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Samuel Clemens Carriage House) 351 Farmington Avenue WABS Hartford Hartford County- Connecticut
MARK TWAIN CARRIAGE HOUSE HABS No. CT-359-A (Samuel Clemens Carriage House) 351 Farmington Avenue WABS Hartford Hartford County- Connecticut WRITTEN HISTORICAL AND DESCRIPTIVE DATA REDUCED COPIES OF THE MEASURED DRAWINGS PHOTOGRAPHS Historic American Buildings Survey National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Washington, D.C. 20013-7127 m HISTORIC AMERICAN BUILDINGS SURVEY MARK TWAIN CARRIAGE HOUSE HABS NO. CT-359-A Location: Rear of 351 Farmington Avenue, Hartford, Hartford County, Connecticut. USGS Hartford North Quadrangle, Universal Transverse Mercator Coordinates; 18.691050.4626060. Present Owner. Occupant. Use: Mark Twain Memorial, the former residence of Samuel Langhorne Clemens (better known as Mark Twain), now a house museum. The carriage house is a mixed-use structure and contains museum offices, conference space, a staff kitchen, a staff library, and storage space. Significance: Completed in 1874, the Mark Twain Carriage House is a multi-purpose barn with a coachman's apartment designed by architects Edward Tuckerman Potter and Alfred H, Thorp as a companion structure to the residence for noted American author and humorist Samuel Clemens and his family. Its massive size and its generous accommodations for the coachman mark this structure as an unusual carriage house among those intended for a single family's use. The building has the wide overhanging eaves and half-timbering typical of the Chalet style popular in the late 19th century for cottages, carriage houses, and gatehouses. The carriage house apartment was -
TRINITY CHURCH and GRAVEYARD, Broadway at Wall Street, Borough of Manhattan
Landmarks Preservation Commission .A.ngust 16, 1966, Number· 2. · LP-0048 TRINITY CHURCH AND GRAVEYARD, Broadway at Wall Street, Borough of Manhattan. Completed 1846; architect Richard Upjohn. Landmark Site: Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 49, Lot 1. On October 19, 1965, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a public hearing on the proposed designation as a Lendmark of Trinity Church and Graveyard and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site. (Item No. 20). The hearing had been duly advertised in accordance with the provisions of law. Four witnesses spoke in favor of designation. Two representatives of Trinity Church also spoke at the hearing. DESCRIPTION AND Al.I!ALYSIS The present Trinity Church, completed in 1846, is the third edifice of this Episcopal parish, founded in 1697, to stand on this prominent site, d0sing the vista at the end of Wall Street. The present Ch~r· ch is one of t.hOJ m')~mments of the Gothic Revival and was executed in brownstone b;y the noted ecclesi::ts~,ical architect Richard Upjohn in a free rendering of English Gothic . Its spire, once the highest structure on the New York skylir:>e, is the most not<1ble fedure of t;1e Church. The tower itself is given a marvele~u0 appearance of solidity, being do,Ible-buttressed at each corner by r<to:n.e bdtresses which diminish in depth as the towe r rise~ . Four o't'nnC.o. p'ir.n<:cles C:~. t the corners with f:lyir.g buttresses beh::.nd tl:em mal~e a skilJ.:.">ll ·trD.r.sj_t:ion ;~re>m the square t ower to th<:J hnndscme od<'.gonal spire. -
The Magazine of the Victorian Society in America Volume 40 Number 1 Editorial
Nineteenth Ce ntury The Magazine of the Victorian Society in America Volume 40 Number 1 Editorial The Artist’s Shadow The Winter Show at the Park Avenue Armory in New York City is always a feast for the eyes. Dazzling works of art, decorative arts, and sculpture appear that we might never see again. During a tour of this pop-up museum in January I paused at the booth of the Alexander Gallery where a painting caught my eye. It was an 1812 portrait of two endearing native-New Yorkers Schuyler Ogden and his sister, the grand-nephew and grand-niece of General Stephen Van Rensselaer. I am always sure that exhibitors at such shows can distinguish the buyers from the voyeurs in a few seconds but that did not prevent the gallery owner from engaging with me in a lively conversation about Fresh Raspberries . It was clear he had considerable affection for the piece. Were I a buyer, I would have very happily bought this little confection then and there. The boy, with his plate of fresh picked berries, reminds me of myself at that very age. These are not something purchased at a market. These are berries he and his sister have freshly picked just as they were when my sisters and I used to bring bowls of raspberries back to our grandmother from her berry patch, which she would then make into jam. I have no doubt Master Ogden and his beribboned sister are on their way to present their harvest to welcoming hands. As I walked away, I turned one last time to bid them adieu and that is when I saw its painter, George Harvey. -
Frank Furness Printed by Official Offset Corp
Nineteenth Ce ntury The Magazine of the Victorian Society in America Volume 37 Number 1 Nineteenth Century hhh THE MAGAZINE OF THE VICTORIAN SOCIETY IN AMERICA VOLuMe 37 • NuMBer 1 SPRING 2017 Editor Contents Warren Ashworth Consulting Editor Sara Chapman Bull’s Teakwood Rooms William Ayres A LOST LETTER REVEALS A CURIOUS COMMISSION Book Review Editor FOR LOCkwOOD DE FOREST 2 Karen Zukowski Roberta A. Mayer and Susan Condrick Managing Editor / Graphic Designer Wendy Midgett Frank Furness Printed by Official Offset Corp. PERPETUAL MOTION AND “THE CAPTAIN’S TROUSERS” 10 Amityville, New York Michael J. Lewis Committee on Publications Chair Warren Ashworth Hart’s Parish Churches William Ayres NOTES ON AN OVERLOOkED AUTHOR & ARCHITECT Anne-Taylor Cahill OF THE GOTHIC REVIVAL ERA 16 Christopher Forbes Sally Buchanan Kinsey John H. Carnahan and James F. O’Gorman Michael J. Lewis Barbara J. Mitnick Jaclyn Spainhour William Noland Karen Zukowski THE MAkING OF A VIRGINIA ARCHITECT 24 Christopher V. Novelli For information on The Victorian Society in America, contact the national office: 1636 Sansom Street Philadelphia, PA 19103 (215) 636-9872 Fax (215) 636-9873 [email protected] Departments www.victoriansociety.org 38 Preservation Diary THE REGILDING OF SAINT-GAUDENS’ DIANA Cynthia Haveson Veloric 42 The Bibliophilist 46 Editorial 49 Contributors Jo Anne Warren Richard Guy Wilson 47 Milestones Karen Zukowski A PENNY FOR YOUR THOUGHTS Anne-Taylor Cahill Cover: Interior of richmond City Hall, richmond, Virginia. Library of Congress. Lockwood de Forest’s showroom at 9 East Seventeenth Street, New York, c. 1885. (Photo is reversed to show correct signature and date on painting seen in the overmantel). -
YALE CLUB of NEW YORK CITY BUILDING
Landmarks Preservation Commission February 9, 2010, Designation List 426 LP-2379 (Former) YALE CLUB of NEW YORK CITY BUILDING (now PENN CLUB of NEW YORK), 30-32 West 44th Street, Manhattan Built 1900-01, [Evarts] Tracy & [Egerton] Swartwout, architect; upper stories 1992-94, [David P.] Helpern Architects. Landmark Site: Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 1259, Lot 54 On November 17, 2009, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a public hearing on the proposed designation as a Landmark of the (former) Yale Club of New York City Building (now Penn Club of New York) and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site (Item No.1). The hearing had been duly advertised in accordance with the provisions of law. Four people spoke in favor of designation, including representatives of the Penn Club, University of Pennsylvania, New York Assemblyman Richard Gottfried, and Historic Districts Council. Summary The former Yale Club of New York City Building is located along “clubhouse row,” West 44th Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenues, its neighbors including the Harvard Club, New York Yacht Club, Association of the Bar of the City of New York, and former City Club. This Beaux-Arts style building, constructed in 1900-01 by builder Marc Eidlitz & Son, was designed by [Evarts] Tracy & [Egerton] Swartwout, both Yale University graduates, Yale Club members, and former employees of McKim, Mead & White. It was one of the first high-rise clubhouse buildings in the city, with over half the floors devoted to bachelor apartments, during the era when bachelor apartment hotels were a necessity in the vicinity. -
Powelton: an Unrecorded Building by William Strickland
Powelton: An Unrecorded Building by William Strickland OWELTON, the great Greek Revival country house formerly situated on the west bank of the Schuylkill in Philadelphia's PBlockley Township, was one of the most important buildings of its period and deserves to be better known in the literature of Ameri- can architectural history. The seat of John Hare Powel (1786-1856),1 gentleman farmer, art collector, and amateur architect, the house was one of the earliest private manifestations of the monumental Greek Revival style in America. The core of the house was built by Powel's aunt, Elizabeth Willing Powel, in 1800-1802. The portico and wings, added by John Hare Powel, the inheritor of her fortune, were designed by William Strickland in 1825; the portico was com- pleted in 1826, but the wings took almost forty years to finish. De- stroyed in 1885 to make way for West Philadelphia tenements, Powelton was Strickland's first important private commission and, as far as is known, the first private country house near Philadelphia to use a giant stone portico based on a Greek temple front. Powelton has not entirely escaped the notice of architectural his- torians, but comment has been brief.2 "Considering the architectural importance of this fine house," George B. Tatum has written, "it is surprising that it has received so little attention from either contem- porary writers or from later historians."3 Brief accounts or references 1 Henry Simpson, The Lives of Eminent Philadelphia™ now Deceased (Philadelphia, 1859)* 808-819. 2 William Harbeson, "Mediaeval Philadelphia," Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography (hereinafter PMHB), LXVII (1943), 226, 230. -
Tweed Courthouse, and the Proposed Designation of the Related Landmark Site (Item No
Landmarks Preservation Commission October 16, 1984; Designation List 172 LP-1437 TWEE D COURTHOUSE, 52 Chambers Street, Borough of Manhattan. Built 1~61-1881; architects Thomas Little, John Kellum, and Leopold Eidl itz. Landmark Site: Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 122, 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 Tweed Courthouse, and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site (Item No. 12). The hearing had been duly advertised in accordance with the provisions of law . Two witnesses spoke in favor of designation. There were no speakers in opposition to designation. Cor respondence was received in favor of designation, including a letter from Robert Litke, Commissioner of the Department of General Services. -3- Tweed's power was solidified in 186 1 whe n he was elected chairman of the Democratic Central Committee of New Yor k Coun ty. In the following years, Tweed increased his personal fortune through various questionable business dealings. In September 1861 just a few days after con s truction had begun on the new court house, Tweed purchased a marble quarry in Sheffield, Massachusetts, from which a large portion of the marble for the co urthouse was ~ought, undoubtedly at a tremendous profit to the ovmer.5 In '1864 , he acquired the controlling interes t in a printing concern , known as the New York Pri nting Company, which soon after ward had the contracts for all of the pri nt ing business of the city and county. -
Calvert Vaux: Architect and Planner by William Alex
Calvert Vaux: Architect and Planner by William Alex alvert Vaux, architect and planner, is an unjustly neglected nineteenth-century figure. Long overshadowed by his more famous partners, Andrew Jackson Downing and Frederick C Law Olmsted, Vaux has failed to receive recognition a the first professional in America to combine the talents oflandscape designer, architect, and planner. Working with Downing during the early 1850s, Vaux established a set of distinctive domestic architec tural designs that served as a standard throughout the remainder of the century. Vaux initiated the process that led to the creation of Central Park in New York and Prospect Park in Brooklyn, and per suaded Olmsted to join him in both endeavors. Their designs for these two prototypical country parks in the city were of crucial importance in forming the urban face of nineteenth-century indus trial America. Vaux shared the strong reformist impulse that infused many of his contemporaries and saw his work as an opportunity to translate "the republican art idea" into physical form. While the ultimate effect of this effort is still much debated, Vaux and Olmsted created. parks that were clear manifestations ofa particular notion of the democra tizing value of amenable public spaces. Vaux also found an outlet for his concern in designs for shelters for the Children's Aid Society and for the first buildings of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the American Museum of Natural History, soon to become two of New York's pre-eminent cultural institutions. Although Calvert Vaux's greatest achievements were collaborative, they nonetheless bespeak a creative genius that for too long has gone uncelebrated. -
National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form
Form No. 10-300 (Rev. 10-74) UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR NATIONAL PARK SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES INVENTORY -- NOMINATION FORM SEE INSTRUCTIONS IN HOW TO COMPLETE NATIONAL REGISTER FORMS TYPE ALL ENTRIES -- COMPLETE APPLICABLE SECTIONS I NAME HISTORIC Third Judicial District Courthouse (Jefferson Market Courthouse) AND/OR COMMON Jefferson Market Branch New York Public Library LOCATION STREETS NUMBER Sixth Avenue at 10th Street (425 Sixth Avenue) _NOT FOR PUBLICATION CITY, TOWN CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT New York VICINITY OF 19th STATE CODE COUNTY CODE New York CLASSIFICATION CATEGORY OWNERSHIP STATUS PRESENT USE —DISTRICT .X.PUBLIC X2PCCUPIED —AGRICULTURE —MUSEUM X-BUILDINGIS) —PRIVATE —UNOCCUPIED —COMMERCIAL —PARK —STRUCTURE —BOTH —WORK IN PROGRESS ^.EDUCATIONAL —PRIVATE RESIDENCE —SITE PUBLIC ACQUISITION ACCESSIBLE _ENTERTAINMENT —RELIGIOUS —OBJECT _IN PROCESS —YES: RESTRICTED —GOVERNMENT —SCIENTIFIC —BEING CONSIDERED X_YES: UNRESTRICTED —INDUSTRIAL —TRANSPORTATION _NO —MILITARY —OTHER: [OWNER OF PROPERTY NAME City of New York, Mayor Abraham D. Beame STREET & NUMBER City Hall CITY. TOWN STATE New York VICINITY OF New York 10007 LOCATION OF LEGAL DESCRIPTION COURTHOUSE. New York County Hall of Records REGISTRY OF DEEDS, ETC. STREET & NUMBER 31 Chambers Street CITY. TOWN STATE New York New York REPRESENTATION IN EXISTING SURVEYS TITLE Historic American Buildings Survey DATE June 1968 X3FEDERAL —STATE —COUNTY —LOCAL DEPOSITORY FOR SURVEY RECORDS Library of Congress CITY. TOWN STATE Washington D.C. 25 DESCRIPTION CONDITION CHECK ONE CHECK ONE ^.EXCELLENT _DETERIORATED _UNALTERED X_ORIGINALSITE _GOOD _RUINS 2LALTERED _MOVED DATE. _FAIR _UNEXPOSED DESCRIBETHE PRESENT AND ORIGINAL (IF KNOWN) PHYSICAL APPEARANCE The Jefferson Market Courthouse was designed under the firm name of Withers and Vaux (Frederick Clarke Withers and Calvert Vaux) but is the work of Withers executed between the years 1874 to 1877. -
EMPIRE BUILDING, 71 Broadway (Aka 69-73 Broadway, 1-5 Rector Street, and 51-53 Trinity Place), Borough of Manhattan
Landmarks Preservation Commission June 25, 1996, Designation List 273 LP-1933 EMPIRE BUILDING, 71 Broadway (aka 69-73 Broadway, 1-5 Rector Street, and 51-53 Trinity Place), Borough of Manhattan. Built 1897-98, [Francis H.] Kimball & [G. Kramer] Thompson, architects; Charles Sooysmith, foundation engineer; Marc Eidlitz & Son, builders. Landmark Site: Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 21 , Lot 6, and the portions of the adjacent sidewalk on which the described improvement is situated. ' On September 19, 1995, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a public hearing on the proposed designation as a Landmark of the Empire Building and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site (Item No . 3) . The hearing had been duly advertised in accordance with the provisions of law. The hearing was continued to December 12, 1995 (Item No. 1) . The hearing was subsequently continued to January 30, 1996 (Item No . 1). The hearing had been duly advertised in accordance with the provisions of law. Nineteen witnesses spoke in favor of designation, including Councilwoman Kathryn Freed and representatives of Manhattan Borough President Ruth Messinger, the Downtown Alliance, New York Chapter of the American Institute of Architects, Municipal Art Society, New York Landmarks Conservancy, Historic Districts Council, Fine Alts Federation, and Landmarks Committee of Community Board 1. A representative of the mortgagee attended the first hearing but took no position regarding the proposed designation. No one spoke in opposition to designation. The Commission has received several letters and other statements in support of designation, including a resolution by Community Board 1. Summary The richly decorative, neo-classical Empire Building was commissioned in 1895 by the Estate of Orlando B. -
National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form 1
NPS Form 10-900 (3-82) 0MB No. 1024-0018 Expires 10-31-87 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service For NPS use only National Register of Historic Places received Inventory—Nomination Form date entered See instructions in How to Complete National Register Forms Type all entries—complete applicable sections_______________ 1. Name historic Grace Church and or common 2. Location street & number 950 Broad Street not for publication city, town Newark vicinity of state New Jersey 07102 code county Essex code 3. Classification Category Ownership Status Present Use district public X occupied agriculture museum X building(s) X private unoccupied commercial park structure both work in progress educational private residence site Public Acquisition Accessible entertainment X religious object in process X yes: restricted government scientific being considered . yes: unrestricted industrial transportation no military other; 4. Owner of Property name Grace Church in Newark street & number 950 Broad Street city, town Newark vicinity of state New Jersey 07102 5. Location of Legal Description courthouse, registry of deeds, etc. Essex County Hall of Records street & number Hi§h Street city, town Newark state New Jersey 6. Representation in Existing Surveys__________ title National Register of Historic Places nas this property been determined eligible? __ yes __ no date 1972 X federal state county local depository for survey records 1100 L Street, NW city, town Washington state DC 7. Description Condition Check one Check one X excellent deteriorated unaltered -^ original site good ruins X altered moved date fair unexposed Describe the present and original (if known) physical appearance Grace Church was incorporated on May 24, 1837. -
CENTURY ASSOCIATION BUILDING 109-111 East 15Th Street, Manhattan
Landmarks Preservation Commission January 5, 1993, Designation List 248 LP-1763 (FORMER) CENTURY ASSOCIATION BUILDING 109-111 East 15th Street, Manhattan. Built 1869; architects Gambrill & Richardson. Landmark Site: Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 871, Lot 10. On December 12, 1989, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a public hearing on the proposed designation as a Landmark of the (Former) Century Club Building and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site (Item No. 27). The hearing had been duly advertised in accordance with the provisions of law. Thirteen witnesses spoke in favor of designation. A representative of the owner did not take a position regarding the designation and no witnesses spoke in opposition to designation. The hearing was continued on April 3, 1990 (Item No. 22). At that time eight letters were read into the official record, including one letter from the owner, expressing opposition to designation, and seven letters in favor of designation. The Commission has received other letters in favor of designation. Summary The Century Association Building was designed by the firm of Gambrill & Richardson, whose partners were both members of the association and one of whom, Henry Hobson Richardson, went on to become one of this country's most prominent architects. Built in 1869, the building appears to be Manhattan's oldest surviving structure erected as a clubhouse. Its exterior, which remains remarkably intact, heralded a wave of neo-Grec buildings in the early 1870s. The Century Association, founded in 1847 to promote interest in literature and the arts, attracted authors, artists, and amateurs of letters and the fine arts, many of whom were national leaders in their fields.