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Interior of the Merchants Exchange Building during the 1876 Democratic National Convention, in which Samuel J. Tilden was named the party's nominee for president. The Merchants Exchange Building was a building at Third Street [1] at Chestnut and Pine in St. Louis, Missouri, from 1875 to 1958, that housed the St. Louis Merchants Exchange and hosted the 1876 Democratic National Convention.
The building was built in 1910 by the Memphis Cotton and Merchants Exchange. Locally, it became known as the "Exchange Building." The building was designed by Memphis architect Neander Montgomery Woods Jr. in the Beaux Arts style. [2] The Exchange Building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1979. [3]
Merchants Exchange Building can refer to: 55 Wall Street, New York, formerly the Merchants' Exchange Building; Merchants' Exchange Building (Philadelphia) Merchants Exchange Building (San Francisco) Merchants Exchange Building (St. Louis) Merchants Exchange (Boston) Merchants' Exchange Building (Baltimore, Maryland)
Marquette Hotel (St. Louis) Merchants Exchange Building (St. Louis) N. National Hotel (St. Louis, Missouri) Negro Masonic Hall; New Grand Central Theatre; O.
Beaumont Telephone Exchange Building: February 16, 2006 ... St. Louis Post-Dispatch Rotogravure Printing Plant: February 23, 2016 : 4340–50 Duncan Ave.
In May 2022, the Memphis and Shelby County Land use and Control Board approved plans to convert the site into a 126-unit apartment building. Parkview was built in 1923 as a 165-room apartment hotel.
Merchants Exchange Building (St. Louis) S. Safeway Stores Office and Warehouse Building; Shell Building (St. Louis) T. Townsend & Wall This page was last edited on 21 ...
No. 42: St. Louis with a score of 60.1 No. 50: Detroit with a score of 50.4 This article originally appeared on Memphis Commercial Appeal: Memphis ranked above Chicago, St. Louis in list of top U ...