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Friday, April 5, 2013

BOOK TALK - MARGUERITE HOLLOWAY


Thurs. Apr. 11, 8:00 p.m.
Clark Auditorium
Cultural Education Center - Empire State Plaza
222 Madison Avenue - Albany

Marguerite Holloway, author of The Measure of Manhattan, will speak about the fascinating history of John Randel, Jr., the man who plotted the grid transforming hilly, undeveloped, early 19th century Manhattan into today's modern, geometric city.

Free and open to the public.  Sponsored by the New York State Writers Institute, the Friends of the New York State Library, and the New York Council for the Humanities.

Free parking for this event is available in the Cathedral Lot, just east of the CEC.

Posted at the request of the Friends of the New York State Library.

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

SEAPORT MEETING


Time for a Save Our Seaport meeting !

Please join us this Saturday, April 6th, 6pm at Meade’s. We’ll have the latest news from the Museum, from the waterfront, and the latest on the Pier 17 development plans.

Meade’s is at 22 Peck Slip (Map), and we’ll meet on the second floor. We hope we’ll see you there!

Sunday, March 31, 2013

NEW YORK CITY TIMELINE - 1792-1793


1792
Mar 14                       
New York City’s General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen is incorporated.

May 17                       
The New York Stock Exchange is formed beneath a buttonwood tree on Wall Street by a group of bankers, including Mendes Seixes Nathan.

Jul 1                       
A tornado strikes New York City, sinking boats in the harbor carrying 29 men and women out for a Sabbath sail.

Sep 29                       
New York City’s State Street and others are laid out.

Oct 8                       
Boston businessman Abijah Hammond donates a device for drilling for water to the New York City government. They order experiments on a lot adjoining city hall.

Oct 12                       
New York City's Society of St. Tammany holds the first major celebration of Columbus' discovery of America.

City
The law firm of Cadwallader, Wickersham & Taft is founded.    **    The Belvedere House in lower Manhattan is the first country club in the city.    **    A United States Bank branch opens here.    **   Another grand jury indicts the city for its filthy streets. Again nothing is done.    **    The city council does away with a fixed payment for the digging of a public well and agrees to pay a dollar a foot for all approved wells.    **    A tontine organized by Lewis Morris to fund a toll drawbridge across the lower Harlem River fails to raise enough money. A commission, including lawyer Aaron Burr, is named to supervise the construction of a good road leading to the drawbridge.     **    Isaac Coulthard builds a brewery on the banks of the Collect Pond.    **    The Drone Club is formed by James Kent, William Dunlap, Charles Brockden Brown and Edward and Samuel Miller, as a successor to the Moot Club, to discuss technical matters of law.


1793
Feb 20                       
Lawyer and land speculator James Wadsworth writes from New York City to his cousin Jeremiah Wadsworth in Connecticut, suggesting he buy a particular tract of land in the Genesee Valley.

Apr 3                       
New York City receives the news of France's declaration of war on Britain.

Jun 12                       
The French warship Embuscade arrives at New York City from Charleston, where it had landed Edmond Charles Edouard "Citizen" Genet, agent of the new French republic, in April.

Jun 15                       
Pro-French New Yorkers display a Cap of Liberty on a pole in front of the new Tontine Coffee House at Wall and Water streets.

Jun 20                       
The Embuscade departs from New York City in search of further prizes.

Oct 1                       
New York City lawyer Peter Hawes helps found the Calliopean Society, to present and discuss poetry.

City
The 7 State Street home of James Watson, later to become the Shrine of Blessed Mother (Saint) Seton, is completed. The architecture is attributed to John McComb, Jr.    **      203 members of a merchants' association erect the Tontine Building (The Coffee House) at Wall and Water streets, to provide a business exchange. The funds are provided by members' annuities, the eventual remainder to be distributed among the seven longest surviving members. Archibald Gracie is elected its first president.    **    An attempt to sell the land in the former Collect Pond area elicits no responses.    **    Thrice-weekly trips both ways are made by stage-carriage to and from Boston, in 3 or 4 days, at a cost of four-pence a mile.    **    Citizen Genet is entertained by the Tammany Society. Mrs. Ann Julia Hatton writes an opera called Tammany, or The Indan Chief in his honor.    **    The Burns Coffee House at Broadway, north of Trinity Church, is demolished. The City Hotel will be built on the site.    **   James Kent becomes the first professor of law at Columbia University.    **    Twenty-two-year-old Yale-educated physician Elihu Hubbard Smith, arrives in New York from Connecticut to work on the staff of New York Hospital. By the end of the year he’s joined James Kent, businessman William Woolsey and playwright William Dunlap, to form the Friendly Club, dedicated to intellectual improvement.    **    Scottish-born shipping merchant Archibald Gracie moves to the city.    **    The French begins using Bedloes Island as an isolation station.    **    Philadelphian John Bill Ricketts brings his circus company to perform at Broadway and Broome Street. The group will return to the city five times.    **    Peter Schermerhorn combines properties at Beekman Slip  (the future Schermerhorn Row and Fulton Street).    **    Future Manhattan businessman Ira Hawley is born in Ridgefield, Connecticut.

©  2013    David Minor / Eagles Byte

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

NYC MUSEUM RESEARCH PORTALS


The Museum of the City of New York is currently in the midst of a long term project to provide increased access to all of its holdings.  One aspect of the project, begun in 2008, is the digitization of its holdings, starting with the vast collections of photographs, prints, and other works on paper depicting the changing city over time, now available via our online Collections Portal.  As a complement to the online Collections Portal, this site will provide access to archival collections at both the Museum of the City of New York and the South Street Seaport Museum.
The archivists will continue to make new finding aids available as collections are processed, but feel free to contact the research departments directly if you don’t see what you are looking for here.
Please click on the links below to learn about research services and contact information at each institution:
Museum of the City of New York
South Street Seaport Museum

Friday, March 8, 2013

SOUTH STREET SEAPORT THIS COMING WEEK

A very important way you can support the South Street Seaport Historic District is coming up next week.

Please attend the City Council public hearing on the future of the Seaport onThursday, March 14, at 9:30am near City Hall. We need as many supporters present as possible. It also helps a great deal if we know how many are coming.

Please email us at
rsvp@newamsterdammarket.org for more details and to let us know you can make it.
If you'd like to speak at the meeting, you will have the opportunity, but the most important thing is that you attend. Please join us!

Save Our Seaport!





Our Next Meeting

Saturday, March 9
6pm
Meade's (Upstairs)
22 Peck Slip




Are you or were you a
Seaport Volunteer?
Please fill out our

Volunteer Census.



Contact Us

saveourseaport@gmail.com
(347) 6-PIER16


About Us

Our Mission: To save South Street’s working waterfront, beginning with our schooners Pioneer and Lettie G. Howard, then continuing inland to restore interest and life to the rest of the Museum.

Saturday, February 23, 2013

CANAL SOCIETY OF NEW YORK STATE HOSTING WINTER SYMPOSIUM


The annual all-day CSNYS Winter Symposium will be held March 2nd, at Monroe Community College in Rochester.


With a special focus this year on the Great Lakes and their interconnections with New York’s canals the event will feature speakers such as Michigan history professor Matthew Daley (The Keweenaw Waterway and Copper Mining), former Rochester City Historian Ruth Naparsteck Kron, and Canadian Great Lakes historian Walter Lewis on “Steamboats and the St. Lawrence Canals”. Other speakers will include keynote speaker and director of the NYS Canal Corporation Brian Stratton, and Fairport Canalside Development head Kal Wysokowski, as well as a preview of the upcoming 2013 field trip to the Delaware and Hudson Canal and the upcoming Worlds Canal Conference in Toulouse, France.

Advance registration is appreciated to permit accurate lunch number totals. Additional information, including registration forms and the meeting schedule is available online at:
Payment may be made at the door.

Sunday, January 20, 2013

NEW YORK CITY TIMELINE - 1791


 1791

Jan 5
The 14th New York State Legislature, having assembled a quorum on its second day, begins sitting at the second City Hall at the north End of Broad Street.

Feb 7
The legislature re-apportions the state Senate and Assembly districts.

Feb 12
Inventor and industrialist Peter Cooper is born in New York to Newburgh, New York Methodist hat maker John Cooper and his wife.

Mar 24
The 14th New York State Legislature concludes its 14th session.

Jun 9                 
Playwright-composer John Howard Payne is born in New York City.

Oct 14
The Old American Company drama group out of Philadelphia performs the tragedy The Gamester and a farce called The Mock Doctor or, the Dumb Lady Cured in a John Street Theater.

Dec 17                 
Manhattan's first one-way street is created.

City
The city begins a ten-year project to fill in the Collect Pond, a source of drinking water, after pollution makes it unfit to drink. It purchases all land claims previously granted to the Rutgers family.    **    Trinity Church, rebuilt in 1788, is consecrated by Bishop Provost.    **    New Jersey express coaches travel to New York City and back at the rate of twenty a week, mostly on commercial travel.    **    The city suffers a relatively mild outbreak of yellow fever, although close to 100 died in the Peck Slip area.    **   A tontine organized by Lewis Morris to fund a toll drawbridge across the lower Harlem River fails to raise enough money.    **    The Tammany Society has over 300 members.    **    Andrew S. Norwood goes into business in Manhattan as a merchant.    **    Brig owner Joseph Rose and his family move from their Georgian-style homer at 273 Water Street to Pearl Street, leaving the former property to his son.    **    Merchant Benjamin Seixes builds a double house at 76 Broad Street.    **    The city establishes the Northern Dispensary for treatment of the poor, in Greenwich Village.    **    The Society for the Promotion of Agriculture, Arts and Manufactures is founded. It will move to Albany in 1797.    **    Only 4% of the city’s households – mostly elite merchants -are owners of stock.    **    The 1784 Bank of New York receives a corporate charter. It currently has 190 shareholders    **    The city is divided into seven wards.    **    Free black future dry cleaner Thomas L. Jennings is born to Joseph Jennings and Marry Baker.

©  2013    David Minor / Eagles Byte