Lower Manhattan’s Local News
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The Broadsheet Inc. | 212-912-1106 | editor@ebroadsheet.com | ebroadsheet.com
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Aesthetic Inventory
BPCA’s Public Art Collection Represents Multiple Layers of Value
The Battery Park City Authority (BPCA), at the urging of Martha Gallo, the vice chair of the agency’s board of directors, has completed an inventory and appraisal of its public art collection. This is part of a broad effort to take stock of the Authority’s ongoing role as a patron and custodian of pieces that represent an integral thread in the fabric of the community, as evidenced by the fact that space and funding for public art were both set aside decades ago, in the neighborhood’s first master plan, before the first building was erected.
At the June 25 meeting of the BPCA’s board, Eric Munson, the Authority’s chief operating officer, said, “a few months back I described the measures we were taking to improve our management of the Authority’s public art collection, which we have known for quite some time to be world class in many ways — a foundational element of the neighborhood as a whole. Ms. Gallo asked for a comprehensive plan, and so as part of that effort, we engaged the Art Dealer’s Association of America to appraise the collection. Last month, the 15 pieces compromised in the collection were collectively appraised at $63,514,098.”
This is a striking valuation, given that most of the pieces in Battery Park City’s collection were originally commissioned at costs ranging from several tens to a few hundreds of thousands of dollars. This estimated worth may be driven in part by the soaring reputations of many of the artists who contributed work to the collection decades ago, at the dawn of their careers. Three have gone on to represent the United States at the renowned Venice Biennale, which is sometimes described as “the Olympics of the art world.” They are Martin Puryear, in 2019 (he created the Pylons, adjacent to North Cove Marina); Ann Hamilton in 1999 (she designed the Ice Wall in Teardrop Park); and Louise Bourgeois, in 1993 (who fashioned the Eyes sculpture in Wagner Park).
Remarking on the need to insure any asset worth tens of millions of dollars, Mr. Munson continued, “we’ve been working to secure fine arts coverage for that collection, which would cover claims related to among other events, terrorism, wind, and water damage. We’ve received one proposal so far with the remaining due back later this week. That policy would meet our needs and cost approximately $37,000. And so I’m requesting authority to bind coverage for a fine arts policy for an amount not to exceed $40,000 contingent upon receipt of the remaining policies.”
The push to catalog and estimate the value of the Authority’s art collection began in September, 2018, when Ms. Gallo noted during a discussion about a $500,000 contract to repair two art works (the Pylons, and the lighted glass benches alongside the Irish Hunger Memorial) that, “it’s a big number, half a million dollars, for two pieces of art. One of the things I would request the team to pull together is an inventory of the pieces, a current valuation, and some kind of aging report. I mean, half a million dollars is a significant amount of money. I love these Pylons, but I don’t depend on their lighting system.” (This was a reference to the need to repair the interior electrical circuity on the Pylons sculpture.) Ms. Gallo continued, “and I like those benches, but you can sit on them without the lights. I mean this is a big investment, half a million dollars for two pieces of art.”
BPCA board member Donald Capoccia observed that the BPCA had recently spent $2.5 million renovating Irish Hunger Memorial. (The total cost of repairing the Irish Hunger Memorial, which was plagued by leaks and drainage problems for more than a decade, came to approximately $5 million.)
Ms. Gallo replied, “for the second renovation of the structure. So these are not insignificant dollars. I love these pieces of art, and I think this comprehensive view will help us.”
Authority board member Louis Bevilacqua observed, “these are valuable parts of the community. They may not be economically valuable to everybody, but they’re important parts of this community. And it seems to me that if we have a valuable asset for this community, we ought to have built into the budget plenty of excess to take care of those assets. It seems to me that this is the type of thing that ought to be built into the budget.”
Mr. Bevilacqua’s point is underscored by a raft of studies indicating that public art works confer a broad range of benefits, from higher levels of social cohesion and community engagement, to increased property values, to more positive health outcomes for nearby residents.
BPCA board chair George Tsunis remarked that, “we have a fiduciary duty of oversight. Before we even start making ad hoc decisions, one by one, one was two and a half million, this was $595,000, let’s get a global view of what this will cost, and candidly what the opportunity cost is, what else we’re giving up. I, for one, would like to maintain these. They’re beautiful and such. However, there’s a lot of things that I want. I mean someone once said, we dream about things in poetry, but we have to execute in prose.”
Mr. Munson continued, “in recognition of the really renewed focus on our public art collection, Abby Ehrlich, who used to be the director of community partnerships and engagement, is now the director of community partnerships and public art. And we’ve also brought on a part timer who has both gallery and public art experience to supplement her efforts around this conversation work.” BPCA board member Catherine McVay Hughes added, “Abby’s been here now 20 years as well. So I want to commend her for all her work.”
Following this exchange, the BPCA retained consultants to appraise the collection and identify deficiencies in its condition. The appraisal work yielded the valuation of $63 million. The condition report identified conservation issues commensurate with a portfolio of outdoor sculpture on the waterfront, where harsh weather and the Hudson’s brackish water can accelerate wear and tear. In the months ahead, the Authority plans to address these issues through long-term engagements with specialized contractors. On a larger scale, in addition to the soon-to-be-completed conservation work on the Pylons, the BPCA recently completed a renovation of New York artist Mary Miss’s South Cove, an environmental landscape artwork on Battery Park City’s southern Esplanade.
Moving forward, the BPCA more recently partnered with artists Dharmesh Patel and Autumn Ewalt to bring their work “Sunrise, Sunset (Revolution)” — an installation consisting of 27 aluminum panels embedded with 9,000 crystal prisms activated by natural light — to Pier A Plaza in 2017. In an arrangement largely overseen by Ms. Ehrlich, the work was originally scheduled to remain there for less than a year, but was so well-received that its stay was extended through most of 2019. (The piece will soon be removed to make way for construction, but residents can view it through October 19.)
This represents an ongoing evolution in the BPCA’s approach to public art, focused on collaborating with artists on temporary installations — in addition to the BPCA’s traditional paradigm of commissioning and taking permanent ownership of such works. This model, while it still offers financial support to artists, spares the Authority from the greater capital outlay involved in outright ownership, and also relieves the agency of the financial and logistical responsibility for maintaining the works in perpetuity. It also creates a new dynamic in which works from a broader range of contributors rotate in and out of the community, lingering for months or years at a time, before being replaced by fresh pieces.
“Public art that is accessible and inviting is important because a city or a community is more than essential services,” Ms. Ehrlich observes. “It’s also a network of connections — verbal, nonverbal, tangible and intangible. Art provides ways to connect with our own curiosity, an artist’s intentions, and each other. People intuitively know this and experience the connections. It’s not important to know who the artists are or other facts. Art speaks for itself, in many languages and to all ages, and that’s its gift to us.”
Matthew Fenton
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Fraunces Tavern Celebrates 300 Years
It’s not often you get invited to a 300th birthday party.
Last week, Fraunces Tavern and Fraunces Tavern Museum celebrated the 300th anniversary of the construction of the building at 54 Pearl Street that would become Fraunces Tavern. The museum also highlighted its new exhibition “A Monument to Memory: 300 Years of Living History.”
Built around 1719 as a private residence for a merchant Stephan Delancey, the building has played various roles in American history. In 1762, Samuel Fraunces bought the building and turned it into a tavern and colonial meeting place. During the Revolutionary War, it served as Washington’s headquarters, and housed the first offices for the Departments of War, Treasury and Foreign Affairs.
The Sons of the Revolution took control of the building in 1904, and reconstructed it in 1907. That year, it reopened as a restaurant and, on the upper floors, a museum. Today, Fraunces Tavern Museum and Fraunces Tavern (managed by the Porterhouse Brewing company) keep extraordinary American history alive at the corner of Pearl and Broad Streets.
photos courtesy Matthew Carasella
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Saloon Scuffle
Residents Riled about Tribeca Tavern
More than a dozen concerned Tribeca residents turned out for the September meeting the Licensing and Permits Committee, which weighs in on the granting or renewal of liquor licenses.
They showed up to voice concerns about MI-5, a bar located at 52 Walker Street, which has been a source of local complaints as far back 2007.
Neighbors of the bar allege that it operates as a dance club (in violation of its current license, which is now up for renewal), and that loud music penetrates the upper floors of the residential building located above the bar as late as 4:00 am. To read more…
Matthew Fenton
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Sin of Omission
City Agency Leaves Cash-Strapped Local Museum Off Roster of Cultural Institutions
The City’s Department of Cultural Affairs has omitted from its list of dozens of New York-based cultural institutions that receive public support the museum that chronicles the oldest community anywhere in the five boroughs.
Since the 1870s, City Hall has maintained a roster of museums and arts groups located on publicly owned land, which are earmarked for tax-payer subsidies. This relationship began with the American Museum of Natural History, and has been updated recently enough to include new entrants like the Museum of Jewish Heritage, in Battery Park City, along with more than 30 other organizations.
But DCA has never included on this list the South Street Seaport Museum, which is the historical repository of New York’s first neighborhood, the colonial port and fishing village that grew up around the first Dutch settlement in what is now Lower Manhattan, starting in 1625.
Matthew Fenton
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Damascus on the Hudson
Lower Manhattan’s Old Syrian Quarter
Today, the stretch of Greenwich and Washington Streets between Battery Place and Albany Street — bisected by the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel entrance — is known by the forgettable name, “Greenwich South.” By all appearances it is an orphan of a neighborhood that never quite coalesced. But nothing could be further from the truth. A century ago, before the World Trade Center or the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel (the two giant public works projects that decimated this once-thriving quarter), it was an ethnic enclave as vibrant as Little Italy or Chinatown. To read more…
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Condo Embargo
BPCA Puts the Brakes on Conversions of Rental Buildings within Community
Residents of rental apartments in Battery Park City who fear being thrown out of their homes as developers plan to convert those buildings to condominiums can rest a little bit easier, according to the Battery Park City Authority. At the October 2 meeting of the Battery Park City Committee of Community Board 1, Authority president Benjamin Jones said, “I want to talk about some of the potential condo conversions that people are concerned about. We have been very clear with developers over the last year, and then some, about our position — that we want to preserve the rental housing that exists in Battery Park City.”
Matthew Fenton
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Build It and They Will Come ~ Monarch Butterflies Pause to Refuel in Lower Manhattan
Click to watch monarch butterflies feeding on milkweed planted by the Battery Park City Authority to help them on their annual fall migration from Canada to the mountains of Mexico. To read more…
To the editor:
Thank you, kind-hearted gardeners. We must all do whatever little bit we can to hold back the wave of extinctions that is a hair’s breadth from taking the last of our monarchs.
Brendan Sexton
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CLASSIFIEDS & PERSONALS
Swaps & Trades ~ Respectable Employment ~ Lost & Found
212-912-1106 editor@ebroadsheet.com
DO YOU NEED A PERSONAL ASSISTANT?
I am experienced, reliable, knowledgeable and able to work flexible hours. CHINESE AIDE/CAREGIVER FOR ELDERLY
Cantonese/Mandarin-speaking and Excellent Cook for Battery Park City.
917-608-6022 SEEKING FREE-LANCE PUBLIC RELATIONS PROFESSIONAL OR SMALL PR FIRM
Work with well-reviewed author of five E-books, developing and implementing outreach strategies.
Includes writing, placement, research, new outlets and on-line advertising. Savvy social media skills a must. Downtown location. HOUSEKEEPING/NANNY/BABYSITTER
Available starting September for PT/FT.
Wonderful person, who is a great worker. Reference Available ELDERCARE
Available for PT/FT elder care. Experienced. References Angella
347-423-5169 angella.haye1@gmail.com
DITCH THE DIETS & LOSE WEIGHT FOR GOOD
Call Janine to find out how with hypnosis.
janinemoh@gmail.com 917-830-6127 EXPERIENCED ELDER CARE
Able to prepare nutritious meals and light housekeeping
Excellent references 12yrs experienced 347 898 5804 Call Hope anasirp@gmail.com
NOTARY PUBLIC IN BPC
$2 per notarized signature Text Paula at 917-836-8802
CLEANING SERVICES
Dishes, windows, floors, laundry, bathrooms.
You name it – I will clean it. Call Elle at 929-600-4520 IT AND SECURITY SUPPORT
Experienced IT technician. Expertise in 1-on-1 tutoring for all ages.Computer upgrading & troubleshooting. Knowledgeable in all software programs.
James Kierstead james.f.kierstead@gmail.com 347-933-1362. Refs available ELDER COMPANION
Experienced with BPC residents. Available nights, days, and weekends. Will cook, clean and administer medicine on time. Speaks French and English. Can start immediately. Please call or text 929-600-4520.
OLD WATCHES SOUGHT, PREFER NON-WORKING
Mechanical pocket and wristwatches sought and sometimes repaired
212-912-1106 If you would like to place a listing, please contact editor@ebroadsheet.com |
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Court of Appeal
Local Leaders Urge Preservation of Justice Complex
Community Board 1 is urging the City’s Landmarks Preservation Commission to consider granting legally protected status to the Criminal Courts Building, at 100 Centre Street. The case of 100 Centre Street takes on special urgency in this context, because, as the CB1 resolution notes, “the Manhattan Criminal Court building shares the same underlying City lot with the south tower of the Manhattan Detention Complex. This appears to mean that if City Hall needed extra space for the proposed new jail, it would face no legal obstacle in demolishing all or part of the historic building.
Matthew Fenton
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Today’s Calendar
Thursday October 10, 2019
6PM
China Institute 40 Rector Street
In All in My Family, documentary filmmaker Wu Hao (People’s Republic of Desire, 2018) turns his camera inward. After starting a family with his husband in the United States, Wu documents his Chinese family’s journey to acceptance. What will they say when he brings home his husband and their two kids for the first time? Following the screening, Wu will discuss LGBTQ+ life in China today. FREE China Institute 40 Rector Street.
6PM
Community Board 1 Landmarks & Preservation Committee
Community Board 1 – Conference Room 1 Centre Street, Room 2202A-North
AGENDA
1) 315 Church Street, application to legalize removal of fire shutters at rear back corner of building – Resolution
2) District Needs Statement and Budget Requests for FY2021 – Discussion
7PM
New York Academy of Sciences
From the macrocosm of the universe to the microcosm of the human body, our discoveries about ourselves and the natural world continue to spark our experience of awe and wonder.
But how exactly does science define and explain the experience of awe and wonder? What has the historical and cultural impact of this emotion been in the development of science and reason? And does the experience of awe and wonder suggest that the quest for scientific truth and the metaphysical yearning for a deeper understanding of reality share a common root?
Social psychologist Michelle Shiota, writer Caspar Henderson, and astrophysicist Alex Filippenko unpack the emerging science behind the emotion of awe and wonder, and its function in our ongoing quest for understanding and knowledge. $5, $7, $15 7 World Trade Center
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Vertical Values
Costs to Rent or Own in Lower Manhattan Are Matched by Lofty Local Earnings
A slew of recent reports documents what everyone who lives or works in Lower Manhattan already sensed in their bones: This is a mind-numbingly expensive place to call home.
In September, RENTCafé issued a new analysis of the most expensive neighborhoods for renters in the United States that finds northern Battery Park City (zip code 10282) is the priciest enclave in America, with an average rent of $6,211 per month. Coming in at second place is zip code 10013, which covers western Tribeca, along with part of Soho. To read more…
Matthew Fenton
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EYES TO THE SKY
September 30-October 13, 2019
Amateur astrophotographer soars: The Eagle Nebula
Looking through a telescope, we travel in light years. One light-year is equal to 9,500,000,000,000 kilometers or nearly 6 trillion miles. The Eagle Nebula, pictured here, is about 7000 light years away and includes a cluster of about 8,500 stars. To read more…
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Steven Amedee Gallery
GRRR | Brad Greenwood
“GRRR is the noise of the street, the buzz-saw of the news cycle, the constant low growl in the throat. What is it like to try to live peacefully, contentedly, lovingly while the animals roar? Can there be quiet in the midst of these troubling noises? ~ Brad Greenwood
The exhibition runs through November 30 at Steven Amedee Gallery, 41 North Moore Street in Tribeca.
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From Bunker to Incubator
New Arts Center on Governors Island Will Provide Studio Space and Cultural Programming
Lower Manhattan has a new cultural hub. The Lower Manhattan Cultural Council and the Trust for Governors Island have partnered to create the LMCC Arts Center at Governors Island, a 40,000-square foot studio space and education facility, housed within a restored 1870s ammunition warehouse — a relic from the days when the island was a military outpost.
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Rapport to the Commissioner
CB1 Makes Exception to New Policy; Okays Naming Street for Former NYPD Commissioner
A public figure from the 1980s may soon be honored by having a street co-named in his memory, if Community Board 1 gets its way. The panel recommended that Benjamin Ward, New York’s first African-American police commissioner, be commemorated by rechristening one block of Baxter Street as Benjamin Ward Way.
This comes on the heels of a controversial decision by CB1 in 2018 to decline such a request on behalf of James D. McNaughton, who, on August 2, 2005, at age 27, became the first New York City Police officer to be killed in action while serving in “Operation Iraqi Freedom.”
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Shattering the Lens
There isn’t anything unusual in a woman keeping a light in her window to guide men folk home, I just happen to keep a bigger light.” – Keeper Margaret Norvell
Shattering the Lens is an exhibit at the National Lighthouse Museum.
Artist Elaine Marie Austin, using her paintings of keepers and their lighthouses, sheds light on the dynamic impact of female lighthouse keepers.
It is inspired by the book Women Who Kept the Lights by Mary Louise Clifford and J. Candace Clifford.
The show runs through October 20, 2019.
National Lighthouse Museum
200 The Promenade at Lighthouse Point, Staten Island
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While They Were Sleeping
Battery Park City Resident Charged with Two Home Invasions, and Sexual Abuse
A Battery Park City resident has been arrested twice in the space of five days on charges arising from two separate (but related) incidents, in which he is alleged to have sexually assaulted one woman, and sexually menaced her roommate on another, prior occasion.
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TODAY IN HISTORY
October 10
680 – Muhammad’s grandson Husayn ibn Ali is decapitated by Caliph Yazid I’s troops.
1760 – In a treaty with the Dutch colonial authorities, the Ndyuka people of Suriname – descended from escaped slaves – gain territorial autonomy.
1780 – The Great Hurricane of 1780 kills 20,000-30,000 in the Caribbean.
1845 – In Annapolis, Maryland, the Naval School (later the United States Naval Academy) opens with 50 students.
1846 – Triton, the largest moon of the planet Neptune, is discovered by English astronomer William Lassell.
1913 – President Wilson triggers the explosion of the Gamboa Dike, completing major construction on the Panama Canal.
1928 – Chiang Kai-shek becomes Chairman of the Republic of China.
1938 – Abiding by the Munich Agreement, Czechoslovakia completes its withdrawal from the Sudetenland.
1957 – President Eisenhower apologizes to Ghanaian finance minister Gbedemah after he is refused service in a Delaware restaurant.
1967 – The Outer Space Treaty comes into force. The treaty’s main points are that it prohibits the placing of nuclear weapons in space, limits the use of the Moon and all other celestial bodies to peaceful purposes only, and establishes that space shall be free for exploration and use by all nations, but that no nation may claim sovereignty of outer space or any celestial body.
The Outer Space Treaty does not ban military activities within space, military space forces, or the weaponization of space, with the exception of the placement of weapons of mass destruction in space As of June 2019, 109 countries are parties to the treaty, while another 23 have signed but not yet completed ratification.
1973 – Vice President Spiro Agnew resigns after being charged with evasion of federal income tax.
1985 – US Navy aircraft intercept an Egyptian airliner carrying the perpetrators of the Achille Lauro hijacking, and force it to land in Italy.
2015 – Twin bomb blasts in the Turkish capital Ankara kill 102 and injure 400.
Births
786 – Saga, emperor of Japan (d. 842)
1344 – Mary of Waltham, duchess of Brittany (d. 1361)
1629 – Richard Towneley, English mathematician and astronomer (d. 1707)
1731 – Henry Cavendish, French-English chemist, physicist, and philosopher (d. 1810)
1813 – Giuseppe Verdi, Italian composer and philanthropist (d. 1901)
1858 – Maurice Prendergast, American painter and academic (d. 1924)
1877 – William Morris, 1st Viscount Nuffield, English businessman and philanthropist, founded Morris Motors (d. 1963)
1901 – Alberto Giacometti, Swiss sculptor and painter (d. 1966)
1917 – Thelonious Monk, American pianist and composer (d. 1982)
1930 – Harold Pinter, playwright, screenwriter, director Nobel Prize laureate (d. 2008)
1946 – John Prine, American singer-songwriter and guitarist
Deaths
1708 – David Gregory, Scottish mathematician and astronomer (b. 1659)
1911 – Jack Daniel, American businessman, founded Jack Daniel’s (b. 1849)
1913 – Adolphus Busch, German-American brewer and businessman, co-founded Anheuser-Busch (b. 1839)
1985 – Orson Welles, actor, director, producer, and screenwriter (b. 1915)
1998 – Clark Clifford, American captain, lawyer, and politician 9th United States Secretary of Defense (b. 1906)
2013 – Scott Carpenter, commander, pilot, and astronaut (b. 1925)
credits include wikipedia and other internet sources
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Flipped Again
Onetime Non-Profit Nursing Facility Sold to Anonymous Buyer for Five Times Original Price
If there is an Exhibit A in the case of fevered speculation in Lower Manhattan real estate, it must be Rivington House
After purchasing the block-long, 150,000-square-foot structure (located at 45 Rivington Street, near the Williamsburg Bridge), the developer, the Allure Group, paid the City an additional $16 million to remove the deed restriction that limited the property to its legacy use of non-profit, residential healthcare. To read more…
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Breaking It Down
Composting Catches on in Battery Park City
You’re probably heard of the farm-to-table movement. Thanks to the Battery Park City Authority’s compost initiative, there’s a burgeoning table-to-earth movement in this Lower Manhattan community.
What happens to the scraps after you’ve dropped them in the bin? How do your apple peels and corn husks turn into rich, beneficial compost?
The Broadsheet set out to investigate. To read more…
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If They Went Any Slower, They’d Slip Into Reverse
City Transportation Study Finds That Lower Manhattan Bus Service Is Among Most Sluggish in Five Boroughs
The annual New York City Mobility Report, produced by the City’s Department of Transportation, contains two data points that will come as no surprise residents of Lower Manhattan. The first of these is that the median speed for Downtown bus service ranks among the slowest of any community in the five boroughs. And the second is that this creeping pace is, if anything, getting creepier. To read more…
Matthew Fenton
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Death Came Calling at the Corner of Wall and Broad Streets, in Lower Manhattan’s First Major Terrorist Attack
As the noon hour approached on a fall Thursday morning in 1920, a horse-drawn wagon slowly made its way west down Wall Street toward “the Corner,” the high-powered intersection of Wall and Broad. Its driver came to a gentle stop in front of the Assay Office, where stockpiles of gold and silver were stored and tested for purity. But theft was not his motive.
John Simko
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RiverWatch
Cruise Ships in New York Harbor
Arrivals & Departures
———————————————————————
Thursday, October 10
Anthem of the Seas
Inbound 6:30 am (Bayonne); outbound 4:00 pm
New England/Canadian Maritimes
Ocean Dream
Inbound 6:00 am; in port overnight
Friday, October 11
Ocean Dream
Outbound pm 102nd Global Voyage
(Quebec City/Transatlantic/Belfast, N. Ireland)
Silver Whisper
Inbound 7:15 am; outbound 6:30 pm
New England/Canadian Maritimes/Quebec City/Montreal
Viking Sun
Outbound 6:00pm; Bermuda/Eastern Caribbean/San Juan, PR
Many ships pass Lower Manhattan on their way to and from the Midtown Passenger Ship Terminal. Others may be seen on their way to or from piers in Brooklyn and Bayonne. Stated times, when appropriate, are for passing the Colgate clock in Jersey City, New Jersey, and are based on sighting histories, published schedules and intuition. They are also subject to tides, fog, winds, freak waves, hurricanes and the whims of upper management.
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Cass Gilbert and the Evolution of the New York Skyscraper
by John Simko
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The Broadsheet Inc. | 212-912-1106 | editor@ebroadsheet.com| ebroadsheet.com
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© 2019
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