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The Essex Street Market, constructed in the 1940s, [3] is an indoor retail market that was one of a number of such facilities built in the 1930s under the administration of Mayor Fiorello La Guardia at 120 Essex Street, at Delancey Street. The Essex Street Market is operated and managed by the New York City Economic Development Corporation ...
Essex Hall, an office building at numbers 1 to 6, is the headquarters of the British Unitarians. [4] Prior to the Blitz, a chapel and meeting rooms were on the site, continuing the association with the first avowedly Unitarian place of worship in London, dating back to 1774, [1] when Theophilus Lindsey founded the Essex Street Chapel.
The Delancey Street/Essex Street station is a station complex shared by the BMT Nassau Street Line and the IND Sixth Avenue Lines of the New York City Subway, located at the intersection of Essex and Delancey Streets on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, just west of the Williamsburg Bridge.
Delancey Street in 2021 Exterior of Essex Street Market, prior to its rebranding and relocation. Essex Market (formerly known as Essex Street Market) is a food market with independent vendors at the intersection of Essex Street and Delancey Street in the Lower East Side of Manhattan, New York City. [1]
Essex Street Chapel and Hall, the since-demolished first Unitarian church building in England. Essex Street Chapel, also known as Essex Church, is a Unitarian place of worship in London. It was the first church in England set up with this doctrine, and was established when Dissenters still faced legal threat. As the birthplace of British ...
Map by Wenceslaus Hollar (c. 1670s) showing Milford Lane when it divided the estates of Essex and Arundel. The lane possibly takes its name from the ford that crossed a stream that roughly followed the course of Essex Street. [n 1] It once marked the boundary between the London estates of Lord Essex, Essex House, and the Earl of Arundel ...
The information presented in this map reflects the results of hospice inspections provided by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), the hospice industry’s federal regulator, in response to a public records request. The time period covers Jan. 2, 2004, to Oct. 16, 2014.
The signage and map dates to 1977; it was likely installed along with the orange/red paint as a halfhearted modernization in the late 1970s. Full modernization of the northbound side did not occur until 1986-87, at which time this entrance was replaced with an entrance north of Essex Street.