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East Fourth Street Historic District is a registered historic district in Cincinnati, Ohio, listed in the National Register of Historic Places on February 22, 1988. It contains a row of 3 side-by-side contributing buildings dating circa 1860.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio, United States. Downtown Cincinnati is defined as being all of the city south of Central Parkway, west of Interstates 71 and 471, and east of Interstate 75.
A smaller, albeit older historic district, the East Fourth Street Historic District, lies several blocks to the east. In the early part of the nineteenth century, Fourth Street was lined with exclusive mansions and an opera house. [3]: 170 Fourth Street has been an important financial center of the city since the late nineteenth century.
Three senior Justice Department officials in New York and Washington resigned Thursday instead of complying with orders from the Trump administration to dismiss the corruption case against New ...
4th Street is a street in Lower Manhattan, New York City.It starts at Avenue D as East 4th Street and continues to Broadway, where it becomes West 4th Street.It continues west until the Avenue of the Americas (Sixth Avenue), where West 4th Street turns north and confusingly intersects with West 10th, 11th, 12th, and 13th Streets in Greenwich Village.
Abutting the museum to the east is a public park named Manuel Plaza. [8] [9] Several doors east of the museum, at 37 East Fourth Street, is the Samuel Tredwell Skidmore House, a three-story Greek Revival house built for a cousin of one of 29 East Fourth Street's early residents, Seabury Tredwell.
The Fourth & Walnut Center (previously known by the names Clopay Building and the First National Bank Building) is a building in Cincinnati, Ohio.Designed by Chicago architect Daniel Burnham of D.H. Burnham and Company, the building is an example of Chicago School architecture.
The story of the neighborhood immediately surrounding East 4th Street between Second Avenue and the Bowery is unique in its history of artistic activity and grassroots activism. At the turn of the century, 66 East 4th Street, known as Turin Hall, was a focal point for the German immigrant community, and the first Yiddish theater in New York, in ...