G.W. Pach

12100.

No. 287. The Five Points.

12101.

No. 368. View in the Five Points.

12102.

No. 324. Deck View Str. Herman.

12103.

482. Shipping Scene.

12104.

Navy Yard Scene, Brooklyn.

12105.

No. 139. City of Peking, New York.

12106.

336. Elevated RR.

12107.

No. 337. Grand Central Depot.

12108.

No. 293. Hudson River R.R. Freight Depot.

12109.

No. 293. Hudson River R.R. Freight Depot.

12110.

No. 364. Interior G.C. R.R. Depot.

12111.

Grammar School No. 40, New York City. Assembled for Morning Exercises.

12112.

No. 320. 5th Ave. Hotel Dining Room.

12113.

354. Meat Market.

12114.

Grammar School No. 55, New York City. Pupils of the First Grade in their Class-Room.

12115.

No. 793 (could be 193). Stuyvesant Place.

12116.

No. 109. Park Ave. East Side.

12117.

317. New Post Office.

12118.

No. 346. Young Men’s C.A.

12119.

No. 347. Blind Asylum.

12120.

No. 481. Custom House.

12121.

No. 356. French Hospital.

12122.

No. 333. Booth’s Theatre. Booth’s Theatre was a theatre in New York built by actor Edwin Booth. Located on the southeast corner of 23rd Street and Sixth Avenue, Booth’s Theatre opened on February 3, 1869. The theatre featured a grand vestibule with Italian marble floors and a large statue of Edwin Booth’s father, the Shakespearean actor Junius Brutus Booth, by the sculptor Thomas Ridgeway Gould. The auditorium was similarly elaborate in its decor, and featured a large chandelier, as well as a stage that incorporated the most modern machinery in use at the time, such as hydraulic rams to raise and lower scenery, and stage lights that could be completely extinguished during the performance, a first in the United States. Despite the appearances by important talent of the times, Booth could not make the theatre a financially viable enterprise. It was sold in December 1881, and was converted into McCreery & Co. department store until 1965, when it was demolished to make room for a parking lot.

12123.

No. 317. New Post Office. P.T. Barnum sign as a bill post in view.

12124.

No. 277. Broadway North from 8th St.

12125.

No. 329. The Colosseum.

12126.

No. 339. Lincoln Monument. Union Square.

12127.

No. 331. Albemarle Hotel.

12128.

No. 338. Park Avenue.

12129.

No. 298. Herald Building. Pach’s photo wagon is in the view.

12130.

No. 276. Free Academy.

12131.

No. 319. Church, cor. Madison Ave. & 57th St.

12132.

No. 302. Tabernacle Church.

12133.

No. 327. Church of the Messiah.

12134.

No. 352. Cathedral.

12135.

491. Interior St. Francis Church.

12136.

Interior 5th Ave. Synagogue.

12137.

No. 412. The Dairy.

12138.

Academy Mt. St. Vincent-on-the-Hudson. The Grotto of Our Lady of Lourdes.

12139.

The Fountain on the Lawn. Mt. St. Vincent.

12140.

Academy Mt. St. Vincent. View from the South-west.

12141.

Academy Mt. St. Vincent-on-the-Hudson. St. Vincent’s Free School, 1875.

12142.

Academy Mt. St. Vincent-on-the-Hudson. Pupil’s Dining Room.

12143.

Academy Mt. St. Vincent-on-the-Hudson. Art Room.

12144.

The Terrace. Mt. St. Vincent.

12145.

The Angel on the Via Angelorum. Mt. St. Vincent.

12146.

Academy Mt. St. Vincent. View from the North-west.

12147.

Academy of Mt. St. Vincent-on-the Hudson. Study Hall.

12149.

Academy of Mt. St. Vincent-on-the Hudson. Chapel, 1874.

12150.

Font Hill Castle. Mt. St. Vincent.