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As he first combed through files from the Emigrant Savings Bank at the New York Public Library that day about 25 years ago, Anbinder was working on a book about the city’s famed Five Points ...
Emigrant Savings collected extensive records of the arriving Irish immigrants to America, which were later donated to the New York Public Library and serve as valuable genealogical resources. [6] Emigrant Savings Bank also had customers from numerous other immigrant communities, including those from Eastern and Northern Europe.
Emigrant Savings Bank initially took up the banking hall, while the other floors were rented out. [22] [23] The New York Supreme Court announced in March 1912 that it would take up the 13th floor and half of the 12th floor at the Emigrant Savings Bank Building. The Supreme Court, which had a shortage of space in the Tweed Courthouse (then known ...
The structure would replace 280 Broadway and the old Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank Building, incorporate the then-under-construction Hall of Records, and would also entail destroying the Tweed Courthouse. [107] Several architects submitted proposals, the most elaborate of which was by McKim, Mead & White. [108]
Emigrant City: Transcription Explore the history of New York City by transcribing mortgage and bond ledgers of the Emigrant Savings Bank from between 1851 and 1921, held by the New York Public Library. [54] 1 December 2015 Measuring the ANZACs: Transcription
Bouwerie Lane Theatre (Bond Street Savings Bank) 11 January 1967: Bowery Bank of New York Building, 124 Bowery 26 June 2012: Bowery Mission, 227 Bowery 26 June 2012: Bowery Savings Bank, 130 Bowery 19 April 1966 Archived 11 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine: Bowling Green Fence: 14 July 1970: Bowling Green Offices Building
This article about a historic property or district in Manhattan, New York City, that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
The Jefferson Market Branch of the New York Public Library, once known as the Jefferson Market Courthouse, is a National Historic Landmark located at 425 Avenue of the Americas (Sixth Avenue), on the southwest corner of West 10th Street, in Greenwich Village, Manhattan, New York City, on a triangular plot formed by Greenwich Avenue and West 10th Street.