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Buses from Holborn Circus and Chancery Lane BRIXTON
HOLLOWAY ILFORD KENTISH HACKNEY TOWN ISLINGTON SHOREDITCH BETHNAL GREEN Buses from Holborn Circus and Chancery Lane BRIXTON 24 hour Northumberland Park 341 service 17 Tesco and IKEA Key continues to Maida Vale Archway Northumberland Park N8 Hall Road Hainault 8 Day buses in black The Lowe Lansdowne Road St JohnÕs Wood 24 hour N8 Night buses in blue Swiss Cottage Upper Holloway 25 service Wanstead Ilford Bruce Grove Hainault Street —O Connections with London Underground Warwick Avenue FitzjohnÕs Avenue HOLLOWAY o Connections with London Overground Holloway Tottenham Leytonstone Ilford Hampstead NagÕs Head Police Station Green Man 24 hour R Connections with National Rail West Green Road 242 service ILFORD Paddington Caledonian Road Homerton Hospital BishopÕs Bridge Road Philip Lane Leytonstone Manor Park DI Connections with Docklands Light Railway Harringay Green Lanes Broadway Clapton Park B Royal Free Hospital Caledonian Road & Barnsbury Connections with river boats Lancaster Gate Manor House Millfields Road Woodgrange 46 Leytonstone Park I Mondays to Fridays only Hackney Downs Hampstead Heath Green Lanes High Road South End Green Caledonian Road Forest Gate Copenhagen Street Lordship Park Newington Green Hackney Central Maryland Princess Alice Kentish Town West Caledonian Road Stratford Carnegie Street Newington Green Road Graham Road Balls Pond Road Bus Station KENTISH Kentish Town Road HACKNEY Essex Road Caledonian Road Stratford High Street Killick Street Dalston Junction TOWN Royal Camden Road Essex Road Old Ford College Pancras -
Boston Symphony Orchestra Concert Programs, Season 37,1917-1918, Trip
CARNEGIE HALL - - . NEW YORK Thirty-second Season in New York B©§[ fiesta Thirty-seventh Season, 1917-1918 Dr. KARL MUCK, Conductor THURSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 8 AT 8.15 AND THE SATURDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 10 AT 2.30 WITH HISTORICAL AND DESCRIPTIVE NOTES BY PHILIP HALE COPYRIGHT, 1917, BY C. A. ELLIS PUBLISHED BY C. A. ELLIS. MANAGER Stelnway FROM the very beginning of a musical education, nothing is so important as a correct appreciation of tone. Hence the child should receive its early impressions from a Steinway Piano. The exquisite Steinway tone is recognized as ideal, and it has made this instrument world- famous. Superior craftsmanship builds the Steinway for lifetime usage, and all the strain of "prac- tice years" does not make its action uneven or lessen its sweet- ness and resonance of tone. Under these circumstances, no other instrument is "good enough to begin on." Consider, too, that a Steinway costs but little more than an ordinary "good" piano. Thirty-seventh Season, 1917-1918 Dr. KARL MUCK, Conductor Violins. Witek, A. Roth, 0. Rissland, K. Theodorowicz, J. Concert-master. Hoffmann, J. Schmidt, E. Bak, A. Noack, S. Mahn, F. Ribarsch, A. Goldstein, H. Sauvlet, H. Tak, E. Traupe, W. Baraniecki, A Griinberg, M. Habenicht, W. Fiedler, B. Berger, H. Goldstein, S. Fiumara, P. Spoor, S. Siilzen, H. Fiedler, A. Gerardi, A. Pinfield, C. Gewirtz, J. Kurth, R. Gunderson, R. Rosen, S. Violas. Ferir, E. Werner, H. Gietzen, A. v.Veen, H. Wittmann, F. Schwerley, P. Berlin, W. Kautzenbach, W. Van Wynbergen, C. Blumenau, W. Violoncellos. Warnke, H. Keller, J. -
Capacity Fund Grant Website Application
CAPACITY FUND GRANT WEBSITE APPLICATION GRANT SPECIFICATIONS Partnerships for Parks makes small grants to community groups working in NYC parks to strengthen their outreach, membership, and program-planning capacity. The Capacity Fund grant is funded in part by the Parks Equity Initiative of the New York City Council under the leadership of Speaker Melissa Mark Viverito. Partnerships for Parks awards small grants of up to $5,000 to support capacity building activities and projects for park groups located within the five boroughs of New York City. Proposals should articulate the group’s willingness to take ownership of their goals, establish a plan for achieving them, and support sustainability to increase their scope and to become more independent. Please make sure you explain how your website supports your group’s development (through events and programming, outreach and communications, resources, or partnerships) and makes your group more effective. Specifically explain how a new website will enhance your current online presence through social media such as e- newsletters, Facebook, and Twitter. Grant applications must adhere to all grant guidelines. Complete guidelines here: http://www.cityparksfoundation.org/partnerships-for-parks/grantsresources/capacity-fund-grants GRANT PROPOSAL DEADLINE The next deadline is February 1, 2015. Late applications will be considered in the next funding cycle and incomplete applications will not be considered. Applications should be received, not postmarked, by the due date. Emailed submissions must be received by 6:00 pm on the due date. GRANT PROPOSAL SUBMISSION Applications may be emailed to (preferred): Or mailed to: [email protected] Capacity Fund Grant – Website (Subject line: Capacity Fund Grant – Website) Partnerships for Parks 49 Chambers Street, Room 1027 New York, NY 10007 REQUIRED ATTACHMENTS Please include proof of 501(c)(3) status or fiscal sponsorship with the application. -
UC Riverside UC Riverside Electronic Theses and Dissertations
UC Riverside UC Riverside Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title Mobilizing the Metropolis: Politics, Plots and Propaganda in Civil War London, 1642-1644 Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3gh4h08w Author Downs, Jordan Publication Date 2015 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA RIVERSIDE Mobilizing the Metropolis: Politics, Plots and Propaganda in Civil War London, 1642-1644 A Dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History by Jordan Swan Downs December 2015 Dissertation Committee: Dr. Thomas Cogswell, Chairperson Dr. Jonathan Eacott Dr. Randolph Head Dr. J. Sears McGee Copyright by Jordan Swan Downs 2015 The Dissertation of Jordan Swan Downs is approved: ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ Committee Chairperson University of California, Riverside Acknowledgements I wish to express my gratitude to all of the people who have helped me to complete this dissertation. This project was made possible due to generous financial support form the History Department at UC Riverside and the College of Humanities and Social Sciences. Other financial support came from the William Andrew’s Clark Memorial Library, the Huntington Library, the Institute of Historical Research in London, and the Santa Barbara Scholarship Foundation. Original material from this dissertation was published by Cambridge University Press in volume 57 of The Historical Journal as “The Curse of Meroz and the English Civil War” (June, 2014). Many librarians have helped me to navigate archives on both sides of the Atlantic. I am especially grateful to those from London’s livery companies, the London Metropolitan Archives, the Guildhall Library, the National Archives, and the British Library, the Bodleian, the Huntington and the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library. -
CITY PLANNING COMMISSION N 980314 ZRM Subway
CITY PLANNING COMMISSION July 20, 1998/Calendar No. 3 N 980314 ZRM IN THE MATTER OF an application submitted by the Department of City Planning, pursuant to Section 201 of the New York City Charter, to amend various sections of the Zoning Resolution of the City of New York relating to the establishment of a Special Lower Manhattan District (Article IX, Chapter 1), the elimination of the Special Greenwich Street Development District (Article VIII, Chapter 6), the elimination of the Special South Street Seaport District (Article VIII, Chapter 8), the elimination of the Special Manhattan Landing Development District (Article IX, Chapter 8), and other related sections concerning the reorganization and relocation of certain provisions relating to pedestrian circulation and subway stair relocation requirements and subway improvements. The application for the amendment of the Zoning Resolution was filed by the Department of City Planning on February 4, 1998. The proposed zoning text amendment and a related zoning map amendment would create the Special Lower Manhattan District (LMD), a new special zoning district in the area bounded by the West Street, Broadway, Murray Street, Chambers Street, Centre Street, the centerline of the Brooklyn Bridge, the East River and the Battery Park waterfront. In conjunction with the proposed action, the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development is proposing to amend the Brooklyn Bridge Southeast Urban Renewal Plan (located in the existing Special Manhattan Landing District) to reflect the proposed zoning text and map amendments. The proposed zoning text amendment controls would simplify and consolidate regulations into one comprehensive set of controls for Lower Manhattan. -
Borough Hall Skyscraper Historic District Designation Report
Cover Photograph: Court Street looking south along Skyscraper Row towards Brooklyn City Hall, now Brooklyn Borough Hall (1845-48, Gamaliel King) and the Brooklyn Municipal Building (1923-26, McKenzie, Voorhees & Gmelin). Christopher D. Brazee, 2011 Borough Hall Skyscraper Historic District Designation Report Prepared by Christopher D. Brazee Edited by Mary Beth Betts, Director of Research Photographs by Christopher D. Brazee Map by Jennifer L. Most Technical Assistance by Lauren Miller Commissioners Robert B. Tierney, Chair Pablo E. Vengoechea, Vice-Chair Frederick Bland Christopher Moore Diana Chapin Margery Perlmutter Michael Devonshire Elizabeth Ryan Joan Gerner Roberta Washington Michael Goldblum Kate Daly, Executive Director Mark Silberman, Counsel Sarah Carroll, Director of Preservation TABLE OF CONTENTS BOROUGH HALL SKYSCRAPER HISTORIC DISTRICT MAP ................... FACING PAGE 1 TESTIMONY AT THE PUBLIC HEARING ................................................................................ 1 BOROUGH HALL SKYSCRAPER HISTORIC DISTRICT BOUNDARIES ............................. 1 SUMMARY .................................................................................................................................... 3 THE HISTORICAL AND ARCHITECTURAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE BOROUGH HALL SKYSCRAPER HISTORIC DISTRICT ........................................................................................ 5 Early History and Development of Brooklyn‟s Civic Center ................................................... 5 Mid 19th Century Development -
The Smithfield Gazette
THE SMITHFIELD GAZETTE EDITION 164 April 2018 REMEMBERING THE POULTRY MARKET FIRE Early on 23 January 1958 a fire broke out in the basement of the old Poultry Market building at Smithfield Market. It was to be one of the worst fires London had seen since the Blitz. The old Poultry Market was similar in style to the two remaining Victorian buildings – it was also designed by Sir Horace Jones and opened in 1875. In a moving ceremony held in Grand Avenue exactly sixty years after the fire started, the two firefighters who died were remembered by the unveiling of one of the Fire Brigades Union’s new red plaques. Wreaths were laid by Matt Wrack, General Secretary of the Fire Brigades Union, Greg Lawrence, Chairman of the Smithfield Market Tenants’ Association and Mark Sherlock, Superintendent of Smithfield Market. Serving and retired firefighters attended as well as Market tenants and representatives of the City of London. Two fire engines were also there. The fire burned for three days in the two and a half acre basement, which was full of crates of poultry as well as being lined with wooden match boarding which had become soaked with fat over a period of years – this meant that the fire spread exceptionally quickly. Reports of the time state that by dawn the stalls and market contents had been destroyed, the roof had collapsed and what was left was a blackened shell enclosing a twisted heap of ironwork and broken masonry. Flames 100 feet high lit the night sky. Firefighters from Clerkenwell fire station were the first to arrive on the scene, including Station Officer Jack Fourt-Wells, aged 46, and Firefighter Richard Stocking, 31, the two who lost their lives. -
1 Giltspur Street
1 GILTSPUR STREET LONDON EC1 1 GILTSPUR STREET 1 GILTSPUR STREET INVESTMENT HIGHLIGHTS • Occupies a prominent corner position in the heart of Midtown, where the City of London and West End markets converge. • Situated on the west side of Giltspur Street at its junction with West Smithfield and Hosier Lane to the north and Cock Lane to the south. • In close proximity to Smithfield Market and Farringdon Station to the north. • Excellent transport connectivity being only 200m from Farringdon Station which, upon delivery of the Elizabeth Line in autumn 2019, will be the only station in Central London to provide direct access to London Underground, the Elizabeth Line, Thameslink and National Rail services. • 23,805 sq. ft. (2,211.4 sq. m.) of refurbished Grade A office and ancillary accommodation arranged over lower ground, ground and four upper floors. • Held long leasehold from The Mayor and Commonalty of the City of London for a term of 150 years from 24 June 1991 expiring 23 June 2141 (approximately 123 years unexpired) at a head rent equating to 7.50% of rack rental value. • Vacant possession will be provided no later than 31st August 2019. Should completion of the transaction occur prior to this date the vendor will remain in occupation on terms to be agreed. We are instructed to seek offers in excess of£17 million (Seventeen Million Pounds), subject to contract and exclusive of VAT, for the long leasehold interest, reflecting a low capital value of £714 per sq. ft. 2 3 LOCATION & SITUATION 1 Giltspur Street is located in a core Central London location in the heart of Midtown where the City of London and West End markets converge. -
49 Chambers Street Classical Bank Building Juncheng Today's Luxury Residential Building
July 12, 2018 49 Chambers Street Classical Bank Building Juncheng Today's Luxury Residential Building [New York News] July 12, 2018, 06:00 Roof garden. door. Like many metropolises in the world, New York City is known for its adaptability and flexibility in the urban development process. Changing a church into a nightclub, changing into a shopping mall or becoming an apartment is happening all the time. From the former factory buildings and warehouses to luxury residences, the red light district on 42nd Street was redeveloped into a family entert ainment center, the South Street fish market became a popular riverside residential area, etc. With the development of the times, metamorphosis is the theme, leading New York into 21 century. In the early and middle of the last century, the building of the Bank Building Headquarters was a symbol of wealth and strength, and it was often impressive, many of which were local landmarks, rather than setting up points next to convenience stores like today's bank branches. In recent years, some of these gorgeous b ank buildings, including some famous buildings, have been converted to retail or other uses, and some have been demolished. However, some locations, strong structures, and elegant designs have been converted into top-class homes because it is impossible to recreate these beautiful buildings with current labor, cost and materials. The 49 Chambers Street building next to the New York City Hall building is a former bank headquarters that is being converted into a top-class home. Formerly known as Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank, the building was once the largest bank in the United States. -
FORMER EMIGRANT INDUSTRIAL SAVINGS BANK BUILDING, 51 Chambers Street, Borough of Manhattan
Landmarks Preservation Commission July 8, 1985, Designation List 181 LP-1438 FORMER EMIGRANT INDUSTRIAL SAVINGS BANK BUILDING, 51 Chambers Street, Borough of Manhattan. Built 1909-1912; architect, Raymond Almirall. Landmar k Site: Borough of Manhattan, Tax Map Block 153, Lot 1 in part consisting of the land on which the described building is situated. On June 14th, 1983, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a public hearing on the proposed designation as a Landmark of the former Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank Building and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site (Item No. 13). The hearing had been duly adverti sed in accordance with the provision of law. Two witnesses spoke in favor of designation. There were no speakers in oppos ition to designation. Correspondence was received in favor of designation, including a letter from Robert Litke, Commissioner of the Department of General Services. DESCRIPTION AND ANALYSIS The 17-story Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank was constructed between 1909 and 1912, and was the third bank built on the site for the same expanding organi zation. Designed by architect Raymond F. Almirall, who trained at the Ecole de s Beaux-Arts in Paris, the building is well conceived and richly decorated, refl ect ing contemporary architectural trends towards neoclassicism in skyscrapers. The pioneering "H"-plan of the Emigrant represents an important phase in the develop ment of the early skyscraper, resolving problems of interior lighting with simpli city and with dignity. The Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank was incorporated in 1850. Organized under the auspices of Bishop John Hughes and the Irish Emigrant Society, it was intended to protect the savings of newly-arrived immigrants (particularly those from Ireland) from unscrupulous people who might take advantage of their i nexre r ience. -
G:\MONTHCAL\May 6, 2008 PH Agenda.Wpd
LANDMARKS PRESERVATION COMMISSION NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that pursuant to the provisions of Title 25, chapter 3 of the Administrative Code of the City of New York (Sections 25-307, 25-308, 25,309, 25-313, 25-318, 25-320) (formerly Chapter 8-A, Sections 207-6.0, 207- 7.0, 207-12.0, 207-17.0, and 207-19.0), on Tuesday, May 06, 2008 at 9:00 A.M. in the morning of that day, a public hearing will be held in the Conference Room at 1 Centre Street, 9th Floor, Borough of Manhattan with respect to the following properties and then followed by a public meeting. Any person requiring reasonable accommodation in order to participate in the hearing or attend the meeting should call or write the Landmarks Commission no later than five (5) business days before the hearing or meeting. Item 1. CERTIFICATE OF APPROPRIATENESS Staff:EG BOROUGH OF QUEENS Hearing: 05/06/2008 08-5289 - Block 149, lot 42- 39-10 47th Street - Sunnyside Gardens Historic District RW, JG 9-0-0 Closed A brick rowhouse with Colonial Revival style details designed by Clarence DC, CM 7-1 (RG)-1( PV) Stein, Henry Wright, and Frederick Ackerman and built in 1925. Application Approved is to alter a window opening. Item 2. CERTIFICATE OF APPROPRIATENESS Staff:EG BOROUGH OF QUEENS Hearing: 05/06/2008 08-7023 & 08-7024 - Block 148, lot 13 & 14- 39-79 & 39-75 47th Street - Sunnyside Gardens Historic District RG, JG 9-0-0 Closed Two brick rowhouses with Colonial Revival style details designed by Clarence Stein, RW, MP 9-0-0 Approved Henry Wright and Frederick Ackerman and built in 1927. -
Names and Addresses of Attorneys Practicing Before the United States Patent Office, Washington, D
1 T 223 .N 1889 Copy 1 ^*,j ?cv '^'' 1 I LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. S^ap Snit^ris]^ la Shelf.W DNITEB STATES OF AMERICA. FAMES AND ADDRESSES OF ATTOKNEYS PRACTICING BKFORE THE UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE ^w^^sE:i2sra-To:N-, td. o. COMPILED BY V. W. kiDDLETO Waskmgton : Thomas McGill & Co. j8Hg. 4 r^ Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1889, By V. W. MIDDLBTON, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress. Si ^. .-:i ^ NAMES AND ADDRESSES ATTORNEYS PRACTICING BEFORE THE UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE. The following list embraces the names and addresses of Attorneys practicing before the United States Patent Office, and has been carefully prepared up to date. V. W. MiDDLETON. Washington, D. C, Nov. 1889. NAMES AND ADDRESSES OF ATTORNEYS. ALABAMA. Name. Residence. Local address. Bromberg, Fred'k G....i Mobile Campbell, E. K | Birmingham. Carroll & Carroll do Post-office Box 63. Hibbard, B. L do Post-office Box 492. Lane & Taliaferro do McDaniel, Jr., P. A ! Abbeville Merrell, A. H | Eufaula Ridge, L. B Birmingham. Post-office Box 169. Smith & Lowe do Sterrett, Rob't H do Taliaferro & Smithson do No. 216 One-Half street. Troy, Tompkins & Montgomery. London. i Zimmerman, Geo. P Birmingham. ; AEIZONA. Barnes, Hon. Wm. H... Tucson Lighthizer, H.B Phoenix i; Porter & Baxter do j No. Washington street. ARKANSAS. Basham, J. H Clarksville Clark S I Helena Coates, James Little Rock Davies, R. G Hot Springs Box No. 17. Davis & Baker Eureka Springs Fulkerson, J. L do Gibbon, T. E Little Rock 32 1 >^ Odd Fellows Block.