Mark-To-Market (M2M) Transactions
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Race, Riots, and Public Space in Harlem, 1900-1935
City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works School of Arts & Sciences Theses Hunter College Spring 5-9-2017 The Breath Seekers: Race, Riots, and Public Space in Harlem, 1900-1935 Allyson Compton CUNY Hunter College How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/hc_sas_etds/166 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] The Breath Seekers: Race, Riots, and Public Space in Harlem, 1900-1935 by Allyson Compton Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History, Hunter College The City University of New York 2017 Thesis Sponsor: April 10, 2017 Kellie Carter Jackson Date Signature April 10, 2017 Jonathan Rosenberg Date Signature of Second Reader Table of Contents Introduction ..................................................................................................................... 1 Chapter 1: Public Space and the Genesis of Black Harlem ................................................. 7 Defining Public Space ................................................................................................... 7 Defining Race Riot ....................................................................................................... 9 Why Harlem? ............................................................................................................. 10 Chapter 2: Setting -
LEGEND Location of Facilities on NOAA/NYSDOT Mapping
(! Case 10-T-0139 Hearing Exhibit 2 Page 45 of 50 St. Paul's Episcopal Church and Rectory Downtown Ossining Historic District Highland Cottage (Squire House) Rockland Lake (!304 Old Croton Aqueduct Stevens, H.R., House inholding All Saints Episcopal Church Complex (Church) Jug Tavern All Saints Episcopal Church (Rectory/Old Parish Hall) (!305 Hook Mountain Rockland Lake Scarborough Historic District (!306 LEGEND Nyack Beach Underwater Route Rockefeller Park Preserve Rockefeller Park Preserve Rockefeller Park Preserve CP Railroad ROW Rockefeller Park Preserve Rockefeller Park Preserve CSX Railroad ROW Rockefeller Park Preserve (!307 Rockefeller Park Preserve Rockefeller Park Preserve NYS Canal System, Underground (! Rockefeller Park Preserve Milepost Rockefeller Park Preserve Rockefeller Park Preserve Rockefeller Park Preserve )" Sherman Creek Substation Rockefeller Park Preserve Rockefeller Park Preserve Methodist Episcopal Church at Nyack *# Yonkers Converter Station Rockefeller Park Preserve Upper Nyack Firehouse ^ Mine Rockefeller Park Preserve Van Houten's Landing Historic District (!308 Park Rockefeller Park Preserve Union Church of Pocantico Hills State Park Hopper, Edward, Birthplace and Boyhood Home Philipse Manor Railroad Station Untouched Wilderness Dutch Reformed Church Rockefeller, John D., Estate Historic Site Tappan Zee Playhouse Philipsburg Manor St. Paul's United Methodist Church US Post Office--Nyack Scenic Area Ross-Hand Mansion McCullers, Carson, House Tarrytown Lighthouse (!309 Harden, Edward, Mansion Patriot's Park Foster Memorial A.M.E. Zion Church Irving, Washington, High School Music Hall North Grove Street Historic District DATA SOURCES: NYS DOT, ESRI, NOAA, TDI, TRC, NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF Christ Episcopal Church Blauvelt Wayside Chapel (Former) First Baptist Church and Rectory ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION (NYDEC), NEW YORK STATE OFFICE OF PARKS RECREATION AND HISTORICAL PRESERVATION (OPRHP) Old Croton Aqueduct Old Croton Aqueduct NOTES: (!310 1. -
Manhattan N.V. Map Guide 18
18 38 Park Row. 113 37 101 Spring St. 56 Washington Square Memorial Arch. 1889·92 MANHATTAN N.V. MAP GUIDE Park Row and B kman St. N. E. corner of Spring and Mercer Sts. Washington Sq. at Fifth A ve. N. Y. Starkweather Stanford White The buildings listed represent ali periods of Nim 38 Little Singer Building. 1907 19 City Hall. 1811 561 Broadway. W side of Broadway at Prince St. First erected in wood, 1876. York architecture. In many casesthe notion of Broadway and Park Row (in City Hall Perk} 57 Washington Mews significant building or "monument" is an Ernest Flagg Mangin and McComb From Fifth Ave. to University PIobetween unfortunate format to adhere to, and a portion of Not a cast iron front. Cur.tain wall is of steel, 20 Criminal Court of the City of New York. Washington Sq. North and E. 8th St. a street or an area of severatblocks is listed. Many glass,and terra cotta. 1872 39 Cable Building. 1894 58 Housesalong Washington Sq. North, Nos. 'buildings which are of historic interest on/y have '52 Chambers St. 1-13. ea. )831. Nos. 21-26.1830 not been listed. Certain new buildings, which have 621 Broadway. Broadway at Houston Sto John Kellum (N.W. corner], Martin Thompson replaced significant works of architecture, have 59 Macdougal Alley been purposefully omitted. Also commissions for 21 Surrogates Court. 1911 McKim, Mead and White 31 Chembers St. at Centre St. Cu/-de-sac from Macdouga/ St. between interiorsonly, such as shops, banks, and 40 Bayard-Condict Building. -
DUNBAR APARTMENTS, I 49Th Street to I 50Th Street, Beh.Rcon 7Th Avenue and 8Th Avenue, Borough of Manhattan
Landmarks Preservation Commission July 14, 1970, Number 4 LP-0708 DUNBAR APARTMENTS, I 49th Street to I 50th Street, beh.rcon 7th Avenue and 8th Avenue, Borough of Manhattan. Begun 1926, completed 1928.; architect Andrew J. Thomas. Landmark Site: Borough of ~~anhattan Tax t~ap Block 2035, Lot I. On May 26, 1970, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a public hearing on the proposed designation as a Landmark of the Dunbar Apartments and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site. (Item No. 28). The hearing had been duly advertised In accordance with the provisions of law. One witness spoke in favor of designation. There were no speakers in opposition to designation. The City's Landmarks Preservation program has been discussed with the owners of the Dunbar Apartments, and they have indicated that they have no objection to the proposed designation. DESCRIPTION AND ANALYSIS The Dunbar Apartments, named after the famous Black poet of the turn of the century, Paul Lawrence Dunbar (1872-1906), occupies the entire block bounded by 149th and !50th Streets and Seventh and Eighth Avenues. It was the first large cooperative built for Blacks and was Manhattan's earliest large garden apartment complex. Financed by John D. Rockefeller, Jr., and designed by the architect Andrew J. Thomas, the building was completed in 1928 and was destined, from the planning and sociological points of view, to occupy a pivotal place in the history of the Harlem community. The complex consists of six independent U-shaped bui !dings, containing 51 I apartments, and is clustered around a large interior garden court. -
NSPIRE Approved Properties As of May 1, 2021
NSPIRE Approved Properties as of May 1, 2021 Title MFH Property ID PHA Code City State Parkwest Apartments 800000113 Fairbanks AK John L. Turner House 800217776 Fairbanks AK Elyton Village AL001000001 Birmingham AL Southtown Court AL001000004 Birmingham AL Smithfield Court AL001000009 Birmingham AL Harris Homes AL001000014 Birmingham AL Coooper Green Homes AL001000017 Birmingham AL Kimbrough Homes AL001000018 Birmingham AL Roosevelt City AL001000023 Birmingham AL Park Place I AL001000031 Birmingham AL Park Place II AL001000032 Birmingham AL Park Place III AL001000033 Birmingham AL Glenbrook at Oxmoor-Hope VI Phase I AL001000037 Birmingham AL Tuxedo Terrace I AL001000044 Birmingham AL Tuxedo Terrace II AL001000045 Birmingham AL Riverview AL005000001 Phenix City AL Douglas AL005000002 Phenix City AL Stough AL005000005 Phenix City AL Blake AL005000006 Phenix City AL Paterson Court AL006000004 Montgomery AL Gibbs Village West AL006000006 Montgomery AL Gibbs Village East AL006000007 Montgomery AL Colley Homes AL049000001 Gadsden AL Carver Village AL049000002 Gadsden AL Emma Sansom Homes AL049000003 Gadsden AL Gateway Village AL049000004 Gadsden AL Cambell court AL049000005 Gadsden AL Westfield Addition AL052000001 Cullman AL Hilltop AL052000004 Cullman AL Hamilton AL053000020 Hamilton AL Double Springs AL053000030 Hamilton AL John Sparkman Ct. AL089000001 Vincent AL Stalcup Circle AL090000001 Phil Campbell AL Stone Creek AL091001003 Arab AL Franconia Village AL098000001 Aliceville AL Marrow Village AL107000001 Elba AL Chatom Apts AL117000001 -
Landscape Architecture … Is a Social Art
Landscape architecture … is a social art. – Lawrence Halprin, 2003 The Landscape Architecture of Lawrence Halprin The Cultural Landscape Foundation connecting people to places™ ® tclf.org What’s Out There [cover] Roger Foley Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial 2016 C-print 36 x 24 inches [opposite] Roger Foley Fountain Detail, Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial 2016 Acknowledgements This gallery guide was created to accompany the traveling photographic exhibition The Landscape Architecture of Lawrence Halprin, which debuted at the National Building Museum on November 5, 2016. The exhibition was organized by The Cultural Landscape Foundation (TCLF), and co-curated by Charles A. Birnbaum, President & CEO, FASLA, FAAR, Nord Wennerstrom, Director of Communications, and Eleanor Cox, Project Manager, in collaboration with G. Martin Moeller, Jr., Senior Curator at the National Building Museum. The production of this guide would not have been possible without the help and support of the Halprin family, and the archivists at the Architectural Archives of the University of Pennsylvania, where Lawrence Halprin’s archive is kept. We wish to thank the site owners and administrators who graciously allowed us to document their properties, particularly Richard Grey, Diana Bonyhadi, Emma Chapman, and Anna Halprin, who allowed us access to their private residences. We also wish to thank the photographers who generously donated their time and energy to documenting these sites, and Russell Hart for proofing the photography. Finally, we are grateful to the National Building Museum’s Chase W. Rynd, Hon. ASLA, President and Executive Director of THE LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE OF the National Building Museum, Nancy Bateman, Registrar, Cathy Frankel, Vice President for Exhibitions and Collections, and G. -
Big Buy Reimbursement Program Property Status.2010-07-02.Xlsx Page 1 of 295
Big Buy Reimbursement Program Property Status.2010-07-02.xlsx Page 1 of 295 Multifamily Hub Name Property Name City State Official Big Buy Status BBRP Status Not Interested in Atlanta ADA FERRELL GARDEN APTS (THDA) TULLAHOMA TN Participating Ineligible: inactive in iREMS Evaluation Report Mailed Atlanta ADAIRVILLE ARMS APARTMENTS ADAIRVILLE KY to the Owner Ineligible: Evaluation Completed Evaluation Report Mailed Atlanta ALCO APTS SCOTTSVILLE KY to the Owner Ineligible: Evaluation Completed Evaluation Report Mailed Atlanta ALDERMAN GARDEN APARTMENTS FLATWOODS KY to the Owner Ineligible: Evaluation Completed Not Interested in Atlanta Alpha A Fowler Community DOUGLASVILLE GA Participating Ineligible: Exempt Evaluation Report Mailed Atlanta ALTA LOMA APTS NASHVILLE TN to the Owner Ineligible: inactive in iREMS Evaluation Report Mailed Atlanta ALTURAS DEL SENORIAL SAN JUAN PR to the Owner Ineligible: Evaluation Completed Not Interested in Atlanta AMBER VILLAGE EDDYVILLE KY Participating Ineligible: Exempt Atlanta ANDERSON PLACE LOUISVILLE KY Interested in Participating Ineligible: Exempt Evaluation Report Mailed Atlanta Anthony Arms L P MACON GA to the Owner Ineligible: Evaluation Completed Not Interested in Atlanta AQUEDUCT PLACE, INC. LEXINGTON KY Participating Ineligible: Exempt Not Interested in Atlanta Ashley House Apartments VALDOSTA GA Participating Ineligible: Exempt Not Interested in Ineligible: Not Interested in Atlanta Athens Gardens ATHENS GA Participating Participating Evaluation Report Mailed Atlanta Augusta Manor AUGUSTA GA -
IM^M^^M^Iiim^^^Mi!
7 Form 10-300 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR STATE: (Rev. 6-72) NATIONAL PARK SERVICE New York COUNTY: NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLAC ES New York INVENTORY - NOMINATION FORM FOR NPS USE ONLY ENTRY DATE (Type all entries - complete applicable sectiom*) \ —————————————————————————————————————————— :ffi:*:-:-:-:Afr:-:fc-t'A^-:-:-:-:-:-x-x-:-:-:-x-:-:^ : '•:•'.•:•:•:•'••:•'.•:•:•:•:•: :•:-:•: :-.•;•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:-:•.•:•:•:•:•:•:•>;•:•:•:-:-:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:-.•. E•:!l-*->:->l^-jfcJyi-lF':-:-:-:-:-'->>!-:-!-:'>:-:-:->:-: :•:•:•:•:-:•::•:•:•:•'•'•:•:•:;::-•/: •:-:•'.•:•:•:•'•: :•:•:•:-:•:•:•:::•:•:•:•:::::•:•:•:•:-:•:•:-'•:•: ^i-x-i-ix^^i^-^^^x-x-i-X;:-:;:;:':;:;:;:;:;;;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:^^!;:::;::.^^':::::':^::: lill^ipislIM COMMON: Dunbar Apartments (Matthew Henson's residence) AND/OR HISTORIC: Matthew Henson Residence P^ilMilM STREET AND NUMBER: 246 W . 1 50th Street , Apartment 3F CITY OR TOWN: (:ONGRESSIONAl_ DISTRICT: New York Twenthieth STATE r CODE C OUNTYr CODE New York 3O New York 06 1 Itllililll^ STATUS ACCESSIBLE ^TEtG ° RY OWNERSHIP (Check One) TO THE PUBLIC CD District (X) Building CD Public Public Acquisitior 1: S Occupied Yes: CD Site Q Structure Ixl Privote CD In Proce D Unoccupied ^ Res 'ri ' ted CD Object D Both PI Being C<>nsidered p p reservatfon work CD Unrestricted in progress ' — ' PRESENT USE (Check One or More as Appropriate) CD Agricultural | | Government CD Park CD Transportation CD Comments CD Educational CD Military Q Religious CD Entertainment 1 1 Museum | | Scientific OWNER'S NAME: (/> IES -
The Spirit of East Harlem, at E. 104Th Street and Lexington Avenue, Painted by Hank Prussing, 1974
THE HOUSE I LIVE IN The Spirit of East Harlem, at E. 104th Street and Lexington Avenue, painted by Hank Prussing, 1974. fund LaGuardia for and Wagner public Archives 2017 Calendar housing Housing has always been about much and working people. You can view the most recent calendars online at: more than shelter. Our homes can re- www.cuny.edu/freedom. flect our values and our sense of iden- tity, the economic realities we face and The once novel idea that a city government should have a responsibility our aspirations. The advocates, policy to provide housing started right here in New York. In 1934, Mayor Fio- makers, poets, architects and urban rello LaGuardia established the country’s first municipal housing authority. planners quoted in the 2017 CUNY/ Three years later, U.S. Senator Robert F. Wagner (a City College gradu- New York Times in Education cal- ate) crafted the federal legislation establishing a housing policy and putting endar and website illuminate what our homes tell us about where we have been, people to work during the Great Depression. and where we are going. Look at our homes and how they have changed over Turn to any page in the calendar, and you’ll find striking images and the years and you can discover truths thoughtful viewpoints on housing. April focuses on the “uprooted” – those about our family life, our communities and how we are progressing as a without homes. As Congresswoman Nydia Velazquez says, “Fair and af- society. fordable housing is a basic right for all New Yorkers and all Americans.” March, featuring Housing Construction, includes a thought-provoking The House I Live In is the 13th collaboration between The City Uni- statement by architect I. -
Section Summary Key Terms and People Academic Vocabulary
Name _____________________________ Class _________________ Date __________________ The Roaring Twenties Section 1 MAIN IDEAS 1. President Harding promised a return to peace and prosperity. 2. Calvin Coolidge supported a probusiness agenda. 3. American business boomed in the 1920s. 4. In 1928, Americans elected Herbert Hoover, hoping he would help good financial times continue. Key Terms and People Warren G. Harding a Republican president elected in 1920 Calvin Coolidge became president when Harding died; reelected to office in 1924 Teapot Dome scandal the acceptance of bribes by Secretary of the Interior Albert Fall in exchange for control of government oil reserves Kellogg-Briand Pact an unenforceable agreement among 62 nations to outlaw war Model T a low-cost automobile invented by Ford moving assembly line a production system that moves parts between groups of workers Herbert Hoover a president elected in 1928 with promises for more prosperity Academic Vocabulary incentive something that leads people to follow a certain course of action Section Summary RETURN TO PEACE AND PROSPERITY As the war ended, millions of soldiers came home just as factories stopped making war supplies. Many people could not find jobs. But demand for goods was high so prices rose. Workers couldn’t afford the goods, so many went on strike for higher wages. Warren G. Harding ran for president with What was Warren running mate Calvin Coolidge. Harding promised a G. Harding’s campaign return to “normalcy.” After he was elected, Harding promise? worked hard to strengthen the ecomomy. He used _______________________ tax cuts for the wealthy as an incentive to invest in _______________________ business. -
Hyde Park Township; Chicago Annexed Neighborhood
Living History of Illinois and Chicago® Living History of Illinois and Chicago® – Facebook Group. Living History of Illinois and Chicago Digital Library Living History of Illinois Gazette - The Free Daily Illinois Newspaper. Illinois History Store® – Vintage Illinois and Chicago logo products. Hyde Park Township; A Chicago Annexed Neighborhood Hyde Park Township was founded by Paul Cornell, a real estate speculator and cousin of Cornell University founder Ezra Cornell. He paid for a topographical survey of the lakefront south of the city in 1852. In 1853, following the advice of Senator Stephen Douglas, he bought 300 acres of speculative property between 51st Street and 55th Street. Cornell successfully negotiated land in exchange for a railroad station at 53rd Street setting in motion the development of the first Chicago railroad suburb. This area was 7 miles south of the mouth of the Chicago River and 6 miles south of downtown Chicago. In the 1850s, Chicago was still a walkable urban area well contained within a 2 miles radius of the center. He selected the name Hyde Park to associate the area with the elite neighborhood of Hyde Park in New York as well as the famous royal park in London. Hyde Park quickly became a popular suburban retreat for affluent Chicagoan's who wanted to escape the noise and congestion of the rapidly growing city. By 1855 he began acquiring large land tracts, which he would subdivide into lots for sale in the 1870s. The Hyde Park House, an upscale hotel, was built on the shore of Lake Michigan near the 53rd Street railroad station in 1857. -
Old Buildings, New Views
H VoL. 35y d N0. 1 e PublishedPa by ther Hydek Park H istoricalH Society istoWINTErr 2013y 2013 R te WIN Permit No. 85 No. Permit T Chicago, IL Chicago, oor V r 37 6 60 IL Chicago, AID P HS U.S. Postage U.S. 5529 S. Lake Park Avenue Park Lake S. 5529 ANDE V HP Org. Non-Profit Society Historical Park yde H ANCES Fr S o T o H P Tecumseh, Shawnee Indian leader, Del Prado entrance hall ceiling This Newsletter is published by the Hyde Park Historical Society, a old Buildings, Hyde Park Historical Society not-for-profit organization founded CoLLECTINg AND PrESErVINg HyDE PArk’S History in 1975 to record, preserve, and New Views Time for you to join up or renew? promote public interest in the history Fill out the form below and return it to: of Hyde Park. Its headquarters, must have walked by this building a hundred “I times but never once looked in,“ remarked The Hyde Park Historical Society located in an 1893 restored cable car Mindy Schwartz. Such were the sentiments of many 5529 S. Lake Park Avenue • Chicago, IL 60637 station at 5529 S. Lake Park Avenue, of the more than fifty history and architecture buffs touring landmark hotels on Hyde Park’s east side in ✁ houses local exhibits. It is open to late September. Mindy was eying Grecian sculptures Enclosed is my new renewal membership the public on Saturdays and Sundays of faces, pillars, and wall decorations propped against Bob Dalby examines a wall feature in the East Park Tower Hotel in the Hyde Park Historical Society.