NYC Stereoviews

12476.

Old Harlem Bridge.

12477.

Broadway from the Metropolitan-looking south St. Nicholas Hotel in the distance.

12478.

Street View of New-York.

12479.

St. Paul’s Church & Astor House, N.Y. Bridge across. (Broadway Bridge.)

12480.

West Street, New York, 1865.

12481.

5th Avenue, N.Y.

12482.

New York.

12483.

Bowery, NY.

12484.

22nd St., NY.

12485.

552. Labor Day Parade.

12486.

No. 5. Broadway with Grand Central Hotel.

12487.

From roof of 102 East 10 St., NY, looking northerly, Jan. 1876. View has detailed notes by deceased collector Jerry Winevsky on verso as well as collection stamp of deceased collector Herbert Mitchell.

12488.

Building the new Post Office, N.Y. City.

12489.

Brooklyn Heights-Winter.

12490.

Broadway 13 & 14 St. (Union Square). N.Y. City. 1878. Sign across Broadway for the American Jockey Club Races at Jerome Park.

12491.

Fulton St., NY.

12492.

Street Scenes in New-York. Broadway, below Grand-Street. (Appleton’s Building.)

12493.

NYC.

12494.

Union Square, Washington Monument, 4 July, 1876.

12495.

Fifth Avenue. New York.

12496.

Street View of New-York. West Street.

12497.

Atlantic Garden.–New York.

12498.

Brooklyn Theatre.

12499.

Dry Dock Savings Bank.

12500.

Talmadge’s Tabernacle–Brooklyn.

12501.

Dr. Storr’s Church.–Brooklyn.

12502.

Home for Destitute Children–Near Prospect Park.

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.

12517.

Park Bank.

12518.

Castle Garden, N.Y. Commissioner of Emigration on sign.

12519.

No. 316. St. Thomas Church.

12520.

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

12521.

Department of Public Charities & Corrections, Hospital for the Reception of Sunstruck Patients.

12522.

No. 50. Unidentified NYC street scene.

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.