Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
New York, New York Carte-de-visite printed by Brady's gallery from a lost copy negative of a retouched original print Library of Congress Mathew Brady's first photograph of Lincoln, on the day of the Cooper Union speech. Over the following weeks, newspapers and magazines gave full accounts of the event, noting the high spirits of the crowd and ...
Barack Obama was the first president to have his portrait taken with a digital camera in January 2009 by Pete Souza, the then–official White House photographer, [23] using a Canon EOS 5D Mark II. [citation needed] Obama was also the first president to have 3D portraits taken, which were displayed in the Smithsonian Castle in December 2014. [24]
In 1955, the first city institution to commit to be part of the Lincoln Square Renewal Project, an effort to revitalize the city's west side with a new performing arts complex that would become the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, was the Fordham Law School of Fordham University. [23]
30 Color Photos Photographers Took 100 Years Ago That Still Mesmerize Us Today. ... First Class Dining Room, Ca. 1910. ... New York City.
Nathan Leventhal is an American municipal government executive, arts administrator and corporate director. He served five years as Deputy Mayor of New York City and 17 years as President of Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, which was the longest such tenure in the Center's history.
Francis Bicknell Carpenter (August 6, 1830 – May 23, 1900) was an American painter born in Homer, New York.Carpenter is best known for his painting First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln, which is hanging in the United States Capitol.
March 15: all schools in the New York City Department of Education (NYCDOE) system closed until at least mid-April. [240] March 22: The city goes into a state of lockdown, amidst the COVID-19 pandemic. March 30: The Mercy-class hospital ship USNS Comfort (T-AH-20) arrived in New York City to assist in against the COVID-19 pandemic. [241]
Arrangements were made for the erection of the statue after the assassination of Abraham Lincoln in 1865. The statue was intended to be placed opposite to that of the equestrian statue of George Washington on the southwest corner of the square. [2]