13002.

Observatory, Coney Island.

13002.

Washington Square Arch, NYC.

13003.

Tower, Coney Island.

13003.

Unidentified Street in Brooklyn, NY.

13004.

West Brighton Beach. The Observatory-300 feet high.

13004.

Brunswich Arch, NYC.

13005.

Manhattan Beach Hotel.

13005.

Madison Square, NYC.

13006.

Manhattan Beach Hotel.

13006.

Brooklyn Bridge under construction.

13007.

West Brighton Beach. The Big Cow.

13007.

1040. Coney I. & NY Bay from Elevator.

13008.

West Brighton Beach. View from West Brighton Beach Hotel.

13008.

South Street, NY.

13009.

West Brighton Beach. Bathing Scene.

13009.

Lenox Hospital, NY.

13010.

Brighton Beach. Hotel Brighton.

13010.

1253. Croton Reservoir.

13011.

Manhattan Beach. Music Pavilion.

13011.

Grace Church, Episcopal, New York.

13012.

West Brighton Beach. West Brighton Beach Hotel.

13012.

The Approach to Brooklyn Bridge.

13013.

West Brighton Beach. The Iron Pier–1000 feet long.

13013.

Franklin St. from the Tombs.

13014.

West Brighton Beach. Coney Island Beach, from the Iron Pier.

13014.

No. 139. View of Broadway Bridge, St. Pauls, and Astor House, NY City.

13015.

West Brighton Beach. The Iron Pier–1000 feet long.

13015.

Broadway & Union Square at 13th St.

13016.

Iron Pier, Coney Island.

13016.

Homeopathic Hospital, Ward’s Island, NY.

13017.

Dining Room, Brighton Beach, Coney Island.

13017.

Homeopathic Hospital, Ward’s Island, NY. This building began its life for a different purpose.

In the late nineteenth century the belief that alcoholism could be cured by confinement led to the establishment of inebriate asylums. In 1864 judges were granted the power to commit alcoholics to asylums.  In the Textbook of Temperance (1869), Lees proclaims, “At last physiologists and statesmen have begun to acknowledge that the drinker’s appetite is a true mania and must be treated as such. Hence the establishment of ‘Inebriate Asylums’ in various parts of the States.”  The Asylum on Ward’s Island was opened in 1868 by the Commissioners of Public Charities and Correction, becoming the third in New York State.  In New York and its Institutions, 1609-1871 (1872), Richmond chronicles its opening, “On the 21st of July 1868 the Asylum was formally opened to the public with appropriate services and on the 31st of December the resident physician reported 339 admissions. During 1869 1,490 were received and during 1870 1,270 more were admitted.”

While most patients were transferred from the Workhouse, there were also three classes of paying patients, with voluntary attendance of some. However, the Commissioners and the Attending Physician of the Inebriate Asylum came to agree with prevailing expert opinion that stricter confinement was necessary. Richmond explains, “The rules of the Institution were at first exceedingly mild. The patients were relieved from all irksome restraints, paroles very liberally granted and every inmate supposed intent on reformation. But this excessive kindness was subject to such continual abuse that to save the Institution from utter demoralization a stricter discipline was very properly introduced.”

As forcible detention came to lose favor as a means of treating alcoholism, the Inebriate Asylum closed in 1875.  The building temporarily housed the overflow of patients from the Insane Asylum, also located on Ward’s Island, before becoming the Homeopathic Hospital the same year. The Homeopathic Hospital was renamed Metropolitan Hospital in 1894 when it moved to Blackwell’s Island, marking the beginning of Metropolitan’s affiliation with New York Homeopathic Medical College (now New York Medical College).

13018.

Andrew R. Culver’s R.R., the Culver Line.

13018.

No. 23. Bowery looking north from Grand Street.

13019.

Untitled Coney Island.

13019.

Looking West  toward New York from Brooklyn Bridge.

13020.

No. 24. Wall Street and Trinity Church.

13021.

Coney Island, NY.–Vanderveer’s Hotel.

13021.

1336. Casino Theatre, N.Y. City. The Casino Theatre was a Broadway theatre located at 1404 Broadway and West 39th Street in New York City. Built in 1882, it was a leading presenter of mostly musicals and operettas until it closed in 1930. The theatre was the first in New York to be lit entirely by electricity, popularized the chorus line and later introduced white audiences to African-American shows. It originally seated approximately 875 people, however the theatre was enlarged in 1894 and again in 1905, after a fire, when its capacity was enlarged to 1,300 seats. It hosted a number of long-running comic operas, operettas and musical comedies, including ErminieFlorodoraThe Vagabond King and The Desert Song. It closed in 1930 and was demolished the same year.

13022.

Marine Railway Station, Coney Island.

13022.

A Scene in the Blizzard NYC 1888.

13023.

Music Pavilion, Coney Island, NY.

13023.

Grand Central Depot, NY.

13024.

Camera Obscura. This is Culver’s Camera Obscura, bought from the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition of 1876.

13024.

Crowd reading the latest posted news.

13025.

Coney Island, NY.-“Meet me by moonlight alone.”

13025.

Lewis Aunts & Brothers & Sisters, Staten Island, NY.

13026.

West Brighton Bach, Coney Island, NY.

13026.

37. 14th St. NY.

13027.

No. 183. Mt. St. Vincent. Central Park. Before there was a park, however, there were nuns. In 1847 the Sisters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul arrived at the still-bucolic region of Manhattan and opened the Academy of St. Vincent, a school and convent. The nuns left when the area was incorportated into the park, however the building remained standing and utilized for several purposes. During the Civil War, it was briefly used as a hospital; later, it was a “restaurant and hostelry,” with some certainly spectacular views for guests. The stone chapel was even refashioned as an gallery for artwork and “stuffed specimens of animals of considerable value.” Unfortunately, the structures were destroyed in a fire in 1881.