Nov

25

Friday, November 25, 2022 – Visitors are constantly welcomed in the Kiosk

By admin

FROM THE ARCHIVES

FRIDAY,  NOVEMBER 25,  2022



THE  843rd EDITION


Notes from a day in the Kiosk

Judith Berdy

I decided to spend the afternoon in the Visitor Center Kiosk on Thanksgiving.  While the  wonderful staff Ellen, Barbara, Gloria and Vicki) were off and enjoying their families, I had the opportunity to meet and greet visitors arriving on the Island. It has been 15 years since we opened in 2007!

You never know who comes into to request a map, get directions, find a bathroom or ask questions.

A sample our visitors this afternoon:

A sailing instructor from Annapolis who loved the island and FDR Four Freedoms Park, He returned after visiting the park to purchase two books.


An Island family that will be moving home to Europe soon and wanted a large poster of the island. We had one by artist Julia Gash, measuring 24 X 36″.  They were thrilled to have this souvenir of their short stay on the island.

A dentist from Argentina, whose phone was in need of a charge. While it was charging we discussed Argentina and her dental profession in (my) mangled Spanish. She was enthralled with our large stuffed owls and purchased one for her niece. After the phone charges, she was off to NISI for lunch.

A mother and son from Tenerife, Canary Islands. We had a great chat about that beautiful island and her son studying engineering in Kansas City, Mo.

Some fun visitors from Texas, Alabama, Fishkill amongst those who stopped in.

Some visitors asked for a map and left immediately. Others stayed as I described the sites on  the island.  We suggest Southpoint Park and the Girl Puzzle in Lighthouse Park.

Of course there are numerous people looking for a restroom.  We suggest Cornell Tech if it is open, if not restaurants or the Southpoint Park.  This is the most frustrating part of our job, that RIOC is blind to the needs of visitors.

We do not realize how visitors are thrilled to visit the island and constantly comment on our location, beauty and friendly people.  We are loosing so much business to the island by RIOC’s lack of publicity and making visitors welcome. The RIHS can only do so much along without more support of RIOC.

When was the last time you were in the kiosk?  Have you come in to say hello, check out our merchandise, buy some gifts, leave a donation to support the RIHS?


Looking forward to seeing you for holiday shopping.

Judith Berdy

THESE ARE A FEW OF THE GREAT
KIDS BOOKS ON SALE AT THE KIOSK

Friday Photo of the Day

SEND YOU RESPONSE TO ROOSEVELTISLANDHISTORY@GMAIL.COM

Text by Judith Berdy
Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac and the RIHS
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter and Deborah Dorff

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated

JUDITH BERDY


THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

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Copyright © 2022 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Nov

24

Thursday, November 24, 2022 – HAVE A WONDERFUL HOLIDAY

By admin

Grandma Moses, Turkeys, 1958, oil on pressed wood, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the Kallir Family in memory of Otto Kallir, 2017.34.1, © Grandma Moses Properties Co., New York

FROM THE ARCHIVES


THURSDAYNOVEMBER  24,  2022

OUR 842nd ISSUE

THANKSGIVING WISHES

AND 

SHOP THE KIOSK

ON

BLACK FRIDAY

HOURS 12 NOON TO 5 P.M.

STOP BY THE KIOSK FOR YOUR HOLIDAY SHOPPING AND TOMEET OUR GREAT STAFF.

JULIA GASH MUGS  $15-  

MAGNETS  $5-
GREAT STOCKING STUFFERS
PULLBACK TRAINS $14-

BUILDING MODELS INCLUDING ONE WORLD TRADE, BROOKLYN BRIDGE, CHRYSLER BUILDING $15-

OUR FAVORITE PULL-BACK SUBWAY $14-

OUR FAVORITE BOOSK FOR ADULTS AND KIDS

OUR BEST SELLING LOQI SOFT TOTES  $15-

OUR FAVORITE MAP BOOK, A GREAT COLLECTION OF NEW YORK MAPS $22-

THURSDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

Horatio Walker, Watching the Turkeys, n.d., watercolor, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Dwight Wardlaw, 1968.59.3

Text by Judith Berdy
Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac and the RIHS
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter and Deborah Dorff

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated

Sources

JUDITH BERDY
R.I.H.S.


THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

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Copyright © 2022 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Nov

23

Wednesday, November 23, 2022 – FIVE GREAT SELECTIONS FOR YOUR READING PLEASURE

By admin

FROM THE ARCHIVES

WEDNESDAY,  NOVEMBER 23,  2022


THE  841st EDITION

NEW BOOK RELEASES:

GREAT FOR GIFTS AND WINTER

READING

NEW YORK ALMANACK

ENJOY SOME SUGGESTIONS FOR WINTER READING.  THE ABUNDANCE OF NEW  BOOKS FOCUSING ON NEW YORK HISTORY IS CONSTANTLY GROWING.

Bits and pieces of the lives led long before the age of skyscrapers are scattered throughout New York City, found in backyards, construction sites, street beds, and parks. Indigenous tools used thousands of years ago; wine jugs from a seventeenth-century tavern; a teapot from Seneca Village, the nineteenth-century Black settlement displaced by Central Park; raspberry seeds sown in backyard Brooklyn gardens―these everyday objects are windows into the city’s forgotten history.

Buried Beneath the City uses urban archaeology to retell the history of New York, from the deeper layers of the past to the topsoil of recent events. The book explores the ever-evolving city and the day-to-day world of its residents through artifacts, from the first traces of Indigenous societies more than ten thousand years ago to the detritus of Dutch and English colonization and through to the burgeoning city’s transformation into the modern metropolis. It demonstrates how the archaeological record often goes beyond written history by preserving mundane things―details of everyday life that are beneath the notice of the documentary record. These artifacts reveal the density, diversity, and creativity of a city perpetually tearing up its foundations to rebuild itself. Lavishly illustrated with images of objects excavated in the city, Buried Beneath the City is at once an archaeological history of New York City and an introduction to urban archaeology.

Fundamentally reshapes our understanding of the causes of the American Revolution and the pivotal role foreign news and misinformation played in driving colonists to revolt.

“Fake news” is not new. Just like millions of Americans today, the revolutionaries of the eighteenth century worried that they were entering a “post-truth” era. Their fears, however, were not fixated on social media or clickbait, but rather on peoples’ increasing reliance on reading news gathered from foreign newspapers. In Misinformation Nation, Jordan E. Taylor reveals how foreign news defined the boundaries of American politics and ultimately drove colonists to revolt against Britain and create a new nation.

News was the lifeblood of early American politics, but newspaper printers had few reliable sources to report on events from abroad. Accounts of battles and beheadings, as well as declarations and constitutions, often arrived alongside contradictory intelligence. Though frequently false, the information that Americans encountered in newspapers, letters, and conversations framed their sense of reality, leading them to respond with protests, boycotts, violence, and the creation of new political institutions. Fearing that their enemies were spreading fake news, American colonists fought for control of the news media. As their basic perceptions of reality diverged, Loyalists separated from Patriots and, in the new nation created by the revolution, Republicans inhabited a political reality quite distinct from that of their Federalist rivals.

The American Revolution was not only a political contest for liberty, equality, and independence (for white men, at least); it was also a contest to define certain accounts of reality to be truthful while defining others as false and dangerous. Misinformation Nation argues that we must also conceive of the American Revolution as a series of misperceptions, misunderstandings, and uninformed overreactions. In addition to making a striking and original argument about the founding of the United States, Misinformation Nation will be a valuable prehistory to our current political moment.

The Fulton Fish Market stands out as an iconic New York institution. At first a neighborhood retail market for many different kinds of food, it became the nation’s largest fish and seafood wholesaling center by the late nineteenth century.

Waves of immigrants worked at the Fulton Fish Market and then introduced the rest of the city to their seafood traditions. In popular culture, the market — celebrated by Joseph Mitchell in The New Yorker — conjures up images of the bustling East River waterfront, late-night fishmongering, organized crime, and a vanished working-class New York.

The new book The Fulton Fish Market: A History (Columbia Univ. Press, 2022) by Jonathan H. Rees is a lively and comprehensive history of the Fulton Fish Market, from its founding in 1822 through its move to the Bronx in 2005.

The new book Women Waging War in the American Revolution (University of Virginia Press, 2022) edited by Holly A. Mayer is a collection examining the impact of Revolutionary-era women on the outcomes of the war and its subsequent narrative tradition, from popular perception to academic treatment.

America’s War for Independence dramatically affected the speed and nature of broader social, cultural, and political changes including those shaping the place and roles of women in society. Women fought the American Revolution in many ways, in a literal no less than a figurative sense. Whether Loyalist or Patriot, Indigenous or immigrant, enslaved or slave-owning, going willingly into battle or responding when war came to their doorsteps, women participated in the conflict in complex and varied ways that reveal the critical distinctions and intersections of race, class, and allegiance that defined the era.

The contributors show how women navigated a country at war, directly affected the war’s result, and influenced the foundational historical record left in its wake. Engaging directly with that record, this volume’s authors demonstrate the ways that the Revolution transformed women’s place in America as it offered new opportunities but also imposed new limitations in the brave new world they helped create.

The new book Heaven on the Hudson: Mansions, Monuments, and Marvels of Riverside Park (Empire State Editions, 2022) by Stephanie Azzarone with photographs by Robert F. Rodriguez is a colorful tale of a singular New York City neighborhood and the personalities who make it special.

To outsiders or East Siders, Riverside Park and Riverside Drive may not have the star status of Fifth Avenue or Central Park West. But at the city’s westernmost edge, there is a quiet and beauty like few other places in all of New York. There are miles of mansions and monuments, acres of flora, and a breadth of wildlife ranging from Peregrine falcons to goats.

It’s where the Gershwins and Babe Ruth once lived, William Randolph Hearst ensconced his paramour, and Amy Schumer owns a penthouse. Told in the uniquely personal voice of a longtime resident, Heaven on the Hudson features the history, architecture, and personalities of this often overlooked neighborhood, from the eighteenth century through the present day.

Combining history of the area and its people with one-on-one guide to its sights, author Stephanie Azzarone sheds light on the initial development of Riverside Park and Riverside Drive, the challenges encountered ― from massive boulders to “maniacs” ― and the reasons why Riverside Drive never became the “new Fifth Avenue” that promoters anticipated.

From grand “country seats” to squatter settlements to multi-million-dollar residences, the book follows the neighborhood’s roller-coaster highs and lows over time. Readers will discover a trove of architectural and recreational highlights and hidden gems, including the Drive’s only freestanding privately owned villa, a tomb that’s not a tomb, and a memorial to an eighteenth-century child.

Azzarone also tells the stories behind Riverside’s notable and forgotten residents, including celebrities, murderers, and a nineteenth-century female MD who launched the country’s first anti-noise campaign.

WEDNESDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

HAPPY THANKSGIVING FROM THE RIHS AND CBN OLDER ADULT CENTER. PHOTO FROM OUR 2018 THANKSGIVING DINNER. 

JUDITH BERDY

TUESDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

JOHN F. KENNEDY CAMPAIGNING IN 1960 WITH
WIFE JACQUELINE ON LOWER BROADWAY.  JFK WAS ASSASSINATED ON NOV. 22, 1963.

ANDY SPARBERG & GLORIA HERMAN GOT IT RIGHT.

Text by Judith Berdy
Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac and the RIHS
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter and Deborah Dorff

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated

Sources

NEW YORK ALMANACK


THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

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Copyright © 2022 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Nov

22

Tuesday, November 22, 2022 – 1930′ REALIST ART BY THIS BRITISH BORN ARTIST

By admin

FROM THE ARCHIVES

TUESDAY,  NOVEMBER 22,  2022

THE  840th EDITION

An Immigrant

Printmaker and Painter

Gives Color and Light

to

Depression-era New York City

EPHEMERAL NEW YORK

Smithsonian American Art Museum

Max Arthur Cohn was a prolific 20th century artist of many mediums. But whether a silkscreen print, oil painting, mural, or lithograph, Cohn’s work imbues nuanced scenes of midcentury New York City with bursts of color and Ashcan-inspired realism. (“Rainy Day/Victor Food Shop,” date unknown, seriograph)

His early years echo those of so many early 20th century immigrants. Born in London in 1903 to Russian parents, Cohn and his family settled in America two years later, moving to Cleveland and then Kingston, New York. At 17, he landed his first art-related job in New York City: making commercial silkscreens.

(“New York Street Scene,” 1935, oil)

Silkscreening seemed to become Cohn’s creative focus. At the Art Students League—where he studied under John Sloan—he’s thought to have made his first artistic screenprint, according to the Annex Galleries. In 1940, he founded the National Serigraph Society (a serigraph is another word for a silkscreen print) and exhibited his prints in New York galleries.

Cohn, who spent much of his long life residing in Gotham, is also credited with teaching a young Andy Warhol the silkscreening process in the 1960s, according to Sotheby’s.

(“Washington Square,” 1928, oil)

During the Depression, Cohn found employment at the Works Progress Administration. The small stipend the WPA paid to artists must have been welcome support during these lean years of national financial uncertainty.

“In 1934, as part of the New Deal, he was selected as one of the artists for the Public Works of Art Project (PWAP) and from 1936-1939 the Works Progress Administration (WPA) Easel Project,” states arts agency fineleaf.net.

(“Hooverville Depression Scene,” 1938, oil)

The work featured in this post don’t reflect Cohn’s later artistic style, which became more abstract. Instead, they reveal an artist with a sensitivity to New York City’s rhythms and moods from the 1920s to 1940s.

I’ve read a fair amount about Cohn, and what strikes me most is that he doesn’t seem to belong to any one school. Art historians have described him as a pointillist, modernist, and American scene artist. I see the influence of the post-Impressionists and the Ashcan School, sometimes with a Hopper-esque quality as well.

(“New York City Subway,” 1940s, oil)

FROM THE 
SMITHSONIAN AMERICAN ART MUSEUM

Max Arthur Cohn, Coal Tower, ca. 1934, oil on canvas, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Transfer from the U.S. Department of Labor, 1964.1.4

Max Arthur Cohn, Bethlehem Steel Works, 1938, oil on canvas, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Mr. Max Arthur Cohn, 1978.41.1

Max Arthur Cohn, Untitled (Night Scene), 1944, color screenprint on paper, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the artist, 1984.63.5, © 1984, Max Arthur Cohn

Max Arthur Cohn, Railroad Bridge, opaque watercolor, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the artist, 1984.63.3

Tuesday Photo of the Day

SEND YOUR SUBMISSION  TO:
ROOSEVELTISLANDHISTORY@GMAIL.COM

MONDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY
COACH USED BY GENERAL LAFAYETTE ON
HIS RETURN TOUR TO THE UNITED STATES

COACH IS ON EXHIBIT AT THE STUDEBAKER MUSEUM
GLORIA HERMAN GOT IT RIGHT

Text by Judith Berdy
Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac and the RIHS
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter and Deborah Dorff

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated

Sources

EPHEMERAL NEW YORK

SMITHSONIAN MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART


THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

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Copyright © 2022 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Nov

21

Monday, November 21, 2022 – HE FOUGHT FOR THE AMERICANS WITH GEORGE WASHINGTON

By admin

FROM THE ARCHIVES

MONDAY,  NOVEMBER 21 , 2022 



THE  839th  EDITION

 

The Marquis de Lafayette:

A Short Biography

by James S. Kaplan 



NEW YORK ALMANACK

The Marquis de Lafayette: A Short Biography

James S. Kaplan

George Washington and Lafayette at Mount Vernon, 1784 by Rossiter and Mignot, 1859

2024 will mark the 200th anniversary of the return of the Marquis de Lafayette (Marie-Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de La Fayette) to America. In 1824, almost 50 years after the start of the American Revolution, the 68-year-old Lafayette was invited by President James Monroe, an old Revolutionary War comrade and lifelong friend, to tour the United States.

Lafayette’s visit was one the major events of the early 19th century. It had the effect of unifying a country sometime fractured by electoral discord and reminding Americans of their hard won democracy.

In 2015, the French government and private groups raised approximately $28 million to build a replica Hermione, the French ship which had carried Lafayette to America in 1780 (his second voyage to here). That 1780 voyage is considered by some to have revived flagging Revolutionary efforts, and ultimately to have been a factor in the ultimate American victory, with French support, at Yorktown.

The replica of the Hermione, which was constructed by the French as a good will effort to highlight the historical ties between France and America, had a triumphant visit in 2015 to cities on the Eastern seaboard. The ship is currently in dry dock in Rochefort, France where it was constructed. You can read about that here.

Lafayette in the uniform of a major general of the Continental Army, by Charles Willson Peale, between 1779–1780


The Marquis de Lafayette

The Marquis de Lafayette was born in 1757, at a time when England had largely defeated the French forces throughout Europe in the Seven Years’ War (the larger conflict that included the French and Indian War in the America). His family (and particularly his wife Adrienne) was one of the wealthiest in the country and was well-connected with the French monarchy. His father, a colonel of grenadiers, had been killed by the British at the Battle of Minden in 1759 (when Lafayette was two).

Like many young aristocratic Frenchmen, he had a desire to avenge the French defeats of earlier generations and a desire for glory in battle. Growing up in Auvergne, he attended private schools with the children of French nobility. When a revolution broke out in the 13 colonies America in 1775 he used his family resources and connections to fund his participation in the battle against the English and their allies.

In 1777, he voyaged to the British colonies to join the revolution then underway. At the time there were many young French adventurers who sought positions with the budding revolutionary army. General George Washington, eager to receive help from the French government, was informed by Silas Deane, the American ambassador in France that Lafayette was exceptionally well-connected with the senior levels of the French government, particularly the King. Washington added him to his personal staff (which also included Alexander Hamilton).

When the British were threatening Philadelphia, Lafayette was permitted to attend a council where the revolutionaries planned resistance to the British attack at Brandywine Creek. Washington was cautioned to take care that Lafayette not be put in danger. His death could provide the British with a great propaganda victory. At the succeeding Battle of Brandywine Lafayette saw the British begin to outflank the revolutionary army’s right under General John Sullivan. In the confusion of the battle, he rode out to the collapsing line and helped to organize an orderly retreat.

La Fayette wounded at the battle of Brandywine by Charles Henry Jeans


Wounded during the battle, Washington instructed his personal physician to treat him as if he were his own son. Thereafter Lafayette became a much more important American commander with whom General Washington would have a close relationship.  Among the officers at Brandywine who attended to Lafayette when he was wounded was James Monroe, then a Virginia Militia Captain.

Lafayette then received a battlefield command of Continental soldiers in New Jersey, and was tapped by General Horatio Gates to lead an expedition from Albany into Quebec. It was hoped that French Canadians would rally to the revolutionary movement under Lafayette. For a variety of reasons, not the least of which was political intrigue and the lack of forces and equipment, the attack was never carried out.

Meanwhile his exploits received great acclaim in France where he became something of a national hero, and the pressure grew on him to return to France to see his wife and young child. Always in this period he was extremely active in trying to convince the French government to intervene on the side of the revolution with significant aid to the cause.

In 1780, with the American efforts at a low ebb, the king was finally convinced to send a substantial force under the Marshal Jean-Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, comte de Rochambeau, along with a French fleet. Lafayette helped lead this effort’s advance guard aboard the Hermione. From the revolutionary point of view, the arrival of Hermione was a ray of hope at an otherwise dark time. When the ship arrived in Boston, a large crowd was there to cheer it. Shortly thereafter, at his arrival in Philadelphia, Lafayette was greeted warmly by the Continental Congress.

The arrival of the French in force proved to be an important factor in the victory at Yorktown. Lafayette, as both an Revolutionary and French military leader, was intimately involved with the planning and execution of that victory.

Lafayette’s Return to France

After the American victory, Lafayette (then just 22) return to France and his young children and wife. Given a hero’s welcome for his role in defeating the British, he grew closer to King Louis XVI (two years older), to whom he often served as a kind of political and psychological adviser. After all, these young men had in effect avenged their country’s humiliation in the Seven Years War and forged an important relationship with the new United States.

Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen proposed to the Estates-General by Lafayette


The problems of a centuries old archaic and autocratic French society remained and both Lafayette and the king were also the inheritors of that legacy. The American Revolution had occurred in part according to the principles of Thomas Paine, who sought to overthrow monarchical and aristocratic society. The ultimate result would come just ten years later with the execution of the king and a long period of imprisonment and degradation for Lafayette.

During the opening events of the French Revolution Lafayette supported liberal reforms. As a member of the Estates General of 1789 he supported voting by individual delegates, rather than in blocks (known as Estates). In particular, before a critical meeting of May 5, 1789, Lafayette (a member of the “Committee of Thirty” argued for individual votes, which supported the power of the larger Third Estate (the commoners and bourgeois) over the clergy (the First Estate) and nobility (the Second Estate).

Lafayette could not convince the bulk of the nobility to agree with his position, and when the First and Third Estates declared the National Assembly on May 17th and were locked out by the loyalist supporting the Second Estate, Lafayette was among them. This led to the Tennis Court Oath, in which those locked out swore to remain together until there was a constitution. On July 11th Lafayette presented the original draft of the “Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen,” which he had written after consultation with Thomas Jefferson.

LaFayette kisses Marie Antoinette's hand on the balcony of the royal palace during a riot there in October 6, 1789

The next day armed revolutionaries assembled in Paris and two days later the Bastille was stormed. The day after that Lafayette was made commander of the Parisian National Guard (the Garde nationale), which claimed for itself the role of protecting and administering the city. Lafayette chose the Guard’s symbol, the red, white and blue cockade, forerunner of today’s French flag. The king and many loyalists considered him a revolutionary, but many of the Third Estate considered him to be helping to keep the monarchy in power.

In many ways Lafayette played the role of middle-man and tried to serve as a moderating force against the most radical revolutionaries. In early October, after the King rejected the Declaration of the Rights of Man, a crowd of some 20,000, included the National Guard, marched on Versailles. Lafayette only reluctantly led them in hopes of protecting the king and public order. When they arrived, the king accepted the Declaration but when he refused to return to Paris the crowd broke into the palace. Lafayette brought the royal family onto the balcony, and attempting to placate the crowd at one point kissed the hand of Marie Antoinette – the crowd cheered. Eventually the King was forced to return to Paris, changing the power of the monarchy forever.

Later Lafayette launched an investigation into the role of the National Guard in what is now known as the October Days, which was rejected by the National Assembly in protection of the ongoing revolution. The following spring the Marquis helped organize the Fête de la Fédération, on July 14, 1790 (the first anniversary of the storming of the Bastille), a large convocation of more than 400,000 people at the Champs de Mars in Paris. At this event, representatives from around France and from all segments of society, including the king and royal family, who swore allegiance to a new liberal constitutional monarchy.

Oath of LaFayette at the Fête de la Fédération, 14 July 1790

Among those swearing the oath to to “be ever faithful to the nation, to the law, and to the king; to support with our utmost power the constitution decreed by the National Assembly, and accepted by the king.” was the Marquis de Lafayette.  During the ceremony the new 13-star American flag was the presented to Lafayette on behalf of the United States by Thomas Paine and John Paul Jones. It symbolized the support of democracy in both France and the United States.

Despite the Marquis’ best efforts, the illusionary unity of the Fete de Federation did not last more than a year. Loyalists thought the event threatened the king’s safety and diminished his power. More radical Jacobins saw the event as proof of Lafayette’s royalist tendencies and as an attempt to help keep the monarchy in power. Lafayette continued to support a moderate position which would protect public order in the coming months, including protecting the revolution in an armed stand-off with nobles known as the Day of Daggers in February 1791.

Lafayette’s National Guard was not always loyal to him, including occasionally disobeying his orders. In June, 1791 the king and queen escaped from the palace in Paris where they were being held under the watch of Lafayette’s National Guard. When he learned of their escape, the Marquis led the effort to recapture them and led the column returning them to the city five days later. The effect was devastating to Layette’s reputation however, as radicals, including Maximilien Robespierre denounced him as the protector of the king and the monarchy.

Lafayette as a lieutenant general in 1791, by Joseph-Désiré Court (1834)

His reputation was further hurt when he led the National Guard into a riot at the Champ de Mars where the troops fired into the crowd, an event that was used for propaganda purposes by his personal and political enemies. After this incident, rioters attacked Lafayette’s home and tried to seize his wife. When the National Assembly approved the new constitution two months later, Lafayette resigned his position and returned to his home in Auvergne.

His retreat from the chaos of the revolution was only temporary however. When France declared war on Austria in April 1792, he commanded one of three armies. Three days later Robespierre demanded the Marquis resign his leadership position. He refused, and instead sought peace negotiations through the National Assembly. In June he became openly and aggressively critical of the radicals in control of the Assembly and wrote that their parties should be “closed down by force.”  They also controlled Paris however, and finding his position increasingly untenable he left the city in haste. A crowd burned his effigy and Robespierre declared him a traitor.

On July 25, 1792 the Duke of Brunswick, Charles William Ferdinand, who commanded of the Allied Army during what is now known as the War of the First Coalition, threatened to destroy Paris, including its civilian population, if King Louis XVI was harmed. This radicalized the French Revolution even more. The king and queen were imprisoned and the monarchy abolished by the National Assembly. On August 14th an arrest warrant was issued for Lafayette.

Marquis de Lafayette in prison, by an unknown artist

The Marquis attempted to flee to the United States but was captured by the Austrians near Rochefort (in what was then the Austrian Netherlands, now Belgium). Frederick William II of Prussia (Austria’s ally against the French revolutionaries) had him held as a threat to other monarchies in Europe. For the next five years Lafayette was held a prisoner at various places, for some time with his family. He suffered harsh conditions, especially after a failed attempt to escape. He unsuccessfully attempted to use his American citizenship to argue for his release, although then President George Washington and Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson successfully convinced Congress to pay the Marquis for his service during and after the American Revolution.

After his eventual release, Lafayette was allowed to return to France under Napoleon Bonaparte, on the condition he would not engage in political activity. He remained personally loyal to the democratic principles of the American and French Revolutions, but remained largely out of public life. He quietly opposed the centralized power of Napoleon, and publicly called on him to step down after the Battle of Waterloo. When the Bourbon Monarchy was restored he worked more actively in various European quarters to oppose absolute monarchy, including during the Greek Revolution of 1821.

1824 A Triumphant Return Visit to the United States

In 1820, James Monroe, his old comrade from the Battle of Brandywine, was elected President of the United States, with his Secretary of State John Quincy Adams, Monroe promulgated the Monroe Doctrine warning European powers not to interfere with matters in the Americas. In 1824, he invited Lafayette to return to the United States for a tour of the country as a national guest in honor of the upcoming 50th anniversary of the nation’s independence.

The purpose of the visit, among other things, would be to highlight the country’s unity. Electoral politics had been somewhat fractured in the United States in the previous two decades, including during the War of 1812 against France old nemesis, England.  The visit would also indicate American support for democratic movements throughout Europe.

The King Louis XVIII found the American invitation to Lafayette insulting and caused troops to disperse the crowds that had gathered at Le Havre to see him off. His arrival in New York Harbor was met by dozens of ships and the tolling of bells. Its said that more than 50,000 well-wishers witnessed his arrival at Fort Clinton on the battery (later Castle Garden).

The procession up Broadway to City Hall, which would normally take about 20 minutes, took two hours. That evening a ball was held in his honor, at which veterans of the American Revolution moved him to tears.

1823 portrait of Lafayette, now hanging the House of Representatives chamber by Arey Scheffer

Lafayette biographer Harlow Giles Unger described the festivities as follows:

“New York celebrated Lafayette’s presence for four days and nights almost continuously. Americans had never seen anything like it… He spent two hours each afternoon greeting the public at City Hall — trying to shake every hand in the endless line. Some waited all night to see him…. Women brought their babies for him to bless; fathers led their sons into the past, into American history, to touch the hand of a Founding Father. It was a mystical experience they would relate to their heirs through generations to come. Lafayette had materialized from a distant age, the last leader and hero of the nation’s defining moment. They knew they and the world would never see his kind again.”

In Boston Lafayette said: “My obligations to the United States, ladies and gentlemen, far surpass the services I was able to render.…The approbation of the American people…is the greatest reward I can receive. I have stood strong and held my head high whenever in their name I have proclaimed the American principles of liberty, equality and social order. I have devoted myself to these principles since I was a boy and they will remain a sacred obligation to me until I take my final breath…. The greatness and prosperity of the United States are spreading the light of civilization across the world—a civilization based on liberty and resistance to oppression with political institutions and the rights of man and republican principles of government by the people.”

The Marquis de Lafayette then visited towns and cities throughout the United States. His initially intended three to four month tour was extended to thirteen. A triumphal procession lasting more than 6,000 miles. In recognition of his service in the propagation of democracy in the United States, France, and Europe, Congress awarded him $200,000.

In 1917, when the Americans arrived to help defend France during the First World War, Colonel John E. Stanton declared “Lafayette, we are here!”

MONDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

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WEEKEND PHOTO

The top of one the eastern tower of the Blackwell’s Island, Queensboro,
59th Street, Ed Koch Bridge.  The towers originally held flagpoies.
Andy Sparberg, Ed Litcher, & Alexis Villafane got it right.

Text by Judith Berdy
Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac and the RIHS
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Deborah Dorff
All image are copyrighted (c)

NEW YORK ALMANACK
SOURCES

illustrations, from above: George Washington and Lafayette at Mount Vernon, 1784 by Rossiter and Mignot, 1859; Lafayette in the uniform of a major general of the Continental Army, by Charles Willson Peale, between 1779–1780; Lafayette wounded at the battle of Brandywine by Charles Henry Jeans; Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen proposed to the Estates-General by Lafayette; Lafayette kisses Marie Antoinette’s hand on the balcony of the royal palace during a riot there in October 6, 1789; The Oath of LaFayette at the Fête de la Fédération on July 14, 1790; Lafayette as a lieutenant general in 1791, by Joseph-Désiré Court (1834); Marquis de Lafayette in prison, by an unknown artist; 1823 portrait of Lafayette, now hanging the House of Representatives chamber by Arey Scheffer.

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Nov

19

Weekend, November 19-20, 2022 – IT STARTED AS AN ARTS TRAINING SCHOOL FOR WOMEN

By admin

FROM THE ARCHIVES


WEEKEND, NOV. 19-20,  2022



THE  838th  EDITION

The School of Applied Design

for Women


No. 160 Lexington Ave.

DAYTONIAN IN MANHATTAN

As the 19th century drew to a close, collectors had begun to take American art seriously.  Millionaires, who had for decades scoured Europe for paintings and sculptures to adorn their mansions, took a new pride in home-grown artists.  Another movement was taking hold as well.   The world of professional art had been one almost exclusively of men.  Now female artists sought equality. On May 31, 1892 socialite, painter and philanthropist Mrs. Ellen Dunlap Hopkins founded the New York School of Applied Design for Women.  Ellen came from the old and respected Pond family of Massachusetts.  Initially the school was only a step removed from a trade school, its goals were “…affording to women instruction which may enable them to earn a livelihood by the employment of their taste and manual dexterity in the application of ornamental design to manufacture and the arts.” The New York Times explained “Mrs. Hopkins’s theory in starting the school…was that with the increasing demand for original and artistic designs for carpets, oil cloths, wall papers, silks, book covers, &c., there was a field for the employment of women of natural art taste and ability, could they obtain practical training at a low cost.” At the school’s opening, Ellen Dunlap Hopkins described her initial 45 students as “women who were determined to study in order to compete with men in the arts, and whose endeavor it was to make places for themselves in the branches of their choice, not by asking sympathy and not by taking less pay than men, but by the excellence of their work.” Ellen Dunlap Hopkins rented several floors in a building at Seventh Avenue and 23rd Street in what had become an artistic center.   The Artist-Artisan Institute Building sat nearby at Nos. 136-140 West 23rd Street.  The building was shared with the School for Industrial Art and Technical Design for Women.  The Associated Artists was at No. 115 East 23rd Street; and an artists’ studio building had opened at No. 44 West 22nd Street. Only three months after the school opened, it created waves across the nation.  The New-York Tribune reported that a collection of “designs of wallpaper, carpets, silks, rugs, book-covers, architectural plans and designs and water colors, all the work of the new students,” was exhibited in New York before being sent to the World’s Fair in Chicago.  “From there it was forwarded by request to the Midwinter Fair in San Francisco, and has already been spoken for by the Countess of Aberdeen, to be exhibited at the coming Canadian exhibition.”  The fledgling school earned four gold medals in Chicago and three in San Francisco.

An exhibition in the rented space in 1903 included these designs based on floral forms.  photograph by Byron Company from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York

Students paid a $50 tuition fee per year.   After passing through the elementary department “where the student is taught the first steps,” according to the Tribune on September 30, 1894, she moved to the “advanced” class where “she is left to work out her own artistic salvation.” The concept and success of the school was quickly noticed overseas.  Just two years after its founding, Ellen Dunlap Hopkins was invited by the British royal family to establish a branch school in London.  That school was opened under the patronage of “Princess Christian, the Princess of Wales, and other members of the English royal family and the nobility,” reported The New York Times.  Meanwhile the student body of 45 had grown to nearly 400 by now.   On September 30, 1894 the New-York Tribune noted that the school “is self-supporting, and the work of its students is so constantly in demand that the supply is inadequate.”  The rented space on West 23rd Street could not accommodate the growing school for many more years. On January 30, 1906 The New York Times reported that “The property at the northwest corner of Lexington Avenue and Thirtieth Street is to be made the site of a new six-story building, which will be occupied by an art school.”  The art school was, of course, the School for Applied Design for Women, and the two houses sat at Nos. 160 and 162 Lexington Avenue. Plans for the new building were filed by the architectural firm of Pell & Corbett and construction did not begin until 1908.  It was partner Harvey Wiley Corbett who designed the building.  The choice of architects was doubtlessly influenced by Corbett’s position as an instructor at the school.  The structure was completed late in 1908 and the school officially moved in on January 18, 1909.  The total cost was $215,000—approximately $5.75 million in 2015—paid for by private donations.  The New-York Tribune noted “the largest contributors being J. Pierpont Morgan and Mrs. Collis P. Huntington, who gave $15,000 and $10,000 respectively.”

Vintage brownstone homes surround the completed structure.  photo by Wurts Bros. from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York

The costs were also offset by fund-raising events like the “large bridge tournament” at the Hotel Gotham ballroom on January 29, 1909.  Socialites played for prizes donated by some of the most recognized names in art and literature.  The New York Times listed “autograph sketches and books from artists and authors, including Ernest Thompson Seton, Arnest Peixotto, Alphonse Mucha, Brander Matthews, Richard Watson Gilder, and Mark Twain.” Corbett had produced a seven story beauty of brick and stone with an impressive bas relief frieze above the second floor highly reminiscent of the Elgin Marbles.  Two-story polished gray engaged columns supported a cornice which somewhat playfully zig-zagged in and out following their contours.  Corbett included a good-humored single column on the Lexington Avenue elevation.

A lonely column on the Lexington Avenue elevation was a tongue-in-cheek touch.

The increased floor space included an exhibition room and even before the formal dedication, a permanent exhibition of work done by the advanced students was opened.  “This is something that the management has long desired to have, but in the old, limited quarters, in West 23d street, it was impossible,” reported the New-York Tribune on March 2, 1909. Although Ellen Dunlap Hopkins lived in style in a mansion at No 31 East 30th Street; the new building included apartments for her.  They would prove effective for holding receptions, luncheons and other entertainments for the benefit of the school. Among guests received here were the Countess of Aberdeen and Mrs. Andrew Carnegie, who visited on January 17, 1913 and “spent several hours there,” according to The New York Times the following day.  The newspaper noted “The school, which is the only one of its kind in the country, has 560 students.”

A Roman inspired frieze wrapped the structure.

As the student body increased, so did the curriculum.  The exhibit of student work, occupying four full floors of the building on May 16, 1922 reflected the expanded courses.  The New-York Tribune said it “included work in illustration, fashion design, commercial art, composition work, textile design, historic ornament, flower painting, architecture and interior decoration, antique drawing and sketching.” The socially powerful with whom Mrs. Ellen Dunlap Hopkins rubbed shoulders was reflected in the guest list of a reception and musicale she held in her apartments here on January 15, 1928.   The guest of honor was around-the-world aviator Lt. Leigh Wade of the U.S. Navy.  In the room that night were Manhattan’s socially prominent, including Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish, Mr. and Mrs. George F. Baker, Jr., Mrs. Charles A. Van Rensselaer, Mrs. Andrew Carnegie, Mrs. Benjamin Harrison, Mrs. John Henry Hammond, Mrs. John W. Alexander, and Mr. and Mrs. Elihu Root among others. The students enjoyed a social life as well.  On May 13, 1929 The Times noted that “The annual student dance of the New York School of Applied Design for Women…will be held on Friday evening in the library of the school.” The indefatigable work of Ellen Dunlap Hopkins was recognized in December 1938 when she was conferred the decoration of Les Palmes d’Officier d’Academie by Minister of Education of the French Government.  The award had been established by Napoleon I in 1806. Two months later, nearly half a century after she established the School of Applied Design for Women, Ellen Dunlap Hopkins died at the age of 81.   Her funeral was held on February 6, 1939 in the school.  Among the distinguished mourners was the architect of the building, Harvey Wiley Corbett, who was now President of the school.  He would hold the position until his death in 1954. The School of Applied Design for Women continued to respond to the changing professional needs of its students and the community.  On July 14, 1940 the school announced a new department for teaching costume design. But the school’s most radical change came about in 1944, when it merged with Lauros M. Phoenix’s art institute.  The merger meant that men were now included in the student body.  In the early 1970’s the New York-Phoenix School of Design added photography to the curriculum; an area that gained popularity and importance. In 1974 the school merged again—this time with the Pratt Institute.  Renamed the Pratt-Phoenix School of Design it continued in the building still unaltered after seven decades.     The exterior of structure was given landmark status in 1977. When Touro College took over the edifice it initiated an interior renovation, completed in 1990.  The $750,000 renovation converted the interior spaces to modern classrooms.   But Touro’s ownership would not be especially long.  On May 29, 2007 the building was put on the market; the announcement saying “The property is currently vacant awaiting the next user to enjoy its voluminous interior, high ceilings, abundant light and air and architectural grandeur.” Touro College sold the building to Lexington Landmark Properties for $8.2 million.   In 2012 Dover Street Market, a luxury retail fashion store, signed a 15-year lease on the entire building.  Despite the ongoing lease, in March 2015 real estate firm Walter & Samuels purchased the building for $24.5 million.

Because of landmark designation the exterior of the astonishingly-unaltered School of Applied Design for Women building looks exactly today as it did in January 1909 when it opened.

Weekend Photo of the Day

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FRIDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

RCA BUILDING 

National Academy of Design, one of many Gothic Revival buildings modeled on the Doge’s Palace in Venice, seen c. 1863–1865. This building was demolished in 1901.

Text by Judith Berdy
Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac and the RIHS
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter and Deborah Dorff

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated

DAYTONIAN IN MANHATTAN


THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

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Nov

18

Friday, November 18, 2022 – HOW MUSEUMS STARTED AROUND THE WORLD

By admin

FROM THE ARCHIVES

FRIDAY,  NOVEMBER 18,  2022



THE  837th EDITION

Arguments About American

Museums

Stephen Blank

Frontispiece depicting Ole Worm’s cabinet of curiosities, from Museum Wormianum, 1655 (Smithsonian Libraries). Ole Worm was a Danish physician and natural historian. Engravings of his collection were published in a volume after his death. www.khanacademy.org/humanities/approaches-to-art-history/tools-for-understanding-museums/museums-in-history/a/a-brief-history-of-the-art-museum-edit#

Arguments about American Museums
Stephen Blank
 
I’m reading a recent book about the struggle to win American interest in Picasso and other modern artists – Picasso’s War by Hugh Eakin. Made me think about museums, art museums, collecting…
 
The Romans had something like pop-up museums where they laid out the booty from a victorious battle for folks to see. Churches showed off relics – sort of religious museums. Later, in the age of exploration as the world grew smaller, curious and wealthy types created Wunderkammern, or cabinets of wonders. These were collections of the odd, the rare and newly found, which were the early cousins to museums. As Europe was extending its reach into “new” continents and cultures, Wunderkammern were places to gather, interpret, and show off the riches of the world.

 
Wunderkammern were playgrounds of the wealthy elite, open only to the collector, his immediate circle, and the occasional visitor who was properly furnished with a letter of introduction. This intimacy meant that objects could be taken from shelves, handled, juxtaposed, and discussed before being returned to storage, often out of sight. Wunderkammern were more like private study collections than the art museums most of us know today.
 
(This is quite topical for me. On Monday, I gave a talk in Bard Graduate Study Center, a close cousin to the Wunderkammern.  Lenore and I donated more than 80 glass, ceramic and wood items we had collected in our travels to the Study Center.) 
 
Travel, organized exploration, and intellectual fermentation produced a new kind of institution. One that not only collected and displayed wonders of the world but sought to understand deeper histories and patterns of relationships. The British Museum, founded in 1750, embodies these objectives – not just exotic objects revealed but a greater sense of what they were, where they came from and how they were used by the societies in which they were found.  The British Museum – and soon, similar collections in Paris, Berlin, Vienna and elsewhere – also represented (and glorified) colonial empires.
 
At the same time, specialized collections, such as botanical and zoological museums, begin to emerge –and, as well, museums devoted only to art.  Kustmuseum Basel is seen as the first art museum. Descended from the Amerbach-Cabinet, a Wunderkammern, purchased in 1661 by the city of Basel. It became the first municipally owned museum. Kustmuseum Basel opened publicly in 1671 followed by other art museums — the Capitoline (Rome, 1734), the Louvre (Paris, 1793), and the Alte Pinakothek (Munich, 1836). Britain’s National gallery was founded in 1824 when the government bought 38 paintings from the heirs of John Julius Angerstein, an insurance broker and patron of the arts. Running through these newly public institutions was a deeply didactic structure, and a community, it was felt, to public edification.
Kustmuseum Basel https://kunstmuseumbasel.ch/en/exhibitions/2018/fuseli

What about the US?
 
Of course, there’s a uniquely American story here. On one side, different institutions claim to be the first American museum.
 
Founded in 1773, the Charleston Museum is widely regarded as “America’s First Museum.” It was inspired by the creation of the British Museum and established by the Charleston Library Society on the eve of the American Revolution

10 Must-See Museums in Charleston

Charles Wilson Peale opened a portrait gallery in his home studio in 1782, near the war’s official end, where he displayed his portraits of George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, and Alexander Hamilton. Here where he opened the first public museum — called the Philadelphia Museum — in 1786. The Charleston Museum opened earlier but did not open to the public until 1824. So, the Philadelphia Museum was the nation’s “first successful public museum.”

Charles Willson Peale, The Artist in His Museum https://www.pafa.org/museum/collection/item/artist-his-museum

In 1825, a group of New York artists conceived of the National Academy of Design, one of the nation’s first fine arts institutions. They were students of the American Academy of the Fine Arts who were critical of the academy ‘s commitment to teaching. Samuel Morse, one of the leaders, had been a student at the Royal Academy in London and emulated its structure and goals for the National Academy of Design. The mission of the academy, from its foundation, was to “promote the fine arts in America through exhibition and education.”
 
A few years later, in 1842, the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art in Hartford was founded with a vision for infusing art into the American experience. The Atheneum is the oldest continuously operating public art museum in the United States, opening its doors to the public in 1844.

Notwithstanding these early efforts, art museums were an unusual luxury in the United States until the later decades of the nineteenth century when wealthy patrons in rapidly expanding American cities began to emulate European models. This is why so many historic American museums resemble their European counterparts (temple-fronted facades over a grand staircase), echo their collecting habits (classical sculpture, Renaissance painting, etc.), and mimic their approach to layout and installation.
 
The Metropolitan Museum of Art is the second most visited art museum in the world, largest in the United States and third largest in the world. It was founded in 1870 and opened for public February 20, 1872. It was founded by local businessmen and financiers, leading artists and thinkers. It is originally located on Fifth Avenue but it was later moved to on the eastern edge of Central Park.
 
The Brooklyn Museum opened in 1905 and the Newark Museum was founded in 1909. Its charter states the purpose was “to establish in the City of Newark, New Jersey, a museum for the reception and exhibition of articles of art, science, history and technology, and for the encouragement of the study of the arts and sciences.”  Many others soon followed – in Boston and Chicago, Detroit, Pittsburgh and Kansas City among many more.
 
These museums were all based on the European model. They were built, in many ways, as “temples to art”. Organized along clear and strict historical and modal lines, interaction with viewers was one way. Museum experts decided what visitors would see. These museums represented the ideas, values and interests of the American financial elite of the late 19th century whose purchases of classic European art became legendary and who offered their friends the opportunity to view these works in private salons. These were the leaders of the movement to create new art museums, now open to the public – at least on a limited basis. As kids, when we made a class visit to the Carnegie Museum in Pittsburgh, there were two strict rules: “Don’t talk” and Don’t touch.”
 
Some historians argued, however, that these weren’t the first museums in America, and that the European model did not really represent the American cultural reality.
 
Other museums had existed in American cities – for example, just in New York where the “American Museum” was founded in 1791 by John Pintard under the patronage of the Tammany Society.  That became Scudder’s American Museum in 1810 which ran until 1841, when it was purchased by P.T. Barnum and transformed into the very successful Barnum’s American Museum.

“Museum” may seem an inappropriate title for these operations. The early collection from the Tammany years included an American bison, an 18-foot yellow snake of South American origin, a lamb with two-heads, wax figures, pieces of Indian, African, and Chinese origin. And surely Barnum was best known for his collection of “freaks” like the Fee/Jee mermaid and General Tom Thumb. They offered what one historian described as a “a chance assemblage of curiosities … rather [than] a series of objects selected with reference to their value to investigators, or their possibilities for public enlightenment.” Museum professionals said these American “museums” consisted of spectacular or bizarre objects with no scientific or educational value; in short, they were sideshows aimed at public gratification.

But there was an argument on the other side: That museum staffs had so closely imitated elitist European models that museums soon became little more than isolated segments of European culture set in a hostile environment. These criticisms hold that museums have long been unresponsive to the needs of the public, instead serving the desires of elitists drawn from the ranks of such groups as highly educated historians and scientists, or those with unusually acute aesthetic sensibilities, such as artists. At best, say the critics, the museums have failed to take steps to attract the people; at worst they have actually discouraged the public from attending. Realizing just how invidious this antiegalitarianism is in a free country, curators have taken care to disguise their exclusivity as necessary scholarship or efficient professionalism. But they never deceived the public, who understood that they were not welcome in the preserves of the plutocrats.

These are both extreme positions and it’s clear that most contemporary arts institutions do seek to reply to both sides. Still, it isn’t difficult to see the continued tension embedded in our arts and cultural institutions over identify and role in society. And I have wandered a far from where I set out to go. Ah, the dangers of research and the (wonderful) constraints of 1500 words. I promise to return to the reception of Picasso and other modern artists in New York.

For now, thanks for reading and Happy Fall.

Stephen Blank
RIHS
September 20, 2022

Friday Photo of the Day

SEND YOU RESPONSE TO ROOSEVELTISLANDHISTORY@GMAIL.COM

THURSDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

CENTRAL  NURSES RESIDENCE ON THE SITE OF THE NOW 475 MAIN STREET.  WITH 600 SINGLE ROOMS THE BUILDING HOUSED NURSING STUDENTS, GRADUATE NURSES AND STAFFS FROM 1939 TO THE 1960’S.

ALEXIS VILLAFANE GOT IT RIGHT.
PHOTO M. FRANK

Text by Judith Berdy
Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac and the RIHS
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter and Deborah Dorff

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated

STEPHEN BLANK

Sources

https://www.charlestonmuseum.org/support-us/about-the-museum/
https://www.saturdayeveningpost.com/2018/03/americas-first-museum-charles-willson-peales-novel-idea-stuck/
https://www.thewadsworth.org/about/
http://www.historyofmuseums.com/museum-history/history-of-art-museums/
https://www.metmuseum.org/press/exhibitions/2000/art-and-the-empire-city-new-york-18251861
https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/approaches-to-art-history/tools-for-understanding-museums/museums-in-history/a/a-brief-history-of-the-art-museum-edit#
https://www.newyorker.com/culture/cultural-comment/thirteen-crucial-years-for-art-in-downtown-new-york

Stephen Blank, “P.T. Barnum: New York’s Famous Entertainment Entrepreneurs” RIHS (2022)
Joel J. Orosz, Curators and Culture: The Museum Movement in America, 1740-1870 (2011)

THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

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Nov

17

Thursday, November 17, 2022 – WE FORGET WHAT EFFORTS IT TOOK FOR WOMEN TO GET THE VOTE

By admin

FROM THE ARCHIVES

THURSDAYNOVEMBER 15,  2022


ISSUE # 836

TODAY IN WOMENS RIGHTS HISTORY:

NIGHT OF TERROR

NEW YORK ALMANACK

Women’s Rights History: ‘The

Night Of Terror’

November 14, 2022 by Editorial Staff 

Night of Terror Protester

The Silent Sentinels, or Sentinels of Liberty, organized by Alice Paul and the National Woman’s Party, were a group of over 2,000 women demanding women’s suffrage by silently protesting in front of the White House during Woodrow Wilson’s presidency beginning on January 10, 1917.  About 500 were arrested, with at least 168 serving jail time – many of them from New York State, a birthplace of the suffrage and women’s rights movements.

Over the two and a half year long protest many of the women who picketed were arrested, harassed and abused by local and federal authorities, most notably being tortured while in local jails. Among the most horrific of these acts occurred during the night of November 14-15, 1917, known as the Night of Terror.

The conditions of the District of Columbia Jail were unsanitary and unsafe, with prisoners sharing cells and prison facilities with people who had syphilis and other communicable diseases, and where worms were often found in the food.  When those arrested surpassed the number of spaces at the DC Jail, the women being arrested were taken to Virginia’s Occoquan Workhouse (now the Lorton Correctional Complex, in Lorton Virginia).

The conditions at the Occoquan Workhouse were terrible. Ordered to strip naked and bathe with a single bar of soap, the women refused.

During a suffrage debate in a committee of the House of Representatives in September 1917, Massachusetts Representative Joseph Walsh called suffragist “nagging… iron-jawed angels,” who were “bewildered, deluded creatures with short skirts and short hair.”

National_Womens_Patry_picketing_the_White_House

The protests continued, and sentences to jail grew longer. On October 20, 1917, Alice Paul was arrested while carrying a banner that said: “The time has come to conquer or submit, for us there can be but one choice. We have made it.” The banner language was a direct quote of President Woodrow Wilson.

Paul was sentenced to seven months. She was put in solitary confinement for two weeks, with only bread and water. She became weak and unable to walk, and began a hunger strike after being taken to the prison medical ward. In response to the hunger strike, the prison doctors force-fed the women who joined her by forcing tubes down their throats.

A large number of woman protested this treatment on November 10th and about 3o women were arrested and sent to Occoquan Workhouse. On the night of November 14th, the superintendent, W.H. Whittaker, ordered some forty guards to brutalize the suffragists. They beat New Yorker Lucy Burns, chained her hands to the cell bars above her head, then left her there for the night. They put Dora Lewis into a dark cell and smashed her head against an iron bed, knocking her unconscious. Her cellmate, Alice Cosu, who believed Lewis to be dead, suffered a heart attack. Guards dragged, beat, choked, pinched, and kicked other women.

A total of 14 women from New York State were among a larger group of abused protestors. A significant number of New Yorkers also provided support on the White House picket line from January 1917 through June of 1918.

Suffragists themselves called the night the “Night of Terror.” The attack on activists within the correctional facility and the subsequent extensive nationwide publicity became a turning point in the national effort to win votes for women. The campaign for voting rights goes back to the 1848 women’s rights convention in Seneca Falls, NY and ends with the ratification of the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution in August of 1920.

New York State conducted two referendums on the “votes for women” issue in 1915 and then again in 1917. The 1917 New York State victory recharged the national suffrage movement. After 1917, New York’s large population of new women voters effectively doubled the number of women voters in the nation. The New York victory represented a major step forward in bringing the national suffrage issue to a conclusion in 1920.

Night of Terror

New York women arrest for “unlawful assembly” and sentenced on November 14, 1917 included:

  1. Amy Juengling, Buffalo, NY
  2. Hattie Kruger, Buffalo, NY
  3. Paula Jacobi, NYC
  4. Eunice Brannan, NYC
  5. Lucy Burns, NYC
  6. Emily Dubois Butterworth, NYC
  7. Dorothy Day, NYC
  8. Elizabeth Hamilton, NYC
  9. Louise Hornsby, NYC
  10. Peggy Johns, NYC
  11. Kathryn Lincoln, NYC
  12. Belle Sheinberg, NYC
  13. Cora Week, NYC
  14. Matilda Young, NYC

The Turning Point Suffragist Memorial Memorial, near the “Night of Terror” site in Lorton, Virginia, honors the women who were imprisoned at the Occoquan Workhouse and commemorates all of the millions of little-known women who engaged in the suffragist movement primarily from 1848 through passage of the 19th Amendment in 1920 with which most women won the right to vote.  More information is available at http://www.suffragistmemorial.org

Thursday Photo of the Day

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WEDNESDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

THE ANSONIA HOTEL
HARA REISER, ANDT SPARBERG, ALEXIS VILLAFANE, THOM HEYER, ARON EISENPREISS GOT IT RIGHT!

Text by Judith Berdy
Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac and the RIHS
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter and Deborah Dorff

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated

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NEW YORK ALMANACK


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Nov

16

Wednesday, November 16, 2022 – AN UPPER WEST SIDE EGYPTIAN TREASURE

By admin

FROM THE ARCHIVES

WEDNESDAY,  NOVEMBER 16,  2022


THE  835th EDITION

 

The 1928


Pythian Temple


135-145 West 70th Street

DAYTONIAN IN MANHATTAN

Wurts Bros. photographed the building shortly after its completion in 1928.  from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York

Justus H. Rathbone was impressed by Irish writer John Banim’s 1821 play Damon and Pythias which highlighted the ideals of friendship, loyalty and honor.  In February 1864 he founded The Knights of Pythias, a fraternal group which stressed those qualities and provided philanthropic aid. Like other secret societies, The Knights of Pythias was organized around mystic rituals and included ceremonial props and costumes.  Local units were called “Castles” (a term later changed to “Subordinate Lodges”), and members, depending on rank, were Pages, Esquires and Knights.  And, like the Masons and Shriners, by the early 20th century their elaborate lodges reflected exotic architectural styles—Moorish, Egyptian and Byzantine, for example. In the mid-1920s the Pythians began accumulating property for its new Manhattan lodge.  They had chosen a rather unlikely location—West 70th Street between Columbus and Amsterdam Avenues, a narrow, residential street.  By 1926 eight four-story houses had been demolished and construction begun. The Knights of Pythias turned to architect Thomas White Lamb to design the large building.  Their choice was possibly influenced by his reputation for creating lavish motion picture palaces for the Fox, Loew’s and the Keith-Albee chains.  The Pythian Temple would emerge in 1928 as an exotic $2 million behemoth among the rowhouses–the counterpart of an epic silent movie set,

Lamb freely borrowed from Egypt, Byzantium and Syria in lavishing the façade with cast stone bas reliefs, monumental full-figured seated pharaohs and polychrome bulls.  The dramatic entrance, decorated with Egyptian symbols like crowned cobras, vultures, lotus flowers and winged lions, was executed in blindingly colored terra cotta.  The nearly-windowless midsection was adorned with handsome gray brick diapering and an enormous Pythian symbol.

Even before the lodge was completed the main auditorium space was leased.  On October 6, 1927 Dr. Nathan Krass, rabbi of Temple Emanu-El, preached his Yom Kippur sermon on “Tolerance” here.  The following month an operatic concert was held here; and on January 20, 1928 the New York Press Club held an “entertainment and dance.” Five days later the building was officially dedicated in the larger of the two auditoriums.  More than 1,600 persons were in attendance and the program was well underway when Mayor James Walker—who had a reputation for being late—arrived.  He had not been informed that his arch rival, former Mayor John H. Hylan, would share the stage with him.  Walker did not notice Hylan until he had already begun his address.  He handled the awkward moment by nodding to his nemesis and saying “If I’d seen you when I first came in, I would have paid my respects then.  Time has brought a sympathy for you I never held before.” Walker joked about his tardiness, saying “I suppose you have heard of the ‘late Mayor.’ It is a characterization I can’t deny.”  But he apparently did not appreciate the shock of Hylan’s presence.  Following his speech, in which he congratulated the Knights of Pythias on the new building, he walked off the stage and left.

Four enormous polychrome pharaohs sit high above the street, below an Egyptian peristyle. photo by Beyond My Ken

 The larger auditorium featured a pipe organ; and the Christman Piano Co. of New York proudly announced that the Temple had purchased eight pianos, “some of which are Studio grands and the rest uprights.”   At least one of these would be housed in the smaller auditorium, which was capable of holding 500 persons.   The new building offered members a gymnasium, a bowling alley and billiards room in the basement, 15 lodge rooms decorated in Aztec, Egyptian and other motifs, and a rooftop solarium. The auditoriums and meeting rooms were routinely leased for wedding receptions, musical programs and lectures.  Meetings as diverse as those of the Christian Science Liberals, graduation exercises of the Jewish Theological Seminary, and the church services of the Manhattan Congregational Congregation were held here. The week-long hazing of Columbia University fraternity pledges ended here on February 17, 1929.  The Columbia Spectator reported three days later, “Since noon of last Tuesday twelve Sigma Chi pledges have been going through the well known miseries connected with ‘Running Week.’  Much to their relief it all ended Sunday night with the formal initiation and banquet.  These functions were held at the Pythian Temple on West Seventieth Street.” While the Calvary Baptist Church was being constructed in 1929, the congregation held its Sunday services and its weddings and funerals here.  And in April 1930 the Milton Herbert Gropper and Oscar Hammerstein II play New Toys opened here by the Garfield Players. By now many of the meetings held here were of a more political nature.  The first session of the Annual Convention of the Federation of Polish Jews met in May 1930.  More than 400 delegates met to draft a resolution to Warsaw asking for aid for Polish Jews.  That same month Daniel F. Cohalan and Saliendra nath Ghose addressed Indian Nationalists on the 73rd anniversary of the Sepoy Mutiny and the imprisonment of Mahatma Ghandi.  And the following year the United Romanian Jews met here, as did the convention of the Advancement of Atheism, formed five years earlier. While Jewish and Christian congregations continued to use the auditoriums on weekends throughout the next two decades, the increasingly extreme political assemblies filled the halls during the week.  On May Day 1939 the Federation to Combat Communism and Fascism, Inc. held a demonstration to “protest the infiltration of Communist, Nazi and Fascist propaganda.”  But on the same holiday in 1946 the Socialist Labor Party held its celebrations here. The auditorium was routinely leased by the West Side Committee of American-Soviet Friendship, and the Upper West Side Civil Rights Congress; both of which drew the close scrutiny of the United States Congress.  A Congressional report dated February 15, 1947 focused on the Upper West Side Civil Rights Congress.    The report began “Having adopted a line of militant skullduggery against the United States with the close of World War II, the Communist Party has set up the Civil Rights Congress for the purpose of protecting those of its members who run afoul of the law.” It reported that “On August 28, 1946, the Upper West Side Civil Rights Congress of New York City held a meeting at the Pythian Temple, 135 West Seventieth Street, which was cosponsored by the Communist Party, West Side; American Labor Party; American Youth for Democracy; United Negro and Allied Veterans of America; and the International Workers Order, Lodge 572.”  The Report cautioned that some of these groups used deceptively patriotic names. In the first years of the 1950s the Knights of Pythias gave Decca Records the exclusive use of the main auditorium as a recording studio.  Some of the best known names in Rock ‘n Roll would produce their hits here. Bill Haley and the Comets recorded the albums “Rock Around the Clock” and “Shake, Rattle and Roll” here in 1955; and Johnny Burnette and the Rock ‘n Roll Trio recorded its debut album here the following year.   Buddy Holly’s first recording session in the Pythian Temple studio was on June 19, 1958.  Other hits recorded here were Bobby Darin’s “Early in the Morning” and “Now We’re One,” and Leroy Anderson’s “Sleigh Ride.” In the meantime the smaller auditorium continued to be used for operas, plays, and meetings.  In April 1956 the People’s Artists staged a “Hootenanny” here and in January 1957 folk singer Pete Seeger held a concert.   One notable event was the meeting of the National Council of the American-Soviet Friendship Association in November that year.  The group had been meeting here for years with little real notice.  But that night, when actor and activist Paul Robeson spoke, the timing was ill-advised.  The Soviets had fired on student demonstrators in Budapest a month earlier, killing one.  It sparked the 1956 Hungarian Revolution and American sympathies.  When the meeting broke up, its members were pelted with eggs, spoiled tomatoes and other projectiles. In 1957 the New York Institute of Technology purchased the building in foreclosure for $500,000—exactly one-quarter of its construction cost.  A few weeks later, in January, officials explored the structure to map out classrooms, lecture halls and other areas.  What they found was a bit startling and equally creepy. Meyer Berger reported in The New York Times on January 20, 1958, “Wardrobe lockers still hold Egyptian, scriptural and other ritualistic garb.  There is great store of halberds, ancient staffs and magic wands and rods. “Under several of the meeting-room altars, which are done in Egyptian, Babylonian or Aztec motifs, the college faculty found coffins filled with grinning skeletons, some done in plastic, some apparently human—the kind of thing used to chill and horrify initiates.”

For several days leading up to September 1, 1960 police had received reports of a mysterious cat-sized beast slipping among the buildings on the block.  The phantom animal was considered “imaginary” by officials–until it appeared in the lobby of the New York Institute of Technology that night. Discovered by an elevator operator, the animal curled into a corner was Timmy, the escaped honey bear owned by 17-year old Robert Engler.   When police arrived a safari of sorts ensued.  Timmy bolted, making his way to a basement restroom; then upstairs to the lobby lavatory.  Police were close on its tail, literally. Timmy was eventually captured, but not before Detective Walter Bentley was bitten on the wrist.  The prisoner was taken to the West 68th Street police station in a pail and calm was restored to West 70th Street. In 1983 architect David Gura completed a conversion of the structure into apartments.  He called the project “like dealing with an enormous Rubik cube” because of the myriad spaces.  Windows were carved into the vast brick façade, the major change to the exterior, and 83 different apartment layouts were created.  Some of the resulting duplexes had 16-foot high living rooms.

Because of its side street location, the extraordinary building, now called The Pythian, is as overlooked today as it was in 1928.  But its dramatic, brilliant decoration is worth a detour.

WEDNESDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

SEND YOUR ANSWER TO ROOSEVELTISLANDHISTORY@GMAIL.COM
 

TUESDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

TIMES SQUARE WITH THE FAMOUS LATIN QUARTER NIGHT CLUB.

ANDY SPARBERG AND GLORIA HERMAN BOTH GOT IT RIGHT

Text by Judith Berdy
Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac and the RIHS
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter and Deborah Dorff

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated

Sources

DAYTONIAN IN MANHATTAN


THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

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Copyright © 2022 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
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Nov

15

Tuesday, November 15, 2022 – LITTLE BY LITTLE THE WELFARE AND HEALTH SYSTEM GREW IN THE CITY

By admin

FROM THE ARCHIVES

THE  834th EDITION

 

Department of

Public Welfare of the

City of New York

Rebecca Rankin

Written 100 years ago, this concise history of the New York City welfare system tells the story of how our concern for public  health and well-being has grown over the years. The story continues today with many more agencies, names, commissions and advisors.

The vertical files in the Municipal Library contain a treasure trove of newspaper clippings, media releases and documents from City agencies. There also are original analyses written by the legendary Rebecca Rankin, the long-time Municipal Librarian and her staff. Written on onion-skin paper, the articles are distinctive and elicit a jolt of anticipation when located. This week’s blog is a history of public welfare in the City, circa 1922 as written by Ms. Rankin and staff.
 The original records of these welfare institutions, the Almshouse Ledger Collection, were processed by the Municipal Archives in 2016 under a grant funded by the National Historical Publications and Records Commission and a digitized selection of ledgers are now online.
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WELFARE OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK
The first Bellevue, a 6-bed infirmary on the present site of City Hall. Department of Public Charities Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.

The first Bellevue, a 6-bed infirmary on the present site of City Hall. Department of Public Charities Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.

The responsibility for the care and treatment of the dependents in the City of New York rests upon the Department of Public Welfare. The history of the Department really begins in 1734 when it became apparent to the Common Council that some means for caring for the poor, the beggars and the dependent sick must be provided; at this time the population of the City was 8,000 and contained 1,400 houses. It was decided to erect a workhouse on the unimproved lands known as the “Vineyard”; this site was the ground on which the City Hall now stands. This “Publick Workhouse and House of Correction” was finished in 1736; by 1746 it was outgrown and required additions.

Page from Admissions, Discharges and Death Ledger, Almshouse of the City of New York, 1758-1809. Ledger columns include: date admitted, name, age, occupation, where from or born, complaints, by whom sent/by whose order, location/ward no., date of discharge, date of death, remarks. This collection was processed by the Municipal Archives in 2016 under a grant funded by the National Historical Publications and Records Commission and a digitized selection of ledgers are now online. Almshouse Ledger Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.
Prior to this date, in the early years of the City, the poor had been maintained by the Church. From 1695 on the City appropriated yearly a sum of one hundred pounds or more for the support of the poor, and it appointed Overseers of the Poor who were responsible for policies of management and a Keeper was in charge. But not till 1736 could it be considered as an official part of the city’s activities. The Workhouse was supported by a tax upon the inhabitants. By 1775 this tax amounted to 4,233 pounds or about 95 cents per capita.
View of the "Old Bellevue Establishment" from the East River. Department of Public Charities Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.

View of the “Old Bellevue Establishment” from the East River. Department of Public Charities Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.

In May 1796 a new Almshouse was finished and used till 1816; this occupied the site where the Courthouse now stands on Chambers Street. About this time the City purchased old Kip’s Bay Farm on the East River at the foot of 26th Street which later became known as Bellevue Hospital. This group comprised two hospitals, an almshouse, a workshop and a school. In 1819 an epidemic of yellow fever forced the addition of a hospital for contagious diseases. In 1828 Blackwell’s Island was bought and a penitentiary built and by 1839 a lunatic asylum added. In 1850 it became apparent that a poor farm was necessary and consequently Ward’s Island was purchased for that purpose. By 1843 a re-organization was demanded and a special committee investigated and a resolution was passed which provided for an almshouse on Blackwell’s Island, a children’s and an adult hospital, the lunatic asylum extended, a workhouse, and nurseries and infants hospital on Randall’s Island

Blackwell’s Island looking southeast: Penitentiary, Charity Hospital with Superintendent’s cottage, Smallpox Hospital, Reception Pavilion, ca. 1900. Department of Public Charities Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.In 1846-1849 there was an Almshouse Department with a Commissioner at its head. But in 1849 a new state law put the Almshouse Department under a Board of Governors, ten in number which continued its responsibility until 1860 when the Department of Public Charities and Correction was created. It was in 1850 that the City began the practice of subsidizing private institutions for the care of dependents; in that first year a sum of $9,865 was expended. This policy is still continued successfully; in 1920 there were 196 private charitable institutions which accepted public charges for the City.

Horse-and-buggy ambulance in front of (Old) Coney Island Hospital, ca. 1900. Department of Public Charities Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.

Sea View Hospital, West New Brighton, Staten Island, 1920. Department of Public Charities Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.

Sea View Hospital, West New Brighton, Staten Island, 1920. Department of Public Charities Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.

About 1883 a feeling became general that the existing system under which the paupers, criminals, lunatics and the sick poor were cared for by one department, (Department of Public Charities and Corrections which was established in 1860) was objectionable so that in 1895 a law providing for the division of the department into two distinct bodies, namely, the Department of Public Charities and the Department of Correction was passed. The hospitals, almshouse, lunatic asylum and all institutions on Blackwell’s Island were placed under the Department of Public Charities, and the Department of Correction managed the penal and reformatory institutions. In 1902 further revision resulted in Bellevue and Allied Hospital having a separate organization. In 1920 the name of the Department was changed to the Department of Public Welfare [in 1938 it was further simplified to Department of Welfare

City Home for the Aged, Blackwell’s Island, ca. 1900. Frederick A. Walter, Department of Public Charities Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.No allusion has been made to much legislation affecting the administration of this department. There were many and constant changes in the form of administration; sometimes three, sometimes five, sometimes one commissioner of almshouse, or even a Board of Governors. The Department at present administered is under one commissioner appointed by the Mayor.View fullsize

City Home for the Aged, Blackwell's Island, ca. 1900. Frederick A. Walter, Department of Public Charities Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.

City Home for the Aged, Blackwell’s Island, ca. 1900. Frederick A. Walter, Department of Public Charities Collection, NYC Municipal Archives.To carry on its diverse activities, the Department in 1920 maintained and operated two reception hospitals, six general hospitals, three special hospitals, two homes for the aged and infirm, cottages for aged couples and women, a preventorium, a convalescent home for women and children, a municipal lodging house, a mortuary, a social service department in connection with the hospitals, four schools of nursing and four training schools for attendants. The combined capacity of the eleven hospitals was 8,796 beds; the daily average of all patients cared for was approximately 5,847. The Department had a staff of 4,200 employees to carry on its work and the appropriation in the 1922 budget for the Department was $7,370,550.



Nurses lined up in front of Cumberland Street Hospital, 1920. Department of Public Charities Collection, NYC


Municipal Archives.

Commissioner Bird S. Coler has set forth in his 1919 Annual Report of the Department a descriptive outline of the Department for the information of the public.
Tagged: Public WelfareAlmshouseBellevue HospitalHospitalsBlackwell’s IslandWelfare IslandPublic Charities




Tuesday Photo of the Day
SEND YOUR SUBMISSION  TO:
ROOSEVELTISLANDHISTORY@GMAIL.COM

MONDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY
SURROGATES COURT BUILDING
31 CHAMBERS STREET LOBBY

ALEXIS VILLAFANE AND HARA REISER GOT THIS ONE RIGHT!!

Text by Judith Berdy
Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac and the RIHS
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter and Deborah Dorff

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated

Sources

MUNICIPAL ARCHIVES OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK


THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

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