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Search resuls for: "John Freeman Gill"


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The mausoleum of Henry Herman Westinghouse at Woodlawn Cemetery. The vibrant window within, possibly by Tiffany Studios, bears the Biblical words “I am the resurrection and the life” above a floral landscape. Credit... Jeenah Moon for The New York Times
Persons: Henry Herman Westinghouse Organizations: Woodlawn Cemetery, Tiffany Studios, The New York Locations: Woodlawn
After several years, Ms. Allen became a nurse by graduating from a city program, and before returning to the pediatric hospital in her freshly earned nurse’s whites and cape, she worked briefly in Sea View’s adult wards. The most striking ornamental aspect of these pavilions was the six-foot-high terra-cotta frieze running around each building beneath its eaves. Here, against a backdrop of golden tiles, could be found polychrome images of doctors, seashells, garlands, red crosses and white nurses. The terra-cotta images were created using the “sectile” technique introduced at the 1900 World’s Fair in Paris. In June, New York City Health + Hospitals agreed to allow the New York City Fire Department to occupy the old Sea View staff house for 40 years.
Persons: Allen, Almirall, Christine Jetten, Terra Cotta, Organizations: New, Woolworth, New York City Health, New York City Fire Department Locations: New York, New Jersey, Delft, Holland, Paris, Dutch, New York City
The Church of Our Lady of Guadalupe, a Catholic house of worship on West 14th Street, is a grandly inventive architectural oddity and the mother of all Hispanic storefront churches in New York City. Manhattan’s first church created for a Spanish-speaking congregation, it was cobbled together out of two adjacent rowhouses in 1902 and 1917. But the seminal Spanish-language church was deconsecrated by the Archdiocese of New York in January, paving the way for its potential sale, alteration or demolition. On May 23, the city Landmarks Preservation Commission designated as a landmark the former Colored School No. 4 on West 17th Street in Chelsea, the last-known “colored” schoolhouse remaining in Manhattan from the city’s segregated 19th-century school system.
Persons: Guadalupe, Andrew Berman, Sarah Carroll Organizations: Our, Archdiocese, Village, Greenwich, Landmarks Preservation Commission, Colored, West Locations: New York City, Manhattan’s, rioja, New York, Chelsea, Manhattan
From 1880s Brooklyn, the Weir Greenhouse Returns
  + stars: | 2023-05-19 | by ( John Freeman Gill | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
By 2011, vandals and a century-plus of weather had rendered the fragile greenhouse a virtual ruin. Many of its badly rotting ground-floor window frames had been kicked in by marauding thieves. Leaking and missing window panes abounded, with repair estimates topping $1 million. Although the hothouse was a city landmark, it was at risk of presiding over its own funeral. But in 2012, Green-Wood Cemetery swooped in to rescue it, buying the decaying treasure for $1.63 million from McGovern Florists, a flower-selling family with deep Brooklyn roots that had owned the place for 41 years.
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