpse this elegant past at the former home of fashion retailers Benjamin and Sophie Siegel, the late founders of B. Siegel Co. Their former house will be show- cased as the Detroit Historical Soci- ety's (DHS) 1998 Fall Designer Show- house from Oct. 3-25. An opportunity to raise funds and visibility for the DHS, the showhouse is the society's first such project. Its refurbishing has been undertaken in partnership with the Michigan Chap- ter of the American Society of Interior Designers (ASID). The exquisite 13,000-square-foot, 27-room Italian Revival mansion was built in 1913 and designed by the famed Detroit architect Albert Kahn, whose works include the Fisher Build- ing and many industrial structures for the area's automobile companies. The home sits on three acres of magnifi- cently landscaped grounds, encom- passing a full half-block of Detroit's historic Boston Edison district. The ASID designers, headed by Roy Hankis, ASID, of Roy Allen Han- kis Interiors in Troy, sought to recap- ture the magnificence of the era and to restore the original luster of the home. Each room has been updated and dec- orated by designers from local design firms. From 1957 until 1997, the house served as the offices of the Greater Detroit Interfaith Roundtable, to whom Sophie Siegel had willed the home upon her death. In 1997, local businessman Michael Fisher purchased the house, planning to refurbish it and make it his home. Hankis was hired by Fisher to update the mansion, and the interior designer suggested to the historical society that the refurbished mansion would make an excellent showhouse. But, first, there was a lot of work to be done. "There were florescent lights throughout the house, because the Roundtable used these rooms as offices," explains Hankis. "The beau- tiful plaster ceilings and the dark wood floors throughout the entire home needed a great deal of restor- ing." Much of the original grandeur of the home has been recaptured. In the kitchen, butler's pantry and dining room, for example, "we discovered the original light fixtures. They were black, but after cleaning them, we dis- covered they were all silver," says Han- kis. On two walls of the large dining room, Hankis used walnut carved buf- fet tables that belonged to the Siegels. He added Fisher's own mahogany Chippendale pedestal table and chairs, which sit beneath crystal chandeliers. The room's ornate floral woodwork and perfectly matched walnut paneling also have been restored, and a trompe l'oeil ceiling of a sky with cherubs and nudes has been newly added, handpainted by Alexander at Dynamic Visions. Other rooms have undergone greater changes. The former billiards room has been con- verted into a library for the new home- owner with show furnishings by Hud- son's in Southfield. However, the original wood panel- ing and a carved flo- ral-patterned plaster ceiling remain. Original French doors open to the front veranda. Also on view is the say- ing originally carved into the lime- stone of the fireplace: 'A clean fire, a B enjamin and Sophie Siegel, who built the magnificent Albert Kahn-designed home that is this year's Detroit Historical Society's Fall Designer Showhouse, didn't start out living grand and elegant lives. Benjamin Siegel was born in Baden, Germany, in 1860, and came to the United States in 1876, at the age of 16. His first job, in Selma, Ala., was as a clerk in a general store. Five years later, he struck out for Detroit. Sophie Siegel also came to this country as a child, liv- ing initially near Tiger Stadium. She worked hard to earn a living, as she worked hard in later years to help others. She served as a member of the National Council of Jewish Women, the Founders Society, the National Conference of Christians and Jews and the Detroit His- torical Society. After Ben Siegel moved up to Detroit, he managed, and later owned, the women's ready-to-wear department in the Heyn's Bazaar, which was located near the Majes-, tic Building. By 1895, he opened his own store, B. Siegel Co., which was devoted entirely to selling ladies, Above: Ben and misses, and children's outerwear and furs. Sophie Siegel at the The idea of a department store selling only women's Grand Hotel on apparel, rather than a full line of merchandise, was revo- Mackinac Island. lutionary. Many thought the concept would fail. Instead, Ben Siegel's success led to the creation of many other Top: The B. Siegel "specialty" stores around the country. mansion In 1904, the year Ben Siegel married Sophie Siegel (her maiden name also was Siegel); Ben opened a store at Woodward and State, which was then one of the busiest intersections in the country. He personally managed the store until 1931, when his brother- in-law, Leo Siegel, took over. "They enjoyed life, and the house reflected it," reminisces nephew Marty Mayer, who grew up across the street from Sophie and Ben. "On the ground floor, they had a pool and card room where my Aunt Sophie taught me how to shoot dice and play poker. She was not a shrinking violet, "Uncle Ben was always nattily dressed. He had a barbershop room, with a barber chair. And he always ate a monstrous breakfast, no lunch and a late dinner." As was typical for affluent people of that time, the Siegels, who were members of Temple Beth El, had a maid, cook and chauffeur; Sophie never learned to drive. "She had a Lincoln Touring Car, ancrevery time President Roosevelt came to town, the Secret Service would borrow it for the parades," remembers her nephew. "Aunt Sophie loved it because they would'put new tires on the car and fix it up. "The house was beautiful and elegant," recalls Mayer. "There was beautiful wood paneling, and instead of wallpaper, there was damask silk on the walls. The house was very well taken care of, but it was really lived in. Aunt Sophie and Uncle Ben did not treat it like a showhouse. "I remember Aunt Sophie's New Year's Eve parties in the dining and living rooms," says Mayer. "Most of it was just the family. There were a lot of us then, and we would fill the house up. Everyone would get all dressed up. The house was immaculate, and it would just glit- ter. When [Aunt Sophie] entertained, there was no halfway. It was all first-class." The Siegels had one daughter, Eleanor, who is now deceased. Ben Siegel died in 1936, and Sophie lived on until 1955. Inlet will, she donated her beloved house, as well as money to maintain it, to the National Conference of Christians and Jews, now known as the Greater Detroit Inter- faith Roundtable. [11 — Lisa Brody