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A Brief History of Occupy Wall Street ROSA LUXEMBURG STIFTUNG NEW YORK OFFICE by Ethan Earle Table of Contents
A Brief History of Occupy Wall Street ROSA LUXEMBURG STIFTUNG NEW YORK OFFICE By Ethan Earle Table of Contents Spontaneity and Organization. By the Editors................................................................................1 A Brief History of Occupy Wall Street....................................................2 By Ethan Earle The Beginnings..............................................................................................................................2 Occupy Wall Street Goes Viral.....................................................................................................4 Inside the Occupation..................................................................................................................7 Police Evictions and a Winter of Discontent..............................................................................9 How to Occupy Without an Occupation...................................................................................10 How and Why It Happened........................................................................................................12 The Impact of Occupy.................................................................................................................15 The Future of OWS.....................................................................................................................16 Published by the Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung, New York Office, November 2012 Editors: Stefanie Ehmsen and Albert Scharenberg Address: 275 Madison Avenue, Suite 2114, -
Metropolitan Club Building Helped to Set the Style and High Standard of Design for the Surrounding Area
Landmarks Preservation Commission September 11, 1979, Designation List 127 LP-1020 METROPOLITAN CLUB BUIWING, 1-11 East 60th Street, Porough of Manhattan. Built 1892-94; architects r~Kim, Mead & White. On November 14, 1978, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a public hearing on the prop:::>sed designation as a I.andmark of the Metrop:::>li tan Club Building and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site (Item No. 9). The hearing was continued to January 9, 1979 (Item No. 2) . Poth hearings had been duly advertised in accordance with the provisions of law. At the t'MJ hearings one witness sp:::>ke in favor of designation and several letters in support of designation ~re read into the record. There were no speakers in opp:::>sition to designation. The l'Etrop:::>litan Club has expressed reservations al:out the designation. Hearings on this item had been held previously by the Commission in 1966 and 1967. DESCRIPTION AND ANALYSIS Described by the 19th-century architectural historian Montgomery Schuyler as "the largest, :rrost imposing, and :rrost luxurious of the club-houses of New York'' the Metrop:::>litan Club Building was designed by Stanford White, a partner in the firm of McKim, Mead & White, and was built between 1892 and 1894.~ Executed on a grand scale in a restrained Italian Renaissance manner, the building incorporated the prestige and dignity of the Club's founding members. !-len's clubs were a well-established tradition in early New York. Some New York cluhren first congregated in taverns: the poets net at Old Tom's and the p:::>lititians at the Pe\vter Mug. -
“We Just Need to Go Egypt on Their Ass!” the Articulation of Labor and Community Organizing in New York City with Occupy Wall Street
“We just need to go Egypt on their ass!” The Articulation of Labor and Community Organizing in New York City with Occupy Wall Street John Krinsky and Paul Getsos DRAFT: PLEASE DO NOT CIRCULATE BEYOND THE WORKSHOP b/c no citations Introduction Most of the people who marched down Broadway on the afternoon of September 17, eventually claiming Zuccotti Park and renaming it Liberty Square, practice activism as opposed to base- building campaign organizing. The difference between these two approaches to social justice work is a crucial one for understanding the tensions and potentials in Occupy Wall Street, and for distinguishing the core of Occupy from the more institutional left, comprised of established labor unions and community-based economic justice organizations. Occupiers focus on direct action and tactics whose aim is to raise awareness about an issue, or to challenge the state and corporate power (most usually by challenging the police or by claiming and occupying both public and private space). The institutional left focuses on building issue-oriented campaigns and leadership development among communities directly and adversely impacted by economic inequality in order to deliver tangible results. One of the things that makes Occupy unusual is that it is one of the few times outside of the global justice demonstrations in Seattle and work around the party conventions, that groups which practice the discipline of organizing worked with activists. Even more unusual is that organizers and activists have worked together over a sustained period of time and have moved from issue to issue and campaign to campaign. Some are very localized, such as work against stop-and-frisk policing in the South Bronx where Occupy Wall Street works with local neighborhood activists, to the Bank of America Campaign, where Occupy Wall Street activists are part of a national campaign where partners include the community organizing network National People’s Action and the faith-based federation of community organizations, PICO. -
1 Luxury Hotels, Resorts, Yachts, Mansions, Private Clubs, Museums
Luxury hotels, Resorts, Yachts, Mansions, Private clubs, Museums, Opera houses, restaurants RESORTS Boca Raton Resort & Club, Boca Raton, FL Bocaire Country Club, Boca Raton, FL Equinox Resort, Manchester Village, VT Hyatt Regency Aruba La Quinta Resort, La Quinta, CA Ojai Valley Inn & Spa, Ojai, CA Otesaga Resort Hotel, Cooperstown, NY Phoenician Resort, Phoenix, AZ Rosewood Mayakoba, Riviera Maya, Mexico Stoweflake Resort, Stowe, VT Westin La Paloma Resort, Tucson, AZ YACHTS Eastern Star yacht, Chelsea Piers, NYC Lady Windridge Yacht, Tarrytown, NY Manhattan cruise ship, Chelsea Piers, NYC Marika yacht, Chelsea Piers, NYC Star of America yacht, Chelsea Piers, NYC MANSIONS Barry Diller mansion, Beverly Hills, CA Boldt Castle, Alexandria Bay, NY 1 David Rockefeller mansion, Pocantico Hills, NY Neale Ranch, Saratoga, Wyoming Paul Fireman mansion, Cape Cod, MA Sam & Ronnie Heyman mansion, Westport, CT Somerset House, London The Ansonia, NYC The Mount, Lenox, MA Ventfort Hall, Lenox, MA Walter Scott Mansion, Omaha, NE (party for Warren Buffett) PRIVATE CLUBS American Yacht Club, Rye, NY The Bohemian Club, San Francisco The Metropolitan Club, NYC Millbrook Club, Greenwich, CT New York Stock Exchange floor and private dining room, NYC Birchwood Country Club, Westport, CT Cordillera Motorcycle Club, Cordillera, CO Cultural Services of the French Embassy, NYC Harold Pratt House, Council on Foreign Relations, Park Avenue, NYC Drayton Hall Plantation, Charleston, SC Tuxedo Club Country Club, Tuxedo Park, NY Fenway Golf Club, Scarsdale, NY Fisher Island, Miami Harvard Club, NYC Harvard Faculty Club, Cambridge, MA Bay Club at Mattaspoisett, Mattapoisett, MA Ocean Reef Club, Key Largo, FL Quail Hollow Country Club, Charlotte, NC Racquet and Tennis Club, Park Avenue, NYC Russian Trade Ministry, Washington DC Saugatuck Rowing Club, Westport, CT Shelter Harbor Country Club, Charlestown, RI St. -
1 Agenda Development Commission
AGENDA DEVELOPMENT COMMISSION ZONING MEETING CITY OF COLUMBUS, OHIO SEPTEMBER 11, 2014 The Development Commission of the City of Columbus will hold a public hearing on the following applications on Thursday, SEPTEMBER 11, 2014, beginning at 6:00 P.M. at the CITY OF COLUMBUS, I-71 NORTH COMPLEX at 757 Carolyn Avenue, Columbus, OH 43224 in the lower level HEARING ROOM. Further information may be obtained by visiting the City of Columbus Zoning Office website at http://www.columbus.gov/bzs/zoning/Development-Commission or by calling the Department of Building and Zoning Services, Council Activities section at 645-4522. THE FOLLOWING APPLICATIONS WILL BE HEARD ON THE 6:00 P.M. AGENDA: 1. APPLICATION: Z14-023 (14335-00000-00348) Location: 4873 CLEVELAND AVENUE (43229), being 0.675± acres located on the northwest corner of Cleveland Avenue and Edmonton Road (010-138823; Northland Community Council). Existing Zoning: SR, Suburban Residential District. Request: C-2, Commercial District. Proposed Use: Office development. Applicant(s): Everyday People Ministries; c/o Michael A. Moore, Agent; 1599 Denbign Drive; Columbus, Ohio 43220. Property Owner(s): The Applicant. Planner: Tori Proehl, 645-2749, [email protected] 2. APPLICATION: Z14-029 (14335-00000-00452) Location: 4692 KENNY ROAD (43220), being 3.77± acres located on the east side of Kenny Road, approximately 430± feet north of Godown Road (010-129789 and 010-129792; Northwest Civic Association). Existing Zoning: M-1, Manufacturing District. Request: L-AR-1, Limited Apartment Residential District. Proposed Use: Multi-unit development. Applicant(s): Preferred Real Estate Investments II, LLC; c/o Jill Tangeman; Vorys, Sater, Seymour and Pease LLP; 52 East Gay Street; Columbus, Ohio 43215. -
14 Christopher Street
14 CHRISTOPHER STREET NYC DIGITAL TAX MAP N BLOCK: 593 LOT: 45 ZONING: R6 ZONING MAP: 12C LPC HISTORIC DISTRICT: GREENWICH VILLAGE SOURCE: NYC DOF 14 CHRISTOPHER STREET PRESENTATION TO THE NEW YORK CITY LANDMARKS PRESERVATION COMMISSION October 14 2019 MANHATTAN MODERN MANAGEMENT, INC. SMITH & ARCHITECTS AUTHORIZED REPRESENTATIVE ARCHITECT 16 PENN PLAZA, SUITE 511 11-22 44TH ROAD, SUITE 200 NEW YORK, NY 10001 LONG ISLAND CITY, NY 11101 14 CHRISTOPHER STREET 14 CHRISTOPHER STREET 14 CHRISTOPHER STREET 14 CHRISTOPHER STREET 1 | 1940 TAX PHOTOGRAPH 2 | 1969 LPC DESIGNATION PHOTOGRAPH 4| 1980 TAX PHOTOGRAPH 5 | 2019 SITE PHOTOGRAPH 3 | 1978 UCRS PHOTOGRAPHS 14 CHRISTOPHER STREET 14 CHRISTOPHER STREET 14 CHRISTOPHER STREET PROJECT LOCATION: DATE: SMITH & ARCHITECTS 14 CHRISTOPHER STREET TIMELINE OF SITE ALTERATIONS - CHRISTOPHER STREET October 14, 2019 2 NEW YORK, NY 10014 14 CHRISTOPHER STREET 14 CHRISTOPHER STREET 14 CHRISTOPHER STREET 14 CHRISTOPHER STREET 1 | 1940 TAX PHOTOGRAPH 2 | 1969 LPC DESIGNATION 3 | 1969 LPC DESIGNATION 4 | 2019 SITE PHOTOGRAPH PHOTOGRAPH PHOTOGRAPH PROJECT LOCATION: DATE: SMITH & ARCHITECTS 14 CHRISTOPHER STREET TIMELINE OF SITE ALTERATIONS - GAY STREET October 14, 2019 3 NEW YORK, NY 10014 SCOPE OF WORK: REPLACE 2ND SCOPE OF WORK: LEGALIZE - 5TH FLOOR WINDOWS ON GAY EXISTING 5TH FLOOR WINDOWS ON STREET FACADES AS PER LPC CHRISTOPHER STREET FACADE AS VIOLATION #16/0854 AND LPC PER LPC VIOLATION #16/0854 AND LPC DOCKET #LPC-18-4878. DOCKET #LPC-18-4878 1 | GAY STREET SOUTH FACING FACADE 2 | GAY STREET EAST FACING FACADE 3 | CHRISTOPHER STREET FACADE PROJECT LOCATION: DATE: SMITH & ARCHITECTS 14 CHRISTOPHER STREET EXISTING CONDITIONS PHOTOGRAPHS October 14, 2019 4 NEW YORK, NY 10014 2 3 1 | 4TH AND 5TH STORY WINDOWS 2 | 5TH STORY WINDOW HEAD 3 | 3RD STORY WINDOW 4 | 2ND AND 3RD STORY WINDOWS AND JAMB, TYPICAL SILL AND JAMB, TYPICAL PROJECT LOCATION: DATE: SMITH & ARCHITECTS 14 CHRISTOPHER STREET CHRISTOPHER STREET CLOSE UP PHOTOGRAPHS October 14, 2019 5 NEW YORK, NY 10014 GENERAL NOTES: 1. -
Riis's How the Other Half Lives
How the Other Half Lives http://www.cis.yale.edu/amstud/inforev/riis/title.html HOW THE OTHER HALF LIVES The Hypertext Edition STUDIES AMONG THE TENEMENTS OF NEW YORK BY JACOB A. RIIS WITH ILLUSTRATIONS CHIEFLY FROM PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN BY THE AUTHOR Contents NEW YORK CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS 1890 1 of 1 1/18/06 6:25 AM Contents http://www.cis.yale.edu/amstud/inforev/riis/contents.html HOW THE OTHER HALF LIVES CONTENTS. About the Hypertext Edition XII. The Bohemians--Tenement-House Cigarmaking Title Page XIII. The Color Line in New York Preface XIV. The Common Herd List of Illustrations XV. The Problem of the Children Introduction XVI. Waifs of the City's Slums I. Genesis of the Tenements XVII. The Street Arab II. The Awakening XVIII. The Reign of Rum III. The Mixed Crowd XIX. The Harvest of Tare IV. The Down Town Back-Alleys XX. The Working Girls of New York V. The Italian in New York XXI. Pauperism in the Tenements VI. The Bend XXII. The Wrecks and the Waste VII. A Raid on the Stale-Beer Dives XXIII. The Man with the Knife VIII.The Cheap Lodging-Houses XXIV. What Has Been Done IX. Chinatown XXV. How the Case Stands X. Jewtown Appendix XI. The Sweaters of Jewtown 1 of 1 1/18/06 6:25 AM List of Illustrations http://www.cis.yale.edu/amstud/inforev/riis/illustrations.html LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. Gotham Court A Black-and-Tan Dive in "Africa" Hell's Kitchen and Sebastopol The Open Door Tenement of 1863, for Twelve Families on Each Flat Bird's Eye View of an East Side Tenement Block Tenement of the Old Style. -
Across the Nation, Hundreds of Thousands Join Occupy Movement
www.peoplesworld.org November 9825, 2011 Across the nation, hundreds of thousands join Occupy movement By Gabe Falsetta cross the nation yesterday, in all 50 far bigger and broader than it had been at any states, hundreds of thousands joined time before the eviction. (story continues below Occupy Wall Street, the labor move- slide show) ment and their allies in demonstrations Billionaire Mayor Bloomberg had gone to the Ademanding jobs, taxation of the rich, curbs on the Appeals Court to overturn a Supreme Court rul- power of big finance and preservation of Social Se- ing that allowed protesters to remain in Zuccoti curity, Medicare and Medicaid. Park with their tents and tarps. If there was ever Leaving behind their tents and tarps, the any illusion that the mayor’s move would kill the Occupy Wall Street demonstrators brought their movement, it evaporated at Foley Square. message to the people by marching through the The tens of thousands gathered in the square nation’s financial districts, through the streets of heard music and they heard testimony from speak- cities and towns coast to coast, and by occupying ers who, after having lost jobs, homes and hope, everything from mass transit hubs to the bridges were fighting back. Hope for a better America, that span the nation’s rivers, canals and lakes. many said, was in the air. Coming just two days after protesters were evicted from their headquarters in many city parks and town squares, the mass demonstrations THIS WEEK: amounted to the largest public outpouring of sup- • Across the nation, hundreds of thousands join Occupy port for the movement since it began as a picket line in the financial district here on Sept. -
Columbus Park; New York, (New York County) New York – Phase 1A and Partial Monitoring Report Project Number: M015-203MA NYSOPRHP Project Number: 02PR03416
Columbus Park; New York, (New York County) New York – Phase 1A and Partial Monitoring Report Project Number: M015-203MA NYSOPRHP Project Number: 02PR03416 Prepared for: Submitted to: City of New York - Department of Parks and Recreation A.A.H. Construction Corporation Olmstead Center; Queens, New York 18-55 42nd Street Astoria, New York 11105-1025 and New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation Peebles Island, New York Prepared by: Alyssa Loorya, M.A., R.P.A., Principal Investigator and Christopher Ricciardi, Ph.D., R.P.A. for: Chrysalis Archaeological Consultants, Incorporated October 2005 Columbus Park; New York, (New York County) New York – Phase 1A and Partial Monitoring Report Project Number: M015-203MA NYSOPRHP Project Number: 02PR03416 Prepared for: Submitted to: City of New York - Department of Parks and Recreation A.A.H. Construction Corporation Olmstead Center; Queens, New York 18-55 42nd Street Astoria, New York 11105-1025 and New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation Peebles Island, New York Prepared by: Alyssa Loorya, M.A., R.P.A., Principal Investigator and Christopher Ricciardi, Ph.D., R.P.A. for: Chrysalis Archaeological Consultants, Incorporated October 2005 MANAGEMENT SUMMARY Between September 2005 and October 2005, a Phase 1A Documentary Study and a partial Phase 1B Archaeological Monitoring was undertaken at Columbus Park, Block 165, Lot 1, New York, (New York County) New York. The project area is owned by the City of New York and managed through the Department of Parks and Recreation (Parks). The Parks’ Contract Number for the project is: M015-203MA. The New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation’s (NYSOPRHP) File Number for the project is: 02PR03416. -
Chapter 4: Social Conditions
Chapter 4: Social Conditions A. INTRODUCTION AND METHODOLOGY This chapter addresses a variety of issues that support social conditions, including population and housing characteristics, community facilities and open spaces, and neighborhood character. The discussion of social conditions considers the entire MESA study area (depicted in Figure 3-1 in Chapter 3, above) with particular focus on the project corridor—the routes proposed for the various project alternatives—where the greatest potential for change would occur. Because none of the project alternatives have the potential to change social conditions in the secondary study area, where Build Alternatives 1 and 2 would add service along an existing subway line, this analysis is of the primary study area only. The analysis was conducted by first compiling existing data for population and housing, com- munity facilities and open spaces, and neighborhood character. The source for the population and housing data is the 1990 Census of Population and Housing. The inventory of community facilities is based on Community District Needs (1997) for Manhattan’s Community Boards, the Department of Parks and Recreation’s Property Lists (dated November 4, 1996), supplementary information provided by the various Community Boards within the study area, and the informa- tion gathered for the analysis of land use, zoning, and public policy in Chapter 3. The assessment of neighborhood character is based on information gathered for other chapters of this document, particularly including the analyses of land use (Chapter 3) and visual and aesthetic considerations (Chapter 6). After assessing the existing conditions in the study area, the expected changes in the future are considered, based on information compiled in Chapter 3. -
Active Corporations: Beginning 1800
Active Corporations: Beginning 1800 DOS ID Current Entity Name 5306 MAGNOLIA METAL COMPANY 5310 BRISTOL WAGON AND CARRIAGE WORKS 5313 DUNLOP COAL COMPANY LIMITED 5314 THE DE-LON CORP. 5316 THE MILLER COMPANY 5318 KOMPACT PRODUCTS CORPORATION 5339 METROPOLITAN CHAIN STORES, INC. 5341 N. J. HOME BUILDERS CORPORATION 5349 THE CAPITA ENDOWMENT COMPANY 5360 ECLIPSE LEATHER CORP. 6589 SHERWOOD BROS. CO. 6590 BURLINGTON VENETIAN BLIND COMPANY 6593 CAB SALES COMPANY 6600 WALDIA REALTY CORPORATION 6618 GATTI SERVICE INCORPORATED 6628 HANDI APPLIANCE CORPORATION 6642 THE M. B. PARKER CONSTRUCTION COMPANY 6646 ALLIED BANKSHARES COMPANY 6651 SYRACUSE PURCHASING COMPANY, INC. Page 1 of 2794 09/28/2021 Active Corporations: Beginning 1800 Initial DOS Filing Date County Jurisdiction 06/08/1893 NEW YORK WEST VIRGINIA 05/16/1893 NEW YORK UNITED KINGDOM 09/17/1924 ERIE ONTARIO 09/18/1924 SARATOGA DELAWARE 09/19/1924 NEW YORK CONNECTICUT 09/12/1924 NEW YORK DELAWARE 10/27/1924 NEW YORK DELAWARE 10/27/1924 NEW YORK NEW JERSEY 10/24/1924 ALBANY OHIO 11/18/1924 NEW YORK NEW JERSEY 02/15/1895 ALBANY PENNSYLVANIA 02/16/1895 NEW YORK VERMONT 11/03/1927 NEW YORK DELAWARE 11/09/1927 NEW YORK DELAWARE 11/23/1927 NEW YORK NEW JERSEY 12/02/1927 NEW YORK DELAWARE 12/12/1927 NEW YORK OHIO 12/16/1927 NEW YORK NEW JERSEY 12/14/1927 NEW YORK GEORGIA Page 2 of 2794 09/28/2021 Active Corporations: Beginning 1800 Entity Type DOS Process Name FOREIGN BUSINESS CORPORATION EDWARD C. MILLER FOREIGN BUSINESS CORPORATION ALFRED HEYN FOREIGN BUSINESS CORPORATION DUNLOP COAL COMPANY LIMITED FOREIGN BUSINESS CORPORATION THE DE-LON CORP. -
Aroundmanhattan
Trump SoHo Hotel South Cove Statue of Liberty 3rd Avenue Peter J. Sharp Boat House Riverbank State Park Chelsea Piers One Madison Park Four Freedoms Park Eastwood Time Warner Center Butler Rogers Baskett Handel Architects and Mary Miss, Stanton Eckstut, F A Bartholdi, Richard M Hunt, 8 Spruce Street Rotation Bridge Robert A.M. Stern & Dattner Architects and 1 14 27 40 53 66 Cetra Ruddy 79 Louis Kahn 92 Sert, Jackson, & Assocs. 105 118 131 144 Skidmore, Owings & Merrill Marner Architecture Rockwell Group Susan Child Gustave Eiffel Frank Gehry Thomas C. Clark Armand LeGardeur Abel Bainnson Butz 23 East 22nd Street Roosevelt Island 510 Main St. Columbus Circle Warren & Wetmore 246 Spring Street Battery Park City Liberty Island 135th St Bronx to E 129th 555 W 218th Street Hudson River -137th to 145 Sts 100 Eleventh Avenue Zucotti Park/ Battery Park & East River Waterfront Queens West / NY Presbyterian Hospital Gould Memorial Library & IRT Powerhouse (Con Ed) Travelers Group Waterside 2009 Addition: Pei Cobb Freed Park Avenue Bridge West Harlem Piers Park Jean Nouvel with Occupy Wall St Castle Clinton SHoP Architects, Ken Smith Hunters Point South Hall of Fame McKim Mead & White 2 15 Kohn Pedersen Fox 28 41 54 67 Davis, Brody & Assocs. 80 93 and Ballinger 106 Albert Pancoast Boiler 119 132 Barbara Wilks, Archipelago 145 Beyer Blinder Belle Cooper, Robertson & Partners Battery Park Battery Maritime Building to Pelli, Arquitectonica, SHoP, McKim, Mead, & White W 58th - 59th St 388 Greenwich Street FDR Drive between East 25th & 525 E. 68th Street connects Bronx to Park Ave W127th St & the Hudson River 100 11th Avenue Rutgers Slip 30th Streets Gantry Plaza Park Bronx Community College on Eleventh Avenue IAC Headquarters Holland Tunnel World Trade Center Site Whitehall Building Hospital for Riverbend Houses Brooklyn Bridge Park Citicorp Building Queens River House Kingsbridge Veterans Grant’s Tomb Hearst Tower Frank Gehry, Adamson Ventilation Towers Daniel Libeskind, Norman Foster, Henry Hardenbergh and Special Surgery Davis, Brody & Assocs.