Anonymous

12503.

City Hall–New York.

12504.

Summer House in Madison Square, New York.

12505.

Printing House Square-New York.

12506.

Beecher’s Residence-Columbia Heights, Brooklyn.

12507.

Pierrepont Stores-Brooklyn.

12508.

Penitentiary-Flatbush, L.I. Built in 1879. Raymond Street Jail, between Willoughby and Dekalb Aves. It was the official Kings County Jail. It was closed in 1963 and razed the following year.

12509.

Summer House, Union Square, N.Y.

12510.

Park Police Headquarters-Union Square, New York.

12511.

Bleecker St. Savings Bank-New York.

12512.

Jewish Synagogue, 5th Ave., N.Y.

12513.

View on 4th Ave., New York.

12514.

Masonic Temple-New York.

12515.

No. 2. Trinity Chapel Sunday School. Erected 1860-61. West 25th St. N.Y.  The Trinity Chapel School, now the cathedral’s Parish House, was designed by Jacob Wrey Mould, a polychromatic Victorian Gothic building which is Mould’s only extant structure in New York City.

12516.

No. 1. Trinity Chapel Sunday School. Erected 1860-61. West 25th St. N.Y.  The Trinity Chapel School, now the cathedral’s Parish House, was designed by Jacob Wrey Mould, a polychromatic Victorian Gothic building which is Mould’s only extant structure in New York City.

12520.

Long Island Club House, Clinton & Remsen Sts., Brooklyn.

12523.

St. Ann’s Church, 18th St. between 5th & 6th Aves.

12524.

Academy of Design. The National Academy of Design is an honorary association of American artists, founded in New York City in 1825 by Samuel Morse, Asher Durand, Thomas Cole, Martin E. Thompson, Charles Cushing Wright, Ithiel Town, and others “to promote the fine arts in America through instruction and exhibition.” Membership is limited to 450 American artists and architects, who are elected by their peers on the basis of recognized excellence. The Academy occupied several locations in Manhattan over the years. Notable among them was this building on Park Avenue and 23rd Street designed by architect P. B. Wight and built 1863–1865 in a Venetian Gothic style modeled on the Doge’s Palace in Venice.

12525.

County Court House, Brooklyn, N.Y.

12526.

Tony Pastor’s Opera House, NY. Bowery near Prince St.

12527.

St. Paul’s Church, Brooklyn.

12528.

New Bowery and Roosevelt Streets, NY.

12529.

Unidentified NYC street scene.

12530.

Academy of Music, NY.

12532.

5th Avenue Synagogue.

12533.

Booth’s Theatre.

12535.

Washington Equestrian Statue at Union Square, Decoration Day, 1876.

12536.

Hotel Brunswick.

12537.

1236. Koste & Bial’s Building, New York City.

12538.

Grand Central Hotel, New York.

12539.

Wall Street from Broadway, New York.

12540.

View of the Harlem River, NY.

12541.

Fort Lafayette.

12542.

Bowery, (Atlantic Garden) N.Y. The Atlantic Garden was a beer garden and music hall established by William Kramer in 1858 at what is now 50 Bowery, next to the Bowery Theatre (built in 1826) and on the site of the Bull’s Head Tavern, formerly headquarters for New York’s cattle market, and the New York Hotel. The premises extended west to a secondary frontage on Elizabeth Street. The Bowery Theatre was built as a fashionable theater, but by the 1850s it came to cater to immigrant groups; the Germans especially patronized Atlantic Garden, which featured a theater behind the beer hall, where the new entertainment of “variety” acts were presented along with popular music concerts. In 1910, following the neighborhood’s changing dynamic, Atlantic Garden switched to presenting Yiddish theatre. In 2013 structures on the site were razed to make way for a high-rise hotel.

12543.

7th Regiment Armory, 3rd Avenue, New York.

12545.

1197. Alms House, Blackwell.

12546.

NY Club House 5th Ave.

12547.

Astor House, New York.

12548.

Castle Garden.

12550.

Windsor Hotel, NY.

12551.

Broadway Hospital.

12552.

1378. Union Square Hotel.

12553.

New York Street Scene, Canal Street. Pythagoras Hall, 134 & 136 Canal Street.

12554.

No. 150. City Hall.

12555.

House of Cousin Helen Beuvier? in Astoria, N.Y.

12557.

No. 180. New York University.

12558.

Cooper Institute.

12559.

No. 3. Trinity Chapel Sunday School. Erected 1860-’61. West 25th Street, N.Y. Jacob Wrey Mould, Architect.

12560.

The Church of the Saviour, Brooklyn. In June 1833, forced between choosing a ferry ride to Unitarian services in Manhattan or attending services of a different denomination in Brooklyn where they would be refused communion, a group of ten men (John Frost, Josiah Dow, George Blackburn, William H. Carey, William H. Hale, Henry Leeds, Seth Low, Alexander H. Smith, and Charles and Thomas Woodward) set to forming a Unitarian society in Brooklyn. The First Unitarian Congregational Society of Brooklyn was incorporated two years later as the thirteenth functioning church in Brooklyn and the first in the city to be controlled by its congregation. As its place of worship the First Church constructed the Church Of The Saviour on Pierrepont Street by Monroe Place in 1844. The building was designed by architect Minard Lefever in the Gothic Revival style.

12561.

Grace Church, N.Y. No. 148.

12562.

Foot of Whitehall St., New York City.