Got a Tip?
tips at gothamist
About Gothamist

Gothamist is a website about New York. More

Editor: Jen Chung Publisher: Jake Dobkin

About Us & Advertising | Archives | Contact | Mobile | RSS | Staff

Favorites
Newsmap
Contribute

Latest tip:

RNC 9/11 "tribute" video< [more]

 

Latest link:

 

Latest Photo:

 

Subscribe
Use an RSS reader to stay up to date with the latest news and posts from Gothamist.

All Our RSS

October 28, 2003

Collyer Bros.: Pack Rats to End All Pack Rats

Collyer Bros. newspapers; Photo - NY TimesFranz Lidz looks at the timeless story of the Collyer Brothers for the Times' City section. Two educated brothers, Homer and Langley Collyer, lived in Harlem at the beginning of the 1900s and soon their house would have 180 tons of garbage, much of it newspapers, in it. The main impetus to save was when Homer went blind, and Langley, while taking care of him (like feeding him oranges for his sight), saved newspapers for him, adding to a collection that included 10 pianos, a disassembled car (or two) and a dozen gas chandeliers among other things. Unfortunately Langley died when he sprung on of his homemade burglar traps, becoming buried beneath mounds of newspapers, and Homer died from starvation. Police found Homer's body, but did not find Langley's rat-gnawed body until weeks later within the debris, after searching the city for him.

The Collyer Brothers were a favorite true urban legend for young Franz: "To my 7-year-old ears, the cruel twist was deliciously gruesome: Homer and Langley had been killed by the very bulwarks they had raised to keep the world out of their lives. Now Lidz has written about them, in Ghosty Men: The Strange but True Story of the Collyer Brothers, New York's Greatest Hoarders, An Urban Historical (the brothers were called 'ghosty men' by their neighbors as their reclusive habits emerged). Lidz also connects the story to his own Uncle Arthur, a pack ratl; but Uncle Arthur says "My junk is like a friend, another person, another cat." In that case, Gothamist has many, many friends.

A version of Lidz's Uncle Arthur can be seen in Unstrung Heroes, a 1995 Diane-Keaton-directed film starring John Turturro, Andie MacDowell, and Michael Richards, based on Lidz's memoirs. If you're in Philadelphia, Franz Lidz is reading from Ghosty Men tonight.

One could argue Nicholson Baker is a modern day version of Langley Collyer, with his crusade to save newspapers. But Baker's goal is more structured, to be sure: The American Newspaper Repository.

871

Email This Entry







Advertisement: Gothamist Continues Below!

Comments (7)

This reminds me of artist/avant-garde filmmaker Harry Smith, who collected all sorts of things: books, Ukrainian Easter eggs, antique door knockers. He lived in rooms at the Chelsea Hotel among other places, including a flophouse in the Bowery for a while.

Like Franz Lidz's uncle in the Times article, Smith used to find paper airplanes all over New York, and supposedly donated his huge collection to the Smithsonian.

Pack rats are amazing.

 

I think the Times covered this one.

 

Yeah, I know the Times covered this. Read the post.

 

this is really sad.

u know what? this is my 2nd time here 2day. i came by way of links on other pages and seem 2 always end up back here.

 

I remember hearing about the Collyer Brothers on Eyewitness News back in 1983? when Joel Siegel did a story on New York in the 1940s. They hoarded an incredible amount of junk. Their bodies were found amid the debris. They must of had obsessive compulsive hoarding syndrome. On Sunday Mrach 14, 2004 Dateline NBC just had a story about a man who hoarded everything he could get his hands on. His house would remind one of the Collyer Brothers.

 

I have the perfect tool that can help to control clutter to some extent and it is also fun to use. It is a Tonka Sanitary Service toy garbage truck. I bought mine on eBay in late June 2004 and I use it to help contain the junk mail. I enjoy using it and it makes getting rid of clutter an easier chore. Even though it was a children's toy, it can help an adult to help keep clutter under control. Once the truck fills up, I simply dump the contents into the recyclables since I only put paper (junk mail) into the truck.

Jeff Alterman

 

i thought my mom was a pack rat i just told her that the other day cause we moved out of our house into a new one and that wasn't any fun moving her stuff. she has alot of stuff but none of that compares to the collyer brothers i just so want to know why they kept all of the stuff???
it makes someone wonder why?

small town girl from texas
brittany gunter

 
Post a comment (Comment Policy)

2003-2008 Gothamist LLC. All rights reserved. Terms of Use & Privacy Policy. We use MovableType.

Site Meter