128 ^Published V ' Harconrl-St. fiojtori,A\^5. ?opyn?/,t/90O6y (?ro # Wa/Aw&Sb £°j/i>v 64946 _11854^ Library of Cong res Two Copies *Ecr»\/in JUN 28 1900 Copyright entry SECOND COPY. Delivered to ORDER DIVISION, JUL 11 1900 Copyright, 11)00, BY Geo. H. Walker & Co., Boston. NEW YORK. THE coast was discovered by Giovanni de Verrazano, a Florentine navigator, who anchored his vessel in April, 1524, near the point of land now called Sandy Hook, and afterwards entered the bay and river. French adven- turers, Ranlin Seculart and Jean Alphonse, about the year 1545 visited the same waters, and probably built works on Castleton Island below Albany, and it is claimed that a trace of the ruins may be seen. The English title was partly based on the discovery of the North American coast by John Cabot, June 24, 1497, recorded on maps by his son, Sebastian. The " Half Moon," a Dutch vessel, commanded by Hendrick Hudson, an English- man in the service of the Dutch East India Company, seeking a western passage to China, anchored September 3, 1609, in the lower bay, and eight days later "went into the river," now the Hudson. On September 19, the " Half Moon" anchored at the point where Albany now stands. Dutch merchants commis- sioned a ship in the summer of 1610, for trade to New Netherland, and in 1612 other vessels were sent for the same object. A few huts were built on the southern point of Manhattan Island, and were the beginning of New Amsterdam. Even earlier, Hendrick Christiaensen had erected a strong house on the west bank of the Hudson, just below Albany, and called it Fort Nassau, but it was abandoned in 1617. In 1621, the Dutch West India Company succeeded the earlier traders. The first colony came to New Netherland under the auspices of this company in 1623. Eight men were left on Manhattan Island, and others settled on the west shore of Long Island. Other vessels followed, and in 1625 the population had increased to two hundred. 5 Gfu. II. Walk. Pilgrim Statue. GUIDE TO GREATER NEW YORK. 7 The next year the government of the settlement was made more important, with Peter Minuit as director-general, assisted by a committee of five. He purchased of the Indians, Manhattan Island, for small wares and goods valued at twenty-four dollars. In 1628, the village was named Fort Amsterdam, and a fort was erected of the same name near the Bowling Green in 1635, and was standing up to 1791. In 1633, Director-General Wouter Van Twiller arrived in Manhattan, bring- ing with him a company of soldiers, the first to arrive in the province The earliest defences were at Pearl Street, " the Road to the Ferry," and consisted of a blockhouse and a two-gun battery. The Slip Battery of ten guns was near Coenties Slip. The Stadt Huys Battery of five guns; the Whitehall Battery of fifteen guns. The Stadt Huys (City Hall) stood on the site of No. 73 Pearl Street. Bowling Green was the first parade ground, village green, and used for all outdoor public occasions. Here, in 1658, was the first marketplace. In 1631, the ship " New Netherland," of eight hundred tons, mounting ten guns, was built in the Manhattan shipyard. Pearl Street, the oldest in the city, was built in 1633, and Bridge Street was soon laid out. In 1653, the West India Company incorporated New Amsterdam as a city, then having one thousand inhabitants and one hundred and twenty houses. In 1655, negroes were purchased from the slave ships, and resold to Virginia planters. The first Custom House stood at the corner of State and Whitehall streets, during the administration of Peter Stuyvesant. In 1664, Colonel Nicols, the personal representative of the Duke of York, arrived in the bay with an English fleet, and forced the Dutch to surrender Manhattan Island. He set up a government, and summoned two delegates from each town to consider a code, — "the Duke's Laws," — which was accepted, as the colony were powerless to do otherwise. The Dutch reconquered the island in 1673, but the conquest was not known to the States-General when the Treaty of Westminster was signed, providing for the restoration by England and Holland of all lands captured during the war. On October 15, 1674, orders reached Colve, the director-general, to give up New Netherland. The transfer of the province from the Dutch took place November 9, 1674. Major Edmund Andros, the new governor of the territories of the Duke of York in America, took possession. In 1683, Thomas Dongan was governor, afterwards Earl of Limerick. Benjamin Fletcher was governor from 1692 to 1698, and was succeeded by the Earl of Bellomont. In 1692, the first post office was established. GUIDE TO GREATER NEW YORK. V In 1693, the first printing press used. In 1709, slave market at foot of Wall Street. From 1710 to 1719, Robert Hunter was governor. 1732, first stage from New York to Boston. In 1741, "Negro Plot." A large number of negroes and a Catholic priest were unjustly executed by the deluded populace. From 1743 to 1753, Admiral George Clinton was governor. In 1752, the Royal Exchange was opened on Broad street. In 1751, trustees were appointed by the Assembly to take charge of funds raised for a college. In 1752, Trinity Church offered to give land for the college. In 1754, King's College received its charter, and the building was erected, 1756-60, on college land, between Barclay, Church, and Murray streets, and College Place. The " Sons of Liberty " opposed the Stamp Act in 1765, and burned the effigy of the English governor on Bowling Green. The statue of George III, which stood on the Bowling Green up to the time of the commencement of the revolutionary acts, was pulled down by the patriots and destroyed. The Chamber of Commerce was incorporated in 1770. In 1774, the ship " Nancy" was not allowed to land her cargo of tea. At the evacuation of Boston by the British army, Washington marched his forces to New York, and on July 19, 1776, the Declaration of Independence was read to the troops. In August, a large fleet of vessels arrived in the bay with an army of thirty- one thousand men, under Howe, Clinton, Cornwallis, and Hessian officers. The British army was landed, and defeated Putnam's army at Brooklyn. At Harlem Heights the Americans defeated the British in several encounters, and finally retired into Westchester. At this time a fire broke out in the city, which destroyed four hundred and ninety-three houses. / In November, General Howe's army stormed the works of Fort Washington, taking prisoners the garrison. From this time the British held possession of the city until the end of the war. On November 25, 1783, the rear guard of the British army left the battery, and the American army under Washington, with Clinton and other general officers, marched into the city. At Fraunce's Tavern, corner of Broad and Pearl streets, Washington bade farewell to his officers. City Hall Park was, in the early days of New York, much larger than at present, and extended beyond Duane Street, and in 1785 the "Bridewell," "Almshouse," the "New Jail," and the "Gallows " stood near Chambers Street. The jail is now the Hall of Records, near the bridge, but all the other 10 GUIDE TO GREATER NEW YORK. buildings are gone. The present City Hall was built on the park in 1803- 1812. In 1786, the first city directory had eight hundred and forty-six names. The first American Congress under the Constitution met in 1789 in the old City Hall, corner of Wall and Broad streets. On April 30, 1789, Livingston, chancellor of the State of New York, administered the oath of office to Washington, first President of the United States. On July 11, 1804, occurred the fatal duel between Alexander Hamilton, the distinguished soldier of the Revolution and the first Secretary of the Treasury, and Aaron Burr, Vice-President of the United States. Burr mortally wounded Hamilton, and he died the next day. In the War of 1812, the city and forts in the harbor were held by a garrison of twenty-three thousand men, and a large number of privateers were sent out. The " Clermont," the first steamer, was built in 1807, by Robert Fulton, inventor, and made atrip from New York to Albany. The first steamer, the " Phoenix," for ocean service, was built by Col. John Stevens of Hoboken in 1807, and made the passage from New York to Philadelphia. The " Savannah," a steamer built in New York, was the first steam vessel to cross the Atlantic. In 1824, General Lafayette welcomed. October 26, 1825, the Erie Canal was completed. The Croton Aqueduct was begun in 1835, and water was introduced into the city in 1842 ; the works completed in 1845. The watershed of lakes and reservoirs is about thirty-five miles from the city. In December, 1835, the lower part of the city was burned, seven hundred buildings and twenty million dollars' worth of property being destroyed. on a photograph is a guarantee that it is made by artists with the best skill that a ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ PACH PACH cbird of a Century PACH == ^ ======= ■*■ **V^± * of experience can bring. 935 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, COR. 22nd STREET. OUR OUTDOOR STAFF GO EVERYWHERE; MAKE ANY SIZE • BY DAY OR BY NIGHT. 2644 TELEPHONE JQth CORRESPONDENCE INVITED, GREATER NEW YORK. The city now consists of five boroughs, Manhattan (Island), the Bronx (north of East River), Brooklyn, Queens (suburbs of Brooklyn), and Rich= mond (Staten Island). The consolidation of these municipalities into one great city of three hun- dred and twenty square miles and three million population was accomplished by the affirmative vote of the people in 1894 ; a charter was granted by the State in 1896, and went into effect January 1, 1898. Population of New York from early settlement to present time — all the boroughs being included in the years 1898, 1899, and 1900 — is as follows : — 1653 1,120 1835 253,028 1661 1,743 1840 312,710 1673 2,500 1845 358,310 1696 4,455 1850 515,547 1731 8,256 1855 629,904 1750 10,000 1860 813,669 1756 10,530 1865 726,836 1771 21,865 1870 942,292 1774 22,861 1875 1,041,886 1786 23,688 1880 1,206,299 1790 33,131 1890 1,515,301 1800 60,489 1892 1,801,639 1805 75,587 1893 1,891,306 1810 96,373 1897 1,957,284 1816 100,619 *1898 3,350,000 1820 123,706 *1899 3,549,558 1825 166,136 *1900. . 3,595,93? 1830 202,589 ^Estimated. GUIDE TO GREATER NEW YORK. 1 3 Population of the towns from the State Census of 1802, now included in Greater New York: — New York City 1,801,739 Brooklyn 995,276 Richmond County 53,452 Flushing. 19,802 Hempstead 17,556 Jamaica 14,441 Long Island City 30,506 Newtown 17,549 East Chester, West Chester, and Pelham 35,000 2,985,422 Assessed Valuation of Greater New York Real Estate. Assessed val- uation of the Borough of Manhattan for the year 1899 compared with the year 1898 : - 1898. 1899. Increase. $1.-754,982,400 $2,054,908,875 $299,920,475 Assessed valuation of the Borough of Bronx for the year 1899 compared with the year 1898 : — 1898. 1899. Increase. $101,585,523 $123,702,030 $22,116,507 Assessed valuation of the Borough of Brooklyn for the year 1899 compared with the year 1897 : — 1897. 1899. Increase. $570,107,742 $609,822,267 $39,714,525 Assessed valuation of the borough of Queens for the year 1899 compared with the year 1897 : — 1897. 1899. Increase. $82,683,593 $103,752,600 $21,068,007 Assessed valuation of the Borough of Richmond for the year 1899 com- pared with the year 1897 : — 1897. 1899. Increase. $24,371,551 $40,264,692 $15,894,141 Total assessed valuation of the real estate of the five boroughs of Greater New York for the year 1899 was $2,932,445,464. The personal valuation for the year 1899 was $545,906,565, making a grand total of $3,478,352,029. Battery Park, on the southern point of ancient New York, contains twenty-one acres of land with large shade trees. Here are located the Revenue Barge office and ferries to Brooklyn and Staten Island. A statue of John Erics- i^J=&^r£a^J£J Geo. II. Walker & Co., Boston. BOWLING GREEN. GUIDE TO GREATER NEW YORK. 15 son, erected in 1893, stands on the park. The park was the site of the original New Amsterdam, and at an early date a battery was built, and was rebuilt at the time of the Revolution. In 1805 a fort was completed and named Fort Clinton, and is the same now known as Castle Garden. Castle Garden was erected as a fort in 1805 by the United States govern- ment and was then some distance from the mainland. The waterway between was afterward filled in. In 1822 the fort, then known as Castle Clinton, was ceded to New York City. The building was used as a theatre and opera- house up to 1855, when the city government occupied the place as a depot for immigrants. The Aquarium at Castle Garden is open to the public without charge. American Tract Society, 150 Nassau Street, was organized in 1825. The American Seamen's Friend Society, 70 Wall Street, was established in 1828. The first tavern in New York was a stone building, near what is now Pearl Street and Coenties Slip, Built in 1642. Martin Krigler built his tavern at Bowling Green in 1643. The house was afterwards known as the King's Arm Tavern, and in Revolutionary days was the headquarters of General Gage. Burns's Coffee=House, on Broadway, north of Trinity Churchyard, was on the site of the Boreel Building. A theatre was built in 1761, at Nassau and Beekman streets, where Temple Court now stands. The John Street Theatre was built on the north side of John Street in 1767, near Broadway. It was taken down in 1798. Bull's Head Tavern was in Bowery Lane. Nassau Street Theatre was built on the east side of the town, then called Kip, between John Street and Maiden Lane. Built of wood and opened March 5, 1750. The first playhouse erected in New York. In 1753 another theatre was built on its site, and was in a few years used as a church. It was torn down in 1765. La Montagne Tavern was opposite the present City Hall Park. Park Theatre was on the site of Nos. 21 to 25 Park Row. It was opened January 29, 1798, and burned May 25, 1820. It was rebuilt in 1821 and again destroyed by fire December 16, 1848. All the great actors of this country, and those from abroad, played in this theatre the first half of the nineteenth century. The Merchants' Coffee=House was at the corner of Water and Wall streets. Fraunce's Tavern, originally the homestead of the DeLancey family, was a brick building, erected in 1730 at the corner of Pearl and Broad streets. The estate was sold in 1762 to Samuel Fraunce, who opened it as a tavern and named RS« )..;'.: 1 GUIDE TO GREATER NEW YORK. 17 it the Queen Catharine. It was well patronized by the townspeople for social gatherings. The Chamber of Commerce for many years had headquarters at the tavern. Washington, while in New York, made it his headquarters, and in the assembly room delivered his farewell address to the officers of the Continental Army in 1783. French's Hotel occupied the site of the Pulitzer Building. Golden Eagle Inn stood until 1893 back of the Broadway Central Hotel. Society for Promoting the Gospel Among Seamen in the Port of New York, 46 Catharine Street, was founded in 1818. The Mariners' church, library, and reading-room is maintained by the society. The Old Dutch Vauxhall was at the corner of Warren and Greenwich streets. Salvation Army. Headquarters, 111 Reade Street. Barracks for meet- ings are located in different parts of the city. Vauxhall was on Broadway near Broome Street. The Bank Clearing House, Cedar Street, east of Broadway, was occupied by the Clearing House Association in January, 1896. It was built of marble, and is one of the finest buildings in the city. Newspapers. The first was the Gazette, printed from 1725 to 1741 ; The Weekly Journal, 1733-1746 ; Evening Post, 1746-1747 ; Independent Reflector, 1752-1754; Mercury, 1752-1783; Pacquet, 1753-1767; American Chronicle, 1761-1762 ; The New York Journal, 1766-1787 ; The Argus, 1787-1800 ; Ameri- can Citizen, 1800-1810; Chronicle, 1766; New Gazetteer, ox The Connecticut, Nezv Jersey, Hudson's River, and Quebec Weekly Advertiser, 1773-1775 ; Riviugston , s New York Loyal Gazette, 1777-1783 ; Constitutional Gazette, 1775 ; The American Watchman, 1800-1810 ; New York Packet and The American Advertiser, 1776 ; New York Daily Advertiser, 1785 ; Independent Jotirnal, 1787 ; Gazette, 1788- 1840 ; United States Gazette, 1789-1790 ; Minerva, 1793 ; The Commercial Adver- tiser, 1797 ; The Evening Post, 1801 ; and the Currier Mercantile Advertiser, Columbian, and National Advocate were all published near the beginning of the nineteenth century. The prominent papers at the present time are the Tribune, Herald, Sun, World, Times, News, Press, Journal, Mail and Express, Evening Post, Commercial Advertiser, and Staats Zeituug. The General Post=off ice is at the junction of Broadway and Park Row. Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States has its head- quarters at the Morse Building, 140 Nassau Street. Bar Association of New York, Bar Association Building, No. 42 West Forty-fourth Street. The Lawyers' Club, 120 Broadway. New York Stock Exchange, Broad and New streets. The building is of marble and granite. Geo. H. Walker & Co., Boston. United States Sub-Treasury and Assay Building. GUIDE TO GREATER NEW YORK. 19 Subtreasury of the United States is on Wall Street, corner of Nassau Street, and extending to Pine Street. The site was originally where the City Hall stood when it was occupied by the first Congress of the United States in 1789, and, as Federal Hall, was the scene of the first inauguration. Congress abandoned the building when it assembled at Philadelphia. The building was used afterwards by the government as the Custom House, and was torn down in 1834. The present building was completed in 1841, and was occupied as the Custom House until 1862, when the old Merchants Exchange Building was taken for the Custom House and the Subtreasury occupied the building. It is constructed of stone, of Greek style, with eight large columns supporting the porch, and has stone steps the width of the front of the building. In the centre of the steps is the heroic-sized bronze statue of Washington, unveiled November 26, 1883. Set in the pedestal is a slab of red sandstone that formed part of the flooring of the balcony of Federal Hall when Washington, standing on this identical stone in the balcony on this spot, took the oath of office as first Presi- dent of the United States, April 30, 1789. United States Assay Office. The building on Wall Street adjoining the Subtreasury ; a branch of the United States Mint Building ; built in 1823 ; has been occupied by the assay office since 1853. Coffee Exchange, corner of Pearl and Beaver streets, was organized in 1882. Consolidated Petroleum and Stock Exchange, corner of Broadway and Exchange Place. The Middle Dutch Church, Nassau Street, of ancient Dutch style, with wooden steeple, stood on the site of the Mutual Life Building, and was erected in 1729. The church was used as a prison by the English during the Revolution, and more than three thousand of the American army were confined there. The old church was sold in 1844 to the United States government, and was used for a while as the post-office. The Bronze Statue of Nathan Hale, the martyr of the Revolution, stands on City Hall Park, near Broadway and Wall Street, and was erected by the Sons of the Revolution in 1893. Burton's Chambers Street Theatre, originally Palmer's Opera House, was opened February 4, 1844, for grand opera. It was occupied by Christy's Minstrels during the summer of 1846, and leased by Burton, July, 1848. It was afterwards named the American Theatre. In 1857 it was leased to the United States government and occupied for offices. The building was sold in January, 1876, and the site is now occupied by the American News Company. Free Circulating Library was founded in 1880. It has four buildings : 49 Bond Street, 135 Second Avenue, 226 West Forty-second Street, and 251 West Thirteenth Street. It was incorporated on March 15, 1880, and reincorporated April 18, 1884. The library has more than seventy-five thousand volumes. It has 20 GUIDE TO GREATER NEW YORK. received large donations of books and money from citizens, and yearly grants of money from the city, New York College of Dentistry, Twenty-third Street and Third Avenue, was chartered in 1866. Barnum's Museum was opened on Chambers Street in 1810, where the Court House now stands. Scudder's American Museum was purchased in 1841, and the curiosities removed to Broadway and Ann Street, where the New York Herald Building stands, by P. T. Barnum. It was partly burned in 1864, and was destroyed by fire, July, 1865. It was then established at 530-541 Broadway, and burned March 3, 1868. It opened again on south side Fourteenth Street, and was burned December 24, 1872. Astor Place Opera House was opened November 22, 1 847. Here took place the Macready riot on May 9, 1849. It was renamed the New York Theatre in 1852. In 1854 it was sold to the Mercantile Library Association, and named Clinton Hall. In 1890 the building was demolished and the new Clinton Hall and Mercantile Library building erected on the site. Brougham's Lyceum Theatre on Broadway near Broome Street was opened December, 1850. It was named Wallack's Theatre in 1855, and torn down in 1869. The Kennedy House was built in 1760, afterwards the Washington House. It stood where the Washington Building now stands, No. 1 Broadway. It was General Putnam's headquarters previous to the battle of Long Island, and was occupied at different times by Lord Howe, Lord Cornwallis, Sir Henry Clinton, Benedict Arnold, and Talleyrand. Tripler Hall, on Broadway opposite Bond Street, was burned January 8, 1854. It was rebuilt and opened September 18 as the New York Theatre and Opera House. Within a few years it bore the names of Laura Keene's Varieties, Burton's Theatre, and Winter Garden Building in 1864. It was destroyed by fire, March 23, 1867. Chamber of Commerce, 32 Nassau Street. Organized April 5, 1768. Incorporated March 13, 1770. Reincorporated by State of New York, April 13, 1784. GUIDE TO GREATER NEW YORK. 21 IMPORTS AND EXPORTS. Foreign Imports at the Port of New York. Statement exhibiting the value of foreign merchandise (including coin and bullion) imported into the port of New York for twenty years ended June 30, compared with the total im- ports of the United States. Fiscal year ended June 30. New York. United States. 1879 $314,115,362 $466,073,775 1880 543,595,398 760,989,056 1881 535,753,818 753,240,125 1882 521,275,897 767,111,964 1883 508,700,476 751,670,305 1884 486,355,355 705,123,955 1885 406,035,435 620,769,652 1886 434,548,789 674,029,792 1887 497,936,845 752,490,560 1888 510,268,432 783,295,100 1889 479,428,125 774,094,725 1890 527,497,196 823,286,735 1891 553,188,712 881,175,643 1892 576,246,119 897,057,002 1893 560,864,234 910,768,555 1894 483,835,595 740,730,293 1895 513,241,192 788,565,904 1896 530,904,931 842,026,925 1897 556,948,811 880,278,419 1898 496,397,952 767,369,109 Geo. H. Walker & Co., Boston PRINTING HOUSE SQUARE- GUIDE TO GREATER NEW YORK. 23 Domestic Exports from the Port of New York. Statement exhibiting the value of domestic merchandise (including coin and bullion) exported from the port of New York for twenty years ended June 30, compared with the total domestic exports of the United States. Fiscal year ended June 30. New York. United States. 1879 $338,817,546 $717,093,777 1880 338,441,664 833,294,246 1881 402,305,090 898,152,891 1882, 370,497,741 776,720,003 1883 362,571,653 825,846,813 1884 363,055,394 775,190,487 1885 349,939,225 751,059,056 1886 346,412,339 717,888,646 1887 319,357,498 725,733,263 1888 325,789,244 717,057,608 1889 380,652,425 810,497,603 1890 370,322,430 881,076,017 1891 433,299,274 971,243,548 1892 461,772,231 1,075,818,429 1893 452,535,663 956,658,192 1894 452,644,968 972,761,378 1895 401,150,796 88t),730,334 1896 491,400,781 1,023,331,382 1897 467,624,856 1,127,701,948 1898 486,238,059 1,268,591,929 Foreign Exports from the Port of New York. Statement exhibiting the value of foreign merchandise (including coin and bullion) exported from the port of New York for twenty years ended June 30, compared with the total foreign exports of the United States. Fiscal year ended June 30. New York. United States. 1879 $12,409,385 $19,541,057 1880. 12,192,062 19,487,331 1881 16,429,998 23,631,302 1882 16,162,827 23,239,733 1883 21,166,859 29,812,922 1884 21,557,810 32,456,505 1885 17,828,096 33,362,224 1886 21,573,887 34,099,594 1887 15,153,385 26,447,639 ft- — i—\ 5—"' *-f$xi GUIDE TO GREATER NEW YORK. 25 1888 $10,108,015 $25,311,082 1889 10,727,560 28,545,305 1890 15,845,974 28,901,087 1891 13,404,649 22,190,904 1892 23,202,528 37,405,005 1893 20,905,507 40,425,105 1894 24,837,828 40,808,520 1895 19,898,320 31,571,598 1890 17,058,504 32,227,173 1897 11,037,505 25,599,820 1898 14,319,405 33,402,031 St. Peter's Church, Barclay and Church streets, is the oldest Roman Catholic organization in the city. The first church was erected in 1780, and in 1830 the present stone church was erected on its site. St. Patrick's Church, Mott and Prince streets, was built in 1815, and is the oldest of the Catholic church buildings in the city. The Grand Central Station, East Forty-second Street and Fourth (Park) Avenue, is one of the largest railroad stations in the country. It was thoroughly remodelled in 1898. A stairway leads to the Third Avenue Elevated Railway, which connects with Brooklyn. The New York Central & Hudson River Railroad, the New York & Harlem Railroad, and the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad occupy the station as their New York terminus. The West Shore and the Ontario W The Hotel Essex, j ATLANTIC AVENUE, ESSEX AND EAST STREETS, Opposite the Boston Terminal Station, Boston, Mass* | •I • t£r* t2r* t£r* \?/ * $ | European Plan* Absolutely Fireproof* f 2 - 3$ Every Modern Improvement* $ I Finished, Furnished and Opened in Nineteen | Hundred* J G&r* *£T* G&* ROOMS WITH BATH, $1.50 PER DAY AND OPWARDS. S ROOMS WITHOUT BATH, $1.00 PER DAY AND UPWARDS. I e^* e£* «<5* \|/ F* A* HAMMOND, Proprietor* to No charge for Baggage Also Murray Hill and $ $ from and to above station* Plaza Hotels, New York City* ty WHERE TO STAY IN NEW YORK Plaza Hotel, Model Hotel of the World. Located at Fifth Avenue entrance to and overlooking Central Park. The centre of the fashion- able residential district. Convenient to Metropolitan Opera House and all the best theatres and shops. Fifth Avenue stages and cross-town cars pass the doors, connecting with all surface and elevated roads, bringing all parts of the city within easy reach by public conveyance. This hotel structure is absolutely fireproof; maintained on both European and Ameri- can plans, with cuisine and service of the highest class* F. A. HAMMOND, Proprietor, Also the Hotel Essex, Boston, Mass. GUIDE TO GREATER NEW YORK. Ill LIST OF CONTENTS. A Page Abbey's Theatre 45 Academy of Music (New York) 35 Academy of Music (Brooklyn) 77 Academy of the Sacred Heart 71 Ahawath Chesed (Temple) 69 Albany 105 All Angels' Church 67 All Souls' Church 41, 61 All Souls' Church (Brooklyn) 85 American Artists, Society of 55 American Bible Society 34 American Foreign Christian Union 38 American Geographical Society 44 American Institute 45 American Museum of Natural History. . .59, 65 American Seaman's Friend Society 15 American Society of Civil Engineers 55 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 44 American Theatre 47 American Tract Society 15 American Water Color Society 41 American Yacht Club 34 Amphion Theatre (Brooklyn) 81 Amsterdam, Fort 7 Art Association (Brooklyn) 77 Art Students' League 55 Asbury Park 104 Assay Office, United States 19 Association of the Bar of Mew York 41 Association for the Improved Instruction of Deaf Mutes 69 Astor House 31 Astor Library 33 Astor Place Opera House 20 Astoria Ferry 93 B Baltimore & Ohio Railroad 25 Bank Clearing House 17 Baptist Church of the Epiphany 61 Baptist Tabernacle 41 Baptist Temple (Brooklyn) 81 Bar Association of New York 17 Barnard College 69 Barnum's Museum 20 Bartholdi's Statue of Liberty 91 Battery Park 13 Bay Parkway 87 Bay Ridge Parkway 87 Bedford Heights Church (Bergen) 82 Bedford Park (Brooklyn) 81 Bedloe's Island 91 Bedloe's Island Ferry 93 Beecher Memorial Church 85 Beethoven, Bust of 59 Bellevue Hospital Medical College 43 Bensonhurst Beach 87 Page Bergen Farm (Brooklyn) „ 79 Berkeley Lyceum ' " 49 Berkeley School 49 Beth-El, Temple ." ." 65 Bethesda Congregational Church (Brook- lyn) •. 83 Beth Israel Bikur Cholim, Synagogue 63 Bible House... 34 Bijou Theatre 47 Bijou Theatre (Brooklyn) 85 Biographical Society of America 33 Blackwell's Island 93 Blackwell's Island Ferry 93 Bloomingdaie Reformed Church 61 B'Nai Jeshurun (Temple) 61 Board of Foreign Missions of the Presby- terian Church 45 Board of Home Missions 45 Bolivar, Simon, Statue of 59 Booth's Theatre 33 Boulevard, The 57 Bowery Theatre (old) 27 Bowling Green 7 Brevoort House 43 Brick Presbyterian Church 45 Bridewell 7 Bridge Street 7 Bridges Across the Harlem River 94 Bristol Hotel 47 Broadway Athenaeum 33 Broadway Central Hotel 65 Broadway Music Hall 44 Broadway Tabernacle 41 Broadway Theatre 47 Bronx Borough n Bronx Park 73 Brooklyn 77 Brooklyn Art Association 85 Brooklyn Borough , n Brooklyn Borough Ferries 93 Brooklyn Bridge 27 Brooklyn Club 77 Brooklyn E. D. School Library 85 Brooklyn Forest 87 Brooklyn Homoeopathic Hospital and Dis- pensary 85 Brooklyn Hospital 82 Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences. . . 85 Brooklyn Library 77 85 Brooklyn Music Hall ' 85 Brooklyn (South) 77 Brooklyn Throat Hospital 82 Broome Street Tabernacle 31 Brougham's Lyceum Theatre 20 Bryant Park 47 Bull's Head Tavern 15 Burns's Coffee House 15 Burns, Statue of 50 GEO. H.WALKER & CO. Lithographers, Publishers, Engravers, Printers. ....SEND FOR ESTIMATES.... Maps, Plans and Old Documents Reproduced by Special Process. Letterheads, Billheads, Envelopes and Cards Engraved and Printed. Books, Catalogues and Circulars Printed. Colored Advertising Cards, Posters and Theatrical Lithographs Designed and Reproduced in any quantity. Hali-Tone and Process Plates at Lowest Prices. GEO. H. WALKER & CO, Harcourt Street, One Block from Huntington Avenue Station. BOSTON, MASS. GUIDE TO GREATER NEW YORK. 113 Page Bushwick Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church 82 Bushwick. Hospital 82 Bushwick Park 85 c Calumet Club 49 Calvary Cemetery 87 Calvary Church 39 Calvary Methodist Episcopal Church 69 Canarsie Beach 87 Carroll Park 81 Casino 47 Castle Garden 15 Castle William 91 Cathedral of St. John the Divine 67, 69 Catholic Apostolic Church 51 Catskill Mountains 105 Cedar Park 34 Central Avenue 75 Central Baptist Church (Brooklyn) 82 Central Congregational Church (Brooklyn). 83 Central Methodist Episcopal Church (Brooklyn) .. , 83 Central Opera House 61 Central Park 57, 59, 61 Central Presbyterian Church 51 Central Railroad of New Jersey 25 Central Throat Hospital (Brooklyn) 82 Central Turn-Verein (il Century Club 49 Cervantes, Bust of 59 Chamber of Commerce 9, 20 Chelsea 89 Chickering Hall 38 Christian Alliance 44 Christ Church 63 Church of the Ascension 34 Church of the Covenant 47 Church of the Heavenly Rest 65 Church of the Holy Trinity. 69 Church of the Incarnation 44 Church of the Messiah 44 Church of the New Jerusalem 44 Church of Our Lady of Good Counsel 67 Church of the Pilgrims 85 Church of Reconciliation 83 Church of the Strangers 51 Church of the Transfiguration 43 City Directory (first) 9 City Hall 10 Citv Hall (Brooklyn) 77 City Hall Park (Brooklyn) 81 City Hall Park 9 City Park (Brooklyn) 85 Claremont Park 73 Clifton (Staten Island) 82 Clinton Avenue Congregational Church (Brooklyn) ■ 83 Coffee Exchange . . 19 College Point Eerry 94 College of the City of New York 39 College of Pharmacy of the City of New York 63 College of Physicians and Surgeons 63 Collegiate Reformed Protestant Dutch ° Church 49 Page Collegiate School t>5 Colonial Club 63 Columbia Theatre (Brooklyn) 85 Columbia University 51 Columbus Theatre 69 Commerce, Bronze Figure of 59 Concourse Park (Brooklyn) 87 Coney Island 93 Congress ( First American) i.0 Consolidated Petroleum Exchange 19 Cooper Park (Brooklyn) 87 Cooper, Peter, Statue of 31 Cooper Union 27 Cooper Union Library 33 Cotton Exchange 51 Court House (Brooklyn) 77 Cox, S. S., Statue of 31 Crescent Athletic Club (Brooklyn). 77 Criterion Theatre (Brooklyn) 81 Crotona Park 73 Crystal Palace 47 Cumberland Street Presbyterian Church (Brooklyn) 83 Custom House (first) 7 Cypress Hills Cemetery (Newtown) 89 D Daly's Theatre 43 Declaration of Independence 9 Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad 25 De Peyster, Abraham, Statue of 27 Disciples of Christ (Church) 51 Dobbs Ferry 104 Dodge, William E., Statue of 44 Dry Dock (South Brooklyn) 79 Duel between Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr 9 Dyckman Street Bridge 94 Dyke's Beach 87 E East River 89, 91 East River Bridge (New) ' 34 East River Park G5 East Side Lands (Brooklyn) 85 Eastern Parkway (Brooklyn) 81 Eastern Parkway Extension (Brooklyn) 81 Eden Musee 38 Eighth Avenue Bridge 94 Elevated Railways 53, 55 Eltingville (Staten Island) 89 Emanu-El (Temple) 47 Empire Hotel 61 Empire Theatre 47 Empire Theatre (Brooklyn) 85 Erastina (Staten Island) 89 Erie Railroad 25 Everett House 37 Evergreen Cemetery (Newtown) 87 Excelsior Club 77 Exports (Domestic) 23 Exports (Foreign) 23, 25 F Faith Home for Incurables 82 Federal Building (Brooklyn) 77 Ferries 93, 94 GUIDE TO GREATER NEW YORK. 115 Page Fifth Avenue Baptist Church 49 Fifth Avenue Collegiate Church 49 Fifth Avenue Hotel 43 Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church 51 Fifth Avenue Theatre - 43 First Baptist Church 65, 67 First Baptist Church (Brooklyn) 82 First Collegiate Reformed Church of Harlem 69 First Ferry (Brooklyn) 79 First M. E. Church (Brooklyn) 82 First Moravian Church 44 First Presbyterian Church 35 First Reformed Episcopal Church 57 First Reformed Presbyterian Church 35 First Unitarian Congregational Society 81 Flatbush Free Library (Brooklyn) 81 Fort Columbus 91 Fort Hamilton 91 Fort Hamilton Park 87 Fort Hamilton Parkway 81 Fort Hancock 93 Fort Lafayette 91 Fort Lee Ferry 94 Fort Schuyler 91 Fort Slocum 91 Fort Totten 91 Fort Washington 9, 73 Fort Wood 91 Fourteenth Street Theatre 35 Fourth Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church (Brooklyn) 83 Fourth Avenue Presbyterian Church 39 Fraunce's Tavern 15 Franconi's Hippodrome 45 Franklin, Benjamin, Statue of 27 Free Circulating Library 19 Free Lending Library 81 Free Library of the General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen 37 French's Hotel 17 Friends' Meeting House 38 Fulton Street (Brooklyn) 77 G Gallows 9 Garden Theatre . 43 Garrick Theatre 44 Gayety Theatre (Brooklyn) 85 General Theological Seminary 38 Gerlach Hotel 43 German Hospital (Brooklyn) 82 Germania Theatre 34 Gifford's (Staten Island) 89 Gilsey House 43 Girls' High School 35 Golden Eagle Inn 17 Governor's Island 91 Governor's Island Ferry 94 Governors of New York 99, 101 Grace Church 35 Gramercy Park 39 Grand Army of the Republic 34 Grand Central Station 35 Grand Opera House 38 Grand Opera House (Brooklyn) 81 Grand Union Hotel 55 Page Grant Statue (Brooklyn) 87 Gravesend Bay 91 Greeley, Horace, Statue of 31 Greene Avenue Baptist Church (Brooklyn). 83 Greenwood Baptist Church 83 Greenwood Cemetery 87 Grenoble Hotel 55 H Hale, Nathan, Statue of 19 Hall of Records (Brooklyn) 77 Hall of Records 9 Halleck, Statue of 59 Hamilton Club (Brooklyn) 77 Hamilton Fish Park 33 Hancock Monument 73 Harbor of New York 89 Harlem Club 69 Harlem Opera House 69 Harlem River 91 Harmonie Club 47 Harrigan's Theatre 44 Hart's Island Ferry 94 Heights, The (Brooklyn) 77 Hell Gate 91 Herald Square Theatre 44 High Bridge 71 High Bridge Park 75 Highland Park 85 Hill, The (Brooklyn)..., 77 Historical Hall (Brooklyn) 85 Hoboken • 103 Hoboken Ferries 94 Hoffman House 39 Holland House 45 Holland Society of New York 34 Holy Communion Church 38 Holy Trinity Church (Brooklyn) 81 Home for Consumptives (Brooklyn) 82 Hudson Park 29 Hudson River 89,104,105 Huguenots (Staten Island) 87 Huguenot Graveyard (Staten Island) 89 Humboldt, Bust of 59 Hunt, Richard M. (Memorial) 44 Hyde & Behman's Theatre 81 I Imperial Hotel 45 Imports (Foreign), New York 21 Indian Hunter 59 Irving Place Theatre 37 Irving Square 85 Irvington 104 Jail (New) 9 Jeanette Park 35 Jefferson Hotel 37 Jersey City 103 Jersey City Ferries 93 John Street Methodist Episcopal Church. . 31 John Street Theatre 15 Judson Memorial Baptist Church 41 Jumel Mansion 73, 75 Junction with Hudson River (Ship Canal Bridge) 94 POCKET ROAD MAPS (IN COVERS). „„. MAINE, Coast of, Eastern part, Cyclists . . .26 Maine, Coast of, Western part, Cyclists . . .25 Maine, Moosehead and Aroostook Districts . . .50 Maine, Rangeley and Megantic Districts . . .25 Maine, Rangeley Lake and Megantic Dist., very large .50 Maine, Millnockett and Munsungan Lakes Maine, Northern (for sportsmen and lumbermen) Maine, Portland District, Cyclists NEW HAriPSHIRE, Central White Mount. Cyclists .50 New Hampshire, Northern part, Cyclists New Hampshire, Southern part, Cyclists New Hampshire, (Crawford's White Mount.) New Hampshire, (Calvert's Lake Winnipesaukee New Hampshire, Sunapee Lake District New Hampshire, L. A. W. VERHONT, Northern part, Cyclists . Vermont, Southern part, Cyclists Vermont, Woodstock and vicinity MASSACHUSETTS, Cycling Routes Berkshire Hills, Cyclists .... Boston Road Book, with Map Boston District Road Map, Cyclists Boston and the Country adjacent, large Brockton District Road Map, Cyclists . Cape Cod and vicinity Massachusetts Bay Massachusetts Atlas Plates, Nos. 1 to 27, each Middlesex County and the North Shore, Cyclists New Bedford and vicinity .... Norfolk County and the South Shore . The Connecticut Valley in Massachusetts, Cyclists Worcester County, Cyclists .... Worcester District Road Map, Cyclists RHODE ISLAND, Cyclists Narragansett Bay and vicinity, Cyclists CONNECTICUT, Eastern part, with Index, Cycl Connecticut, Western part, with Index, Cyclists Connecticut New Haven, County NEW YORK to Albany (Hudson River Dist.) Long Island, Cyclists Albany, Troy District, Cyclists . Adirondacks, North, Cyclists Adirondacks, South, Cyclists NEW JERSEY, North (N. Y. to Phila.) Cyclists New Jersey, South, Cyclists NEW ENGLAND, Cycling Routes . Nova Scotia and part of New Brunswick Cycling Routes PENNSYLVANIA, Philadelphia District, Cyclists These maps are for sale by your dealer, or will be sent by mail on receipt of price. Send for Descriptive Catalogue. GEO. H. ^V'AI^-K-EOR S& OO. Lithographers. Photo-Lithographers. Process Cuts. Maps and Plans Reproduced. Send for Estimates. HARCOURT STREET, BOSTON, MASS. One Block from Huntington Ave. Station. _____ ______ City Maps, State Maps, Atlases, etc. Guide to Metropolitan Boston 35 Guide to Greater New York a 5 1.00 .25 .25 .50 .50 .25 .25 .25 1.00 .50 .50 .25 25 .25 .25 .25 1.00 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .50 .50 .25 .25 = .25 .25 .25 .50 .50 .25 .25 .25 50 25 GUIDE TO GREATER NEW YORK. 117 K Page Kenisco Cemetery 75 Kennedy House 20 Kings County Hospital 85 Kingston 105 Kingston Avenue Hospital 83 Knickerbocker Avenue Methodist Epis- copal Church (Brooklyn) 82 Knickerbocker Club 65 Knickerbocker Theatre 45 Koster & Bial's Theatre 47 Krigler's, Martin (tavern) 15 L Ladies' Christian Union 34 Law Library (Brooklyn) . 81 La Montagne Tavern 15 Laura Keene's Varieties 33 Lawyers' Club . 17 Lee Avenue Congregational Church (Brook- lyn) 83 Lehigh Valley Railroad • 25 Lenox Avenue Unitarian Church 69 Lenox Library 63 Lenox Lyceum 57 Lewis Avenue Congregational Church 83 Lexington Avenue Opera House 55 Library of the New York Academy of Medicine 47 Lincoln Club 77 Lincoln Terrace 87 Linnaean Society 65 Linton Park 87 London Theatre 29 Long Branch 104 Long Island College Hospital 83 Long Island Historical Socitty 77,85 Long I sland Railroad 27 Long Island Sound . . 89, 91 Long Island Throat and Lung Hospital. . . 83 Lotos Club 41 Lutheran Cemetery 87 Lutherisches Hospital 82 Lyceum Theatre 38 M Macomb's Dam (Public Bridge) 94 Madison Avenue Baptist Church 41 Madison Avenue Bridge 90 Madison Avenue Hotel 61 Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church 57 Madison Avenue Reformed Church 57 Madison Square 41 Madison Square Baptist Church 39 Madison Square Garden , 41 Madison Square Theatre 41 Majestic Hotel (3 Manhattan Athletic Club s9 Manhattan Borough - 11 Manhattan Club 41 Manhattan College 69 Manhattan Island 5 Manhattan Square 65 Manhattan Theatre 47 Mansion House (Brooklyn) 77 Marble Collegiate Church 41 Margaret Louisa Home ... 37 Page Marlboro (Hotel) 45 Masonic Temple 39 Mayors of New York 102, 103 Mazzini, Bust of 59 McGowan's Pass 61 Memorial Hall 81 Memorial Hospital for Women and Chil- dren , 83 Memorial Presbyterian Church 82 Menagerie 61 Mercantile Library 33 Merchants' Coffee House 15 Methodist Book Concern 38 Methodist Episcopal Hospital 83 Methodist Historical Society 55 Methodist Mission House 38 Metropolitan Club 59 Metropolitan College of Music 37 Metropolitan Hotel 41 Metropolitan Museum of Art 59 Metropolitan Opera House 47 Metropolis Theatre 71 Middle Collegiate Church 33 Middle Dutch Church 19 Midland Beach 89 Military Department of the East 91 Military Order Loyal Legion of the United States 17 Miner's Bowery Theatre 29 Miner's Eighth Avenue Theatre 43 Montauk Club 77 Montauk Theatre 81 Moore, Thomas, Bust of 59 Morningside Heights 71, 73 Morningside Park 71 Morris cS^: Essex Railroad 25 Mount Hope Cemetery 75 Mount Morris Square 73 Mount St. Vincent Academy 75 Mulberry Bend Park 39 Municipal Building (Brooklyn 77 Murray Hill 45 Murray Hill Hotel 45 Murray Hill Theatre 45 Music Hall 51 N Narrows, The 91 Nassau Street Theatre 15 National Academy of Design 39 National Guard of Brooklyn 79 National Guard of New York 27 National Society of New England Women. 67 Naval Reserve (Brooklyn) 79 Naval Reserve (New York) 27 Navy Yard (Brooklyn) 79 Negro Plot 9 New Amsterdam 5 Newburgh 105 New England Baptist Church 83 New England Society 29 New Jersey Midland Railroad 25 New Jersey Northern Railroad 25 New Jersey Shore 103, 104 New Lots Playground 87 New Netherland Hotel 57 Newspapers 17 Pocket City Maps. IN Arnold Arboretum Ashmont, Dorchester, and West Roxbury . .25 Belmont and vicinity . .25 Beverly City . . .25 Boston, vest-pocket size .10 Boston Proper (Subway) .25 Boston, with Index . .25 Boston and Surroundings .25 Boston Rapid Transit 1.00 Boston Terminal Facilities .25 Boston Harbor, Bird's-eye View .10 Brockton City . . .25 Brookline Town . . .25 Cambridge City . . .25 Chelsea and vicinity . .25 Dedham and Needham .25 Everett City and vicinity .25 Fall River City . . .25 Fitchburg City . . .25 Gloucester City . . .25 Haverhill City . . .25 Holyoke City . . .25 Lawrence City . . .25 COVERS Price .25 Lowell City Lynn City Maiden City Marblehead New Bedford City Newburyport City New Haven City Newton Boulevard New York City . Northampton City . Onset Village . Pittsfield City . Plymouth Town Providence, R. I. Revere Town and vicii Salem City Somerville City Springfield City Taunton City . Winthrop Town Waltham City . Woburn City . Worcester City Price .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .10 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 ity.25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 Pocket Railroad Maps. IN COVERS. phice Connecticut, Mass. and R. I. . . . .25 Maine 25 Massachusetts, R. I. and Conn. . . .25 Massachusetts, Index . . . . .25 New England, with Index . . . .50 New Hampshire and Vermont . . . .25 Rhode Island, Conn, and Mass. . . .25 Vermont and N. H 25 ELECTRIC RAILWAYS OF EASTERN NEW ENGLAND . .25 ELECTRIC RAILWAYS OF WESTERN MASSACHUSETTS, .25 RAPID TRANSIT MAP OF METROPOLITAN DISTRICT . 1.00 Guide to Metropolitan Boston, 25c. Guide to Great er New Y ork, 25c- WALL MA PS, ATLA SES, ETC. SEND FOR DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE. GEO. H. WALKER & CO. Lithographers. Photo-Lithographers. Process Outs. Maps and Plans Reproduced. Color Printers. n «, H t RCO !} RT . 8TR f "k ■ ^STON, MASS. One Block from Huntington Ave. station. _^_^_^__^^__^__ 4> GUIDE TO GREATER NEW YORK. 119 Page New York Academy of Sciences 51 New York Athletic Club 57 New York Club 45 New York College of Dentistry 19 New York College of Music • 57 New York Conservatory of Music 38 New York, First Settlement 5, 7, 9 New York Genealogical and Biographical Society 55 New York Genealogical and Biographical Record 55 New York & Greenwood Lake Railroad. . . 25 New York (Greater), Assessed Valuation of Real Estate 13 New York Historical Society 43 New York Homoeopathic Medical College and Hospital 61 New York Institution of the Deaf and Dumb • •• • 75 New York Ladies' Home Missionary Society 33 New York Medical College and Hospital for Women and Children 51 New York Post-Graduate Hospital and Medical School 38 New York, Population 11 New York and New Jersey Bridge 61 New York & Putnam Railroad 27 New York Society Library 33 New York Southern Society 41 New York, Susquehanna & Western Rail- road 25 New York Stock Exchange 17 New York Theatre 49 New York Trade School 63 New York Turn-Verein 67 New York Typographical Society 27 New York Yacht Club 63 Niblo's Theatre 31 Normal College for Women 63 Normandie, Hotel 45 North Baptist Church 35 North Brother Island Ferry 94 North River 89, 91 Norwegian Lutheran Deaconesses' Home and Hospital 82 Nyack 1<»4 o Obelisk 59 Ocean Grove 103 Ocean Hill Baptist Church 83 Ocean Parkway 81 Odd Fellows, Headquarters 65 Ohio Society of New York 65 Old Dutch Vauxhall 17 Old Guard of New York 35 Olympia Theatre 49 Oratorio Society 55 Oxford Club 77 P Parade Ground - 87 Park Avenue and One Hundred and Thirty- third Street Bridge 94 Park Avenue Hotel 44 Park Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church. 67 Park Plaza 79 Page Park Presbyterian Church 67 Park Theatre 15, 38, 45 Park Theatre (Brooklyn) 81 Pearl Street 7 Peekskill 105 Pelham Bay Park 73 Pennsylvania Ave. Congregational Church 82 Pennsylvania Railroad 25 Philadelphia & Reading Railroad 25 Philharmonic Society 37 Phillips Presbyterian Church (i5 Pierrepont House 77 Piers, East River 95, 96 Piers, Manhattan Borough 95 Piers, North River 95 Pilgrim, The (Bronze Statue) 59 Plaza Hotel 57 Plymouth Church 81 Population of New York 11, 13 Port Richmond 89 Post Office (first) 9 Post Office 17 Post Office Building (Brooklyn) 77 Potter's Field 43 Poughkeepsie 105 Pratt Institute 85 Presbyterian House 35 Prince's Bay 89 Printing Press (first) 11 Proctor's Pleasure Palace 55 Proctor's Theatre 38 Produce Exchange ... 51 Progress Club 61 Prohibition Park 89 Prospect Heights Presbyterian Church-... 83 Prospect Park 79 Protestant Episcopal Church Missionary Society for Seamen 34 Puritan Congregational Church 82 Q Ouarantine Station 91 Oueens Borough 11 Queens Borough Ferries 94 R Racquet and Tennis Club 49 Randall's Island 93 Randall's Island Ferry 94 Rapid Transit 53 Red Bank 89 Red Hook Park 85 Republican Union League Club (Brooklyn) 77 Richmond 89 Richmond Borough 11 Richmond Borough Ferry 94 Riverside Park 73 Riverside Presbyterian Church 71 Rodolph Sholom (Temple) 61 Roman Catholic Hospital (Brooklyn) 82 Rossville 89 Royal Exchange 9 Rutgers Riverside Presbyterian Church 63 s Sailors' Snug Harbor 89 Salvation Army IT How to Make and How to Fly Them. ILLUSTRATED WITH 30 DIAGRAMS. Every one interested in this fascinating sport should get a copy of this very enter- taining and instructive work & <£ & PRICE, 15 CENTS. ** ALL DEALERS OR BY MAIL. Geo. H. Walker & Co., Publishers, Lithographers