This gay man is fighting his late partner's family for the right to live in the home they shared together
Bill Cornwell and Tom Doyle spent 55 years building a life together in a one-bedroom apartment within the modestly-sized, West Village brownstone that Cornwell owned and rented out to other tenants until he died two years ago.
When Cornwell died in 2014, Doyle told local paper The Villager about how they first got together—and moved into the house:
“We met in 1958 or ’59 at Riis Park Beach,” Doyle recalled. “We lived for a while on W. Fourth St. and then we found an apartment on Bank St. for $69 a month.
“There was a Chinese egg-roll plant on the block and you could smell it. Uta Hagen’s studio was right across the street,” Doyle added.
“In 1961, we heard about this garden apartment on Horatio St. It was the Meat Market back then,” Doyle continued. “Trucks would roll up the street and bones would fall off the back. The landlord was asking $95 a month and we took it.”
Cornwell purchased the building about a decade later. Now, it is estimated to be worth millions. As part of his will, Cornwell stipulated that the apartment building be left to Doyle, to whom he was never officially married.
But, as the New York Times recently reported, a number of Cornwell’s surviving nieces and nephews are challenging Doyle’s claim to the building because of a slight error the men made when creating the will.