A^'^. -.■ ,<^^- o^ -^6 "^y. C^"' ^ ■-^, vOo. .^ ■^- .^"*" -r, ''^ 9 ■>• V' vOO. >>^>'- o\'' c-i <: Kk ^ HELD IN '^ r^i / ^'" ^^ ^ ,5r * ♦ « *r i^^ hC. '^''^" PRICE TWENTY Five '-tENTj GEORGE EHRET, HELL GATE L?iGER Seer jRrewery, gzd and 93d Streets, Between 2d and 3d Aves. M^}aL VORK oixv. ^oUVEiV;^ Centennial Celebration Washington's Inauguration, HELD IN NEW YORK CITY, April 29th and 30th, 1889, NEW YORK: NICOLL 6- ROY, F'lLIBLISHERC 16 Dey Street. ^•^^ Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1889, by Nicoll & Rov, in the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C. E\)e Ir7au(5uratio9 of (i ^vnd estimates ^5^f»f»ly to THE BARBER ASPHALT PAVING COMPANY, F, V. GREENE, Vicp-President. 1 BROT^DiAiKY. - .- - NeiAi YORK. Washington Inaugural Centennial. ii in Dutch. Every householder swept the street in front of his home twice a week. Oil lamps were used for lighting the streets. Coal was unknown. Hickory wood was the chief fuel. Early every morning milkmen walked through the streets bearing yokes, similar to those used by farmers in New England to-day, on their shoulders, from which dangled tin cans and crying, " milk, ho ! " Water from the celebrated " Tea Water Pump " was carried about in carts and retailed at a penny a gallon. The chimneys were swept by small negro bo}'s, who went their rounds at daybreak shouting, " Sweep, ho ! sweep, ho ! from the bottom to the top without a ladder, sweep, ho ! The men of this period wore long Continental coats, with brass buttons and side pockets, knee breeches, low shoes with big buckles and three-cornered hats. Ruffled shirts, lace sleeves, satin vests, white silk stockings, powdered hair, which was combed back and tied in a queue, were conspicuous features of the men's dress. The correct thing, or full dress of gentlemen, however, was composed of cambric ruffled shirts, light-colored velvet knee breeches, silk or satin waist- coats, silk stocking and low shoes with brass buckles. Ladies wore low-neck dresses, flowing sleeves, hoops and high Dutch hats. The ordinary dress of the women was, however, more modest. It consisted of a short gown and petticoat of any color and material that suited the taste of the wearer. Wall street was the centre of fashion. It presented a brilliant scene every afternoon. Ladies in showy costumes and gentlemen in silks, satins, velvets, ruffled shirts and powdered periwigs promenaded up and down the street in front of the City Hall and on Broadway from St. Paul's Chapel to the Battery. Broad- way was also a popular thoroughfare for driving, and many stylish turnouts were seen every day rattling up and down the street. A liveried footman always rode behind each carriage. Horseback riding was also popular, and gen- tlemen of prominence in state affairs often traveled this way, partly because it gave them exercise and because it was fashionable. The social world was in constant agitation over the arrival of statesmen and distinguished people from different parts of the Union and from Europe. At the time of the election and inauguration of Washington, the stages, about the only means of travel, were few and in out-of-the-way places, and had no fixed days for leaving specified points. They were often delayed on the road by storms and accidents. Mails were carried from and to New York, Albany, Bos- ton and Philadelphia three times a week in summer and semi-weekly in winter. After the announceinent of the adoption of the Constitution on September 13, 1788, it was determined that New York city should be the seat of Congress. The change occurred on December 23, 1788. The old City Hall, in Wall street, in which the Continental Congress had been accustomed to meet, was placed by the corporation of the city at the disposal of Congress, and after reconstruction was known as Federal Hall. The City Hall was built about 1700. It was in the form of an L and open in the middle. The cellar contained dungeons for criminals. The first story had two wide staircases, two large and two small 12 Washington Inaugural Centennial. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOJ Hort\) BritisI? apd /I^erea^til^ loOOOOOOOO 0000 000 oooooooooooooocooooooooooooooooooooooo I II INSURKNOE CO. ■^ OF^ L0ND0N AND EBINBdRGH. UNITED STATES BRANCH, 54 WILLIAM STREET, N. Y. NEW YORK BOARD OF MANAGEMENT. SOLON HUJVir^HI^EYB, Esq., Clnairixie:xn. (E. D. MORGAN & CO.) J. J. ASTOR, Esq. H. W. BARNES, Esq. CHAS. H. COSTER, Esq. (Drexel, Morgan & Co.) DAVID DOWS, Jr., Esq. (Davul Dows, Jr., & Co.) JACOB WENDELL, Esq. (Jacob Wendell c\: Co.) CHAS. EZRA WHITE, Eso. SAM. P. BLAGDEN, IVLaneigfer. WM. A. FRANCIS, Asst. Manager. ROBT. H. WASS, Gen. Agt. WM. R. ECKER, Ass't Gen'l Agt. H. M. JACKSON, Secretary. Washington Inaugural Centennial. 13 rooms. The middle of the second story was occupied by a court room with the assembly room on one side and the magistrate's room on the other. The debtors' cells were in the attic. At this time the building was falling to decay, and the depleted treasury furnished no means with which to erect a new struc- ture or even to remodel the old one. Fortunately in this emergency some of the prominent and wealthy men subscribed enough money, some $32,000, necessary to make the alterations. When completed it was, for that period, an imposing structure. The first story was made in Tuscan style with seven open- ings. There were four massive pillars in the centre, supporting heavy arches, above which rose four Doric columns. Thirteen stars were ingeniously worked in the panel of the cornice. The other ornamental work consisted of an eagle and the national insignia sculptured in the entablature, while over each window- were thirteen arrows surrounded by olive branches. The Hall of Representatives was an octangular room fifty-eight by sixty-one feet, with an arched ceiling forty-six feet high in the middle. This hall had two galleries, a platform for the speaker and a separate chair and desk for each member. The windows, which were wide and high, were sixteen feet from the floor with quaint fireplaces under them. The Senate Chamber w-as twenty feet high with dimensions on the floor of thirty by forty feet. The arch of the ceiling represented a canopy containing thirteen stars ; a rich canopy of crimson damask hung over the President's chair. The chairs in the hall were arranged in semi-circular form. Three spacious windows opened out on Wall street. A balcony twelve feet deep, guarded by a massive iron railing, was over the main entrance on Wall street, where there was a lofty vestibule paved with marble. While the Federal Hall w^as being transformed, building operations were active in various parts of the city. Private houses and stores were being con- structed along the roads in the sparsely populated regions above Chambers street, while warehouses were springing up along the river front in the lower part of the city. All the merchants and mechanics were busy. Business of all kinds was active and vigorous under the stimulus of the new order of things in Federal affairs. Having described the city briefly, I will come down towards the event, the centennial anniversary of which is now at hand. The assembling of the first Federal Congress after the adoption of the Constitution was fixed for March 4th, 1789. The day was ushered in by the ringing of bells and the boom of cannon. Owing to the severity of the weather, the muddy condition of the country roads, and the general inconveniences of travel, only eight Senators and thirteen Representatives, not enough for a quorum, were present. Rivers and brooks that were forded at particular places were overflowing their banks, making this kind of passage impossible. The Raritan river at New Brunswick, New Jersey, and the Delaware river were crossed in scows, upon which carriages were driven. Travel was so impeded that it was not until over a month later, April 6th, that a quorum of Congressmen had assembled. On that date they 14 Washington Inaugural Centennial. met and organized. The first business was the opening and counting of the votes for President and Vice-President, to which ofifices Washington and John Adams were duly declared elected. Washington left Mount Vernon for New York on the morning of April i6th. Before his departure he wrote to Henry Knox that his " feelings were not unlike those of a culprit going to the place of execution." Washington wished to make the trip to New York as quietly and with as little show as possible, but he soon found that this was out of the ques- tion, owing to the patriotic ardor that was aflame ev^erywhere, and the intense admiration for the noble chieftain. So that his journey, instead of being devoid of incident and ostentation, was characterized by the wildest enthusiasm of the citizens all the way from Mount Vernon to P'ederal Hall. Towns and cities along the route were in the highest pitch of patriotic excitement. They vied with each other in honoring the hero of the Revolution, and the first President of a peaceful republic. Among the displays was a long avenue of laurels through which Washington was escorted at Gray's Ferry in Pennsylvania. As the President-elect passed under the last arch a boy, concealed in the foliage above, dropped upon his head a handsome laurel crown. The act aroused enthusiastic demonstrations among the spectators. A triumphal arch was erected by ladies at Trenton. Riding upon his white charger, W^ashington passed under this, and as he did so thirteen beautiful young ladies, carrying baskets, strewed flowers before the hero, at the same time singing an ode especiall}' composed. Upon reaching Elizabethtown Point, Washington was received by a committee of Congress, composed of Elias Boudinot, Chairman ; Robert R. Livingston, Chancellor of the State ; Secretary Jay, Secretary Knox, the Commissioners of the Treasury ; Mayor Duane and Recorder Varick, of New^ York, and several other officials. A barge, elegantly decorated and manned by thirteen captains in white uniform, M'as waiting at this point to convey Washington and his party to the city. As it moved away other barges, covered with decorations, fell into line. This procession came through the Kill Von Kull (between New Jersey and Staten Island) and up the ba}', gathering in its wake craft of every descrip- tion. The vessels, moving and at anchor, bore some emblem of rejoicing that was apparently infectious. The Spanish man-of-war Galveston displayed a variety of national colors from its rigging. A sloop under full sail contained twenty-fiv^e gentlemen and ladies, who sang an ode of welcome to the tune of " God Save the King," in which everybody within sound eagerly joined. Band music from boats on every side, continual cheering and the boom of artillery from the war vessels and neighboring forts filled the air, echoing and re-echoing over the waters. The landing place was Murray's wharf, near the foot of Wall street, where there was a ferry. Here the stairs and railings were carpeted and decorated. Governor Clinton formally received the President-elect. An enthusiastic crowd, that had been waiting expectantly at the ferry, made the air ring with tumultu- ous cheering as he appeared in the street. It was difficult to form a procession Washington Inaugural Centennial. '5 &nffiaz^a /ci /ae Massachusetts Magazixe, Ja'^e, /7'(^^. FEDERAL HALL, >A^ALL STREET, IN 1789. 1 6 Washington Inaugurai, Centennial. among the excited inhabitants, who were desperately struggHng with each other in an effort to see George Washington. After some delay this was finally accomplished. The procession was headed by Colonel Morgan Lewis, aided by Majors Morton and Van Home, all of whom were mounted. The military com- panies were next in line. Among them were Capt. Stokes' horse troop, accoutred in the style of Lee's famous " Partisan Legion ; " Capt. Scriba's German Grena- diers, wearing blue coats, yellow waitscoats, knee breeches, black gaiters and towering cone-shaped hats faced with bearskin ; Capt. Harrison's New York Grenadiers, composed, in imitation of the Guard of Frederick the Great, of only the tallest and finest-looking young men in the city, dressed in blue coats, with red facings and gold lace embroideries, white waistcoats and white knee breeches, black leggings, and wearing cocked hats trimmed with white feathers ; Scotch Infantry in full Highland costume, playing bagpipes. Following the military companies were the sheriff of the county, the committee of Congress, the President-elect, Secretaries Jay and Knox, Chancellor Livingston and dis- tinguished men in State affairs, clergymen and a large number of citizens. Washington was escorted to the Presidential mansion, which stood on the corner of Cherry street and Franklin Square. Every house and building along the route was decorated with flags, silk banners, floral and evergreen garlands. Men, women and children of all degrees flocked through the streets, shouting, waving hats and handkerchiefs in their almost delirious enthusiasm. The name of Washington was not only upon every lip, but dis- played in ornamental arches under which the procession passed. The official residence was known as the Walter Franklin House. It had been occupied by Samuel Osgood of the Treasury Board, who moved out to give room to Wash- ington and family. This house was a large three-story brick structure with a flat roof. Shortly after arriving at his new home, Washington was called upon and congratulated by Government officials, foreign ministers, public bodies, mili- tary celebrities and many private citizens. He dined with Governor Clinton that evening at the latter's residence in Pearl street. The city was brilliantly illu- minated in the evening, when there was a P'ourth of July display of fireworks. The city was overrun with visitors and sightseers from all parts of the country between the date of Washington's arrival and his inauguration. All the hotels and even private mansions were crowded. Excitement ran high. There was an insatiable desire prevalent to get a look at Washington, who had been described as the noblest, grandest man human eyes ever saw. Old people expressed their readiness to die after having once seen the first President. Im- patiently everybody waited for the great day, April 30th, the dawn of a new era ; and when it finally came, the citizens and visitors were absolutely frantic with patriotic fervor. At daybreak a national salute was fired from the fort at the Battery, and within a short time the city was seething with excitement. Of course all business was suspended. Thousands of men, women and children, in holiday dress, bands and military companies filled the streets. Many people Washington Inaugural Centennial. y the Astor Place riot. William C. Macready, an English actor, and the celebrated American tragedian, Edwin Forrest, were the innocent causes of the disturbance. Forrest had not been favorably received in England, and so his American admirers determined that they would retaliate when the Englishman appeared in New York on May 10. He played J/rt^rZir//!. A mob gathered in Astor Place during the performance and determined to drive Macready from the stage. Many of the rioters were in the theatre. As soon as the actor came upon the stage he was assailed with hisses, groans, decayed eggs and various other mis- siles. An indescribable scene followed. There was a stampede from the theatre. Twenty thousand men, mostly toughs of the city, were howling in front of the theatre. Several hundred policemen, who had been detailed to prevent a disturb- ance — which was known to have been arranged — were powerless in the hands of the furious rioters, who hurled paving stones at them. The Seventh Regiment was called out. The rioters had already wounded many and killed several men when the soldiers appeared. The regiment fired upon the mob, killing a number of the rioters. This virtually ended the disturbance, although, as a precaution, the regiment was on duty for three days following. On July 14, 1853, an exhi- bition of the industrial products of all nations was opened in the Crystal Palace, in Reservoir Square, now Bryant Park. The site of the Central Park was selected July 2, 1855, by commissioners appointed by the Supreme Court of the State. In the summer of 1857 a financial crisis swept over the commercial world here and extended to Europe. The business of the growing metropolis was prostrated, all enterprises were crippled, the banks suspended specie payments, while those who depended on a day's or a week's wages for living were sud- denly thrown into a state of destitution, to which a severe winter following Washington Inaugural Centennial. added fresh terrors. Some relief, however, was provided by labor on public works of the city, and the distribution of food and clothing by charitable societies. The aid, however, was not at first adequate for all the sufferers, many of whom perished for lack of clothing and food. The common cry was : " Bread ! Bread ! Give us bread. We must have it." It was so long coming that the hungry people, exasperated beyond endurance, finally indulged in rioting. The mob wildly seized bakers' wagons and grabbed their contents and ravenously devoured them. Hungry laborers threatened to break open pro- vision stores and help themselves. So great was the danger of general destruc- tion that all the available police force and militia were needed to protect the arsenal, the Custom House and other public buildings. The wants of the half-starved people were finally supplied, and no very serious outbreak occurred. This year witnessed the riotous demonstrations growing out of a conflict between two police organizations under the mayoralty of Fernando Wood, for whose arrest an order was issued and resisted. Rioting began on July 4, and eleven persons were killed. The Seventh Regiment was called out to quell the mob. The successful laying of the Atlantic cable was announced in August, 1858, and on September i the achievement was celebrated here by a grand dem- onstration. But no event, in the history of the past half century at least, cre- ated more profound excitement in the city than the outbreak of the Rebellion. The winter of 1 860-61 was one of anxiety, dread and distress. As soon as Fort Sumter was fired upon, the work of organizing regiments here was begun. On July 13, 1863, the militia of the city having been sent to Pennsylvania, the United States authorities undertook to enforce the draft law. This caused an insurrection, which turned upon the colored population of the city. The elements of disorder were combined in this mob. For several days general consternation reigned in the city. The rioters sacked numerous houses and public offices, destroyed the headquarters of the Provost Marshal, burned the building occupied as the Colored Orphan Asylum, attacked the police and chased colored people whenever they were found on the streets. Some were caught and hanged to lamp-posts. The stars and stripes were torn down and trampled upon. Stores were robbed in daylight. Business general!}- was sus- pended, while stages and street cars were stopped. The courageous action of the police, supported by the Federal troops, finally conquered the rioters, but not without the loss of many lives. P"requent outdoor demonstrations were held during the war, the most conspicuous of these being the great mass meetings that occurred in Union Square July 15, 1862, and April 11, 1863. The news of the capture of Lee and the final triumph over the rebels resulted in a series of public celebrations. But these days of rejoicing were soon clouded by the assassination of President Lincoln. During the war the city furnished 1 16,382 troops to the government. The Orangemen, while celebrating the battle of the Boyne on July 12, 1871, were attacked by the " Ribbonmen " and a riot ensued, which caused the 30 Washington Inaugural Centennial. loss of several lives and was only put down by the militia. The New York and Brooklyn suspension bridge, the construction of which was begun on January 2, 1870, was publicly opened in May, 1883. In the fall of 1873 occurred the great financial panic which began with the failure of Jay Cooke & Co. Great corporations closed their doors and went into bankruptcy. So universal was the lack of confidence felt, that for the first time in the history of the New York Stock Exchange it was forced to suspend all transactions. During several years of this period investigations of the " Tweed ring " were in progress. The arrest, trial and punishment of most of the plun- derers and the death of Tweed in prison formed the conclusion of this scheme to despoil the city. The elevated railroads, which caused so much agitation for a dozen of years, were opened in 1878. Neither the Erie Canal nor the Croton aqueduct encountered more fierce opposition. Property-owners and others contested the right of the corporations to erect trestle works in the streets, and their cases were carried from one court to another for years. Few, if any, of these contestants deny to-day that the " L " roads not only enhanced the value of real estate in the city — especially up-town — that they were, and are, a great public necessity and could not be dispensed with. So with the Broadway street railroad, which was opened in 1885, sometimes known as " Jake Sharp's road." This enterprise aroused the most intense opposition. The history of the "boodle" transactions involved in it, the speedy punishment of some members of the " Aldermanic combine," and the death of Sharp are too fresh in your minds to need detailed narration. And the same is true of the Ward and Fish scandal, which, owing to the prominence of the men involved and its effect, proved an earthquake in Wall street and other financial centres. This account of some of the principal events in the annals of the metrop- olis does not constitute nor comprehend more than a brief outline of its complete history. In order to understand this it would be necessary to com- pare the enlargement and progress of the city in various ways with the history of its domestic and foreign commerce. This would require a volume in itself. It is sufficient for the purpose of this sketch to say that commercial interests originated the settlement of New York, developed its rapid growth, have always directly influenced its changes of fortune, and are now the mainstay of its supremacy among its sister cities and entitle it to be called the Me- tropolis of America. Washington Inaugural Centennial. CUSTOM HOUSE-Wall Street. 32 Washington Inaugural Centennial. VICTORIA HOTEL, FIFTH AVENUE, Broadway and T^wenty-Seventh Streets, NEW YORK. H. L. HOYT & CO., PROPRIETORS. American and European Plan. All Languages Spoken. Th ACING Madison Square, located in the very Centre of the City, within seven minutes of Grand Central Depot, convenient to all Railroads, Steamboat Landings, Theatres, Shopping and Places of Interest. Washington Inaugural Centennial. ss OFFIGIAL PReSRAnME. The complete programme, as arranged by the committee in charge, for the three days' ceremonies and entertainments which have been planned to mark the hundredth anniversary of the inauguration of Washington, is as follows : MONDAY, APRIL 29. The Naval Parade win take place in New York Harbor from ii A. M. to i r. M. /-r\i /-A /-\ • ' r c^j 1 and other guests with ladies invited by the I he Governors, Commissioners oi otates ^ •.. c, . j „ ^ ( J. xi>_ v^v^vv, xa.v^x>_<, ■^w.i.i-ia-.-ix.j,-. v^^v. v^ Committce on States and the members of the General Committee will embark at 9.30 A. m. on the steamer Erastus Wiman at ferry slip foot of West Twenty-third street, New York City, to receive the President and to meet the President's steamer off Elizabethport. Admittance by special blue ticket. ^~ - A • 1 r T-k • ^ A TT • '^nd the Cabinet officers and other officials of On the Arrival of President Harrison distinction, at Elizabethport, at n o'clock Mon- day morning, the party will at once embark for New York city. The President and immediate suite will be received by the Committee on Navy, and under their direction will embark on the President's steamer provided by that committee. /^i Q C* • nnder the management of the Committee on Navy, will receive at Eliza- 1 ne Oteamer OirmS, ^ethport other guests and official personages of the Presidential party who cannot be accommodated on the President's steamer. Admission to steamer Sirius will be by red ticket. The line of United States ships of war, yachts and steamboats will be formed in the Upper Bay under Admiral David D. Porter, U. S. N., as Chief Ma^-shal, and will be reviewed by the President. /^ 4-1-. A ' 1 °^ ^^^ Presidential party in the East river, opposite W^all street, a barge manned Un tne Amvai ^^ ^ ^^^^^, ^^ shipmasters from the Marine Society of the Port of New York, with Capt. Ambrose Snow, president of that society, as coxswain, will row the President ashore. The crew of the barge that rowed President Washington from Elizabethport to the foot of Wall street, were members of the same society. The steamers Erastus Wiman and Sirius, prior to the debarkation of the President, •will land at Pier 16, Wall street, the guests for the reception at the Equitable Building, and proceed with the remaining passengers to West Twenty-third Street Ferry and West Twenty-second street. _^ . .. _^ riTTHcv the President of the United States will be received On Arriving at Foot of Wall btreet ^^ ,j^^ Governor of the state of New York, the Mayor of the city of New York, HamiUon Fish, president of the committee, and William G. Hamilton, chairman of Committee on States. The President and other guests will next be escorted to the Equitable Building, where a reception and collation will be tendered them by the Committee on States. The procession will be formed as follows • Brevet Lieut. -Col. Floyd Clarkson, Marshal. Band Fifth Regiment United States Artillery. Three Foot Batteries, Fifth Regiment, U. S. Artillery. New York Commandery of the Loyal Legion of the United States. Commanders of Posts of the Grand Army of the Republic in Counties of New York and Kings. Cappa's Band. Uniformed Battalion of Veterans Seventh Regiment, N. C, S. N. Y. Uniformed Veteran Militia Associations of New York and Brooklyn. Band of the General Service, U. S. Army. {Coniinued on Page jj.) 34 Washington Inaugural Centennial. -'«• O o o o o o o o o o O o O c3rrcojsr^s5^ CARRIAGES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, HEAVY AND LIG-H T, OPEN AND CLOSED, FOR PARK - AVENUE - ROAD CITY AND COUNTRY PKICES WITHIN THE REACH OF ALL. R. M. STIVERS, 144.146,148. Oil 150,152 Olol EAST, FOUNDED 1850. Bet. 3d & 4th Avs., NEW YORK CITY. o £ O O o o o o o o o I o O O Washington Inaugural Centennial. 35 Society of the Sons of the Revohition. The General Committee of the Centennial Celebration. The Tresident of the United States, the Governor of the State of New York, the Mayor of the city of New York, and Hamilton Fish, president of the committee, flanked by the barge crew from the Marine Society of the Port of New York. Tlie Vice-President of tlie United States and Lieutenant-Governor of the State of New York. The Secretaries of State, Treasury, War and Navy of the United States. The Secretary of the Interior, the Postmaster-General, the Attorney-General and Secretary of Agriculture of the United States. The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. The Associate Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States, and Judges of other Federal Courts. The Governors of States, taking precedence in the order of Admission of their States into the Union. The Official Representation of the Senate of the United States. The Official Representation of the House of Representatives of the United States. The Governors of Territories and President of the Board of Commissioners of the District of Columbia, taking precedence in the order of establishment of their Territorial governments. The Admiral of the Xavy, Gen. Sherman, the Major-General Commanding the Army, and Officers of the Army and Navy who by name have received the thanks of Congress. The Official Representation of the Society of the Cincinnati. The Chief Judge and Judges of the Court of Appeals of the State of New York. The Presiding Justice and Justices of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, and Judges of other Courts of Record within the City of New York. The Legislature of the State of New York. Officers of the State of New York. Judges and Justices of other Courts in the City of New York. The Board of Aldermen of the City of New York. Heads of Departments in the City of New York. Mayor of the City of Brooklyn. The Board of Aldermen of the City of Brooklyn. The Foreign Consuls of New York, and Officers of the Army and Navy of tlie United States. Invited Guests, without special order of precedence. The Distance from the Landing f '^%^°°\ f Wall street to the Equitable Building being '^ but a few blocks, the procession will proceed on foot from the landing at Wall street to the Equitable Building, carriages being only provided for the President and his immediate party. At tlie reception in the Equitable Building the President, with his Cabinet, the Governors of the States, the Governor of the State of New York and the Mayor of the city of Nevv- York will have presented to them the guests, who will pass and bow to the President and party without shaking hands (as was the custom at the reception of Washington in 1789). The reception will last from 2 to 3.30 o'clock. Admission only by buff ticket. /jvi -p , • From 4 to 5.30 o'clock a public reception will be given to the President of the ^ ' United States in -the Governor's room in the City Hall, the President, the Gov- ernor of the State of New York and the Mayor of the city of New York proceeding under military escort. \ i. J.1 Oi- r J.^ r^'i. tt 11 a representation of girls from the public schools will assemble At the bteps of U12 Lity Hall / . ,. t, •, . r ., it •» 1 c. . ^ -^ and welcome the President of the United States. /-pi -T) -i-i 111 the evening at g o'clock the Centennial Ball will l)e given in the Metropolitan Opera House. Tlie following is the programme : Til l\/r °^ '•^^^ '^''y °^ New York, as host and as chairman of tlie Committee on the Centennial -^ Celebration of the Inauguration of George Washington as President of the United States, will arrive at the Metropolitan Opera House at 10.15 P. M., and at 10.30 will receive the President of the United States and other distinguished guests. {Continued on Page j/.) 36 Washington Inaugural Centennial. CELLULOID PELTY GOPIPOHY Sole Manufacturers of GELLtiLOlD GOl^l^ARS # G^f^FS. W, S. SILLCOCKS, President. C. L BALCK, Vice-Presibeht, F, R. LEFFERTS, Secretary and Treasurer. THE WDNQER DF THE AGE. CELLULOID (LiHEN) COLLARS AND CUFFS. They are soft and pliable, defy perspiration, and can be worn without change for months. They are the only linen goods made, covered with a Waterproof material. No laundering required when soiled ; simply wipe off with soap and water, and they are ready again for wear. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS— THEY ARE WORTHLESS. ALL GENUINE GOODS HAVE OUR TRADE MARK. TRADE ElLUiOiO MARK. Accept no Goods without this Trade Mark. All First-Class Gents' Furnishing and Dry Goods Houses keep the Goods. CELLULOID NOVELXY CO., (wholesale only.) 313 and 315 BROADWAY, N. Y. Washington Inaugural Centennial. 2)7 T^lie President " '^^ ^"^ brought to the ball by the chairman of the Committee on Entertainment, ac- companied by the Governor of the State of New York and Mrs. Harrison, the Vice- President and Mrs. Morton, the Lieutenant-Governor and Mrs. Jones. n^llP T\/ra"naD"er of tlie T^a ^^''^ meet the President at his carriage and conduct him into the ° ''uilding, where the formal reception by the Mayor will take place. After the reception the guests above named will be conducted to the floor in the following order, escorted liy a guard of honor : The iNIayor. The President. The Governor. The Vice-President and Mrs. Harrison. The Lieutenant-Governor and Mrs. Morton. The President of the General Committee and Mrs. Jones. 'T^Jip Prespntpfinn ^'^ front of the President's box the chairman of the Committee on Entertain- ment will present to the President the chairman of the Executive Committee and the members of the Committee on Entertainment and of the Committee on Plan and Scope. After the presentation the opening quadrille will be formed by the manager of the ball. At IVfirl-nio'lit ''^^ President and party will be escorted in the above order to the supper-room, which ^ order will be observed on returning. The serving of wine will cease at i A. M., in compliance with the law. TUESDAY, APRIL 30. Op«-.r^.Jppq; ^.-T 'p'hnTiTr'JcriAnno' P'^^^'^i^'^'^ ^'^ f^'^s proclamation of the President, will be held in the " ^' churches in New York and throughout the country at g A. M., being the hour at which religious services were held in New York city on April 30, 1789. A Special Ser^dce of Thanksgiving will be held in St. Paul's Chapel at 9 o'clock, which J. <:3 c:) j-jjg President and other distmguished guests will attend. This service will be conducted by the Right Rev. Henry C. Porter, D.I)., LL.D., Bishop of New York, as the service on the day of Washington's Inauguration in 17S9 was conducted by the Bishop of New York, the Right Rev. Samuel Provoost. Admission only by lavender ticket. /-pi On-t-nmiffp'P' "^ ^^^ Vestry of Trinity Church will meet the President at the Vesey street gate and escort him to the west porch of the Chapel, where he will be receivetl by the rector and the full vestry. The Presitlent will then be escorted to the Washington pew, and on his with- drawal from the Chapel the \'estry will escort him to the west purch, where he will be received by the Committee on Literary Exercises at the \'esey street gate. The Services at St. Paul's Chapel nv iu be as follows ; 1. Processional Hymn. 7. Benedicite. 2. Our Father, etc. S. Creed and Prayers. 3. Psalm Ixxxv. . g. Address by the Right Rev. Henry C. Potter, 4. First Lesson, Eccles. xliv. Bishop of New York. 5. Te Deum. 10. Recessional Hymn. 6. Second Lesson, St. John viii. The Literary Exercises.— -^\^^^ '''''' f ^'" religious services at 9.45 a. m. the President •^ and party will proceed to the Sub-Ireasury building, at the corner of ^Vall and Nassau streets, the scene of the Inauguration ceremony on April 30, I78g, \\ here the literary exercises will take place. These exercises will begin at 10 A. M., and will consist of an invocation by the Rev. Richards. Storrs, D.D., LL.D.; a poem by John Greenleaf Whittier ; an oration by Chauncey Mitchell Depew, LL.D.; an address by the President of the United States, and the benediction by the Rev. Michael Augustine Corrigan, Archbishop of New York. (Continued on Page jg.) 38 Washington Inaugural Centennial. HOTEL SX MHRC FIFTH AVENae, 3Stln aiicl 39tU Streets, Nexv York:. J. ALONZO NUTTER. ^Lmei'ican I'lan, $4 to $5 jter day. European I'lan, $1.50 per day. Q(:ad(?ny of ^usie, / Irvii:it^ Place and. l^^tla St. S5c., 30c. f 75c. and $1, GILMORE & TOMPKINS, Proprietors and Managers. DENMAN THOMPSON — IN — THE OLD HOMESTEAD. >octoi<'^23dgiTheati'B, NEAR SIXTH AVENUE. A.bsolutely Fireproof and Safe, PROCTOR & TURNER, Proprietors and Managers. NEIL BdRGESS*- — 1.\ THE — •^•eoaNTY FAIR. PRICES, 25c„ 50c„ 75c,, Sl.OO, $1.50, H. C. shannon, M.\NAGER. FIFTH JWENUE, « NEWYORK^ Washington Inaugural Centennial. 39 ^\^P' Porcjrl^ '^^ ^^^ conclusion of tlie literary exercises the President and members of the Cabinet, the Chief Justice and Associate Justices of the United States will be driven to the reviewing stand at Madison Square to review the parade. Other guests will be carried to the reviewing stands by a special train on the Third Avenue Elevated Railroad, which will start from Hanover Square and run to the Twenty-third street station. While the literary exercises are taking place the military will move from the head of Wall street and Broadway. The column, under Major- General John M. Schofield, U. S. A., as Chief Marshal, will be composed of the Cadets from the Military Academy of West Point, the Naval Cadets from Annapolis, the troops of the Regular Army and Navy and the National Guard of each State in the order in which the States ratified the Constitution or were admitted into, the Union. These will be followed by the Military Order of the Loyal Legion and the posts of the Grand Army of the Republic. The Route of the Procession ^vill be up Broadway to Waverly place, through Waverly place to Fifth avenue, thence up tifih avenue to 1" if ty-seventh street. The reviewing stand will be on the east side of Fifth avenue on Madison square, extending from Twenty-third to Twenty-sixth streets. The other stands will be as follows • 1. On the west side of Fiftli avenue, from Twenty-fourth to Twenty-sixth streets. 2. On the west side of Fifth avenue, from Fortieth to Forty-second streets. 3. On the north side of Washington square. 4. On the east side of Broadway at the City liall Park. "The Centennial Banquet win take place at the Metropolitan Opera House at 6.30 P. M. Apl r^ , At 8 P. M. there will be, at the reviewing stand, Madison square, a free, open-air concert of vocal and instrumental music, under the auspices of the German- Americans of New York, It is estimated that over 2000 singers will sing in this concert. The singing will be led by Theodore Thomas, and R. Schmeelt will conduct the l)and, which will consist of seventy-five to one hundred men. The concert will last from 8 till 10 o'clock, after which fireworks will be displayed. Weber's "Jubilee Oratorio " has been added to the programme, and the " Star Spangled Banner" and " Hail Columbia" will be played with the expectation that everyone will join in. -p^ . 4-1 Th^ * there will be a general illumination of the city and display of fireworks, o ^ the programme of which will be found on page 41. AA^EDNESDAY, MAY 1. The Industrial and Civic Parade, ^l^^^^^^'''^^^^^^! Major-Gen Daniel Butterfidd, late ' U. S. vols.. Chief Marshal, will take place. 1 he line of march will be from Fifty-seventh street down Fifth avenue to Waverly place, up V^averly place to Broadway, and down Broadway to Canal street. ,^ ,^ .,..,. . The formal opening of the Loan Exhibition of Historical Portraits I he IvOan i^xnibltlOn. j^,.,^ Relics will take place in the Assembly Rooirs of the ]\Ietro- politan Opera House on Wednesday, April 17, at 8.30 P. M. The Loan Exhibition will be open to the public on Thursday. April 18, and remain open from 10 A. .M. to 6 P. M., and from 7 P. M. to 10 p. M., day and evening. Admission fee, 50 cents. The Exhibition will remain open until Weilnesday, May 8, at which time the closing ceremonies will be held. Officers of the .\rmy and Navy and jjcrsons occupying official positions are requested to appear in full uniform. 40 Washington Inaugural Centennial. 1789. EVERYBOBY WILL ]gg9, TO CELEBRATE THE ■^iCENTENNIALi^ OF THE INADGOMTIOI OF 01 FIRST PRESIDENT. TO MAKE IT EFFECTIVE, \ USK THK Illuminating Torches, ^ Colored Illuminating Torches, ^ ^ Colored Illuminating Fires, Lanterns, Flags, Streamers, Burgees, &c., &c. Flag- Poles, all Sizes ; Largest Stock in the City. OV7R rse^A^ IL.L^U7V^IN7^T^ING OURS For W^indows, Inside or Outside, La^vns, Boats, &c. No Danger of Fire nor Dropping of Grease. The Effect is like " Fairy Land ! " •»• FIREWORKS •»• OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, AND ALL KINDS OF CELEBRATION GOODS, AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. XHE UNKXCELLBO FIRE^VORKS CO., 9 and 1 1 Park Place, New York City. AS PTROTECHNISTS TO THE CENTENNIAL INAUGURATION OF WASHINGTON, WE HAVE BEEN AWARDED THE LARGEST CONTRACT THAT HAS BEEN GIVEN SINCE 1789, Washington Inaugural Centennial. 41 PropuQiDe of PyroteclmiG Display. THE display of fireworks, on the evening of April 30, will be, most probably, the grandest ever given in this country. Exhibitions will be made at the following places, and as each display will be but slightly dif- ferent from the rest, the set pieces being similar, we need only give the list of pieces at the principal display. The Committee have been fortunate in securing the services of the Unexcelled Fireworks Company, whose reputation, as one of the largest firms of its kind in the world, will insure the most magnificent and successful pyrotechnic exhibition ever held in the city. BATTERY PARK, at the southern extremity of the city, terminus of all elevated railroads 1. Opening Salute of Aerial Maroons. 2. Grand Ruby Illumination. 3. Grand Emerald Illumination. 4. Grand Prismatic Illumination. 5 Display of Kaleidescopic Batteries. 6. Display of Combination Cross-fire Batteries. 7. Weeping Willow Rockets. 8. Twin Asteroids. 9. Rockets, with Prize Cometic and Changing Stars. 10. Rockets, with Shooting Stars and Parachutes. 11. Harlequinade and Cornucopia Rockets. 12. Rockets of Rockets. 13. Rockets, with Jeweled Streamers and Golden Rain. 14. Display of E.xhibition Rockets — new and pleasing effects. 15. Grand Display of Large Special Rockets — all de- signs and colors. 16. Flight of Unexcelled Fiery Whirlwinds. 17. Grand Flight of Aerial Bombs, or Rocket Salutes. 18. Unexcelled Great Aerial Bouquet of 500 Colored Rockets — exploding simultaneously. ig. Grand Flight of Floral Shells, filling the air with Colored Stars. 20. Display of Unexcelled Large Floral Bombshells. 21. Volcanic Eruption, or Unexcelled Chambered Mines. 22. Flight of Fiery Serpents, hissing and squirming in the air. 23. Grand Flight of Largest Floral Shells, studding the Heavens with Gold and Colored Jewels 24. Unexcelled Bombshells — Parachutes, Trailed Stars, Serpents, Gold and Silver Rain, Duration Stars, Colored Jewels, etc., etc. 25. Japanese Shell Display (large)— Golden Serpents, Dragons, Tinted Cloud, Japanese Spiders, Thunder Cloud and Moon, etc , etc. 26. Unexcelled Bombshell Display — Mammoth Spread- ers, Stars and Gold Rain, Dragons, Comets, Red and Blue Meteors, Showers of Pearls, Changing Planetary Stars, etc., etc. 27. Japanese Shells (largest size)— Aladdin's Lamp, Hanging Links and Falling Dew, Chrysan- themums and Stars (all colors). Shooting Comets, Brilliant Sunburst, etc., etc. 28. Unexcelled Mammoth Shells — Aerial Acre of Varie- gated Gems, containing all effects known to the art and spreading over an immense area. 29. Unexcelled Fireworks Balloons (largest size), bear- ing aloft Trails of Fireworks, and discharging in their flight many beautiful effects. 30. Aerial Menagerie— Pigs, Fish, Lions, Elephants, Dogs, Cats, Birds, Comic Figures, etc. SET THE YEW TREE." TREE OF LIBERTY." PERUVIAN CROSS." CENTENNIAL POLKA." AMERICAN CROSS." ■ SPARKLING CASCADE." 'CENTENNIAL WHEEL"— 100 wheels within a wheel. PIECES. "DAZZLING DIAMOND." '■ BEAUTIFUL FIRE PICTURE OF THE FALLS OF NIAGAR,\ ■' " STATUE OF GEORGE WASHINGTON " taking the oath of office as first President of the United States, surrounded by brilliant Sun Fires and Colored Stars of the Union. Finale— "FEU DE JOIE." OTHER DISPLAYS WILL BE GIVEN >3^T: UNION SQUARE, between Broadway and Fourth avenue and 14th and 17th streets. WASHINGTON SQUARE, between West 4th street and Waverly Place and Macdouj University Place. TOMPKINS SQUARE, between Avenues A and B and 71I1 and lotli streets, 3IOUNT MORRIS SQUARE, Fifth avenue, 120th to 124th streets. CENTRAL PARK PLiAZA, sgth street and Eighth avenue. CANAL STREET SQUARE, junction of Canal and West streets. WASHINGTON HEIGHTS, i7Sth street, near Hudson River. EAST RIVER PARK, foot of East 86th street. TWENTY-THIRD Tl^ARD, Boston Road and Third avenue. TWENTY-FOURTH WARD, Webster avenue and Burnside RoacL al street and 42 Washington Inaugural Centennial. <^^ ^V \^^ %> <^ cT A' THE OHSOMERS COAL CO, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, Head Office, 640 Sixth Avenue, NEW YORK. TRUSTEES : Maj.-Gen. Daniel E. Sickles, S. N. Hyde, Paul Coster. Henry Dexter. C. STEWART SCHENCK, President. JilCLirJEJtlJES ST TBI: TOX OR CARGO. Washington Inaugural Centennial. 43 f\ QpT)\j((r)\eY)t ar)d Jrustuyortt^y Quid<^ to J\fom $1 to f 3 per day is a fair estimate at a good house. For suites, comprising sitting-room, bed-room and bath, from $20 to $50 per week is a fair average price. At hotels on the American plan, breakfast, lunch, dinner (both at mid-day and at night), tea at night for those who dine at mid-day, and supper until midnight are the meals set by the most expensive. At all of them at least three meals a day are served. The prices range from $3 to $5 per day; but these prices merely represent a basis upon which higher prices are computed for rooms of extra size, number and location. A few hints in regard to matters common to all hotels may be of service to the visitor in our city at the present time. When a stay of several weeks or months at an hotel is contemplated, a considerable re- duction from the regular rates can always be obtained. The understanding to that effect should be had, however, immediately upon your arrival. Attendance, ice-water, gas and towels are always included in the price of the room or the rate per day; but baths and meals served in rooms are usually charged as extras. Telegraph offices, railway and theatre-ticket offices, barber-shops, news-dealers and boot-blacks are to be found in or near the office of all first-class hotels. No signs are displayed on the front of the hotels of the better class, except in an inconspicuous place over the main entrance. The following list comprises all of the principal hotels in the city, with their location and plan; and visitors will find it to their advantage to stop at one of these hotels during their sojourn in our city, as they can be sure of receiving every comfort and attention possible, without being disagreeably crowded, as will be the case in almost all of the smaller and less prominent hotels. Pibefnarle |10Cel, Broadway, Fifth avenue and Twenty-fourth street. E. P. $2.00 per day and upwards. See illustration on opposite page. Janvrin & Walter, Proprietors. HSplar^d pOiJ56, 215 I^ourth avenue, corner Twenty-fourth street. Am. and European Plan. H. II. Brockway. Proprietor. PStOr pOiJ$^, Broadway, Barclay and Vesey streets. E. P. $l.OO per day and upwards. F. T. Allen. Proprietor. Barrett j^OiJSe, Broadway and Forty-third streets. E. P. $1.50 per day and upwards. Barrett Bros, Proprietors, B^IU<^dere |iOiJS<^, Fourth avenue and Eighteenth street. E. P. Joseph Wehrle, Proprietor. BreUOOrt t^OiJS<^, n Fifth avenue. E. P. B. Lip.ijey, Proprietor. 48 Washington Inaugural Centennial. BLl<^\{\[)(^\)3(r\, I^Q, Fifth avenue and Fiftieth street E. P. Wetherbee & Fuller, I'roprietors. QafBbrid^e, Jl^e, iMfih avenue and Thirty-second street. E. P. Lorenz Reich, Proprietor. Qlari^^dO^ f^Otel, l-Ourth avenue and Eighteenth street. Am. and E. P. C. FI. Kerner, Pro- prietor. <$0l(^ma9 )HOiJ$e, nroadw.ay, Twenty-seventh and Twenty-eighth streets. E. P. $i.oo per day and upwards. James H. Rodgers, Proprietor. \p\0riV}2QQ JHotel, p,roadway and Lafayette place. F:. P. |i.oo per day and upwards. J. M. OriER, Manager. ([^09^1969^31 j^Otel, Broadway and Twentieth street. E. P. fi.oo per day and upwards. E. F. MKkKiFiELi), Proprietor. EU6r6CC pOiJ52, Fourth avenue and Seventeenth street. Union Square. E. P. See advertisement on page 46. J. G. Weaver, Jr., & Co., Proprietors. pij^tt^ Pue9^<^ f^Oti^l, liroadway. Fifth avenue. Twenty-third and Twenty-fourth streets. Am. P. Hitchcock, Darling ^V Co., Proprietors. (4(^09^7 jlOUSB, Broadway and Fortieth street. European Plan. $1.00 per day and upwards. P.KIKHI l\; De Klyn, Proprietors. (4115'^y yOiJS<^, Broadway and Twenty-ninth street. E. P. $2.00 per day and upwards. J. IF Breslin & Bro., Proprietors. (jra9d f^Otel, Broadway and Thirty-lirst street. E. P. !|i.50 per day and upwards. Henry MiLi-ORD Smith & Son, Proprietors. Qr3T)d Qe9tral |iOt(^I, 667 to 677 Broadway. Am. Plan I2.50 to $3.50 per day and E. P. $1.00 per day and upwards. Fayman .X: Spragl'e, Proprietors. V4ra9^ U9IO9 P^^^M P'orty-second street and Fourth avenue, directly opposite the Grand Central Depot. P^. P. $1.00 per day and upwards. W. D. Garrison, Manager. |H0jj/T\a9 l)OiiSQ, Broadway and Twenty-fifth street, Madison Square. E. P. $2.00 per day and upwards. C. H. Read & Co., Proprietors. pOCSl DarCpOlal, Broadway and Twenty-third street, opposite Madison Square. E. P. See ad- vertisement on page 72. Bartholdi Hotel Co , Proprietors. R. Stafford, President. jHOtel BrU9Sll/IGl(, Fifth avenue, Twenty-si.xth and Twenty-seventh streets. Am. and E. P. MncHF.i.L, KiNZLER & SouTiiGATE, Proprietors. J1OC6I QlG993n\> Fifth avenue between Twenty-first and Twenty-second streets. E. P. N. B. Bakry, Proprietor. )40t^l jNlOr/Ha9dl(^, Broadway and Thirty-eightii street. E. P. $2.00 per day and upwards. Ferdinand P. Earle, Proprietor. Washington Inaugural Centennial. 49 jiOCei ]^C. /I\are, Fifth avenue, Thirty-eighth and Thirty-nhUh streets. Am. plan, I4.00 to $5.00 per day. Also E. plan, $1.50 j^er day and upwards. See advertisement on page 38. J. Alonzo Nutter, Proprietor. jHOtel Sl7elbar9, Fifth avenue and Thirty-sixth street. E. P. Plinn Pros., Proprietors. jlOCel \JQrj60f(\Q, Proadway and Forty-tirst street. Am. P. Isaac Steinfeld, Manager. jiOl(^l luSllip^COIJ, Madison avenue and Forty-second .street. Am. P. Oscar \'. Pitman, Proprietor. (ai^^pam, ope, Fifth avenue and Fifty-second street. Am. P. See illustration on page 38. II. C. Shannon, INIanager. /r\etrOpOllCa9 PO^*^'' Broadway and Prince .street. Am. P. $3.00 per day. J- M. Otter, Manager. /l\iJrray plU pOtel, Park avenue, between Fortieth and Forty-first streets, near CJrand Central Depot. Am. and E. P. Hunting & Hammond, Proprietors. fiQUJ YOrl^ pOCel, ^21 Proadway. Am. and E. P. Henry Cranston, Proprietor. Parl^ f{\jeY)ae JHOtel, Park avenue and Thirty-tliird street. Am. P. I3.50 per day. J. M. Otter, Manager. l-^OSS/T^Ore pOiel, Broadway, Forty-first and Forty-second streets. E. P. Also Am. P., f 3.00 to $3.50 per day. CIeorge T. Putney & Co., Proprietors. ^C. U^lylS jlOt^l, Broadway and Eleventh street. pAiropean Plan. $1.00 jier day and upwards. William Taylor, IVoprietor. ^C. janie5 pOC^I, Broadway and Twenty-sixth street. E. P. William M. Connor, Proprietor. operU/OOd, 696, Fifth avenue and Forty-fourth street. Am. P. Murray ^; Nulter, Proprietors. ^Iyv,ldir l^OLl^Q, Broadway, corner Eighth street. pAirojiean Plan. $1.00 per day and ujjwards. A. L. Ashman & Sox, Proprietors. otiJrC^iyaQC pOiJS^, Broadway, between Twenty-eighth and Twenty-ninth streets. Am. and E. P. Matthews ^; Pierson, Proprietors. UT)\0T) SCjUari? JHOtel a9d jdOtel Da/n, Fifteenth street and Union Square. E. P. Dam & De Revere, Proprietors. t/lGCOna p0l6l, Fifth avenue, Broadway and Twenty-seventh street. Am. and ¥.. P. See advertisement on page 32. H. L. Hoyt i\; Co., Proprietors. U/^5^'^'9^^^'' pOtel, Irving place and Sixteenth street. .\m. P. W. G. .SCHENCK, Proprietor. *^'9 5'^'^ Y ' Fifth avenue, Forty-sixth and Forty-seventh streets, near the Grand Central Depot. Am. P. Hawk & Wetherbee, Proprietors. 50 Washington Inaugural Centennial. iJ ESTABLISHED 1831. OHp ^TEpHEN^OW GOMpAMY, LIMITED, 47 East 27th St., NEiA£ ■» YORK, Jra/T)-(^ar+Builders. Street, Cable, Electric, Nlotor CMRS OF EVERY VARIETY, WITH LATEST IMPROVEMENTS, ADAPTED TO ALL SYSTEMS. LIGHT, ELEGANT, aURABLE. SUPPLIES OF ALL KINDS, OF BEST QUALITY, AT MINIMUM PRICES. Washington Inaugural Centennial. 51 mkh MODES OF gONVEYlNgE, PTrPVAmPn K>ATT,K>nAnc: '■^"'^^'' §^"'"S about easy and rapid in New York city, which, being OLil:. V AU'tiU i^AiLti^UAUlD iQj^g ^,^j narrow, makes distances great. There are four of these roads, viz : The Second, Third, Sixth and Ninth Avenue " L" lines. All of them extend the length of the city, and start from South Ferry, which is at the extreme lower end. One branch of the Third avenue line runs to and from the City Hall and Brooklyn Bridge to Chat- ham square, where it joins the main line. Another branch runs through 42d street to the Grand Central Depot. Another branch on the Third and Second avenue lines, runs from the 34th street station to the 34th street Ferry. All the lines have stations at 42d street, within easy distance of the Grand Central Depot. The speed of the trains is about fifteen miles an hour. FARE. — The fare on all the elevated roads is Jive cents, with no extra charges for transfers to the branch lines. STREET RAILWAYS. There are over forty lines of horse cars in the city, nearly all of which are equipped with elegant and easy riding cars manufactured by the celebrated car building firm, the John Stephenson Co., whose cars are now used on many of the largest street railways in different parts of the world. Space Dermits us to mention only a few of the principal ones. BROAD WA Y LINE, from the Battery, up Broadway to 45th street, and thence up Seventh avenue to Central Park (sgth street). MADISON A VENUE LIN'E, from Post-ofiice to Fourth avenue, up Fourth avenue to Madison avenue, to 138th street. THIRD A VENUE LINE, from Post-ofiice to Third avenue, and up Third avenue to Harlem. SIXTH A VENUE LINE, from Broadway and Vesey street to Sixth avenue, and up Sixth avenue to Central Paric (59th street). BELT LIiVE. from Battery along the East river front to 59th street, across 59th street, and down to Battery again on North river front (west side). This line passes all ferries, steamboat and steamship docks. CROSS-TO IVN LIN'ES cxosii the city from river to river at Canal street, Grand street, Houston street, 14th street. 23d street, 42d street, 59th street and 125th street. BOULEVARD LINE, from 34th street Ferry, E. R., to First avenue, to42d street, passes through 42d street to the Western boulevard, to Riverside Park and General Grant's tomb. FARE. — The fare on all the lines is five cents. Omnr'pcr There is now but one line of stages (or omnibuses) in the city. The route is from the corner of South Fifth avenue and Bleecker street up Fifth avenue to 72d street. These stages, or coaches, are a great improvement over the "buses" used for so many years in New York. They are handsome in appearance, are drawn by large, well-kept horses, and the drivers are neatly uniformed. There are seats for twelve persons inside and six on top. A ride the full length of this line, known as the " Fifth avenue coaches," is strongly recommended, as it leads through a most superb part of the city. Ladies frequently ride on top, and there is no impropriety in so doing. FARE. — The fare is five cents. ^ABS AND Carriages. before hiring a cab or carriage, be sure to make an exact agree- ^ ' ment with the driver as to the charge. Fares are high, but the driver will often try to get more than is legally due him ; and a wrangle is apt to ensue unless a bar- gain is made beforehand. I5ANS0MS, OR Open LiANDAU ^ABS l^^ve become very popular. It is easy to get ' ' ^ m and out, and the passenger has an unm- terrupted view. A pleasant way of seeing the city is to hire one of these vehicles by the hour, and be driven through the principal streets. By applying at any of the hotel offices, cabs or carriages with trust- worthy drivers may be obtained at the regular rates, and no trouble will be had. 5 2 Washington Inaugural Centennial PUBLIC BUILDINGS, ETC. 'ITII few exceptions, the public buildings of the city are not imposing or elegant. Most of them, built many years ago, suffer by contrast with the magnificent commercial edifices which have more recently been erected. The most important of our public buildings are named below : w cr /• /^-C-R' ^''^ Wall street, just east of Nassau, is the oldest building on the street, having been /iSSciy VjrilCS ^^^-^^^ ^^j. ^j^^ united States Branch Bank, in 1823. Here gold and silver are brought in the crude state, and assayed, refined, and cast into Ijars, to be made into coin elsewhere. As high as |ioo,ooo,oco in bullion is sometimes assayed here in a year. Here may be seen $50,000,000 or more, stacked up in shining gold bricks. Visitors are admitted between 10 A. M. and 2 P. M., and shown the various processes of assaying. ^ 4,T r^ J '^ ^'^ the extreme southern end of the city, in the Battery Park. It is open to visit- V^cIljLIC' ^CliUvili QJ.JJ ^j. jiA. M. As it is the gateway of America to hundreds of thousands of immi- grants, it has a deep interest for all citizens. Of the 10,000,000 foreigners who have landed in our country in the past century, the majority have passed through this portal. Entering the enclosure, we see the fine old brown-stone ramparts of Castle Clinton, with its walled-up embrasures. The National Government built this fortress in 1807, and gave it to the city in 1823 ; and here were held the great popular recep- tions to Andrew Jackson (1832), President Tyler (1843), and Lafayette (1824). In later days it became a fashionable opera house, where the grand voices of Sontag, Mario, Parodi and Jenny Lind were heard. In 1855 the immigrant depot was established here, for the reception of incomers from Europe, who find I'.ere their friends or letters, reliable boarding-house- keepers, railroad tickets for the West, physicians for the sick, cheap, plain food, protection and shelter. It is a most interesting sight when a steamship load of Italian or German immigrants are debarked here, with their strange baggage and appurtenances. ry'i^ f tJkTT ^'^ the City Hall Park, was erected in 1803, in what was then the outskirts of the city. VviLj( jlClXi; It is of white marble, built in the Italian style; the back being of brown stone, as the authorities, eighty years ago, fancied that the town would never grow beyond it. The governor's room contains the desk on which Washington wrote his first message to Congress, the chair in which he was inaugurated, many historical portraits, and other objects of interest. A movement is now under way to build a new City Hall. ri M r Cy 4iTJ ^'''°'^ Chambers street, near Broadway. It is a white marble building, WUU.iiljt ^ULLJ. L JXVJU.iSC' jj^ (.|^g Corinthian style, chiefly interesting as being the most costly build- ing of its size ever erected. It was built in 1869-70, during the reign of William M. Tweed, the leader of the New York " ring," when the city debt increased nearly $50,003,000. Most of this amount was alleged to have been expended on this building. But the lion's share of it came back in the form of " rebates " and " commissions " to the guileless William and his associates. He afterwards died at Blackwell's Island. The Court House stands in the City Hall Park. ry i. tT on W'all street, at the corner of William street, is a large and sombre pile of ^ ^ L J IVJUO&j (^uincy granite. The portico is supported by eighteen granite columns tliirty-eight feet high and four and a half feet in diameter, cut in one piece. The rotunda is a beautiful and lofty round hall, surrounded by pilasters of variegated marble. The Custom House cost $1,800,000. tJ'/vVi 75 'Ar*n l^y which the Croton .\queduct is carried across the Harlem River, at 175th street, jAigii JOiiUgC; ji^ cast-iron pipes 7^ x 8^ feet in size, is a very picturesque and noble stone struc- ture of thirteen arches, over 100 feet above the river, and 1400 feet long. There is a footpath over the bridge, and a lofty stand-pipe at one end. Washington Inaugural Centennial. 53 Jefferson-Marl^et Court and Prison 1:JT::Z!I ^I'Z::t.:ij::: ZZl stone, in Lombardo-Gothic architecture. At one corner is a fine round tower, of graceful and effective proportions. T nrfloTflr C;4iT7Cf(7^ TttT ^^^^ Essex Market and Grand street, is a massive big structure for LiUCLiOyi/ puree U Jali, j}ei-,toi.s. United States prisoners, and derelict militiamen. Among its guests have been Tweed, Connolly, Fish, Ward, and other notorious politicians and financiers of New York. T^r *,-.-/• "VhTTr^ Wallabout Bay, Brooklyn. (Cross Fulton Ferry, and take horse-cars.) The JVa jf J ■ principal naval station of the country. The yard contains an enormous stone dry- dock (built at a cost of $2,000,000), a museum, a library, and a number of venerable vessels-of-war of an obsolete and now wholly useless type. The great Marine Barracks and Marine Hospital are worthy of notice ; and also the parks of artillery, including many trophy-guns, captured in battle, from Mexican and other foes. In the British prison-ships moored in \Yallabout Bay, 11,500 American's died during the Revolutionary war. They are buried near by. r)-.„i, /<>f.C4/-r/y ^^ ''^^ junction of Broadway and Park Row, is an immense triangular building of Dix- ' Island (Maine) granite, which cost nearly $7,000,000, and was finished in 1S75. Over 600,000,000 letters, newspapers, etc., are handled here annually. The office yields a profit, annually, of nearly $3,000,000, and is the largest in the United States. "Oai^irfhriyi^r-i ^•R-R'T /^/T J"^*" ^^^^ '^^ ^^^ ^'''^ Hall, was the British provost prison during the Revolu- V & Viii^Cj jJQj-iai-y war, where many patriots were confined. ments, and a militia brigade is a gray stone building with turrets, at Seventh avenue and Thirty-fifth street, the headquarters of the State Ordnance and Quartermaster's Depart- (^ T /t' _,. _/■ ^^ the corner of Wall and Nassau streets, a noble Doric Iniilding of white granite, fU u Ji 1 c>a.i2 U.1 j( ; covers the spot where Washington was inaugurated President. Here the City Hall was built in 1700, with the cage, whipping-post, pillory and stocks in front. The first United States Congress under the Constitution met here, when it was named Federal Hall ; and for some years it was the State Capitol. The present building was erected and long used for the Custom House. On its roof four pieces of light artillery are kept, and riflemen guard the premises at night. It contains vaults for the storage of gold and silver coin, notes, etc. On the granite steps in front stands a colossal bronze statue of Washington, by J. <). A. Ward. The pedestal contains the stone on which Washington stood when he took the oath of office. There is an impressive classic portico facing Broad street. fri 7 the popular name given to the city prison, occupies the block bounded by Centre, Elm, ^ ' Leonard and Franklin streets, and is a large and gloomy granite building in the pure Egyptian style. The hanging of criminals takes place here. Visitors are admitted on a[iplication at the office of the Commissioners of Charity and Corrections, corner of Third avenue and Eleventh street. Sometimes more than 500 prisoners are incarcerated within these frowning walls — murderers, incendiaries, burglars, thieves, and all their horrid crew. The murderers'cells are of especial strength. The building dates from 1838. and holds prisoners awaiting trial, and convicts waiting to be executed, or sent to the State prison. The Special Sessions and Tombs Police Court are held here. On this site in ancient times rippled the blue waters of a pretty lake, around which the Indians built their wigwams. The Dutch found their mounds of shells here, and named the place Kalk-IIook, or Lime-shell Point, which degenerated into " The Collect." It was near the pond on this site, in the year 1626, that three of Minuit's farm hands murdered a Wecktiuaesgeek Indian, who was bringing his furs down to sell. His young nephew escaped, and afterwards led the Indians in disastrous and vengeful forays on the colony. Knox's American infantry marched in to the Fresh-water Pond, and sat here in the long grass, while the British army was embarking from New York, in 1783. Here, in 1796, occurred the first trial of a steamboat with a screw propeller, John Fitch's invention. 54 Washington Inaugural Centennial. \o\}T) f\. I^oebli9(^'s Sops ?o. IRON, STEEL >^" COPPER For Mines, Inclines, Elevators, &c, felvaiiized Rope for Kuys and Slip Rigging, BRIDGE CABLES. HAWSER ROPES. ROPES FOR STREET CABLE ROADS. VsLl RE PLAIN AND BARBED FENCE WIRE; TELEGRAPH V/IRE; SPRING WIRE AND ALL OTHER KINDS OF AVIRE. ELECTRIC LIGHT WIRE, MAGNET WIRE AND COVERED ELECTRIC WIRES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, A.VII?E CLOTH. WII^E NETTING. FIRE-PRDDF WIRE LATHING. JOHN ^. I^OEBLING'S 30NS CO.. NEW YORK OFFICE AND WAREHOUSE, 1 17 AND 1 19 LIBERTY ST. H. L, SHIF'F'Y, Secretary. Washington Inaugural Centennial. 55 ihe Qpeat East i^ner Bridge.- This is one of the most magnificent and enduring structures the world has ever known ; it may in fact be said to be the very acme of perfection in bridge building, for even in its smallest detail, is observable — to the eye of the expert — the most striking evidence of the master-mind that conceived and created it, and this is but a scant eulogy to bestow upon Mr. John A. Roebling, the original designer, who died from injuries received in tie commencement of the work, or on Col. W. A. Roebling, its chief engineer and constructor ; who, during all the years devoted to its construction, and through all the trials and vicissitudes incident to the completion of so stupendous an undertaking, was indefatigable in the prosecu- tion of his labors, sparing himself neither work nor pain, but watching its gradual growth with that keen interest that a parent feels for its offspring. In fact, so wedded was he to his undertaking, and so constant and unremitting in his personal attendance to every detail, that his health finally became impaired therebv, and when, after thirteen years of labor and anxiety, this giant project became, by its completion, an established fact, Mr. Roebling gracefully retired from his labors with the remark " I am satisfied." Upon the resignation of Mr. Roebling, about ten days previous to the public opening of the bridge. Mr. C. C. Martin was appointed chief engineer and superintendent, wliich position he still retains, discharging his onerous duties with marked ability, having earned alike the commendation of the trustees and the gratitude of the traveling public. The construction of the bridge was commenced on January 3, 1870. The first wire was run across from tower to tower, on May 29, 1877, and the structure thrown open to public travel on May 25, 1883. Thus it will be seen that the time consumed in building this giant bridge was over thirteen years, and the total cost was fifteen millions of dollars. The total length of the bridge is 59S9 feet ; its width is eighty-five feet ; the length of the river span is 1595/4 feet, while the length of each land span is 930 feet, and the New York and Brooklyn " approaches " 1362^ feet and 971 feet respectively. The clear height of the bridge, in the centre of the river span above high water mark, is 135 feet, and total height of the towers above high water is 272 feet. The official report shows that during the year ending December, 1888, the number of passengt rs who passed over the bridge were 33,116,816. The bridge is equipped with an efficient police force, comprising one captain, one sergeant, three roundsmen and ninety policemen. 56 Washington Inaugural Centennial. (^OMMERCmL gUILi^INGS. ^^ FEW years ago, if a man wished to become a hermit, lie would take an office on the fourth or fifth ^1 story of a building. No one would ascend to such dizzy heights, save an occasional daring book f ' agent, who, when he got there, w-ould be too short of breath to explain his mission, or offer more than the feeblest opposition to his ejectment. The introduction of the passenger elevator has revolutionized this, and led to the construction of immensely lofty buildings for business purposes. Now the greater the altitude, the more desirable the accommodation. An ofHce upon the tenth or twelfth story of one of these buildings is light, cool, airy and quiet, and as easy of access as if nearer the ground. Equitable Building. JC/QlUinDlC JwUUOtn^, on Broadway, between Cedar and Pine streets, was finished in 1887, and is a marvelous structure of Quincy granite, solid and fireproof as a rock, and with four imposing facades, abounding in pillars and carvings. The high-arched Broadway entrance, twenty-two feet wide, leads to the finest court-yard in America, 100 by 44 feet in area, with a tessellated pavement, from which rise lines of rose-colored marble columns with onyx capitals, upholding an entablature of polished red granite, above which is a finely arched roof of stained glass and polished marble. The building fronts for 167 j-^ feet On Broadway and cost $5,000,000. The Ijuilding is open to visitors from 8 A. M. to 5 P. M. UlUitCO !lSnnk JSUilMnO, at Broadway and Wall street, the " Fort Sherman " of the financiers, contains the ofiices once occupied by (leneral Grant. Here I'erdinand Ward con- cocted his vast and historic swindles. Washington Inaugural Centennial. 57 IKHnSbiUOtOU !l6UilMnCJ, on Broadway, Battery Place and Greenwich street, belongs to the great financier, Cyrus W. Field. It is twelve stories high, and the great observatory-tower reaches an altitude of 235 feet from the pavement. The top of the flagstaff is higher than Trinity spire or the Liberty statue. The view from the tower is the finest in the city — -one of the finest in the world. Home Office, Mutual Life Insurance Company fIDUtUnI XifC !f6Uilbin(J* one of the handsomest buildings, of those raised by our wealthy corporations, is that of the Mutual Life Insurance Company, on the block fronting on Nassau, Liberty and Cedar streets, formerly occupied by the old post office or Middle Dutch Church. The style is a modification of the Italian Renaissance. The stories are grouped so as to form three grand divisions, and the facade is divided into a recessed center, flanked by pavilions, on Cedar and Liberty streets. The first stories are built of solid M\ine granite, the upper of Indiana limestone. The portico, two stories high, is an impressive feature. The capitals of the polished granite columns and piers are beautifully carved in white marble, the capitals on the second story displaying finely executed heads of Europe, Asia, Africa and America, from original designs by celebrated sculptors. The work throughout is most substantial, and does not contain a particle of wood. The interior hall is of white marble and white marble wainscoting surrounds the large rooms. Visitors in the city should not fail to visit this handsome building. It is open for inspection from 9 A. M. to 5 v. M. 58 Washington Inaugural Centennial. ilDilllS !fi6Uil0in(}^ on Broad street, is a vast structure, forming three sides of a court-yard. It cost !|2, 700,000. St^^^a^^ ®il Company's BUilMUOt «» Broadway, is the largest marble structure in New York. Here is the ofifice of William Rockefeller. ^rCyCl JOUllOinQ^ at Broad and Wall streets, is of white marble, in Renaissance architecture, and cost $700,000. tllDriCl) VL'OUrij on Broadway, opposite Exchange place, is another lofty palace of trade. It was finished in 1887, and contains 300 offices, lighted at night by 2600 Edison incandescent lights, and reached by four Otis elevators. It is built around a court-yard, 50 by 70 feet. flDnnbnttnn !©anh JSUilMn^, on Wall street, near Broad street, is of polished gray granite, and is one of the finest structures in the city. It was finished in 1885, and is occupied by banks, lawyers, etc. ^-rinil^ JlJllllOiny^ adjoining Trinity church-yard, and extending through from Broadway to Church street. It is about 50 feet wide by 250 feet long, five stories in height, and is divided into suites of offices occupied by coal companies, real estate brokers, lawyers and others. The offices are of every size, and its occupants would suffice to populate a good sized town. On the basement floor is a large public auction salesroom, where real estate and coal are the principal things offered. The building belongs to the Trinity Church corporation. The windows in each room open either on a street or on the churchyard, so that there is an abundance of light and air ; otherwise it lacks the convenience of the structures erected more recently for the same uses. JdOICCI JvUllOlliy^ on Broadway, directly opposite the Equitable building, is an immense brick structure, filled with offices, largely of famous and powerful insurance companies. OTCStCrn ITlniOn ^ClCOrapb BUilMnO, at Dey street and Broadway, is of brick granite and marble, eight stories high, with a tall tower. Vl'CllipiC vL-OUri is a huge building 160 feet high, erected at a cost of $1,200,000, and belonging to Eugene Kelly. This is one of an amazing group of buildings at the corner of Nassau and Beekman streets. IPOlICl JwUllOinyj on the opposite corner, with fronts on Park row, Nassau and Beekman streets, is of iron and brick, 185 feet high, and cost $2,500,000. One of the features of this handsome structure is the substantial and enduring Granolithic sidewalks on Park row, Beekman and Nassau streets, laid by the Matt. Taylor Granolithic Paving Company. XII30li?C JvUllOlill), Nassau and Beekman streets, ten stories (165 feet) high, is of red and black brick, and Ijelongs to the son and nephew of Professor S. F. B. Morse. It is fireproof and massive. ^iCwart jbUllOiny^ at Broadway and Chambers street, of white marble, occupies the site of the ancient negro burying ground, and afterward of Washington Hall. It was erected for A. T. Stewart, and used by him for many years for his wholesale dry-goods establishment. It is now one of the largest and most convenient office buildings in the city. Washington Inaugural Centennial. 59 m V o referre(l class Economical ^Management. Limited Expenses. Benefits Graded in Proportion to Hazard of Occupation. Equitable Adjustment and Prompt Payment of Claims. -1 SSESSMEJS'TS. Death from Accident $5,000 Loss of Hand and Foot S.o '• Both Hands 5.000 " Both Feet - 5-000 " One Hand - 2,500 Loss of One Foot $2,500 " Both Eyes 2,500 " One Eye 750 Permanent Total Disability _ 2,500 Weekly Indemnity not to e.\ceed 52 weeks 25 ■^ NO • V^Ml-ID • OI-7^I7V^ . WNRT^ID.t^ irlih'-s/irf ^paptment plouses, or freiich piats. WITHIN the last few years apartment houses have multiplied to a remarkable extent in this city and this mode of living seems destined to become as common in New York as it is in Paris and \'ienna. Some of the largest and finest structures in the city are the apartment houses or "flats." Each apartment is complete in itself, containing all the rooms requisite for house- keeping. The rent of an apartment of the better class ranges from $1000 to $7000 a year, according to size and location. The buildings are provided with elevators, hall-boys, electric lights, and in many cases are fireproof. The expensive apartments are elegantly fitted up with hard woods and inlaid floors, frescos etc., and contain from seven to twenty-five rooms each. One of the differences between "flats" and "apartment houses" is that the former have kitchens, equipped for housekeeping, while the latter have restaurants where the occupants get their meals. The following are among the largest : Ci. ( i-i I ■-. _< i. I I o" 59th street, near Seventh avenue, form the entral Park Apartment HaUeEe, largest flat-hotel in the world, including several huge fireproof buildings — the Madrid, Cordova, Granada, Lisbon — comprehended in one plan, and magnificent in all their appointments. The whole structure is best known as the " Navarro Flats," and is said to have cost upwards of $7,000,000. — I j . at Eighth avenue and 72d street, is another vast and costly structure, 155 feet high, and UaivLllai gorgeous in all its details. It is called the finest in New York. The rent of an apartment runs as high as $7000 a year. It was built by Clark, of Singer Sewing Machine fame. _ , at the corner of Seventh avenue and 57th street, is eleven stories (171 feet) high, of UaDUrriCj rock-faced Connecticut brown-stone, fireproof, with floors and roof of iron, brick and concrete, all rooms finished in mahogany or ash, electric lights, steam-heat. Tiffany stained glass, etc. The main entrance is said to be the finest in New York, with heavy oaken doors, rare marbles, mosaic, frescos and stained glass, furnished by the La Farge Decorative Art Company. Besides those already mentioned, the most noteworthy ones are : THE STRA THMORE, Broadway and 52d st. THE HEA THIVOOD, 345 West sSth street. THE SARA TOGA, Broadway and 52d street. THE GARFIELD, 336 West 56th street. THE NEWPORT, 200 West 52d street. THE ST. ALBANS, 349 West 5Sth street. THE GRENOBLE, 57th street and Seventh ave. THE PALISADE, 325 West 56th street. THE CHELSEA HOME CLUB, West 23d r//i5' .4 .S/ZZ^A'/?, 53<:1 street and Lexington ave. street, between Seventh and Eighth avenues. THE HE THE RING TO A^, Fourth avenue and THE DELMONLCO, 79th st., near Second ave. 63d street. THE HOFFMAN ARMS, Madison av. & 59th st. THE LONSDALE, Fourth avenue, near 62d st. THE BERKELEY, 20 Fifth avenue. THE WASHINGTON, Seventh avenue, between THE RANDOLPH, 12 W^est i8th street. 121st and I22d streets. THE ROCKLAND, 140 West i6th street. THE BEVERLEY, Sixth avenue and 125th st. ST. A UGUSTINE, 264 West 67th street. THE EISLENBEN, Sixth avenue and 125th st. The stranger in New York, whether he come from the East or West or the North or South, is always most impressed by the high buildings that are to be seen in every section of the city. While the stranger is astonished at these great metropolitan structures, it seldom occurs to him that they would never have been erected had it not been for the introduction of passenger elevators, or, as they have been called, " Perpendicular Railways," by means of which the uppermost parts of buildings of eight, ten, twelve and even fourteen stories in height are made to-day more accessible and desirable, and even preferable to the lower parts of ordinary buildings of ten years ago. The elegance and speed of the majority of New York elevators are noteworthy, and as the results of many improvements their safety now is unquestioned. Elevators were at first used chiefly by leading hotels, but they are now used not only in all hotels but in thousands of public and commercial buildings, and also in thousands of the large and palatial residences in the newer parts of the city. There are several firms which have been foremost in the manufacture of the finer grades of elevators, and one of the best known is the firm of Otis Brothers & Co., whose offices are in the Potter building, 38 Park row. Those who may be interested in elevators and their construction will find it to their advantage to correspond with Messrs. Otis Brothers & Co. 64 Washington Inaugural Centennial. INSURE YOUR LIFE ^S YOU INSURE YOUR PRORERTY Each year by itself, but with the right to continue the insurance as long as you live, by payments adjusted to cover the cost during the term paid for only. Renewable Term Insurance as furnished by the •PR0VIDENT SAVINGS^ LIFB ASSURANCE SOCIETY, 120 BROADWAY, (equitable building) new YORK, Is ttie Safest, the Cheapest, Eind the Fairest Contract A.ttainable. Among all the life insurance companies the Provident Savings shows the largest ratio of assets to liabilities and the smallest ratio of payments for death claims and expenses. The maximum of security and the minimum of cost. Postmasters may easily add to their Incomes by acting as Agents. WM. E. STEVENS, Secretary. SHEPPARD HOMANS, President. SEND FOR PROSPECTUS. GOOD AGENTS WANTED. THOS. A. IRELAND, President. CHAS, L. TOMPKINS, Sec'y and Gen'l Manager, ARTHUR M, SANDERS, Treas, and Counsel GEO, E, GLINES, Vice-President, R, PITCHER WOODWARD, Ass't Secretary, JOHN F, RUSSELL, M. D„ Surgeon, H7VTERICKN /^(;gde9t Ipdempity /^ssoeiatiop —OF— New York. Important Nov Features 5 I^owest Xerms. Synopsis of Our New Policy and Our New " Identification Card " furnished free upon application. Js^F-r-LY J^T HOMK{ OF^F^ICE, OR ADDRESS, P. o. jwx U74, y. r. , CHAS. L. TOMPKIKS, Sec'y and Gen'l Manager. Office, 91, 92, 93 and 94 Temple Court, N. Y. Washington Inaugural Centennial. Lifi^ l9SiJra9(;e (^o/npapies li) J^eu/ Yor\[ Qity. Name and Location. Mutual, Nassau, Cedar and Liberty sts Brooklyn, 51 Liberty street Equitable Life Assur. Soc, 120 B'dway Germania, 20 Nassau street Home, 254 Broadway Manhattan, 156 Broadway Metropolitan, 32 Park place New York, 346 Broadway Provident Savings, 120 Broadway United States, 261 Broadway , Washington, 21 Cortlandt street President. Richard A. McCurdy Wm. M. Cole Henry B. Ilyde. . . . Hugo Wesendonck. CJeorge C. Ripley. . . Jas. M. McLean . . . J. F. Knapp William H. Beers.. Sheppard Homans. . George H. Burford. W. A. Brewer Assets, Jan. I, 188 126,082,153 1-645.558 95,042,923 13,961,199 6,363,572 11.543,049 6,287,781 93,480,186 592,127 5.976,250 9-519.277 Surplus over all Liabilities. 7,940,063 176,119 20,794,715 1,188,521 1.258,597 1,306,705 924.915 13,500,000 396,084 689,024 558,450 Total Amount of Insurance in Force. 482,125,184 5,720,140 549,216,126 49.921.750 22,748,299 43.504.413 180,600,919 419,886,505 51,012,286 25,455.249 42,768,034 MssessTu^ersLT co7v^F>75Nies, Name and Location. Bank, & Merch. Alliance, 32 Thomas st Citizens Mut. L. Ins. Ass'n, 115 B'dway Equitable Reserve Fund Life Ass'n, 171 Broadway Family Fund Society, 280 Broadway. . . Home Benefit Ass'n, 137 Broadway. . . . Home Benefit Society, 161 Broadway. . Home Prov. S. F. Ass'n, 89 Liberty st. The Life Union, 234 Broadway Mut. Ben. I>. Ass'n of A., 280 B'dv\-ay. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association, 38 Park row National Alliance, 5 Beekman street. . . National Benefit Society. 187 Broadway Protective L. A. Soc, 44 Broadway.. . . Security Mut. Ben. Society, 233 B'dway United L. and A. Ins. Ass'n, 44 B'dway Womens Mutual Ins. and A. Co. of A., 128 Broad wav President. N. Fobes Levi M. Bates Charles M. Hibbard. George W. Willard . . William A. Camp . . , John F. H. King. . . , Julian W. Merrill ... T. S. Johnson Edw. Henry Kent. . . E. B. Harper H. M. Munsell Ceorge Merrill Eberhard Faber R. Carman Combs... Peter Bowe Elizabeth B. Phelps. Assets, Jan. I, i8£ 38,069 20,072 68,646 129,422 153.198 1,584 22,823 38,349 204,106 1,738,453 91,012 83,443 8,403 2,818 37,944 25,175 Insurance Written 230,000 1,968,700 221,000 257,000 4,257,000 549.400 362,000 1,415,000 4,429,000 37,906,800 5,153,500 1,906,700 116,750 2,568,000 3,941,000 2,223,120 Total Amount of Insurance in Force. 3,535,500 5.875.575 3,561,000 3,212,000 11,472,500 3,015,900 1,120,000 8,310.000 22,288,200 168,902,850 13,540,500 8,176,700 69,250 11,024,000 8,707,000 3,207,590 KGCIOeNT C07U^F=7^NieS, Am. Accident Indemnity Ass'n of N. Y., 5 Beekman street (See advertisement on opposite page.) Guar. Mut. Ace. Ass'n, 165 Broadway . Mercantile Mut. Ace. Soc, 137 B'dway National Accident Society, 280 B'dway. Preferred Mu. A. Ass'n, 257 B'dway.'.. Provident Fund Society, 280 B'dway. . . Traders & Trav. Ace. Co., 287 B'dway. U. S. Mut. Ace. Ass'n, 320 Broadway. . Thos. A. Ireland. G. H. Fitzwilson. , Wm. H. Peckham T. L. Barton , II. L. Coe A. N. Lockwood. , S. S. Pierson Charles B. Peet.., 4,077 7,86y.OOO 5,245,000 3,625 1 4, 340; 500 13,894,500 3-047 4,148,000 3,006,000 1,997 12,742,250 9,260,250 73,450 41,060,000 56,420,000 3.043 26,022,925 19,376,375 30.632 8,005,000 10,135,000 91,500 151,192,250 231,931,250 66 Washington Inaugural Centennial. QUEEN IiNSURANCE COMPANY, GO T^ALL STI^EET, NEW YORK. LANCASHIRE INSdRANCE COMPANY, OP 40 Pine Street, New York. ASSETS, - - 1st JANUARY, 1889, - - $1,706,412,18 LIABILITIES, - - " " '' - - $1,025,457,10 SURPLUS, - - . .. . - - $680,955.08 Trustees in U. S. DONALD MACKA V. Of Vermilye bf Co., Bankers. CORNELIUS N. BLISS Of Bliss, Fabyan &= Co. II. J. FAIRCHILD Of H. B. Claflin &= Co EDWARD LITCHFIELD United States Manager GEORGE PRITCHARD. Sub-Manager. \ (guarantee of ^tyle aijd Qualitil. _(^' ^^^1^^ ESPENSCHEID'S HATS. 118 NASSAU STREET, - - - NEW YORK. N. B.--EXCLUSIVE STYLES FOR YOUNG MEN, guN piRE Office^ eSTKBL-ISMeO M. D. ITIO. STATEMENT OF UNITED STATES BRANCH, 31st DECEMBER, 1888. ASSETS, - - $1,926,203.14. LIABILITIES, - - $1,034,532.93. SURPLUS, - - $891,670.21. TRUSTEES IN UNITED STATES, GEO. D. MORGAN, Chairman. If. M. ALEXANDER. Col. J. J. McCOOK'. .MORRIS FRANKLIN, Secretary .Ixvncy Department. J. /. PURCELL, - - Secretary Local Department. J. J. OTLJILE:, IVIanager. Washington Inaugural Centennial. 67 pire l93ura9(;e ^o/r\paQie5 JQ f(<^u; Yor\{ <$ity. Xame and Location. Alliance, 34 Nassau street American, 146 Broadway Broadway, 158 Broadway Citizens, T56 Broadway City, III Broadway Commonwealth, 33 Nassau street Continental, 102 Broadway Eagle, 71 Wall street Empire City, 166 Broadway Exchange, 41 Pine street Farragut, 346 Broadway ■Fire Association, 155 Broadway Firemen's, 153 Broadway German-American, 115 Broadway Germania, 179 Broadway Globe, 161 Broadway Greenwich, 161 Broadway Guardian, 153 Broadway Hamilton, 155 Broadway Hanover, 40 Nassau street Home, 119 Broadway Jefferson, iii Broadway Kings County, 139 Broadway Knickerbocker, 64 Wall street Liberty, 120 Broadway Manuf'rs and Builders, 152 Broadway. Mutual, 155 Broadway Nassau, 173 Broadway National, 35 Pine street New York, 72 Wall street New York Bowery, 124 Bowery New York Equitable, 58 Wall street. . Niagara, 135 Broadway Pacific, 470 Broadway People's, 393 Canal street Peter Cooper, Third avenue and gth st. Phenix, 195 Broadway Rutgers, 180 Chatham Stjuare Standard, 52 Wall street Stuyvesant, 157 Broadway United States, 170 Broadway Westchester, 27 Pine street Williamsburgh City, 150 Broadway. . . . President. James Yereance David Adee E. B. Magnus Edward A. Walton . . S. Townsend M. M. Belding ¥. C. Moore A. J. Clinton Lindley Murray, Jr. . R. C. Combes John E. Leffingwell. P. B. Armstrong John F. Halsted E. Oelbermann R. Garrigue A. A. Reeves S. C. Harriot W. K. Pave D. D. Whitney B. S. Walcott Daniel A. Heald. . . . Samuel E. Belcher... W. E. Horwill E. W. Albro George A. Morrison. Edward V. Loew . . . . P. B. Armstrong William T. Lane Henry T. Drowne. . . Daniel Underbill. . . . John A. Delanoy. . . . John Miller. . . .' Peter Notman F. T. Stinson Fred. V. Price W. H. Riblet George P. Sheldon . . . Edward B. Fellows. . Wm. M. St. John. . . George B. Rhoads. . . W. W. Underbill.. . . George R. Crawford. Edmund Drives Capital. $200,000 400,000 200,000 300,000 210,000 500,000 1,000,000 300,000 200,000 200,010 200,000 300,000 204,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 200,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 1,000,000 3,000,000 200,010 150,000 210,000 I, 000, coo 200,000 260,215 200,000 200,000 200,000 300,000 210,000 500,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 1,000,000 200,000 200,000 200,000 250,000 300,000 250,000 Assets, January i, 1889. 1400,037 1,308,514 448,112 1,126,197 403.647 713.534 5,028,345 1,091,423 316,821 480,149 400,673 543,869 279.975 5,388,533 2,808,719 355,003 1,405,811 266,669 283,317 2,503,382 8,961,657 502,483 371,623 344,098 1,379.956 477,700 1,493.179 424,809 411,937 365.403 770,576 546.454 2,360,135 738,970 342,728 378.536 4.524.597 419,140 380,798 300,452 666,178 1.407,452 1,365,541 Surplus Over All Liabilities. $58,459 548,338 218,736 293,639 159,619 97,122 1,226,692 680,572 80,497 100,543 79.190 76,012 42.673 2,243,986 726,445 100,027 415.742 38,391 73,594 462,554 1,502,462 244,408 167,451 94,397 115,408 119,789 683,420 178,262 71,880 56,212 119,069 296,873 379,540 340,070 39,192 212,336 193,928 156,915 130,236 53,186 263,902 314,859 611,004 I=OReiGN C07UTF>7^NieS. Name and Location. Manager. Assets in the U.S., Jan. I, 1889. Total Liabilities. Surplus Over All Liabilities. Commercial Union (Lon.), 48 Pine st. . A. Pell&C. Sewell.. $2,807,874 $1,869,353 $938,521 Guardian (London), 50 Pine street. . . . H. E. Bowers 1,492,214 679,609 812,605 Lancashire (Manchester), 40 Pine st. . . E. Litchfield 1,706,412 1,025,457 680,955 Liv. & Lon. & CJlobe (Liv.), 45 William Henrv W. Eaton 6,963,812 3,963,285 3,000,527 Lon. & Lancashire (Liv.), 38 Nassau st. Jeffrey Beavan 2,019 691 1,190,964 828,729 N. British & Mer. (Lon.), 54 Williamst. S. P. Blagden 3,472,614 1,615,269 1,857,345 Northern (London), 38 Pine street. . . . Henry H. Hall 1,496,473 817.213 679,260 Norwich Union (Norwich), 67 Wall st. J. Montgomery Hare. 1, 411,445 815. 3S2 596,063 Phoenix (London), 67 Wall street A. D. Irving 1,858,874 1,325,799 533,075 Queen (Liverpool), 60 Wall street James A. Macdonald. . 2,133,801 1,288,363 845,438 Royal (Liverpool), 50 Wall street E. F. Beddall 5,233,694 3,028,691 2,205,003 Sun Fire Office (London) 34 Nassau st. United Fire Re-In. (Manch.), 38 Nassau J. J. Guile 1,926,203 1,058,396 1,034,533 716,160 891,670 342,236 William Wood 68 Washington Inaugural Centennial. NEAa^ vork, FIFTH AVENUE. CORNER TWENTY-THIRD STREET. Designated o Depository © of o the ©United o States. THE COLLECTION OF INTEREST, COUPONS AND DIVIDENDS FOR DEPOSITORS WILL S« RECEIVE SPECIAL ATTENTION. f^ GEORGE MONTAGUE, JOSEPH S. CASE, President. Cashier. DIReCTORSj AMOS R. ENO. HENRY A. HURLBUT. ANSON PHELPS STOKES. ALFRED B. DARLING. JOHN L. RIKER. WM. C. BREWSTER. WM. P. ST. JOHN. GEORGE MONTAGUE. CHARLES B. FOSDICK. GEORGE SHERMAN. JOS. S. CASE. L^s-iDiEs' Cj^FiFtiAGE, Entra^nce^ 23i:> Street. THE Fifth Ave. Safe Deposit Company. Entrance through SECOSD MTIONAL BANK, No. 190 Fifth Avenue, Corner 23d Street. The Vaults of this Company are entirely outside the building, and are absolutely FIRE AlVO BURGI.AR PROOF. Steel Safes for the keeping of Securities, Jewels and other Valuables. Rent $io and Upwards per Annum. Special Department for Ladies. Ofifice Hours, 9 A. M. to 4.30 i'. M. OEEICERiS : WILLIAM C. BREWSTER, President. GEORGE MONTAGUE, Vice-President. DANIEL C. SILLECK, Jr., Superintendent. trustees: HENRY A. HURLBUT. ALFRED B. DARLING. JOHN L. RIKER. WILLIAM C. BREWSTER. AUGUSTUS C. DOWNING. WILLIAM P. ST. JOHN. GEORGE MONTAGUE. CHARLES B. FOSDICK. GEORGE SHERMAN. GEORGE W. CARLETON WILLIAM P. ENO. JOSEPH S. CA.SE. JOHN H. SHOE.\n'.ERGi:/:. Washington Inaugural Centennial. 69 NATieNALi Banks. Name. American Exchange. . Bank of Commerce. . . Bank of New York . . . Bank of the Republic. Broadway National . . . Butchers' and Drovers'. Central National Chase National Chatham National . Chemical National. Citizens' National. . City National Commercial National. Continental National. East River National. . Fifth National First National. . . , Fourth National. . Fulton National . . Gallatin National Importers and Traders. Irving National Leather Manufacturers Lincoln National Market National Mechanics National. . . Mercantile National Merchants National Merchants Exchange National Bank of Deposit. New York County. . . . New York National E> Ninth National Park National Location. 128 Broadway . . 27 Nassau street. 48 Wall street . . . 2 Wall street . . . 237 Broadway. . . . 1 24 Bowery 320 Broadway. . . . 15 Nassau street. 196 Broadway . . 270 Broadway. . 401 ISroadway. . 52 Wall street. 78 Wall street . . . 7 Nassau street. 682 Broadway. . . . 300 Third avenue. 94 Broadway. . . . 14 Nassau street. 37 Fulton street . 36 Wall street. . . President. George S. Coe. Richard King . Charles M. Fry John J. Knox . Francis A. Palmer Gurdon G. BrinckerhoiT. W. L. Strong II. W. Cannon George M. Hard. . . George G. Williams W. IL Oakley Percy R. Pyne Orson Adams Edmund U. Randolph. Charles Jenkins Richard Kellev George F. Baker J. Edward Simmons. . W. Irving Clark Frederic'K D. Tappen. Garfield National 378 Sixth avenue A. C. Cheney Hanover National 13 Nassau street I |ames T. Woodward. :hange . Phenix National. . . Seaboard National. Second National. . . Seventh Ward Shoe and Leather. . Sixth National Third National Tradesmen's National. . United States National. W'estern National 247 Broadway E. H. Perkins, 287 Greenwich street j John L. Jewett 29 Wall street 32 East Forty-second street 286 Pearl street 33 Wall street igi Broadway. . . . 42 Wall street . . 257 Broadway. . . . 55 Liberty street. 79 Eighth avenue. . 138 Chambers street. 409 Broadway 216 Broadway 45 Wall street . . 18 Broad v\'ay. . . 190 Fifth avenue 1 84 Broadway. . . 271 Broadway. . . 1282 Broadway. . . . 22 Nassau street. 291 Broadway. . . . I Broadway. . . . 120 Broadway. . . . John T. Willetis. Thomas L. James Robert Bayles . . . H. E. Garth W. P. St. John.... Jacob D. Vermilye. P. C. Lounsbury. . Lewis E. Ransom. Francis L. Leland. . Daniel B. Halstead. John T. Hill V. Mumford Moore Eugene Dutilii. . . . W. A. Pullman. . . George Montague. O. H. Schreiner. . John M. Crane . . . Charles E. Leland W. A. Booth Nathaniel Niles. . . Logan C. Murray . C. N. Jordan Capital. $5,000,000 5,000,000 2,000,000 1,500,000 1,000,000 300,000 2,000,000 500,000 450,000 300,000 600,000 1,000,000 300,000 1,000,000 250,000 150,000 500,000 3,200,000 300,000 1,000,000 200,000 1,000,000 1,500,000 500,000 600,000 300,000 500,000 2,000,000 1,000,000 2,000,000 600,000 300,000 200,000 300,000 750,000 2,000,000 1.000,000 500,000 300,000 300,000 500,000 200,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 500,000 3,500,000 yo Washington Inaugural Centennial. STATE BANKS. Name. Bank of America Bank of Harlem Bank of the Metropolis. Location. 54 William street. . . . 241 West 125th street. 17 Union Square. . . . Bank of New Amsterdam Bank of North America Bank of the State of New York. Bowery Bank. . . Clinton Bank. . , Columbia Bank. Broadway and 40th street. 44 Wall street 33 William street President. 62 Bowery 112 Hudson street. 501 Fifth avenue. . Corn Exchange Bank. East Side Bank Eleventh Ward Bank. 13 William street. 459 Grand street. . . 147 Avenue IJ) Empire State Bank. . . . Fifth Avenue Bank. . . . Fourteenth Street Bank. 640 Broadway 531 P'ifth avenue. . . 3 East 14th street. Gansevoort Bank German-American Bank. German Exchange Bank . Ninth avenue and 14th st. 50 Wall street 330 Bowery Germania Bank . . Greenwich Bank. Hamilton Bank. Home Bank Hudson River Bank. Lenox Hill Bank. . . Madison .Square Bank Manhattan Company Bank. . . Mechanics and Traders Bank. Mount Morris Bank. Murray Hill Bank. . Nassau Bank 215 Bowery 402 Hudson street. . . . 278 West 125th street. 654 Eighth avenue Ninth avenue and 72d St., Third avenue and 72d st. , Fifth avenue and 25th st. 40 Wall street 486 Broadway Nineteenth Ward Bank. Ninth Avenue Bank.. . . North River Bank 133 East 125th street. 760 Third avenue. . . . 137 Nassau street. . . . Oriental Bank. Pacific Bank. . People's Bank. Produce Exchange Bank. Riverside Bank St. Nicholas Bank 57th street and Third ave. 922 Ninth avenue 187 Greenwich street 122 Bowery 470 Broadway. . . 395 Canal street. 8 Broadway .... 962 Eighth avenue. 120 Broadway Twelfth Ward Bank Twenty-third Ward Bank Union Bank West Side Bank 153 East 125th street Third avenue and 146th st . 747 Fifth avenue , 481 Eighth avenue Capital. Edmund W. Corlies. . C. H. Pinkham, Jr... Robert Schell Thomas C. Acton . . . . William Dowd R. L. Edwards , Henry P. De Graaf . , Douglass R. Satterlee Joseph Fox William A. Nash Thomas R. Manners. Henry Steers James \V. Conrow. . . A. S. Frissell George F. Vail T. C. Kimball Henry RochoU M. J. Adrian Marc. Eidlitz John S. McLean. . . . Luclen C. Warner.. Edmund Stephenson. William de Groot. . . Charles A. Troup. . . . W. Wetmore Cryder. DeWitt C. Hays M. Thalmessinger. . Joseph M. DeVeaw. . William A. Darling. Francis M. Harris... Samuel H. Rathbone William H. Bellamy. E. E. Gedney C. W. Starkey Hart B. Brundrett. .. Scott Foster Forrest H. Parker. . . Floyd Clarkson Arthur B. Graves. ... Edward P. Steers . . . Thomas MacKellar. . lohn W. Kilbreth... John W. B. Dobler. . 53,000,000 100,000 300,000 250,000 700,000 1,200,000 250,000 200,000 200,000 1,000,000 100,000 100,000 250,000 100,000 100,000 200,000 750,000 200,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 100.000 200,0 00 100,000 200,000 2,050,000 200,000 100,000 100,000 500,000 100,000 100,000 240,000 300,000 422,700 200,000 1,000,000 100,000 500,000 200,000 100,000 250,000 200,000 Washington Inaugural Centennial. 71 STATUES. THE objects which a stranger usually wants to see in New York first are the Statue of Liberty and the East River Bridge, the greatest works of their kind in the world. All of the note- worthy statues or other monuments in the public parks and squares of the city, including Central Park, are comprised in the following list: STATUE OF LIBERTY "ENLIGHTENING THE WORLD" stands on Bedloe's Island, in the harbor. It is a majestic female figure made of copper, 151 feet i inch high, standing on a pedestal 154 feet 10 inches high. It was modeled by Bartholdi, a French sculptor, and was presented by the French people to the people of the United States. In the upraised right hand is a torch, lighted by electricity ; and in the left hand is the Constitution. The copper is about one-fifth of an inch thick. The forefinger is 8 feet long and 5 feet in circumference. The finger-nail is L4 inches long and 10 wide. The eyes are 28 inches wide. The nose is nearly 4 feet long. The head is 14 feet high. The top of the ^.gure is higher than the steeple of Trinity Church. The statue and pedestal cost $1,000,000. Bedloe's Island may be reached by boats from the Battery, where a small steamboat starts every hour from the Barge Office, and makes the excursion in an hour. The fare for the round trip is twenty-five cents. Pleasant views are afforded of the inner harbor, the Narrows, Governor's Island and its forts, Staten Island the Brooklyn Bridge and lower New York. The boat usually lies at the island wharf long enough for one to walk briskly up to the pedestal, and look off from its upper balustrade, gaining an enchanting view over the lower harbor and its environing cities. Or you can spend a full hour on the island, visiting also the fortifications and barracks of the United States Artillery, and return on the next boat. It is the largest bronze statue in the world, and can be clearly made out from the Battery and many distant points. It faces very nobly toward the Narrows, the route from Europe. Inside the sea wall is an earthwork. OBELISK, in Central Park, was erected in the Temple of On, in Egypt, about 3500 years ago, by Thutmes 111., King of Egypt, and conqueror of Central Africa, Palestine and Mesopotamia, with hiero- glyphics, illustrating his campaigns and titles, and those of his descendant, Rameses II. For many cen- turies it stood before the Temple of the Sun at Heliopolis, and was removed during the reign of Tiberius to Alexandria, where it remained until 1877, when the Khedive, Ismail Pasha, presented it to the city of New York. It was skillfully transported hither hy Lieut-Com. Gorringe, U. S. N., and now stands on. the knoll near the Metropolitan Museum of Art in Central Park. The entire cost of its transportation and setting-up was borne by the late William H. Vanderbilt. It is of granite, 70 feet long, and weighs 200 tons. This noble monument was made before the siege of Troy or the foundation of Rome and while the Israelites were enslaved in Egypt. BEETHOVEN, erected iu 1884, on the Mall at Central Park. A colossal bronze bust, by Bacrer, on high granite pedestal. Given by the Mannerchor. a German singing society. BOLIVAR, the Liberator of South America, has a bold equestrian statue in Central Park near West Eighty-first street, dedicated in 1884. It was given to the American people by the Republic of Venezuela. BURNS stands in bronze, on the Mall at Central Park, designed by John Steele, and presented in 1880 by the Scottish New Yorkers. COLUMBUS, a colossal marble statue by Emma Stebbins, is in the Arsenal at Central Park. It was given to the city by Marshall O. Roberts in 1869. COMMERCE, an allegorical bronze figure of heroic size, by the French sculptor, Fosquet, stands near the southw est entrance of Central Park. Stephen B. Guion gave it to the city in 1866. WILLIAM E. DODGE, the late eminent merchant, is represented by a bronze statue, erected by the merchants of New York, at Broadway and Thirty-sixth street. ADMIRAL FARRAGUT is commemorated by a noble bronze statue, designed by Augustus St. Gaudens, on Madison Square. The pedestal curves almost into a semi-circle, and has marine decorations. The Admiral is represented as on the deck of his ship. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, a bronze statue on Printing-house Square, was erected in 1867, at the •expense of Captain De Grcot. 72 Washington Inaugural Centennial. HOTEL BARTHOLDI, Broadway and 23d Street, NEW YORK. OPPOSITE MADISON SQUARE. E.H. MASON Office Furniture No. 62 No. 62 WILLIAM STREET. A. SPECIALTY: ROLL-TOP DESKS. Washington Inaugurai. Centennial. STATUE OF LIBERTY. 74 Washington Inaugural Centennial. FITZ-GREENE HALLECK, the poet, has a bronze-seated statue on the Mall, Central Park designed by \Vilson MacUonald, erected in 1877. ALEXANDER HAMILTON'S statue, presented by his son, John C. Hamilton, in 1880, is ii. Central Park, near the Museum of Art. It is of white Westerly granite. HUMBOLDT, the celebrated German traveler and scientist, has a large bronze bust in Central Park, near the southeast corner, presented by German New Yorkers in 1869 It was designed by Pro- fe^sor Blaiser of Berlin. THE INDIAN HUNTER, by J. Q. A. Ward, stands in Central Park, near the Mall. It is of bronze, and has high art value. LAFAYETTE, a bronze statue by Bartholdi, is in Union Square. It was presented by French New Yorkers in 1S76. ABRAHAM LINCOLN, a bronze statue by H. K. Browne, was erected in 1868, in Union Square, by popular subscription. MAZZINI, an heroic bronze bust of the Italian liberator, was erected in 187S, in Central Park, by Italian New Yorkers. PROFESSOR S. F, B. MORSE has a bronze statue, erected by the Telegraph Operators' Asso- ciation in 1871, in Central Park, near West Seventy-second street. He was present at its dedication, but died the next year. THE PILGRIM, a picturesquely posed and attired heroic bronze statue, by J. Q. A. Ward, was presented by New England New Yorkers, and stands in Central Park, near East Seventy-second street. SCHILLER, a bronze bust in the Ramble at Central Park, was given in 1859 ^^7 German New Yorkers. SIR WALTER SCOTT, a bronze copy of the celebrated statue on the Scott monument at Edin- burgh, is on the Mall, Central Park, on a pedestal of fine Aberdeen granite. It was given in 1871 (the one-hundredth anniversary of Scott's birtli), by Scottish New Yorkers. The poet is represented seated on a rock, with his dog at his feet. SEVENTH REGIMENT MONUMENT, a bronze statue of a soldier, by J. Q. A. Ward, is in Central Park, near East Seventy-second street. It commemorates the soldiers of the regiment dead in the Secession war. WILLIAM H. SEWARD, Secretary of State during the civil war, has a bronze statue by Randolph Rogers, erected in 1876, in Madison Square. SHAKESPEARE, a bronze statue, by J. Q. A. Ward, placed on the Mall in Central Park in 1872, by the Shakespeare Dramatic Association. THE STILL HUNT, by Kemeys, is a crouching American panther on a high ledge of rocks near the Obelisk, in Central Park. GEORGE WASHINGTON is commemorated by an heroic equestrian statue in Union Square. It was designed by H. K. Browne. WASHINGTON also has a colossal statue by J. Q. A. Ward, erected in 1883, before the Sub- Treasury, on Wall street, where he took the oath as first President, in 1789. WASHING rON also has a quaint statue, a copy of that by Houdon, erected by the school children at Riverside I'ark. DANIEL WEBSTER has an heroic bronze statue, given by Gordon W. Burnham, in Central Park, near West Seventy-second street. It was made in Italy, at a cost of $65,000, and stands on a huge block of granite. GEN. WORTH is commemorated by a granite obelisk at Broadway and Fifth avenue (Madison Square), erected by the city. The following monuments have historic interest : THOMAS ADDIS EMMETT in St. Paul's churchyard. GEN. RICHARD MONTGOMERY in the Broadway end of St. Paul's. THE MARTYRS MONUMENT, in Trinity churchyard, commemorating the American soldiers who died in British prisons during the Revolution. ALEXANDER HAMILTON'S, ALBERT GALLATIN'S, ROBERT FULTON'S and CAPT. LAWRENCE'S (of the "Chesapeake ") in Trinity churchvard. CAPT.-GEN. PETRUS STUYVESANT'S in the outer wail of St. Mark's Church. Washington Inaugural Centennial. Places of ^Imusement, •'l^HE theatres of New York are among the best in the world and should be visited by all who are ^ fortunate enough to be in the city at this time. Care should be taken about buying tickets from speculators outside, as in some of the theatres such tickets will not be accepted. The side-walks on Union Square, near the Washington statue, are frequented by numbers of actors \»'aiting for engagements, and has hence come to be known as " Tha Slave Market," and " The Rialto." iffiioacierny of _LY'l"'asiG, a long and plain brick building at the corner of 14th street and Irving place, formerly was the home of Italian opera in New York, and more recently of the famous National Opera Company. It cost 1360,000, and has a magnihcent interior, where some of the most notable balls and other entertainments have taken place. Nearly opposite is Irving Hall, also famous for fashionable balls and hops. The Academy has heard the impassioned songs of Lucca, Nilsson, Kellogg, Tietjens, Piccolomini, Gerster, Hauk, Brignoli, Campanini, Mario, and other famous singers. E. G. Gilmore and Eugene Tompkins are its proprietors and managers. IB1JOIJ. ©peTa jSonse, on Broadway, between 30th and 31st streets, is a small but very comfortable theatre, devoted to comic opera. J. W. Rosenquest, manager. !Bl?oaciv7ay T?]:]eatre, Broadway, corner of 41st street, is a charming new theatre, under the management of Mr. F. W. .Sanger. ^^aSlXlO, at Broadway and 39th street, is a beautiful Moorish structure, modeled after parts of the famous Alhambra. Here are produced comic operas, musical extravaganzas and oth .-r light amuse- ments. On the roof is a pleasant and popular cafe and summer garden. Rudolph Aronson, manager. Italy's, at Broadway and 31st street, has an admirable stock company, and renders modern and classic English comedies in a style of incomparable excellence. Augustin Daly is its proprietor and manager. l^oe^'sta^-ei^'s, on Broadway, near 2qth street, is devoted to minstrels, sketches and entertain- ing varieties. "^11 tl] i^veriue Ti'lrieat'Pe, corner of Broadway and 2Sth street, is a beautiful and success- ful " star " theatre, built for Augustin Daly, and now managed by Eugene Tompkins. If'otll^'teerittl Street TPbiCatl^e, on 14th street, near Sixth avenue, is a handsome gray building, with a classic portico. It has also been known as the Lyceum Theatre (when Fechter conducted it), and Haverly's. It has a very handsome and comfortable auditorium. J. W. Rosenquest, manager. (^3?ar|3. ©"pera House, at Eighth avenue and 23d street, is an immense structure of white marble, for a long time run by James Fisk, Jr. The prices here are much lower than at the other large theatres, and its great auditorium has witnessed many fine " star" performances. T. H. French, manager. JriaT?r':crari'8 "JpaT-k Tj'tieatre, at Broadway and 35th street, is under Edward Uarrigan's management, and furnishes capital novelties and comedies, in which the drolleries of the Hibernian char- acter are deftly illustrated. Edward Harrigan, proprietor. Jjlai'r'y ^Kiiriei^'s 'TTtieatr'eS, one on Eighth avenue, near 23d street, and the other on the Bowery, near Broome street, are devoted to varieties and other light performances. Jl3yoe"'aTri T?T:]eat]?e is a beautiful new structure on Fourth avenue, near 23d street (next to the Academy of Design), built under the direction of Steele Mackaye and richjy decorated by Tiffany. Here one may see modern comedies and popular dramas of high excellence. Daniel Frohman, manager. 76 Washington Inaugural Centennial. !KIa<3.180r| Squar'e (R>ai?cier|, at Fourth and Madison avenues and 26th and 27th streets, has the largest auditorium in the city. Here occur pedestrian and pugiHstic matches, circuses, Barnum's or Wild West shows, exhibitions of flowers, dogs, etc. IviadlSOri Square TTlieatre, on 24th street, near Broadway (adjoining the Fifth Avenue Hotel), is one of the best in America, with an admirable stock company, devoted to society dramas and comedies of modern life. It has a double, movable stage, so that succeeding scenes can be presented without delay ; and the orchestra is sequestered in an exquisite eyry above the curtain. A. M. Palmer, manager. ]wletr'0"polltar| ©pei^a I?loilSe has the largest audience room in the world, and has 122 boxes (each with a spacious parlor attached), and seats for 6000 persons. It is an enormous Renaissance building of yellow brick, 200 by 260 feet, with broad foyers, 17 entrances and a stage 96 by 76 feet, and 120 feet high. The structure is of brick and iron, and practically fireproof. It was opened in 1883 by Nilsson and Campanini in " Faust." Here the great German and Italian operas are given in magnificent style, with every accessory of fine scenery and stage effects. It fronts on Broadway and extends from 38th to 3gth streets. if! 1^1 8 Cpai^<3-er|, at 580 Broadway, near Prince street (adjoining the Metropolitan Hotel), is a spacious and splendid theatre, with broad lobbies, and a handsome auditorium seating 2000 persons. It occupies the site of a summer garden founded many years ago by William Niblo. Here may be seen ballets, spectacular pieces and the best melodramas. E. G. Gilmore, manager. CpT'lerital 'Irl:]eatl?e, 113 Bowery, gives perfo'-mances in Hebrew. jralirieT's Url]eatre, at Broadway and 30th street, is one of the leading theatres of the metropolis, with a brilliant and comfortaljle auditorium. It presents choice modern dramas and comedies in a style of great splendor. irr'OCtoi^ S ljl:|eatee, 23d street, near Sixth avenue, is a fine new theatre, opened quite recently, and is one of the most exquisitely decorated and best arranged theatres in the city. Proctor & Turner are the proprietors and managers. (■i)tar|a.a'ri3. Jjlneatl?e, at Broadway, Sixth avenue and 33d street, is a large new theatre, devoted to modern society plays, comedies, etc. optaT? ll rieatre, at Broadway and 13th street, has a large and brilliant auditorium, devoted to opera comique and " star " representations. It is the old Wallack's Theatre. Tj'lieat'Pe (^Onqig^Tie is on 125th street, Harlem, near Third avenue. T|''l:in?d ^ver|ne Tj'T:]eatl='e, on Third avenue, between 3Cth and 31st streets, exhibits popular dramas and plays at low prices. It was built by McKee Rankin. Tj'oriy lpastoi?'8 T7l:ieatl=e, on East 14th street, between Tammany Hall and the Academy of Music, is sacred to variety shows, and is the best of it-> kind in the city. Tony Pastor, proprietor. jiiiaeri JVLusee, on West 23d street, near Fifth avenue, is an attractive new building, contain- ing wax portrait figures of many famous men and women in life size, historical groups, a subterranean Chamber of Horrors, and other interesting curiosities. Almost all visitors to New York include this remarkably instructive and entertaining sight in their grand rounds. The entrance fee is fifty cents ; and the collection is the best and largest of its kind in the world, far excelling the famous London wax works of Madame Tussaud. IpubilC Ijialls. At Chickeking Hall (Fifth avenue and i8th street), Steinway Hall (107 14th street, near Irv'ng place), and other large and beautifully decorated halls, lectures and concerts and other fashionable public entertainments are given frequently. Washington Inaugural CENTENNiAt. RAILROAD DEPOTS. F the various railways starting from or terminating in New York city only three have their depots proper in the city ; all the others, excepting the Long Island roads, starting or arriving at the New Jersey side of the Hudson river, across which passengers are conveyed by ferryboats. The following are the principal railroads running out of New York, and the location of their passenger depots : BALTIMORE AND OHIO RAILROAD.— Depot at Jersey City. Ferry from foot of Liberty street. CENTRAL RAILROAD OF NEW JERSEY.— Depot at Jersey City. Ferry from foot of Liberty street. DELAWARE, LACKAWANNA AND WESTERN RAILROAD (MORRIS AND ESSEX). Depot at Hoboken. Ferry from foot of Barclay street or Christopher street. ERIE RAILROAD (N. Y., L. K. & W.) — Depot at Jersey City. Ferry foot of Chambers street or West 23d street. HARLEM RAILROAD.— See New York and Harlem. HUDSON RIVER RAILROAD.— See New York Central and Hudson River Railroad. LONG ISLAND RAILROAD. — Depot at Hunter's Point. Ferry from East 34th street. MORRIS AND ESSEX RAILROAD. — See Delaware, Lackawanna and Western. NEW JERSEY CENTRAL RAILROAD.— See Central Railroad of New Jersey. NEW JERSEY SOUTHERN RAILROAD.— Depot at Sandy Hook. Steamer from foot of Rector street. NEW JERSEY AND NEW YORK RAILROAD.— Depot at Jersey City. Ferry foot of Chambers street and West 23d street. NEW YORK CITY AND NORTHERN RAILROAD.— Depot at 155th street. Six/A Avenue Elevated Road. NEW YORK CENTRAL AND HUDSON RIVER RAILROAD.— Grand Central Depot. This depot is the largest and finest passenger station in America, and is located on Forty- second street and Fourth avenue, opposite the Grand Union Hotel. It is used jointly by the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad, the Harlem Railroad and the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad, with the connections of the latter branching all over New England. NEW YORK AND HARLEM RAILROAD.— Grand Central Depot. NEW YORK, NEW HAVEN AND HARTFORD RAILROAD.— Grand Central Depot. NEW YORK AND NEW ENGLAND RAILROAD.— Grand Central Depot. NEW YORK, ONTARIO AND WESTERN RAILROAD.— Depot at Weehawken. Ferries from foot of Jay street or West 42d street. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. — Depot at Jersey City. Ferries at foot of Cortlandt street and Desbrosses street. PHILADELPHIA AND READING RAILROAD.— Depot at foot of Liberty street. WEST SHORE RAILROAD. — Depots at Jersey City and Weehawken. Ferries from foot of Jay street and West 42d street. 7'^> Washington Inaugural Centennial. --js" FAVORITE ROUTE FOR BUSINESS AND PLEASURE TRAVEL."i^- |lie WeW Yoiil^ Genti^al aqd Hudson I^iVei' ^Wmi j&_ Is recognized by experienced travelers as without a rival for Easy Kidini;\ Lux- virions Slttpi7tg Cars, Elegant Dining Cars, East and Regular Service -BETWEEN- NEW ] ORK OR BOSTON and BUFFALO, NIAGARA FALLS, DETROIT, CLEVELAND, TOLEDO, CHICAGO, CINCIN- NA TI AND ST. LOUIS, V/ITII DIRECT CONNECTIONS NORTH, UEST, SOUTHWEST AND NORTHWEST. ROUTE OF THE FAMOUS WAGNER VESTI- BLLED NEW YORK, CHICAGO, CINCINNA TI Ai\D ST. LOUIS LIMITED. THE FASTEST AVD MOST LUXURIOUS TRAIN IN THE WORLD. THE DIRECT AND POPULAR NIAGARA FALLS ROUTE. AH trains stop ten minutes at Falls View Sta- liou on the vereg of, and overlooklnj the great cataract and the rapids above and below the Falls. ({2^"The New Passenger Cars, Parlok Cars, Sleepin-g Cars, Dining Cars, and Buffet Smoring Cars now in use on the New York Cen- tral and Hudson River Railroad and its connections, the Michigan Central Railroad, the Lake Shore and Ml higan Southern Railroad and the Bee Line, are unequaled in elegance of finish and racdern appli- ances to promote the comfort of passengers. For tickets, information respecting through fares, time of trains, connections, etc., apply at following offices of the company : IN new YORK CITY, 413, 7'iS, 942 Jiroadway, 1 Baftet-;/ I'larc, 12 FarK rUtce, 03 West I'iSth St., ISSth St. Station or Grand Central Station. M. C. ROACH, Gen" I Eastern Passenger Agent, 413 Broadway, N. Y. IN BROOKLYN, 33:i Wa.sliiiiffton St., 730 I'liltoti St., or 398 1U<1- ford A-venwe, E. J. RICHARDS, Ass^t Gen' I Passenger Agents Grand Cent'l Station, N. Y. -^iYhe: grand central srATlONi^ On Forty-second Street, at which all New York Central Trains Arrive and Depart, is in the Heart of the City and Convenient to Hotels AND Residences. For the Convenience of Uptown Resi- dents, ALL Express Trains, F.XCEPTING THE " LIMITED," also stop at the New Uptown Station on 138TH Street. highlands of HUDSON RIVER. Washington Inaugural Centennial. /^ h O w Q < h z w o Q z <: cc o So Washington Inaugural Centennial. CHURCHES. I VERY denomination of the Christian religion is represented in New York city, and visitors need be at no loss where to go on Sunday, unless it be from the difficulty of deciding which par- ticular church to attend among so many. There are about 400 different church buildings in the city, varying in seating capacity from 200 to 2000 persons and averaging between 600 and 700, or an aggregate of nearly 250,000. The combined value of the churches is $60,000,000. On Sunday, services in the Protestant churches begin in the morning, generally at 10.30 ; in the after- noon at 3.30, and in the evening at 7.30. The Roman Catholic churches celebrate high mass and vespers at about the same hours. Baptists. The Baptists have 43 churches, including those of the French, Swedes, Germans, Africans, and other nationalities. FIFTH A VENUE CHUR CH is at the corner of West Forty-sixth street. Dr. Armitage is the pastor. MADISON AVENUE CHURCH \^ at the comer of East Thirty-first street. Dr. Bridgman is pastor. EPIPHANY is at Madison avenue and Sixty-fourth street. Dr. Elder. CAL VAR Y CHUR CH, on West Fifty-seventh street, is ministered to by Dr. MacArthur. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, at Broome and Elizabeth streets, is a Gothic building of rough stone. TAPER NA CPE, on Second avenue, near Tenth street, is an attractive Gothic building, near St. Mark's. This was once the leading Baptist church in America, in Dr. Edward Lothrop's day, but having run down, it was on the verge of being sold for a synagogue, until it was revived and beautified by its present pastor, the Rev. Dr. D. G. Potter, largely aided by contributions from the leaders of the Standard Oil Company. y Dr. E. H. Chapin. It has towers 185 feet high. AVashington Inaugural Centennial. ^pi3eopalia9. There fire 76 churches of this .sect in New York, of which the following may be distinguished : TRINITY CHUR CM, on Broadway, at the head of Wall street, is the richest parish in America, having revenues of $500,000 a year. It was founded in 1697, receiving from the English Government a grant of its present site, outside the north gate of the city, to which in 1705 was added Queen Anne's Farm, includ- ing the territory along the river from Vesey street to Christopher street. Much of this great domain remains in the possession of the parish. Other singular resources were added to Trinity's store. It received a fund raised for relieving Christian slaves out of Salee ; was granted all wrecks and drift-whales on the island of Nassau ; Jewish citizens contributed for its spire ; and the Widow Hellegard DeKay loaned it ;[^400. Communion services were given by William and Mary, Queen Anne, and King George. Among the rectors were Dr. Vesey, for 50 years ; Dr. Barclay, from 1746 to 1764 ; Dr. Auchmuty ; Bishops Pro- voost, Moore and Hobart ; Dr. Hobart. When the Revolution broke out, the clergy were Royalist ; and the patriots closed the church, which was burned down in 1776, and rebuilt in 1788. The present church dates from 1846, and is a noble Gothic structure, with a rich gray interior, carved Gothic columns, groined roofs, and the magnificent marble and mosaic altar and reredos, erected by his family as a memorial to the late William B. Astor. The church is usually open all day long, throughout the week, with morning and even- ing prayers at 9 A. M. and 3 P. M.. and imposing choral services on Sunday. The parish spends enormous sums annually in charities. Upjohn, the greatest of American architects in the Gothic style, devoted seven years to building Trinity. It has an elaborate chancel service of silver, presented by good Queen Anne. Its spire, 284 feet high, commands a wide and wonderful view, and contains a melodious chime of bells. ST. Pa UL o, at Broadway and Vesey street, was built in 1764-66, and faces away from Broad- way, and was attended by Washington. It is a chapel of Trinity parish. The interior is quaint and old- fashioned to a degree. At mid-aisle, on the Vesey street side, the site of the pew of Washington is marked with his initials. The organ was brought from England long years ago. Dr. Auchmuty used to read prayers for the king, in the chancel, until the drummers of the American garrison beat him down with the long roll in the centre aisle. Among those buried in St. Paul's churchyard were Emmet and MacNeven, Irish patriots of '98 ; Gen. Richard Montgomery, the brave Irish-American, who was killed in storming Quebec ; John Dixey, R. A., an Irish scul])tor ; Capt. Baron de Rahenan, of one of the old Hessian regiments : Col. the Sieur de Rochefontaine, of our Revolutionary army ; John Lucas and Job Sumner, majors in the Georgia Line and Massachusetts Line ; and Lieut. -Col. Beverly Robinson, the Loyalist. TRINITl CHAPEI is a brown-stone Gothic church, on Twenty-fifth street, close to Madison Square. The inside walls are ol Caen stone, with tiled floors, and rich stained windows. Dr. Swope is rector. ST. jOHjSf o is a venerable sandstone chapel of Trinity parish, with a deep portico, on St. John's Park, where the great New York Central freight station now stands. Dr. Weston is rector. .5"^ A UG USTINE S, in Houston street, near the Bowery, is a handsome Queen Anne chapel of Trinity, with industrial schools, guilds, and mission house. Dr. Kimber is in charge. An illuminated crystal cross on its lofty spire indicates when services are being held. The bell was cast in 1700, and pre- sented by the Bishop of London, in 1704. GRA CE CHUR CH looks down Broadway from Tenth street, and is a very sumptuous and ornate edifice of marble, with a lofty marble spire. The interior is rich in delicate carvings, lines of stone columns, forty stained-glass windows, etc. Renwick built the church in 1845. Dr. Huntington is rector. You should visit the beautiful little chantry, opening off the south aisle, which was erected by Catherine Wolf's bounty. CAL VAR Y CHUR CH., at Fourth avenue and Twenty-first street, is a cathedral-like stone structure, with a rich and spacious interior, great transepts, and clustered Gothic columns. It dates from 1847. 82 Washington Inaugural Centennial. •5"^ Cr£ OJ^ G/^ S, on Slnyvesant square, is an immense Byzantine structure of brown-stone, with lofty twin-spires, a rich chancel, and brilliant polychromatic interior. It is " Low " church, and the rector is W. S. Rainsford. The elder Dr. Stephen H. Tyng was for many years rector here. ST". JSTARK .Vis a quaint old church, at Second avenue and Stuyvesant place, with many mural tablets, and the tombs of Petrus Stuyvesant, the last Dutch governor ; Col. Slaughter, one of the English governors ; and Gov. Tompkins. From the adjacent churchyard, A. T. Stewart's body was stolen, by night. On the site of St. Mark's Gov. Stuyvesant built a chapel, near his quaint yellow-brick house, over two centuries ago. CHURCH OF THE HOLY SPIRIT, at Madison avenue and Sixty-ninth street, designed by R. H. Robertson, is famous for its fine wood-carvings. ST. BARTHOL OME ]V S ^X Madison avenue and West Forty-fourth street, has a sumptu- ous richness of brilliant colors and gold, and stained windows, arcades and round arches, and polished granite pillars. ST. jAJ\lES\ on Madison avenue, corner of Seventy-first street, is one of the most elegant in the denomination. The new edifice is but a few years old, but it is admired for its graceful exterior and its exquisite interior decorations. CHURCH OF THE HEAVENLY REST, at 551 Fifth avenue, Rev. D. Parker Morgan, rector, and Rev. E. W. Babcock, assistant, contains polished red and gray granite pillars, with immensely costly capitals, in carved roses and lilies ; frescos of Fra Angelico's seraphs ; richly carved roof- timbers, and brilliant windows. This is one of the so-called " Low " churches. SI. I CrJVA I J US, 56 West Fortieth street, opposite Bryant Park, is High-church and ritualistic, with a rich and almost Roman service, largely choral, and a fine marble altar. Arthur Ritchie is rector. ST. MAR Y THE I^IR GLVirench cliurch, on West Twenty-third street. Ffeformi^d X^wX.^. There are 24 churches and chapels of this denomination. COLLEGLATE MLDDLE REFORMED CHURCH, at Fourth street and Lafa- yette place, built in 1839, has a handsome marble pulpit and a fine interior. OTHER REFORMED CHURCHFS are on Fifth avenue, at Twenty-first, Twenty- ninth, and Forty-eighth streets. The latter is a rich and florid Gothic building of brown-stone, with colored windows, many high gables, and flying buttresses. y^ Washington Inaugural Centennial. /T^etf^odist There are 66 Methodist churches in New York, 5 of which are German, 6 African, i Swedish, and i Welsli. [OHN STREET CHURCH is the cradle of American Methodism, which began in 1776, when' Philip Embury preached to four persons. Two years later, the society bought this site, and built the Wesley Chapel, replaced in 1S17 and in 1841 by larger churches. The clock now there was presented by John Wesley, and the society has other precious relics of the early days. ST. PAUL'S, at Fourth avenue .ind East Twenty-second street, is a handsome white stone structure, in Romanesque architecture, with a spire 210 feet high. ST. L UKE'S is at 108 West Forty-first street. ASB UR Y CHUR CH is at 82 Washington square. LEX IN G TON A VENUE CHUR CH is at East Fifty-second street. iJ9itariaQ5. This sect support 2 churches, widely known by reason of their illustrious pastors. ALL SOULS' CHURCH, at Fourth avenue and East Twentieth street, is a quaint red- and-white Byzantine editice, in the style of the media;val Italian churches, in which the late Dr. Bellows preached for many years. Dr. Williams is pastor. CHUR CH OF THE MESSIAH at I'ark avenue and East Thirty-fourth street, on Murray Hill, is a spacious and handsome structure, with a beautiful portal. Robert Collyer is pastor. There are 30 synagogues and temples, with strange Oriental names and ritual, and many smaller shrines. TEMPLE EMANU-EL, at Fifth avenue and West Forty-third street, is a picturesque pile of Oriental architecture, erected at a cost of $650,000, and rich in delicate detail work, carvings, and color. The interior is dazzling in its brilliancy. Smaller Sects of every conceivable character have churches or meeting places in various localities. Some of these are : CATHOLIC y^ Z' (9 .VrCZ/C 128 West Sixteenth .street. CHRISTIAN ISRAELITES, loS First street. REFORMED EPISCOPAL, Madison avenue and Fifty- fifth street. (Dr. Sabine,) NEW JERUSALEM, 114 East Thirty-llfth street. (Mr. Seward.) REFORMED CATIIOIIC 79 West Twenty-third street. j\f ORA V IAN, 154 Lexington avenue. FRIENDS, 124 l-'ast Twentieth street, 43 West Forty-seventh street, and East Fifteenth street, and Rutherford place. Z UTHERAN', 216 East Fifteenth street. Washington Inaugural Centennial. 85 gAr^I^S AND SQUAr^ES. p-p-ivj/yVTj Ay p A p Xf ^'■"^ '""*•- ueautiliU and popular puulic domain in America, only thirty Iv /\i\.iV, ygars ago was a dreary region of swamps, thickets and ledges, disfigured with heaps of cinders and rubbish, and dotted with the squalid shanties of degraded squatters. Since then a paradise has been created here, by an outlay of upwards of $15,000,000. Winding lakelets and velvet lawns have succeeded the gloomy swamps, splendid driveways curve around the picturesque rocky knolls, footpaths meander through the groves and thickets, and fine architecture and monuments of art are seen on every side. The Park extends from 5gth street to iioth street (over 2 5^ miles), and from Fifth avenue to Eighth avenue (over yi mile), covering 862 acres, of which 185 are in lakes and reservoirs and 400 in forests, wherein over half a million trees and shrubs have been planted. There are 9 miles of roads, 5^ of bridle paths and 28^ of walks. The landscape architects of the Park were Frederick Law Olmstead and Calvert Vaux. Upwards of 12,000,000 people visit the Park every year, half of them on foot. The best way to get a general idea of this great pleasure ground is to take one of the large public Park carriages, at the entrances on Fifth avenue and Eighth avenue. The fare to Mount St. Vincent, in the northern part, and return, is twenty-five cents. In the southwest part of the Park is the Ball Ground, a ten-acre lawn, where the boys may play cricket, base-ball or tennis ; and adjoining it on the northeast is the Carrousel, for young children, with swings and other means of amusement. Close by is the Dairy, affording milk and light food for the little ones. Beyond is the Green, or Common, a lawn of sixteen acres, made picturesque by grazing sheep, and thrown open to the people on Saturday. In the southeast part is the Menagerie, around the old castel- lated Arsenal building, and with many cages for animals, birds, a house full of monkeys of various kinds, bear-pits, with amiable-appearing ursine dwellers, and many other wild creatures, whose movements are watched by thousands of visitors daily. In winter, when several circuses board their animals here, the resident population is augmented by sundry lions, tigers, bisons, leopards, camels, hippopotami and other rare and interesting sojourners. The Mall is the chief promenade, nearly a quarter of a mile long and 208 feet wide, bordered by double rows of American elms, with the Green on one side and a bold, rocky ridge on the other. Here are the statues of Scott, Shakespeare, Burns, Fitz-Greene Halleck, the colossal Beethoven bust, and other artistic memorials. Beyond the Music Pavilion, #here band music is given on pleasant Saturday after- noons, is the Terrace, a sumptuous pile of light Albert-freestone masonry, with arcades and corridors and rich carvings of birds and animals. Below is the Lower Terrace, an ornamental esplanade, in which stands the famous Bethesda Fountain, designed by Emma Stebbins, and made at Munich, and represent- ing a lily-bearing angel descending and blessing the outflowing waters. Close by extends the Lake, twenty acres of winding water, devoted to public pleasure boats in summer and skating in winter. This part of the Park is reached direct from the Seventy-second-street station of the Third avenue or Sixth avenue Elevated railroads. Beyond the Lake is the Ramble, a delightful labyrinth of footpaths amid thickets, rocks and streams. Farther on rises the Belvedere, a tall Norman tower of stone, overlooking the Park and the suburbs of New York, the Palisades, Long Island, Orange Mountain and Westchester county. Next come the great reservoirs of Croton water, vast granite-walled structures containing 1,200,000 gallons of water. The American Museum of Natural History is on the left, on Manhattan Square, a kind of annex to the Park, between Seventy-seventh and Eighty-first streets and Eighth and Ninth avenues. The Metropolitan Museum of Art is on the right, near Eighty-second street. Beyond the reservoirs extend the North Park, with the carriage concourse on Great Hill ; the North Meadow, of 19 acres ; Harlem Meer, covering 12^ acres, and overlooked by ancient fortifications ; and the deep ravine of M'Gowan's Pass, from which Leslie's British light infantry drove the Continental troops in September, 1776. Just beyond, on the plains of Harlem, the Maryland line came to the rescue of the retreating \'irginians and Connecticut Rangers, and drove the British back, witli heavy losses. 86 Washington Inaugural Centennial. ^^ OTTkT^ -D A T? T^ occupies the high l)ank of the Hudson, from 72d to 130th street, three i\.l\ JrV-Koi-L'-tV r AivK. jj^iie^ long, and averaging 500 feet wide, with 17S acres of land, much of which has been improved by landscape gardening. A magnificent driveway, cut into four broad sec- tions by curving ribbons of lawns and trees, sweeps over the hills and along the edge of the blulT, afford- ing very charming views of the Hudson river, Weehawken, Guttenburg, Edgewater, the Palisades and upper Manhattan. On a noble elevation near the north end of the Park is the brick tomb in which Gen. Grant's body was temporarily laid, with imposing ceremonies, August 8, 1885. You can look through the latticed door and see the flower-laden receptacle in which the remains of the great hero are placed. Near the tomb is the old Claremont mansion. Visitors who want to see Grant's tomb only can go up on the Sixth avenue Elevated to 125th street, and thence go west on I22d street and Riverside avenue. Those who wish to ride through the whole park, with its lovely views of Weehawken and beyond, can take Park coaches (twenty-five cents) from the Elevated station at Ninth avenue and Seventy -second street. Around this wonderfully beautiful strip of park, it is said, will be the patrician residence quarter of the New York of the twentieth century. Among the other public grounds of the great metropolis we may mention a few of the most important. -P^ . ,^,^^ ^^ (The) is the oldest park in the city. It covers twenty-one acres at the seaward end of J^-^ J- J- -tv-K. 1 ^j^g island, with trees, lawns and walks, and a fine promenade around the sea wall. Here stood the Battery erected by the Dutch founders of the city ; and in later days the aristocratic houses of the city fronted on its lawns. Sir Guy Carleton's British army embarked here on November 25, 1783, a date still celebrated as Evacuation Day. On one side is Castle Garden and on another the United States Revenue Barge Office. Here the Elevated Railways terminate. There are beautiful harbor views from the sea wall. In July, 1776, the British frigates Rose and Phoenix, with their decks protected by sand-bags, ran by the roaring Battery and up the Hudson, firing broadsides on to the town. r^-n -r^-r^AT ^^ ^^^^ ^°°'^ "^ Broadway, is a little oval park, with a weary fountain in IJW VV J-v-LiN vj IjiViJ/lJ/iN , jjg centre, and surrounded by ocean steamship offices, foreign con- sulates, etc., and the great Produce Exchange, Washington building and Standard Oil Company's build- ing. On the site of the Washington building, in 1760, Archibald Kennedy, the Collector of the Port, built a large house, which afterwards became the headquarters of Lords Cornwallis and Howe and Sir Henry Clinton and George Washington. Here also Talleyrand made his home. No. 3 Broadway was Benedict Arnold's dwelling. At No. 11, on the site of Burgomaster Kruger's Dutch tavern, was General Gage's headquarters, in the old King's Arms Inn. The Green was a treaty ground with the Indians, the parade for the Dutch train bands and a cattle market. In 1732 it was enclosed " for the beauty and orna- ment of said street, as well as for the delight of the inhabitants of this city." The present iron fence dates from 1 770, and was formerly capped with round balls, which were knocked off and used as cannon balls by our artillery in the Revolution. In 1626, soon after Peter Minuit, first (Jovernor of New Nether- lands, had arrived in the ship Sea Mew, and bought the island of Manhattan from the natives for $26, he built here Fort Amsterdam, a block-house surrounded by a cedar palisade. Seven years later it was enlarged by Wouter Van Twiller and garrisoned by 104 rotund Dutch soldiers. This site is now occupied by the block of six old-fashioned brick buildings south of the square. On the site of the Produce Ex- change, in 1633, Wouter Van Twiller built the first church on Manhattan and a house for his good Dutch dominie. On the site of the fort a stately lonic-porticoed mansion was built in 1790 for the Presidential palace, and became the official residence of Governor George Clinton and John Jay. In 1815 it was replaced by the Bowling Green block. No. 39 Broadway was the site of the first European dwelling on Manhat- tan, Iniilt in 1612 by Ilendrick Christiaensen, the agent of the Dutch fur-trading company, who built here four small houses and a redoubt, the foundation of the present great city. Christiaensen was killed by an Indian afterwards, this being the first murder on record in the province. In July, 1776, to cele- brate the Declaration of Independence, the people came down here in vast crowds and knocked over the equestrian statue of George III., which was melted into bullets to assimilate with the brains of the adver- sary. The great fire of 1776, which destroyed the greater part of New York, began near Whitehall Slip, and swept over the city on a strong south wind, while the angry British garrison bayonetted mary of the citizens and threw others, screeching, into the sea of flame. Chancellor Livingston lived en lower Broad- Washington Inaugural Centennial. 87 way, in a house hung with Gobelin tapestry and rare paintings, with a $30,000 dinner service of solid silver and a rural palace at Clermont, up the 1 [udson. TT A AT/^A TT^t:> O/^TT A D T^^ ^^ ^^ ^^^ comer of Pearl and William streets, with an elevated rail- -^"^-'-^^ ^ -C/-tN- Ov^ U -TxiVJj^ j.Q^j station, and is now the centre of the wholesale cotton trade in America. On one side is the old Cotton Exchange, and on another side is the imposing new Cotton Exchange. Hereabouts, a century or more ago, were the mansions of the Beekmans, Hamersleys, Gouv- erneurs, Hoffmans and Van Homes. And here Admiral Digby entertained Prince William Henry, after- wards William IV. of England. About Hanover Square, in 1800, dwelt a community of French emigres — De Neuville, La Rue, De Riviere and others ; and the famous General Moreau, some time commander of the army of the Rhine and Moselle, banished by Napoleon, who, after dwelling here for seven years, joined the Allied armies in Europe, and was killed at the battle of Dresden by a cannon shot, aimed by Napoleon himself. .^ . .^^^^^-^ . near Hanover Square, has recently been made by filling up the Jl^AWJNi^i ii^ FAKK, ancient Coenties Slip. /^XT A T^TLT A 1\ T O/^TT A TD T^ ^^ ^^ intersection of Chatham street. East Broadway and the Bow- ^-'^■'^ ■'- -n.-^-'-'-L OV^vJi^lvJJ/, gj.y^ jj. ^j^g concurrent point of several elevated and horse railways, and one of the most crowded and busy localities in this roaring metropolis. A hundred years ago the marshes hereabouts were so pestilent that their owner, Rutgers, declared "the inhabitants lose one-third of their time by sickness." ^^ _j. . y -I- T) \ "D T7' ^'^^''^rs about eight acres, partly bounded by resounding Broadway and V^i 1 X n/xlvJ-v i: ri-iViV ^j^g newspaper-abounding Park Row, and contains the City Hall, Court House and other well-worn public buildings. Here, also, fronts the United States Post-Office, a mountain of granite. Before the Revolution it was an open field, in the country, where the people used to assemble for great popular demonstrations. T^n A TVTTT'T TAT O/^TT A T) T^ ''^^ minutes' walk east of City Hall .Square, down I>ankfort ^ -tvAiNI JS-ivii\ O^ U AK-i:!/, street, used to be a hillock between the Swamp and the East River. It has the Brooklyn Bridge on one side and the great Harper's publishing house on another, and is roofed over by the elevated railway trestles. At Cherry street and Franklin Square Walter Franklin, the great Russian merchant, built a palace, which became the Presidential mansion, where Washington held his court and gave his brilliant receptions. ■D-D TAT^TMr^ TTnTTQ-R^ QPUT A I? T? J'"' ^^'^ "^ ^^'"^ ^'^^ ^^^^^' ^""''^"'^ "'°'* °^ ^^"^ S^^^^ J^K-llN iilNLx jnUUD-d, C5V^Ui\iS.rV, newspaper offices, the Tribune, Times, Sun, World, News, Journal, Mail and Express and many others, with scores of famous and widely influential weekly papers. Here the great presses thunder on, night and day, printing their varied editions ; reporters flit to and fro with "copy;" and the wonderful New York newspapers are made up, with all their teeming freightage of battle and murder and sudden death, lectures, political leaders and the annals of the passing day. TTATT/^AT C/^TT A "D T?- "^^ °- 1^^^'^ °^ ''^^''^^ ^""^^ one-half acres, with fountains, trees, statues of Lin- U JN iUJN 0\2 U -AKxlrf ^.qJ^ ^,^j Washington, electric lights and other bravery, between Fourteenth and Seventeenth streets and Broadway and Fourth avenue. All around are hotels, restaurants, theatres, shops and offices, the centre of an ever busy and picturesque life. Its northern part is an open plaza for parades, with a platform for speakers or reviewing officers. \\T A QTTTMr TOM QniT A T? P ''^'''' ^^^'^ ^''"""^ ^'^'"'' '' "" ^^'^ °^ "'"^ ^"''' °''"P^' VV/lorlii\U-i WIN O^U/lIvrV, ing the site of the old Potter's Field, wherein more than 100,000 human bodies were buried. 88 Washington Inaugural Centennial. -rvTOr^AT C/^TT A r> "C*' ^°'^^''^ ^'^ acres, between Broadway and Madison avenue and Twenty- MADioUlM O^ U AK.±!/ i^j-^j^^j ^^^^ Twenty-sixth streets, and has lawns and trees, statues of Seward and Farragut, and a tall electric light tower. Around it are stores, huge hotels, restaurants and famous club houses. It is the central point of the life and splendor of upper New York. ^ _^ T) A T) XT' one and one-half acres, between Twentieth and Twenty first streets ^-^-'^-^^^-'-'-^^ ^ J: -TVivrv, ^j-jj Third and Fourth avenues, a part of the old Gramercy farm, is a private plaisauncc^ around which are the homes of many old families — John Bigelow (No. 21), Cyrus W. Field (123 East Twenty-first street), David Dudley Field (64 Park avenue), MaxStrakosch and others. Here was the palatial home of the late Samuel J. Tilden (No. 15). ^^ ^^^ . ,^^ „ P on a part of the old Stuyvesar.t farm, covers four acres, O 1 U 1 V iVoAiN i oy U AK.IJ/, between East Fifteenth and Seventeenth streets, with the tall twin spires of St. George's overlooking it. In this vicinity dwell Hamilton Fish (ex-Secretary of State), Sidney Webster, Jackson S. Schultz, Russell Sturgis, Richard H. Stoddard (the poet), William H. Schieffelin, the Rutherfords, the Stuyvesants and other well-known persons. The square has rich and luxuriant foliage and lawns, the local paradise for the dwellers in the adjacent crowded tenement regions of the East side. T^/^T\ TT>X^TTVTC C/^TT A "D ^:^ '^^^'^''^ ^^^'^ acres of lawns and greenery, between East Seventh and i vyiVix iS^ilN O Ov^ U/xivHv fej^th streets and Avenues A and B, surrounded by one of the most overcrowded tenement regions of the East side. AT^T^ T) A T) XT' '^ ^ pleasant open space, between Fortieth street and Forty-second street and Jjlv 1 i-li\ 1 X iT.-LVJV •^\y^^ avenue and the Reservoir, which received its present name in 1S84, in honor of William Cullen Bryant. On this site the world-renowned Crystal Palace stood in those far-away days before the war. It is now a favorite resort of West side children. MOT? IVTXrP mD"P P A "R "K" ^ long-drawn and nearly unimproved public ground of forty- lviwivi\ii\ Vjol-L'i-/ X rxlviv, seyen acres, extends from lioth street to 123d street, near Tenth avenue, and has a costly and far-viewing driveway. It lies on the east, or morning, side of the ridge which separates Harlem plains from the Riverside Park and Hudson River. ^ l\/rrMD"DTC Cr^TTATDT?' ^^''^o'^"'^^ ^ bold, rocky hill, by which even the lordly MOUJNI 1 MOKKio oyUAKJJv Fifth avenue is stopped, in the environs of Harlem. It abounds in maples, tulip trees, oaks, etc. ; and from the plaza near the fire alarm tower, on the crest of the hill, a broad view is enjoyed. ■ .^>^^J^. ■ Washington Inaugural Centennial. 89 Excliapges aijd Boards of Trade, There are a number of these in New York, but the three most interesting to visitors are the Stock Exchange, Produce Exchange and Consolidated Exchange. STOCK EXCHANGE is on Broad street, near Wall street. The stranger should not fail to visit the gallery of the Exchange between the hours of ten and three. As the name would indicate, the busi- ness of the Exchange is the purchase and sale of stocks, bonds and securities. The manner in which the brokers transact business is most amusing and extraordinary, and, to the uninitiated, appears to consist of incoherent shouting and violent gesticulation, to which no one seems to pay the least atten- tion. When the market is active, the scene is as though pandemonium had broken loose. A seat in the Exchange now costs twenty-five or thirty thousand dollars. The building is of white marble, and the great hall is handsomely frescoed. The visitors' gallery is entered from Wall street. PRODUCE EXCHANGE is, perhaps, the most imposing and impressive building in New York. It is at the foot of Broadway and fronts on Bowling Green, and is in rich Italian Renaissance architecture, of brick, with a copious use of terra cotta, in medallions, the arms and names of the States, and pro- jecting galley-prows. Above its uppermost long line of round arches rises an immense campanile, covering forty by seventy feet and 225 feet high, richly decorated, and nobly dominating lower New York and the bay. The building is 307 by 150 feet in area, and 116 feet high ; and the main hall is a noble one, 220 by 144 feet, and 60 feet high. From the visitors' gallery you may look down on the 3000 members of the Exchange (organized in 1861, and the largest in the world), and see and hear their fierce bargaining. The scene resembles a pitched battle between walls, and without cavalry. Near the gallery are the sumptuous library and reception rooms. Go to the superintendent of the building and get a pass (without charge) to ascend the tower. The climb is made luxuriously by eleva- tor ; and from the summit you see a magnificent and unrivaled bird's-eye view of lower New York, the bay, Staten Island, the shores and blue mountains of New Jersey. Brooklyn and Long Island. "Not the White Tower, nor the Colonne Napoleon, nor Bunker-hill Monument offers anything equal to the urban, rural and marine scenery presented to the vision." The building rests on 15,437 piles made of sturdy Maine and Nova Scotia trees. It was planned by George B. Post, and erected between 1881 and 1884. It is entirely fireproof. The flag flying from its tower is the largest ever made, covering fifty by twenty feet. There are nine passenger elevators. The money vault con- tains 1300 safes, and is defended by seven alternate layers of iron and steel. The Exchange cost $3,179,000. "Harper's Magazine " for July, 1886, has a thirty-page illustrated article describing this vast institution. CONSOLIDATED STOCK AND PETROLEUM EXCHANGE was organized in 1875. under the title of the New York Mining Stock Exchange, and has since consolidated with it the American Min- ing Stock Exchange, the National Petroleum Exchange, the Miscellaneous Security Board, and the New York Petroleum Exchange and Stock Board. Its growth has been constant. Three years since the Exchange began dealing in the prominent stocks of the country, and now does nearly as much business in this line as the Stock Exchange. During the year 18S7 it sold an average of 60,000 shares a day. A clearing system has been adopted which reduces risk to a minimum, only a very small amount of m.oney being needed to effect balances. This is one of the most animated exchanges for a stranger to visit, as the fluctuations in oil are considerable, the activity is great, and the noise and hubbub indescribable. On the i6th of April, 1888, the Exchange moved into its hand- some new building on Broadway, Exchange place and New street. The Broadway frontage is ninety- one feet ; Exchange place, 132 feet, and New street, eighty-seven feet. The basement is fifteen feet high, and forms the first story on New street, being above the level of that thoroughfare ; the main story is thirty-six feet, and above are four ofifice floors. The main story is entirely devoted to the Exchange, giving nearly 10,000 square feet of space, and is well ventilated and lighted. The building is open from 10 A. M. to 3 p. m., visitors being admitted to the gallery during those hours. 90 Washington Inaugural Centennial. MERCANTILE EXCHANGE has a new Inick and granite l)uilding at Hudson and Harrison streets, with a tall tower. There are 800 members, deahng in luitter, cheese, eggs and groceries. COTTON EXCHANGE has a new and imposing seven-story building of yellow l^rick on Hanover Square, south of Wall street. It cost .fi, 000,000. COAL AND IRON EXCHANGE is a vast and massive building at the corner of Cortlandt and New Church streets, the headquarters for dealings in these great commodities. AMERICAN HORSE EXCHANGE is at Broadway and Fiftieth street. COFFEE EXCHANGE is at 141 Pearl street. It has ovfer 300 members, and sometimes 100,000 l)ags of coffee are sold here in a day. GROCERS' EXCHANGE is at Wall and Water streets. Tea and sugar are the chief commodities sold. MARITIME EXCHANGE is in the Produce Exchange building. Open from eight to five (exchange hours, eleven to three). Marine and commercial news, reading room, library etc. METAL EXCHANGE is at Pearl street and Burling slip. REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE is at 57 Liberty street. AMERICAN EXCHANGE, 309 Greenwich street. AMERICAN REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE, i Broadway. BREWERS' EXCHANGE, corner of Worth and Chatham streets. CATTLE EXCHANGE, Broadway and Thirty-eighth street. DISTILLERS' WINE AND SPIRIT EXCHANGE, 19 South William street. ELECTRIC MANUFACTURING EXCHANGE, Duncan Building, corner Nassau and Pine streets. FOREIGN FRUIT EXCHANGE, 64 Broad street. HARDWARE BOARD OF TRADE, 6 and 8 Warren street. MANHATTAN STOCK EXCHANGE, 69 New street. MECHANICS' AND TRADERS EXCHANGE, 14 Vesey street, near Broadway. MILK EXCHANGE, 22 North Moore street. NEW YORK NAVAL STORE AND TOBACCO EXCHANGE, 113 Pearl street. NEW YORK BOARD OF TRADE AND TRANSPORTATION, Bryant Building, 55 Liberty street. NEW YORK FURNITURE BOARD OF TRADE, Bowery and 150 Canal street. NEW YORK PETROLEUM EXCHANGE AND STOCK BOARD, is Broadway. NEW YORK REAL ESTATE AND TRADERS' EXCHANGE, 76 and 78 Broad street. STATIONERS' BOARD OF TRADE, 97 and 99 Nassau street. SUGAR EXCHANGE, 87 Front street. Washington Inaugural Centennial. 91 ospitals, Dispei^saries, Monies, etc, '^^^^^ LL over the city there are hospitals and dispensaries, where the sick and aihng are treated and ^H^A cared for. If the patient be poor, no charge is made; if able, he is expected to pay a mod- ■^ ^ erate sum. New York is peculiarly blessed in this most noble form of charity, and many of these institutions have attained a degree of excellence in management and comfort in appointments which render them more desirable as places in which to take refuge during illness than almost any private house or home. This is especially true of the New York, St. Luke's and Roosevelt hospitals, where, by paying a reasonable sum, the best medical attendance, diet and nursing may be had. Any visitor in the city, or any person living in a hotel or boarding house, should not be deterred by old-time prejudice from increasing his comfort and chances of recovery by removing at once to a first-class hospital, away from the noise and inattention incident to an illness in a boarding house. The medical visitors to these hospitals comprise the very best talent in the city, but to enumerate them would be impossible within the limits of this work. Many celebrated specialists give up a portion of their time to several hospitals or dispensaries as visiting surgeons or physicians. In many of the hospitals, for §5000 the donor and his successors have the privilege of nominating the occupant of a bed for all time. Frequently a bed is thus endowed in memory of some dead friend or relative, whose name it bears. Such a monument is more beautiful and enduring than any work of the sculptor's chisel. There are also a great number of benevolent societies for the care of the blind, deaf and dumb, in- sane, aged, orphaned, indigent poor and friendless, of every sort and description. Many millions are annually spent on these charities. gLOOMINGlDaLE ^SYLUM FOR THE INSSNE, at Boulevard and One Hundred and Seventeentli street, on Washington Heiijhts, is a palatial brown-stone building, erected mainly in 1S21, amid charming grountls of forty-five acres. Only paying patients are received. IMSTITUTIOM for the DEHF flMt) Dumb, at Fanwood (One Hundred and sixty-second street), Washington Heights, is richly endowed, and has tliirty-seven acres of grounds. It was founded in 1816, and educates 250 jnipils, the course being eight years. Open daily, 1.30 to 4 i'. M. Institution for the ^LINID, at Ninth avenue and west Thirty-fourth street, has a granite (iotliic building. It was founded in 1831. Blind children are educated here, in letters and useful arts. Open to visitors, i to 6 r. ^r. daily. 0ELLEVUE rjOSPITBL, entrance foot of Twenty-sixth street. East river. Established November, 1826. Contagious diseases not admitted. The cost of sustaining the institution is about §100,000 per annum. The medical management is vested in a medical board, who meet on the last day of every month to assign from their own number the visiting stafif to the several divisions. Rules of the United States Military Hospital for the in.spection of the wards are followed. Admission of patients (between 10 A. M. and 3 r. m.) is procurable upon the recommendation of a physician; accidents and sudden illness, at any lime of day or night. Hours for visitors, from 11 A. M. to 3 p. M. Orphan CjSYLUM, at Riverside Park, was founded about 1S07, in a small hired house below City Hall Park. Its property is now worth ft, 000, 000, and 200 orphans are in its charge. 92 Washington Inaugural Centennial. (HEW yORK jyOSPITSL (Fifteenth street, near Fifth avenue) is a great, many-balconied, brick building, with ornamental Gothic gables. The institution was founded by the Earl of Dunmore, in 1771; and its ancient seat, between Duane and Church streets and Broadway, was vacated in 1870, the present building being opened in 1877. Ward patients pay $1 a day. pT. IjUKE'S I^OSPITSL, at Fifth avenue and Fifty-fourth street, was founded in 1S50 by the Rev. W. A. Muhlenberg, and has an oblong parallelogram of buildings, with wings, and a central chapel flanked with towers. It is attended by Episcopal nuns, and the form of worship is Episco- palian; but patients are received without regard to sect. (VjOUNT pINSI yOSPITSIa, at Lexington avenue and East Sixty-sixth street, is a noble Eliza- bethan pile of biick and marble, admirably equipped, with nearly 200 free beds. It cost $340,000, and was erected by Jewish New Yorkers, but is non-sectarian. pRESBYTERIHN rjOSPITSL, at Madison avenue and East Seventieth street, founded by James Lenox, who also established the magnificent Lenox Library, is a handsome Gothic building, dating from 1872. (JaNCER yOSPITSL, The (sIEW yORK (there is but one other in the world), is on Eighth avenue, near One Hundred and Fifth street. It was founded in 1884, with an endowment of $200,000 from John Jacob Astor, $50,000 from Mrs. Gen. Cullom, and $25,000 each from Mrs. Astor, Mrs. R. L. Stuart and Mrs. C. H. Rogers. ULD Jj?lDlE5' jyOME, of the Baptist Church, on Sixty-eighth street, near Fourth avenue, is a spacious semi-Gothic building in the form of the letter H. i\OOSEVELT r30S^^'^^''jj ^^ Ninth avenue and Fifty-ninth street, richly endowed Ijy the late James H. Roosevelt, is an admirably arranged and spacious pavilion hospital, opened in 1871, and accommodating 180 patients. Among the other beneficent institutions of New York are: Actors' Fund, 12 Union square. Bethany Institute for Woman's Christian Work, 69 American Dramatic Fund, 1267 Broadway. Second avenue. American Veterinary Hospital, 141 West Fifty-fourth Bible and Fruit Mission, East Twenty-sixth street. street. Bread and Beef House, 139 West Forty-eighth Artists' Fund Society, 6 Astor place. street. Association for Befriending Children and Young Catholic Protectory, at Fordham. Girls, 136 Second avenue. Catholic, for 200 Chambers Street Hospital, 160 Chambers street. vagrants. Chapin Home for the Aged and Infirm, 151 East Association for the Improved Instruction of Deaf- Sixty-sixth street. Mutes, Lexington avenue and Sixty-seventh Charity Organization Society, 21 University place. street. Children's Aid Society, 24 St. Mark's place. Association for the Relief of Respectable Aged In- City Mission Society, 306 Mulberry street. digent Females, Tenth avenue and One Hun- Colored Home and Hospital, First avenue and dred and Fourth street. Founded 1814. Sixtv-fifth street Asylum for Lying-in Women, 139 Second avenue. ^^{^^^^^ q , ^^^ Asylum, Tenth avenue and One Founded 1823. . ,,.,,. 1 Ti 1 i,r , -ni • . Hundred and Forty-third street. 300 beneli- Asylum of St. Vincent de Paul, 215 West Thirty- ..„,,„ ninth street. For 150 orphans. c^^ries. Founded 1837. Baptist Home for Aged Persons, Fourth avenue and ^'^y Nursery and Babies' Shelter, 143 West Twen- Sixty-eighth street. tieth street. Washington Inaugural Centennial. 93 Emergency Hospital, 223 East Twenty-sixth street. Female Assistance Society, 2S8 Madison avenue. Five-Points House of Industry 155 Worth street. Five-Points Mission, 61 Park street. Foundling Asylum, Sixty-eighth street, near Third avenue. Free Home for Destitute Young Ciirls, 47 West Eleventh street. Friends' Employment Society, Rutherford place. Grace Memorial House, 94 Fourth avenue. Hahnemann Homoeopathic Hospital, Fourth avenue, near East Sixty-seventh street. Harlem Hospital, 27 West One Hundred and Twenty-fourth street. Hebrew Benevolent and Orphan Asylum Society, Tenth avenue and West One Hundred and Thirty-sixth street. Home for Aged Hebrews, One Hundred and Fifth street, near Tenth avenue. Home for Aged Men and Women, One Hundred and Sixth street, near Ninth avenue. Home for Colored Aged, foot of East Sixtv-hfth street. Home for Convalescent, 433 East One Hundred and Eighteenth street. Home for Deaf-Mutes, 220 East Thirteenth street. Home for Fallen and Friendless Girls, 49 West Fourth street, Home for Incurables, 54 West Eleventh street. Home for Inebriates, Madison avenue and Eighty- sixth street. Home for Mothers and Infants, Tenth avenue and West Sixty-first street. Home for Old Men and Aged Couples, 4S7 Hudson street. Home for Sailors, 190 Cherry street. Home for the Aged Poor, 231 West Thirty-eighth street, and 179 East Seventieth street. Home for the Friendless, 32 East Thirtieth street. Home for Women, 273 Water street, 260 (jreene street. Home of Industry for Reformed Men, 40 East Houston street. Hospital New York College of Veterinary Surgeons, East Fifty-eighth street, near Fifth avenue. Hospital for Ruptured and Crippled, Lexington avenue and Forty-second street. House of Industry, 120 West Sixteenth street. House of Mercy, West Eighty-sixth street. House of Rest for Consumptives, at Fordham. House of the Good Shepherd, East Eighty-ninth street. Howard Mission, 56 Rivington street. Infant Asylum, Tenth avenue and East Sixty-lirst street. Institution for the Blind, Ninth avenue and Thirty- fourth street. Institution for the Deaf and Dumb, Tenth avenue and One Hundred and Sixty-second street. Institution of Mercy, 33 East Houston street. Juvenile Asylum, Tenth avenue and One Hundred and Seventy-sixth .street. Ladies' Helping Hand Association, 160 West Twen- ty-ninth street. Leake and Watts Orphan House, Ninth avenue and One Hundred and Eleventh street. Magdalen Asylum, Eighty-eighth street, near Fifth avenue. Manhattan Eye and Ear Hospital, 103 Park avenue. Masonic Board of Relief, Masonic Temjile. Medical Mission, 81 Roosevelt street. Methodist Episcopal Home, 255 West Forty-second street. For aged and infirm. Metropolitan Throat Hospital, 351 West Thirty- fourth street. Midnight Mission, 260 Greene street. For fallen women. New York Eye and Ear Infirmary, Second avenue and Thirteenth street. New York Infirmary for Women and Children, 5 Livingston place. New York Ophthalmic Hospital, 201 East Twentv- third street. Nursery and Child's Hospital, Lexington avenue and Fifty-first street. Olivet Helping Hand, 63 Second street. Orphan Asylum (Catholic), Fifth avenue and Madi- son avenue, between Fifty-first and Fifty-second streets. 1200 children. Orphan's Home (Episcopal), Forty-ninth street, near Lexington avenue. Peabody Home for Aged Women, West Farms. Presbyterian Home for Aged Women, Seventy-third street, near Madison avenue. St. Barnabas Home, 304 MuUierry street. St. Elizabeth Hospital, 225 West Thirty-first street. St. Francis Hospital, 605 F"ifth street. St. John's Guild, 8 University place. St Joseph's Orphan Asylum, Avenue A and Eighty- ninth street. State Charities Aid Association, 21 University place. Trinity Hospital, 50 Varick street. Women's Christian Temperance Home, 440 East Fifty-seventh street. Women's Hospital, Fourth avenue and Forty-ninth street. Young Women's Home, 27 Washington square. 94 Washington Inaugural Centennial. Mrt Gkl-leries. No city has larger or more noteworthy collections of modern art-works than the city of New York, Visitors should not fail to enjoy spending a few hours in one or more of our important galleries. Metropolitan Ma§ear7 of Art, in Central Park, near Fifth avenue and Eighty-third street. Open free every day except Monday and Tuesday, when admission is twenty-five cents. A great collection of Dutch and Flemish pictures and other European works of art. The first movement towards founding the Museum was made in 1869, and for some years its collections were kept in rented buildings down town (Fourteenth street). The present fireproof brick and granite modern-Gothic building was dedicated in 1880 by the President of the United States. It is 218 by 95 feet in area, and new structures are being built in connection, so that in time it will be one of the greatest art-museums in the world. Space fails to tell of the beauties of these varied and extensive collections, numbering many thousands of pieces. Pamphlet cat- alogues are for sale at the door, for ten cents each, one for the Loan Collection of Paintings, one for the Old Masters, one for the Cesnola Collection, etc. The pleasure of a visit will be much heightened by their aid. A long rainy day can be profitably and charmingly spent at the Museum. In the West-entrance Hall are many fine pieces of statuary, Beer's medallion of Michael Angelo, the Apollo Belvedere, Hiram Power's "California," " George Washington," "Alexander I. of Pussia," Roncanelli's " Rose of Sharon," Alba- no's " Thief " from Dante's " Inferno," Mozier's " Rizpah," Fisher's " Goethe," McDonald's " Gen. Han- cock," Schwanthaler's " Dancing Girl," Marochetti's " Washington," Houdon's "Franklin," Conelly's " Thetis ; " and many fine works by Barye, Barbedienne, Thorwaldsen, Reinhart, Canova, Launt Thomp- son, ^i'a/j., loaned l)y tlieir owners. Here also is the Poe Memorial, presented to the Museum by the actors of Nov/ York. On the southwest stairway is a collection of forty-three water-colors by William T. Richards of New England and White Mountain scenes. The great hall contains many pieces of the famous Cesnola collections, from Cyprus, and various other interesting collections of rare objects of art. In the gal- leries are the collections of gold jewelry and Greek and Phoenician glass from the Cesnola treasure-trove, and Japanese, Egyptian and Oriental porcelain and antiquities. Among the art-treasures in the western galleries are many of Kensett's exquisite landscapes, Gifford's and Durand's masterpieces, Frfere's Oriental scenes, Couture's " Decadence of Rome," Maignan's " Outrage at Anagni," Madrazo's portrait of Robert L. Stuart, Bonnat's portrait of John Taylor Johnston, Meyer von Bremen's genre pictures, Granet's " Bene- dictines," Hellquist's great Swedish historical scene, Wylie's " Death of a Vendean Chief," William M. Hunt's " Boy and Butterfly," Marr's " Mystery of Life;" landscapes by Cropsey, Inness and Breton; Bough ton's famous " Judgment of Wouter Van Twiller," Schreyer's Arab scenes, and many other noble and almost priceless works of art. The East Gallery is devoted to pictures by the old masters — Baroccio, Albani, Titian, Correggio, Tiarini, Caravaggio, Tintoretto, Tiepolo, Sassoferrato, Bordone, Andrea del Sarto, Ghirlandajo, Rembrandt, Rubens, Jordaens, Hals, Van Dyck, Cuyp, Wouverman, Ostade, Teniers, Terburg, Breughel, Ruysdael, Steen, Velazquez, Murillo, Copley, Stuart, Trumbull, Jarvis, Etty, Lely, Poussin. Rubens's " Return of the Holy Family from Egypt " was painted on wood for the Jesuit Church at Antwerp, and after the suppression of the Jesuits, in 1777, passed to London. His " Lions Chasing Deer " came from Cardinal Fieschi's collection. Many other pictures in this remarkable collection have romantic histories, extending over centuries. Rosa Bonheur's "Horse Fair," purchased at the Stewart sale for fifty-nine thousand dollars, has been presented by Cornelius Vanderbilt ; and the magnificent collection of paintings bequeathed to the museum by the late Catherine Wolf and Mr. George I. Seney's munificent gifts have also been added. Isei20x Isibrarvj's Fictare Gallerv] (Fifth avenue and Seventy-first street), has about 150 fine paintings, including Munkacsy's " Blind Milton Dictating Paradise Lost to his Daughters," Turner's " A Scene on the French Coast " and " Fingal's Cave," Horace Vernet's " Siege of Saragossa," Gainsbor- ough's " A Romantic Woody Landscape," Andrea del Sarto's " Tobit and the Angel," Delaroche's " The Field of Battle," Church's " Cotopaxi," Thomas Cole's "Expulsion from Paradise," Bierstadt's " Yo Washington Inaugural Centennial. 95 Semite." Sir Joshua Reynolds' portraits of Edmund Burke, Kitty Fisher, and Mrs. Billington ; portraits by Leshe, Stuart, Newton, Trumbull, Inman, Peale, Copley, Daniel Huntington, S. F. B. Morse, Healcy, Pine and others ; and original paintings of dogs by Landseer ; sheep by Verboeckhoven ; landscapes by Mulready, Constable, Kensett, George L. Brown, Durand and Ruysdael ; and calssical subjects by Sir David Wilkie. The statuary includes Crawford's " Sleeping Shepherd Boy " and " Children in the Wood," Rauch's ' Victory," Powers' " La Penserosa," Ball's " Abraham Lincoln," Sir John Steele's " Sir Walter Scott," Trentanove's " Napoleon " etc. Societv] of An2ericsii2 Artists, was instituted in the summer of 1877, by a few of the younger American artists who had for some time the project under consideration. Feeling that the taste for art was ^.trong enougii among the art-loving public of the city to take interest in and support an insti- tution in addition to the Academy of Design, they determined upon its formation. Some of the best known of the artists belonging to the National Academy, and who liked the enterprise and energy of the new society joined its ranks. Its objects are to afford to artists a second exhibition to that of the Academy, where they may display their canvases, and to encourage social intercourse between artists of similar views and ideas. All artists who agree with the principles of the society and with its objects are eligible for election, and are elected by a simple majority vote. The society holds an annual exhibition. William M. Chase, president, 51 We'-t Tenth street ; W. A. Coffin, secretary. Arr^ecicafp Water Goior Socieiv] rooms are at 51 West Tenth street, was organized in the autumn of 1866. Its objects are the furthering of the interests of painting in water colors, the hold- ing of an exhibition where the works of its members may be displayed and sold, and the bringing together of artists who paint themselves and are anxious for the further development of painting in water colors. The members are divided into resident and non-resident, but the latter are allowed to contribute to the exhibitions. Any recognized artist who paints in water colors is eligible for election, which is by ballot at a regular meeting of the society. Two negative votes exclude. Annual exhibitions are held in the Academy of Design in January of each year. The water color exhibition is now an important event of the year in the art world. The ofhcers are J. G. Brown, president ; Henry Farrar, secretary. oocietv] of Decorative Art at 28 East Twenty-first street, was instituted February 24, 1877, by five persons. It was formed for the establishment of rooms for the exhibition and sale of women's work, the diffusion of a knovvlege of decorative art among women, and their training in artistic industries. According to the last annual report, the society has the names of 3910 contributors of work on its books. All articles sent for sale must pass the committee on admission and, if accepted as being up to the required standard, are exhibited in the sales-room free of charge. When sold, ten per cent is deducted from the price received. The society is constantly extending its usefulness in an educational direction to women and children During the past year instruction has been given in free-hand drawing, modeling, plain sewing and fine needle work, wood carving, practical designing and light metal work, at the society's free studios, 37 and 39 West Twenty-second street. These free classes, under the auspices of the society, are in charge of a special committee, and supported by a distinct fund raised for the pur- pose. The society is governed by a Ijoard of twelve managers, from whom the ofiTicers, except the secre- taries, are elected. The officers are Mrs. William T. Blodgett, president ; Mr. George C. Magoun, treas- urer ; Miss M. A. Stimson, secretary. National Aca^en^v] of Desigip, at Twenty-third street and Fourth avenue, is a study in dark-blue stcme and white Westchester marble of thirteenth-century Gothic architecture, forming a peculi- arly lovely and artistic facade. The great exhibition galleries, on the third floor, are reached by an impos- ing oak and marble staircase ; and here are held exhibitions of paintings for two months every spring. The carved capitals of the colum.ns were careful studies from leaves and flowers. The anvil-wrought iron-work is remarkable for its finish and strength. Notice the beautiful Gothic entrance and drinking fountain. Daniel Huntington is president of the National Academy, and T. Addison Richards is secretary. The National Academicians (N. A.) are chosen annually from the Associates (A. N. A.) q6 Washington Inaugural Centennial. M-rr^ericsii^ Pift >A.550CiatiOi2 An association for the promotion and encouragement of art, with liandsome galleries at 6 East Twenty-third street. Two exhibitions, spring and autumn, are held each year. The president is JoseiDh F. Sutton; vice-presidents, T. E. Kirby and R. A. Robertson ; sec- retary, Miss Catherine Timson. NeW Y°''k WistoKical oocietv], 170 Second avenue, corner of East nth street, has in its gallery 1000 pictures, many of them by the old masters, and 100 pieces of statuary. This magnificent collection, the finest in America, is unfortunately sealed against the public, except such as secure an introduction from members of the Society. OsiKOijv] 5, the famous photograpli gallery at 37 Union Square, has a rare and interesting collection of weapons, armor, pictures, statuary, and other bric-a-brac, quite worthy of a visit. Art r\OOrr25 ai^O Art otores are numerous, and many should be visited, to see the fine modern paintings, etchings, bronzes, etc. Knoedler's (formerly Goupil's), Fifth avenue and Twenty-sec- ond street ; Avery's, 86 Fifth avenue ; Schaus', Fifth avenue, near Twenty-sixth street ; Kohn's, 166 Fifth avenue ; Cottier's, 144 Fifth avenue ; Sarony's, 37 Union Square ; Keppel's (rare engravings and etchings), 23 East Sixteenth street. r riVate Lxallenes of the Vanderbilts, Belmont and Hilton, are very rich in fine paintings, but may not be visited by strangers unaccredited. rTOyyrT2ai2 rtouse, in its bar-room, parlors, and rotunda, has several of the finest and costliest art-works in Amsrica, including pictures by Correggio and Bouguereau, a large Gobelin tapestry, and other pieces. It is often visited by ladies. JYLaoarr7e / roVost, on West Twenty-seventh street, opposite the Victoria Hotel, exhibits rare Persian bric-a-brac, armor, embroideries, plaques, etc. otaoios of artists occupy the Sherwood Building, Sixth avenue and Fifty-seventh street ; the Studio Building, 51 West Tenth street, between Fifth and Sixth avenues, and the Fourth avenue Studio Building, Fourth avenue, corner of Twenty-fifth street. There are also many studios in the Young Men's Christian Association Building, Fourth avenue and Twenty-third street ; the Studio Building, Broadway and Twenty-eighth street ; the Rembrandt, West Fifty-seventh street, near Seventh avenue ; the Holbein, 139-145 West Fifty-fifth street, and No. 108 West Fifty-fifth street. In the Sher- wood are the studios of Bolton Jones, Deluce, Fredericks, Beckwith, Granville Perkins, Curran, etc. In the Rembrandt are the Gififords and Sartain, and Junius Henri Browne, the literarian. Many of the artists have regular reception days, when visitors are made welcome. HRT SOHOOL-S. Art Sct^ool of Gooper tli^io 9, Third avenue and Seventh street. Art Sct^ool Datioipal A-Csiberrj^ of Design, Fourth avenue and Twenty-third street. Art Stu^e9t5' Iseagae, 3S West Fourteenth street, under C. R. Lamb's presidency. Scl^ocl of Ji^Sastrial Art, for women, 251 West Twenty-third street. Won^eip's J Institute of Sed^i^ical Desigi^, 124 Fifth avenue. Washington Inaugural Centennial. 97 CLUBS AND SOCIETIES. THESE are not as numerous in proportion in New York as they are in London, but, notwithstanding the fact that several clubs have died from inanition within a few years, the increased membership in desirable clubs seems to indicate that club life is growing in favor in New York. The following is a list of the principal clubs and societies : Union League Club house, at Fifth avenue and West Thirty-ninth street, was built in 1879-S0, at a cost of $400,000, with sumptuous lialls, dining-room, art gallery, library, billiard-room, cafe, etc., decorated by Louis Tiffany, John LaFarge and Franklin Smith. The club has 1500 members. The entrance fee is $300, and the annual dues $75. It was organized in 1S63, as a union of gentlemen devoted to ' ' absolute and unqualified loyalty to the Government of the United States to resist and expose corruption, and promote reform in National, State and municipal affairs; and to elevate the idea of American citizenship." 1 1 raised and equipped several regi- ments for the National armies during the Secession war. This is the most elegant club-house in America. Union Club, at Fifth avenue and Twenty-first street, is a social and non-political club, ranking among the first in New York. The club-house is a fine brown-stone building owned by the club, and ad- mirably adapted to its uses. The membership is limited by the constitution to 1000, and at present there are 1000 full members and 11 life members, thus filling the list. There are also 42 Army and Navy members. Candidates for membership must be proposed and seconded by two members, and their names posted in the club-house for ten days. Election is by the Governmg Board of 24 members, one black ball in ten excluding. The entrance fee is $300, and the annual dues are $75, payable May ist. Officers of the Army and Navy are exempt from the yearly dues. The clul) was organized in August, 1S36, and the presidents have been Chief-Justice Jones, Com. John C. Stevens, Gov. John A. King, Moses H. Grinnell, William M. Evarts, William Constable and, at present, John J. Townsend. Authors' Club, at 19 west Twenty-fourth street, decorated by Francis Lathrop, is the haunt of the leading men of letters in the great metropolis. Among its members are Curtis Eggleston, Stedman. Stoddard, Bunner, Matthews, Boyessen, Godwin, Hay and James. In the same building is tlie hall of the New York Fencing Club (see Century Alagazine, January. 18S7J. GROLIER Club (64 Madison avenue) contains fifty bibliophiles, and studies Ijookbinding, extending, fine printing, paper making, etc., as arts. New York Athletic Club, founded in iSeS, is the leading society of the kind in America. It has a four-story building at Sixth avenue and Fifty-fifth street, with Ijowling. billiards swimming tank, gymnasium, cafe, parlors, reading-room, etc. The grounds and boat-houses are at Travers Island. There are 2000 memljers. Manhattan athletic Club, 524 Fifth avenue, has a sumptuous double house of brown-stone for its home, with cafe, billiard, chess and card-rooms, reading-room, and great \Aealth of statuary, paintings, velvet carpets, gymnasium, etc. Their athletic grounds and cinder track are at Eighth avenue and Eighty-sixth and Eighty-seventh streets. The club was founded in 1877. Lotos Club, at Fifth avenue and Twenty-first street, is a social organization, with monthly art recep- tions in its handsome brown-stone building. It includes many authors, artists, actors, etc. Admis- sion, $200 ; annual dues, $50. There are 500 members. Century Association, at 109 East Fifteenth street, is for the advancement of literature and art, and has a fine library and picture gallery. Six hundred members. A MERIC AN Jockey Club, 22 west Twenty-seventh street. This is one of the most prominent racing associations in America. Tlie club liouse is at Jerome Park, where many of the grandest eques- trian contests of modern times have taken place. 98 Washington Inaugural Centennial. Caledonian Club, handsome sand-stone building at Clreenwich avenue and Thirteenth street (Jackson square). Foundeil in 1S56, as a social and athletic society for Scotchmen. Calumet Club, 3 west Thirtieth street. Young society men. Canadian Club, 12 East Twenty-ninth street. Founded 1SS4. Coney Island Jockey Club, This is the most progressive and popular racing association in this country. It was organized in 1879, and has the finest race track in America, at Sheepshead bay. The meetings are held in June and September of each year. The Futurity Stakes, the richest in the world, are decided on this track. The rooms are on Fifth avenue, corner of Twenty-second street. Leonard W. Jerome is president and J. G. K. Lawrence, secretary. Down Town Club, 50 pine street. 500 members. HARMONIE Club, in a handsome building at 45 West Forty-second street. Three hundred and sixty German members. Founded in 1852. The Lambs Club, Twenty-sixth street, near Sixth avenue, largely composed of actors. The late Lester Wallack officiated for some years as the Shepherd. Merchants' Club, io8 Leonard street. Founded 1S72. Two hundred members. New York Press Club. The Press Club was instituted in December, 1872. Active membership is limited to those employed on the public press of the city and vicinity, to city correspondents of papers abroad, and to "gentlemen engaged in literary pursuits other than that of journalism." Honorary members may be chosen without regard to these qualifications. Election to active mem- bership is by a two-thirds vote of the members present at a meeting ; to honorary membership by a unanimous vote. The initiation fee is $25, and the dues $1 per month. The club has its rooms at 120 Nassau street, where it has a parlor, a commodious work room, a good library and a bil- liard room. New York Southern society includes many eminent Southerners, now domiciled in New York. Racquet Club, sixth avenue and Twenty-sixth street. Two courts. Four hundred and fifty members. KIT-KAT Club, at 23 East Fourteenth Street, is composed of artists. Knickerbocker Club, at Fifth avenue and Thirty-second street, is a very aristocratic society of 350 members. Lawyers' Club. Following the example of the merchants in the dry-goods district, the lawyers have formed a down-town club, which is located in the Equitable building. The rooms extend the whole length of the Pine street wing, and front eighty feet on Broadway. There are a library, smoking-room, kitchen, dining-room and private dining-room. Those connected with this under- taking are among the lawyers of highest reputation in the city, and it is expected to make this a general meeting-place for the profession, while at the same time giving the comforts of a club. Manhattan Club has a fine brown-stone building at Fifth avenue and Fifteenth street. It was founded in 1865 to advance Democratic principles. St. Nicholas Club, 413 Fifth avenue, was founded in 1875, as a social organization of descendants of the New York families, prior to 1785. Three hundred members. St. Nicholas Society, founded in 1835, for descendants of old New Yorkers before 17S5, has famous dinners, and includes the old aristocracy of the city. SOROSIS is a woman's club, founded in 1868, and now with 350 members. Meets twice a month at Delmonico's. University Club, Madison avenue and Twenty-sixth street (old Union League Club house). Founded in 1865. For former students at college. West Point or Annapolis. Washington Inaugural Centennial. 99 Tammany society was founded in 17S9, to inculcate love of America, with an aboriginal ritual, intended to conciliate the hostile Indians, and to antagonize the aristocratic Cincinnati. William Mooney was the first Grand Sachem. The members, in Indian costume, received the Sachems of the Creeks from Carolina. Yacht Clubs '^'^^ Larchmont, New York (57 Madison avenue), American (574 Fifth avenue), Seawanhaka (Tompkinsville), and ATLANTIC (Bay Ridge), are the chief yacht clubs of the city. Rowing Clubs include the Atlanta, Nassau, Gramercy, Columhia College and New York Athletic, which have their boat-houses along Harlem river, near Third avenue. Bicycling Clubs, The New York Bicyling Club, founded in 1879, has rooms in Fifty-ninth street, near the Park. The Citizens' Bicycling Club is at 26 West Sixtieth street, where they have the best club-house for the purpose in America. Several smaller clubs are in existence. There are upwards of 1200 bicycles in the city, and great numbers in Brooklyn and other adjacent muni- cipalities. Ohio Society of New York, 236 Fifth avenue. American Chemical Society, university Buikung. American Ethnological Society, 60 waii street, it dates from 1S42, and Albert c.Mmn was its first president. American Geographical Society owns a building at no. n west Twenty-ninth street. Founded in 1852. One thousand five hundred fellows. Chief Justice Charles P. Daly is presi- dent. It has 20,000 volumes and 8000 maps. AMERICAN METROLOGICAL SOCIETY, East Forty-ninth street. American Microscopical Society, 12 East Twenty-second street. Founded iseg. American Numismatic and Arch^ological Society, 45 university place. American Philological Society, 36 cooper union. New York Genealogical and Biographical Society, 64 Madison avenue. New York Horticultural Society, 26 west Twenty-eighth street. Masonic Temple (sixth avenue and Twenty-third street) is a massive and simple building of gray granite, erected at a cost of over $1,000,000. The ground floor is devoted to business, the second floor to the Grand Lodge hall, the third and fourth to lodge and chapter rooms. Odd rELLOWS Hall, at Grand and Centre streets, is a singular looking and massive structure, built about the year i860, and containing many decorated lodge rooms. There are about 100 lodges. Young Men's Christian Association, at Fourth avenue and Twenty-third street, has a spacious and stately Renaissance building (erected in i86g) of New Jersey brown-stone and yelluw Ohio marble ; with library (35,000 volumes), gymnasium, lecture rooms. It is open from 8 A. M. to lo- P. M. (Sundays, 2 to lo), and strangers are made very welcome. It aims to improve the spiritual, mental and physical condition of young men by evening classes, sociables, prayer meetings, Bible classes, music, entertainments, etc. There are seven branches. Young Women's Christian Association, in East Fifteenth street, near Fifth avenue, is a handsome building of red brick and rock-faced Belleville stone, with a pyramidal roof of red Akron tiles, and abundant tiling, terra-cotta, oaken wainscots, stained glass, etc. Inside are rich parlors, a large chapel, employment rooms, a large library (10,000 volumes), and free schools for type-writ- ing, bookkeeping, short-hand, dress-making, wall paper designing, modelling, etc. The association was founded in 1871, and has 180 members. R. H. Robertson erected the build- ing in 1886, at a cost of $125,000, to which John Jacob Astor gave $30,000, and the three Yander- bilt daughters (Mrs. Sloane, Mrs. .Shepard and Mrs. Twombly), $45,500. loo Washington Inaugural Centennial. UIBRKRieS. Free EirCUlating is intended to become to New York what the Public Library is to Boston, except that it will be composed of many separate collections, in different parts of the city. Andrew Carnegie, John Jacob Astor and others have lately given considerable sums for this purpose. The branches now in operation are at 49 Bond street (13,000 volumes), and the Ottendorfer Library, at 135 Second avenue, founded by Oswald Ottendorfer in 1884 (12,000 volumes, half of them German). The Bruce Library (endowed by Miss Catherine W. Bruce as a memorial of her father) on West Forty-second, west of Seventh avenue, adjoining the Baptist church. Another branch is to be built down town, on the west side. Apprentices, founded in 1820, and still conducted by the General Society of Mechanics and Trades- men, is at 18 East Sixteenth street. It contains 70,000 volumes, one-third of which are stories. It is open to lads under eighteen, journeymen, apprentices and working-women, giving out 160,000 books a year. It is open from 8 .A. M. to 9 P. M. Astor Library, on Lafayette Place, is a handsome brown-stone Romanesque building, 200 feet long, containing 226,000 volumes, and open from 9 A. M. to 5 p. M. Books are not allowed to go out. There is a spacious vestibule, with twenty-four marble busts, and of the three great halls above the centre one is for catalogues and delivery, and the others for general reading. Some of the departments of literature are more complete than in any other American library, and many scholars haunt the twilight alcoves while making books. John Jacob Astor left $400,000 to found the library with, in 1848, to which his son, Wil- liam B. Astor, added $550,000, and his grandson, John Jacob Astor, $300,000. There are many Greek and Latin MSS., black-letter volumes and Shakespeareana. Kooper UniOI], a huge brown-stone building at the head of the Bowery, covers an entire square, and contains free libraries, reading-rooms, lecture-foundations, evening schools of design, engraving, science, telegraphy, etc., and the rooms of the American Geographical Society. It was founded by Peter Cooper, a wealthy iron founder and glue manufacturer, who stated his idea thus : " The duty of a business man is to make money ; the duty of a Christian is to spend it." He erected this building in 1857, at a cost of $630,000, and richly endowed the group of free schools that he founded here. The library contains 20,000 volumes. Mercantile, in CUnton Ilall, Astor place, was incorporated in 1866, and is open from 8 A. M. to 9 p. M. It contains 210,000 volumes, and has a large reading-room. There are 5500 members, who pay $4 or $5 each per year. It has branches at 431 Fifth avenue and 2 Liberty place. Lenox Library is a noble building of white Lockport limestone, in modern French architecture, fronting on Central Park, at Fifth avenue and Seventy-first street, 192 by 114 feet in area, forming a courtyard between the central building, its advancing wings, and a ponderous limestone wall with iron gates. It was built and equipped, at a cost of $1,000,000, by the late James Lenox, who afterwards richly endowed it for the people. Access to its treasures has not been made so easy that the people know much about it, and there have been ferocious skits in the newspapers (and notably in Life) about the prac- tical exclusion of the public. If anyone wants to visit the Library he must write to the superintendent. Dr. G. 11. Moore. looi Fifth avenue, and receive a card of admission. You had better try this, and go up there on a rainy day, when unable to do sightseeing out-doors. From the Grand Union Hotel go up on the Third Avenue Elevated Railroad to Sixty-seventh street station. In the south wing is the library, containing precious incunabula; a perfect Mazarin Bible, printed by Gutenberg and Faust in 1650, and the oldest of printed books ; Latin Bibles printed at Mayence in 1462 (by Faust and Schoffer), and at Nuremberg in 1477 (with many notes in Melanchthon's handwriting); seven fine Caxtons ; block-books; Washington Inaugural Centennial. ioi hve of Eliot's Indian Bibles ; " The Recuyell of the Historyes of Trove " (Bruges, 1474), the first book printed in English ; the Bay Psalm Book (Cambridge, 1640), the first book printed in the United States, etc. There are also many rare MSS. on vellum, illuminated, dating from before the invention of printing. These objects are exhibited and entertainingly explained by the librarian, the venerable Dr. S. Austin AUibone, author of the Dictionary of Authors. New York Law Institute, Post Office Building, Rooms 116 to 122, fourth floor. Founded in 1828, for the use of members of the bar, but is now also open for the use of the public. The library contains about 32,500 volumes of legal works and a few books of reference indirectly useful to lawyers. There are to be found many very scarce copies of law reports ; a few books belonging to Alexander Hamilton, and containing numerous entries in his handwriting ; a note-book of Lord Ilardwicke ; the cases and opinions of Charles O'Conor ; portraits of Thomas Addis Emmet, Chancellor Kent and Judge Greene C. Bronson, and busts of James T. Brady and John Anthon. Open daily from 9 A. m. to 5 r. m. Terms for life mem- bership, if paid in one sum, $150 ; if paid in installments of $35 initiation and $20 annually, $200. The rooms have lately been much remodeled. Americai] Museum of Natural History, between Eighth and Ninth avenues, corner of Seventy- seventh street, was founded in 1869. The corner-stone of this building was laid by President (Jrant in 1874, and the Museum was opened in 1877 by President Hayes. It is a Gothic building of brick and granite, with several large and admirably arranged halls. Here are found the Powell collection of British Columbian objects, the Robert Bell collection from Hudson's Bay, the De Morgan collection of stone-age implements from the valley of the Somme, the Jessup collection of North American woods and building stones, the James Hall collections in paleontology and geology, the Gay collection of shells, the Bailey collection of birds' nests and eggs, mounted mammalia, Indian dresses and weapons, Pacific Islanders' implements and weapons, 10,000 mounted birds, the Major Jones collection of Indian and mound-builders' antiquities from Georgia, the Porto Rico antiquities, a mammoth twenty-five feet high, several specimens of the extinct Australian bird, the Moa (fifteen feet high), reptiles, fishes, corals, minerals, etc. The library contains 12,000 scientific works. Many lectures are given here yearly for the teachers in the public schools, who come here to study these vast and interesting collections. New buildings are about to be added by the State. The Museum is open free on Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays and Sat- urdays. It is reached by the Sixth Avenue Elevated Railroad to the Eighty-first street station, or by the Eighth avenue horse cars. Young Men's £l]ristian Association has several libraries in different localities, the most important of which is in their building, corner of Fourth avenue and Twenty-third street. New Yorlc Historical Society, 170 Second avenue (open from 9 to 6), has upwards of 70,000 volumes, especially Americana and genealogy. It is inaccessible to the public. Bar Association (7 West Twenty-ninth street) has a library of 24,000 volumes ; open to members and the judges. Kity Library, 12 city Hail, 10 a. m. to 4 p. m. Arnerican Institute, 19 Astor place, 9 to 9. Masonic, sixth avenue and Twenty-third street. Mott Memorial (medical), 64 Madison avenue ; open il to 9. New York Society, 67 University place, 8 to 6, 70,000 volumes. Founded 1754 ; $15 a year. I02 Washington Inaugural Centennial. STEAMSHIPS # STEAMBOATS. Dceen SfeamBhipB. All the principal transatlantic steamships sail from the port of New York. A visit to one of them "Will repay the visitor. Select a steamer of the Canard, White Star, Guion or French lines, and go down to the dock an hour or so before the sailing time (see daily papers). The vessel will be crowded with passengers and their friends, the saloon gay with floral offerings, and everything open to inspection. When the warning-bell rings, hurried farewells and parting injunctions and admonitions are given, and those who are to go on shore hurry down the gang-plank. Slowly the vessel backs out from the pier, and, amid cheers and waving of handkerchiefs and a chorus of good-byes, slowly turns her prow towards the many miles of trackless ocean which lie between her and her destination. About this time the man who is always late comes rushing breathlessly down the pier, only to find that he is left again. It is of no avail for him frantically to wave his umbrella, and with shrill expostulation command the vessel to return. Those mighty engines will never cease to throb and pulse until the Old World is sighted. The fastest trip on record across the Atlantic was made by the " Etruria " of the Cunard Line, between Queenstown and New York — six days, five hours and thirty minutes. The distance is a little short of 3000 miles. The following is a list of the principal ocean lines sailing out of New York : Far EurnpE, ANCHOR LINE. — New York to Glasgow. Saturdays. Tier 20 (old), N. R., foot of Dey street. Fares, first cabin, $50 to $60; second cabin, $30. Henderson Bros., agents. No. 7 Bowling Green. ANCHOR LINE. — New York to Liverpool. Steamer " City of Rome." Every fourth Wednesday. Pier 41, N. R. Fares, first cabin, $60 to $100. Henderson Bros., agents. No. 7 Bowling Green. CUNARD LINE. — New York to Liverpool. Wednesdays. Pier 40 (new), N. R., foot of Clarkson street. Fares, first cabin, $80 to I125. Vernon H. Brown & Co., agents. No. 4 Bowling Green. FRENCH LINE. — Compagnie Generale Transatlantique. New York to Havre. Wednesdays. Pier 42 (new), N. R., foot of Morton street. Fares, first cabin, ,$So to |ioo ; second cabin, $60. L. de Bebian i.\: Co., agents, No. 3 Bowling Green. GUION LINE. — New York to Liverpool. Tuesdays. Pier 38 (new), N. R., foot of King street. l'\ires, first cabin, .|6o, $80 to $100 ; second cabin, $35 to |6o. A. M. Underbill l\: Co., agents. No. 29 ISroadway. HAMBURG-AMERICAN.— New York to Hamburg. Thursdays and Saturdays. Pier foot of First stieet, Hoboken. Fares, first cabin, $50, $60 to $75. C. B. Richard & Co., agents. No. 61 iiroadway. INMAN LINE. — New York to Liverpool. Thursdays and Saturdays. Foot of Grand street, Jersey City. Fares, first cabin, $60, $80 to $ioc. Peter Wright & Sons, agents, Washington Building, Xo. I Broadway. NATIONAL LINE.— New York to Liverpool. Saturdays. Pier 39 (new), N. R., foot of Houston street. Fares, first cabin, |6o to $70. Washington Inaugural Centennial. 103 NATIONAL LINE. — New York to London. Pier 39 (new), N. R., foot of Houston street. Fares, first cabin, II55 to !;.6o. NORTH-GERMAN LLOYD.— New York to Bremen. Wednesdays and Saturdays. Pier foot of Second street, Hoboken. Fares, first cabin, .fSo to $175 ; second cabin, $60. Oelrichs & Co., agents, No. 2 Bowling Green. RED STAR LINE. — From New York to Antwerp and Paris. Saturdays. Pier foot of Grand street, Jersey City, adjoining Pennsylvania R. R. depot. Fares, first cabin, $60 to $75 ; second cabin, $45. Peter Wright & Sons, agents, Nos, 7 and 55 Broadway. STATE LINE. — New York to Glasgow. Thursdays. Pier 41, N. R., foot of Leroy street. Fares, first cabin, .$50 to $60 ; second cabin, $30. Austin Baldwin & Co., agents, No. 53 Broadway. WHITE STAR LINE.— New York to Liverpool. Thursdays and Saturdays. Pier 45 (new), N. R., foot of West icth street. Fares, first cabin, $60, fSo to $100 ; second cabin, $35. R. J. Cortis, agent. No. 37 Broadway. Pdp Bermuda and West Indies. QUEBEC STEAMSHIP COMPANY.— New York to Bermuda. Wednesdays. Pier 47 (new), N. R. Fares, first cabin, $30; excursion, $50; second cabin, $20; excursion, $33.50. A. E. Outerbridge & Co., agents, No. 51 Broadway. For Cuba and Mexicn, NEW YORK, HAVANA AND MEXICAN STEAMSHIP COMPANY.— New York to Havana. Thursdays, 3 P. M. Pier 3, N. R. Fares to Havana, first cabin, $50 ; to Yera Cruz, Mexico, first cabin, $85. F. Alexandre & Sons, agents, No. 31 Broadway. Par Cuba and Nassau. NEW YORK AND CUBA STEAMSHIP COMPANY.— New York to Havana. Saturdays, 3 r. M. Pier 16, E. R. Fares to Havana, $50 ; to Santiago and Cienfuegos, 7'in South-side Line, !t^6o. NEW YORK AND CUBA STEAMSHIP COMPANY.— New York to Nassau. Thursdays, 3 P. M. Pier 16, E. R. Fares to Nassau, excursion, $50 ; to Porto Rico, San Domingo, $75. James E. Ward & Co., agents. No. 113 Wall street. Par \A/B5t Indies and South and Central America. ATLAS LINE. — New York to Kingston, Jamaica. Every 14 days. Pier 55, N. R. Fares, first cabin, $50 ; second cabin, $35. Pim, Forwood & Co., agents, No. 22 State street. Per St. Thnmas and South America. UNITED STATES AND BRAZIL MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY.— New York to St. Thomas and Rio de Janeiro. Monthly. Roberts' Stores, Brooklyn. Fares, first cabin, to St. Thomas, I75 ; to Rio de Janeiro, $150. Paul F. CSerhard c\; Co., agents, No. 84 Broad street. I04 Washington Inaugural Centennial. CnaBtwiBB SfeamBhipH. The principal coastwise steanisliip lines sailing from the port of New York are : CROMWELL LINE. — New Vcirk to New Orleans, La. Wednesdays and Saturdays, 3 p. >r. Pier g, N. ]<. Fares, cabin, $40 ; steerage, $20. S. II. Seaman, agent. Pier 9, N. R. MALLORY LINE. — New York to Jacksonville and Fernandina, Fla. Fridays, 3 P. M. Pier 21, E. R. Fares, to Fernandina, first cabin, .f2i.5o ; to Jacksonville, $23. MALLORY LINE, — New York to Galveston and Key West. Wednesdays and Saturdays, 3 p. M. Pier 20, E. R. Fares, to Galveston, Tex., $50 ; to Key West, Fla., I40. C. H. Mallory & Co., agents. Pier 21, E. R. NEW YORK AND CHARLESTON STEAMSHIP COMPANY.— New York to Charleston, S. C. Wednesdays and Saturdays, 3 i'. M. Pier 29, N. R. Fares, first cabin, $20 ; excursion, $32. NEW YORK AND CHARLESTON STEAMSHIP COMPANY.— New York to Savannah. Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, 3 V. M. Pier 27, N. R., foot Park place. Fares, first cabin, I20 ; excursion, $32. W. H. Rhett, agent, No. 317 Broadway. OLD DOMINION LINE. — New York to Norfolk, Va. Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, 3 v. M. Pier 26 (new), N. R., foot of Beach street. Fares, to Norfolk, Va., $8.50 ; excursion, |i6. OLD DOMINION LINE. — New York to Richmond, Va. Wednesdays and Saturdays, 3 p. M. Pier 26, N. R. Fares, to Richmond, $10; excursion, .fiS. (31d Dominion Steamship Company, No. 235 West street. River and Snund SteambaatB. Foreigners sailing into New York harbor for the first time are amazed at the grandeur of the River and Sound steamers. Nearly all are .'-ide-wheelers, usually painted white, and many are of great size and speed. The principal lines, with the location of their piers, are shown belo\\ : Lang iBiand Bnund SteamerB. Name of Line. New York to Start from Foot of Spring street, N. R Warren street, N. R. Canal street, N. R. Boston Murray street, N. R. Peck slip, E. R. Peck .slip, E. R. Hartford HudBDH River BteamerB. Name of Line. New York to St.art from Foot of People's Line Albany I Canal street, N. R. Citizens' Line Albany and Troy ' Christopher street, N. R. Day Line 1 Albany and intermed. points. . Vestry street, N. R. Washington Inaugural Centennial. ios THE MILITIA. THE disciplined militia of the city numbers 5250 men, in eight regiments of infantry and two batteries of artillery comprising the First Brigade. They are equipped by the State with arms and other munitions, and partly with uniforms • and the term of enlistment is five years. In winter there are con- tinual company drills . and in summer several days of camp duty under canvas at the State camp ground near Peekskill. Besides adding an element of mihtary splendor to the sober burgher life of the city they are 01 utmost service in pieserving the public peace on the rare occasions when riots or other public dis- turbances are under way and the police need behind them the moral effect of long lines of bayonets and loaded rifles They have swept the tumultuous streets with deadly volleys more than once, and were equally efficient m line ot battle before GeneraJ Lee's ragged but heroic Southern infantry. The regiment which is the pride of New York is the 7th. The 69th Regiment (the Irish regiment) was commanded by and served during the civil war under the gallant Corcoran. The names of the various regiments and tlie location of their armories are given below : Fil'St Bf'l^'Lld^. Headquarters, 6 Pine street. Brigadier-General Louis Fitzgerald commanding. First Bcittcry . C^pt^^i". LouIs Wendel. Armory, 340 West 44th street. 'SPrntnl RilftprV ^^'"^^'•^ ^ith gatling guns. Captain F. P. Earle. Armory, corner Broad- - ■ way and 45th street. Seventh Regiment Annorv '°7" ^'^, "^'^t "'""". """"'" by 66th and 67th streets -5 - and rourlh and Lexington avenues. 1 he main drill-room is 200 by 300 feet. The company and veterans' rooms are very elegantly furnished ; and there are libran,', reception and memorial rooms of much beauty. The building is open to visitors. Two companies drill each evening. It was built in 1S79 at a cost of $300,000. Emmons Clark is colonel. Ei^htij ReO'inieilt Annoy '^^ ^^ Broadway ami 35th street. Colonel, George D. Scott. hiintlj Re'^'inient ArniOI'V ''' ^^ ~^^ west 26th street. Colonel, Willlam Seward. Eleventh Regiment Annorv '' "' "^T.f 7t ?'"' '''""''■, ^' '' ' ^'"■"'*" '''^'"''^' '-' -^ tion. Alfred P. Stewart is colonel. Twelfth Regiment Annory '' "^ ^'""'l ^'T"": iT ^T "''""' 1° ^''^, '''''', ^'Tt'; -^ '-^ -^ ous, castellated, with heavily grated windows, loopholed towers and a castle keep. Within, besides many company rooms, etc., is an enormous drill hall, hand- somely equipped. Colonel, James II. Jones. Twentv-second Regiment Armory '-^ - ^p--- and attractive structure on 14th - "-' -^ street, near Sixth avenue. Col., John T. Camp. c- i.. .,:.,il, D ,^:„^ ,.,i ^/,-.^...^..., IS over Tompkins Market on Third avenue, between Sixtv-ninth Regiment Armory ,. , ,/^ , , ,,.,. • ,. . ;-, '-' -^ 6th and 7th streets. 1 his is the famous Irish regi- ment that did such noble service under Colonel Corcoran in the civil war. Colonel, James Cavanagh. Seventy-first Regiment Armory j-t Broadway and 45th street, one of its quaintest -^ J * -^ trophies is a cannon captured from the Bowery Boys " in the famous Dead Rabbit war in 1S57. This was one of the bravest commands in the battle of Bull Run. Colonel, E. A. Mc.\lpin. io6 Washington Inaugural Centennial. CDLLEBES AND SCHDDLS. THE citv has 306 free public schools, where more than 4000 teachers instruct 315,000 children, at an annual cost of almost $4,500,000. Children between eight and fourteen are compelled by law to go to school, and twelve truant officers look out for them. There are also many scores of private and paro- chial schools in the city. COLUMBIA COLLEGE occupies an irregular group of brick buildings on the square between Madison and Fourth avenues and Forty-ninth and Fiftieth streets, near the Cathedral and the Grand Central Depot. It has no dormitories. The chief buildings are the School of Mines, along Fiftieth street (four years' course ; founded in 1864) ; the School of Arts, along Madison avenue (four years' course ; fee, $150 a year ; 274 students) ; the Law School founded in 1858, and probably the leading one in America (two years' course ; $150 a year ; 397 students) ; and the Library (Melvil Dewey, librarian), a handsome building, containing 70,000 volumes (open from 8 A. M. to 10 P. M.) in a hall 113 by 75 feet, and 58 feet hio-h. The School of Political Science, opened in 1880 (three years' course ; fee, $150), is in the School of Arts building ; the School of Medicine is the College of Physician and Surgeons, at Fourth avenue and Twenty-third street. The college has in all 1600 students ; Frederick A. P. Barnard is president. It was founded in 1754 as King's College, and largely endowed with land by Trinity Church. For over a century its buildings were down-town, on College place, between Barclay arid Chambers streets. In 1775 the townspeople drove out the second president, Rev. Miles Cooper, an Oxford graduate, and resembling Dryden in face; and he hid in Stuyvesant's house until he could take ship for England. The college was popularly regarded as a nest of Tories, and remained closed (its buildings serving as barracks and military hospital) until 1784, when the legislature rechristened it Columbia College. Among its professors are Henry Drisler, H. H. Boyesen, C. F. Chandler, J. S. Newberry, John D. Quackenbos, William R. Ware and J. Ordronaux. Among its early students were John Jay Alexander Hamilton, Robert R. Livingston and Gouverneur Morris. The woman's department now contains about forty students. The ancient building, with old-fash- ioned columned portico, in the centre of the college group, was once the Deaf and Dumb Asylum, and was bought by the college about thirty years ago, as a nucleus for its new establishment. UNIVERSITY OF THE CITY OF NKUS YORK was founded in 1830, and has sixty-five instructors and 800 students. The classical and scientific departments are free, and occupy (with the law department) a handsome Gothic building on Washington square. The medical school of the University is near Bellevue Hospital. COLLEGE OF THE CITY OF NEISI YORK, at Lexington avenue and Twenty-third street, has spacious brick buildings, with a library of 40,000 volumes. It has 230 classical students and 330 scientific students, with 36 instructors, and is free to New York lads. It was founded in 1847 as the New York Free Academy, and became a college in 1866. It costs the city $140,000 a year. COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, connected with Columbia College, was founded in 1807, and has 20 professors and over 600 students. The college building is in Sixtieth street, between Ninth and Tenth avenues, and was provided for by Wdliam H. Vanderbilt, who, in 1885, gave it $500,000, wliich was increased by $250,000 given by his four sons to establish a free clinic and dispensary, and $250,000 given by his daughter, IMrs. William D. Sloane, to establish the Sloane Maternity Hospital. BELLEVUE HOSPITAL MEDICAL COLLEGE was founded in 1 861, and has 500 students and a high reputation. It is on the grounds of Bellevue Hospital. GENERAL THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY of the Protestant Episcopal Church occupies the block known as Chelsea square, between Ninth and Tenth avenues, and Twentieth and Twenty-first streets, and overlooking the Hudson river; there are at present about 200 students. Stone buildings. Two great dormitories. CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL. In the old Charlier Institute building, near Central Park. RUTGERS FEMALE COLLEGE is situated at 58 West Fifty-eighth street. The college was incorporated in 1838, and was formerly located in Madison street. In 1S67 it was re-chartered. FRIENDS' SEMINARY, 226 East Sixteenth street. Washington Inaugural Centennial. 107 ISL.MNDS. 's^i 1 r I \ at the mouth of the harbor, covers nearly sixty square miles, and has 40,000 Otateip J Slell^O; inhabitants, two railroads, the Sailors' Snug Harbor (near New Brighton), the summer resorts at St. George, and the great fortifications overlooking the Narrows. People call it "the American Isle of Wight," on account of the beauty of its scenery of hill and sea, and many New York merchants have their homes here. It was the Staaten Eylandt of the Dutch, and is a county of New York. Ferrj'boats leave Whitehall every half-hour or so for St. George. Fare, ten cents. It has along part of its length the Staten Island Railroad, which is a connecting chain of many very attractive villages, where are to be seen hundreds of remarkably pretty homes. Here George William Curtis has lived many years. Here, too, lives Erastus Wiman, who of late years has been foremost in advancing the interests of Staten Island. TTN \ ' X ' \ \ \ Long Island Sound, about one mile from New Rochelle, was made an army L>'slVl0 5 JSlai^O^ hospital in 1861, and a depot for recruits in i86g. It is now a .sort of school for comi)any cooks for the American army. 1 r , ) r j \ off Pelham Neck, is the site of city hospitals and workhouses, and of the Pot- LstrLo Jolstiy KJ ^ jgj.'g pigi(^i^ where over 2000 pauper and unknown dead are buried every year. "XT/ \ ; r I \ near Hell Gate, has 200 acres, with tine old forests, and the State Emigrant VL sirO § JSlsll^O; Hospital, House of Refuge. Lunatic Hospital, Homoeopathic Hospital, Soldiers' Home, etc., a group of costly buildings, attractively embowered in foliage and looking out on wide lawns. •fO \ I J r I \ two miles from the Battery, covers thirteen and one-half acres, and has JOQOIOQ 5 J 5lslI20; ^i^Q obsolete works of Fort Wood, with a small garrison of artillerists, and the Bartholdi Statue of Liberty. -f;^ 1 1 . r I \ one and one-half miles from the Battery, is used for a magazine and con- £51115 J SlsinO; t^jns the ancient bulwarks of Fort Gibson. -O IIP f I X covers 100 acres, where the Harlem river enters the East river, and has J\elI2 Oslll 5 J SlslipO 2500 inhabitants, mostly destitute children in the House of Refuge, Chil- dren's Hospital, Nursery and other vast and handsome brick buildings, where they are instructed in work and study by the paternal city. ^1 I 11; r I \ in the East river, covers 120 acres, and is occupied by vast and impos- JUIgIC K^ W6II o J 51 si 12 Oj ing prisons and asylums, built by the convicts from stones quarried on the island. At the south end is the Charity Hospital, with 1200 beds and twenty-four skillful house physicians. Next comes the great Penitentiary, where 1200 unfortunate criminals are kept under guard. It has a battlemented roof and towers, and is built of granite and iron. More than half of the prisoners are for- eigners. Farther north are the two great Almshouses, one for each sex, with high verandas and pleasant grounds. Farther up are the Workhouses, the City Lunatic Asylum, and other cancer spots of modern Manhattan. Visitors must get a pass at Third avenue and Eleventh street, and go over on the ferry from East Twenty-sixth street. G, -1 I \ is a picturesque ornament of the inner harbor, about half a mile from OveKI20KS Lslsli^O the Battery, towards Brooklyn. It is the headquarters of the Military Department of the Atlantic (Major-General Schofield), and has forts galore, and parks of guns, magazines, barracks, and a beautiful parade ground. At one end is the circular three-story stone fortress of Castle William, built in iSii, and at one time a prison for looo Southern soldiers ; and near the centre are the low and massive walls of the star-shaped Fort Columbus. There are grand old trees on the island, the Museum of the United Service Institution, including General Sheridan's famous Winchester horse, mementos of Washington, Hogarth's painting implements, and sonz'oiirs of Indian, East Indian and Secession wars, and the Chapel of Cornelius the ("enturion. Steamboats run hourly from the Batter\\ io8 Washington Inaugural Centennial. TV^ARKETS. CONSIDERING their many defects, the business done in the New York markets is surprisingly large. It is out of all proportion to the accommodations furnished, especially at Washington Market, where the transactions amount to considerably more than do those at all the others combined. Taken as a whole, though, the entire busi- ness of the markets, large as it is, bears but a small proportion to the business done by dealers in the same line located outside of their limits. Some of the larger markets are worth visiting. The following are the largest : WASHINGTON MARKET is a large new building of red brick, and is as orna- mental as severe utilitarianism will permit. Washington Market is the principal meat and vegetable market of the city, and in the early morning hours presents a spectacle well worth seeing. It occupies the entire square block bounded by Washington, West, Fulton and Vesey streets. The opening of a great market-wagon stand near Little Twelfth street has done away entirely with the outside wagon trade of Washington Market. The crowd of buyers is great during the morning up to about ten o'clock; after that hour it gradually thins out, until at noon the place is almost deserted, except by the scrub-women and sweeps. On Saturday evening, and especially during the winter holiday season, the scene in and about the market is full of interest. The booths about Vesey and Barclay streets are illuminated by the light from rude torches filled with oil, giving out a reddish light and volumes of thick smoke. This light falls weirdly upon the huge piles of fruit and produce and other merchandise, and outlines the figures of the swaying crowd of buyers against the darkness of the night. The air is filled with the hoarse cries of the venders and the wrangling of would-be buyers. FULTON MARKET, bounded by Fulton, Beekman, South and Front streets, is also a large market, always containing a fine display of fish, poultry, etc. During the first few days of April there is always a large display of trout from all parts of the country at the stand of E. G. Blackford. There are several restaurants on the South street side, celebrated for the cooking and serving of oysters. FULTON FISH MARKET, opposite Fulton Market, though rather slimy, and always pervaded by '' an ancient and fish-like smell," is well worth seeing. Every- thing edible that lives in salt water may be seen here. Fish is a cheap and good food, and consequently in great demand. The other large markets are : CATHARINE, foot of Catharine street. East river. CENTRAL, East Forty-second street, opposite Park avenue. CENTRE, Centre street, from Grand to Broome. CLINTON, Spring, Canal, West and Washington streets. ESSEX, Grand street, from Ludlow to Essex. JEFFERSON, Greenwich and Sixth avenues and West Tenth street. MARKET-WAGON STAND, West, Little Twelfth, Washington and Gansevoort streets. TOMPKINS, Third avenue, between Sixth and Seventh streets. UNION, Houston and Second streets and Avenue D. Washington Inaugural Centennial. 109 A STROLL aP FIFTH AVENGE. ]JIFTH AVENUE is the Belgravia of the American metropolis, the centre of its fashion and ' splendor, the home of its merchant-princes. It is at its best on a pleasant Sunday, at the time when the churches are out ; or on a bright afternoon, when its long lines of carriages are rumbling away towards the Park. The scene of beauty and animation then presented is unequaled in America (or in Europe or Asia, for that matter) ; and in the perfect costumes of the promenaders, the dignity of the equipages, the variety and beauty of the domestic and ecclesiastical architecture, affords numberless objects of interest for the amazed and delighted provincial philosopher. Here, on every side, are gorgeous club-houses, churches notable for their beauty, and a domestic archi- tecture of rare variety and comfort, with picture-galleries, and rich porticos, and long vistas of Connecticut brown-stone palaces, the homes of incalculable wealth and splendor. From its beginning in Washington Square, the avenue traverses miles of a palatial residence-quarter, until it reaches Central Park, and passes on, a league beyond, into the suburban life of Harlem. In taking a stroll up Fifth avenue, of about a league, one should be accompanied by a herald king-at- arms, a mercantile register, an elite directory, and a wise old club-man with his stores of personal and family gossip. In default of these, we have strung together here a few items of interest, which may interest the visitor to our city at the present time. The black omnibuses of the Fifth Avenue Transportation Company run at frequent intervals from Bleecker street up South Fifth avenue, across Washington Square, and along the avenue tt) Sixtv-fourth street (fare, five cents). Washington Square, where Fifth avenue begins, is a park of nine acres, occupying the mournful site of the old Potter's Field, wherein more than 100,000 human bodies were buried. On its east side is the white-stone Gothic building of the University of the City of New York, with 800 students and sixty-four instructors. It is described by Theodore Winthrop in his brilliant novel "Cecil Dreeme. On and near the square dwell Charles De Kay, the poet ; the famous saltatory Kiralfy family; Augustus St. Gaudens, the sculptor; the De Navarro family; Walter Shirlaw; Gaston I-. Feuardent, the antiquary; and other notable persons. At No. I, the first house on the right, as the avenue leaves Washington Square, lives William Butler Duncan ; and on the other side, at 6 and 8, are the Lispenard Stewarts and John Taylor Johnston, the famous art connoisseur. Beyond Clinton place is the aristocratic Brevoort House, a favorite with English tourists ; and opposite is the Berkeley, where many famous people dwell. Beyond Ninth street, at No. 23, lives Gen. Daniel E. Sickles. At Tenth street is the brown-stone Church of the Ascension (Epis- copal), with the Grosvenor opposite. The First Presbyterian Church comes next, with the Minturn and Talbot mansions beyond. At Fourteenth street we see the busy precincts of Union Square, to the right, and traverse a region of brilliant shops. On the left-hand corner of Fifteenth street is the great and finely appointed brown-stone building of the Manhattan Club, the favorite resort of the patricians of the Demo- cratic party, called by their round-headed fellow-partisans "the swallow-tails." It has 1000 members, and the entrance fee is $100, with $70 yearly dues. Near by, at 109 East Fifteenth street, is the house of the famous Century Association, a literary, artistic and aesthetic club, with 600 members, a large library and a picture gallery. In this same neighborhood, on West Fifteenth street, are the spacious buildings of the College of St. Francis Xavier, with nearly 500 students, in charge of the Jesuit Fathers, and a library of 20,000 volumes. On West Sixteenth street is the tall New York Hospital, chartered by King (}eorge III. in 1771. At the farther right corner of Sixteenth street is the mansion of Vice-President Levi P. Morton (No. 85), and Col. Robert G. IngersoU lives at No. 89. At No. 103 is the home of Edwards Pierrepont, long time Minister to England. At No. 1 18 live the New York Winthrops. At Eighteenth street is the rich and ornate Chickering Hall, devoted to musical entertainments ; and opposite, at No. 109, is August Belmont's estate, where also dwells the Hon. Perry Belmont. On the opposite corner, at No. 107, is the mansion of Mrs. Marshall O. Roberts, one of the grand dames of New York society. On the Twenty-first street corner is the great brown-stone building of the patrician Union Club, founded in 1836, and with over no Washington Inaugural Centennial. looo members. The entrance fee is $300, and yearly dues $75. Clarence A. Seward, the gifted son of William II. Seward, lives at No. 143. At No. 147 (corner of East Twenty-lirst street) is the Lotos Club's comfortable brown-stone building, with 500 members, where famous monthly art receptions and ladies' days are held. Here dwells the veteran world-traveler. Col. Thomas W. Knox. Next door is the Glen- ham Hotel. In this vicinity stands the South Reformed Church (corner of West Twenty-first street), and the Cumberland is between East Twenty-second and East Twenty-third streets. Now the avenue cuts obliquely across Broadway, with the brilliant vistas of Madison Square on the right, passing the enormous white-marble Fifth Avenue Hotel, the home of Gen. W. T. Sherman, ex-Senator Piatt, William J. Flor- ence and other notable persons. On the next block is the Hoffman House, famous for its interior decora- tions and magnificent bar room. At Twenty-fifth street is the fashionable New York Club, facing the Worth Monument. At the corner of West Twenty-sixth street is Delmonico's famous restaurant, with the Hotel Brunswick opposite. At West Twenty-seventh street is tlie immense and lofty Victoria Hotel, towering high above the' sur- rounding buildings. At Fifth avenue and Twenty-eighth street (No. 247) was the home of the late Pro- fessor E. L. Youmans, editor of the " I^opular Science Monthly," and author of many famous scientific books. No 244 is the home of the famous Mrs. Paran Stevens. On the next block is the great and costly Knickerbocker. The great double house. No. 259, is Mrs. Josephine May's, and belonged to her father, the late George Law, millionaire and financier. At No. 261 (corner of East Twenty-ninth street) dwells Gen. George W. Cullom, beyond the Hamersley mansions. At West Twenty-ninth street appears the white-granite temple of the Fifth Avenue Reformed Church, and a little way to the right (on Twenty-ninth street) is the picturesque Church of the Transfiguration (Epis- copal), generally and affectionately known as "The Little Church around the Corner," wherefrom many actors have been buried. The bit of green lawn, overarching trees, and mantling of ivy, make this a charming oasis in the surrounding desert of brick and stone. It is regarded with peculiar affection by many persons, who consider the average church as quite alien to their lives and tastes. The towering Gilsey House rises to the left, on West Thirtieth street. At No. 319 (corner of East Thirty-second street) stands the new house of the exclusive Knickerbocker Club, which includes many well- known devotees of coaching and polo. Its entrance fee is $300, annual dues $100. Between W^est Thirty-second and West Thirty-third streets (Nos. 338 and 350) are the huge brick mansions of the hun- dred-millionaire brothers — John Jacob Astor and William Astor — with a high-walled garden between. On the next corner. No. 374, is the town-house of Mrs. J. Coleman Drayton, one of the Astor daughters. At the corner of West Thirty-fourth street is the great Italian palace of white-marble, erected at a cost of $2,000,000 by the late A. T. Stewart, a Belfast lad, who came to America in 1818, and began life in New York as an assistant teacher, then opened a small shop for trimmings, and in time became the most suc- cessful merchant in the world, so that when he died (in 1876) he left $40,000,000. Mrs. Stewart lived here until her death in 1886. Alongside the Stewart place, the only other house on the block, is the great old Astor mansion, which, after a strangely checkered career, has been leased by the New York Club to be dedicated to their joyous uses. Between West Thirty-fifth and West Thirty-sixth streets live the Kernochans (No. 384), and Gen- Daniel Butterfield (No. 386) ; and at No. 389 (between East Thirty-sixth and Thirty-seventh streets) is Pierre Lorillard's home. The fashionable Christ Church (Episcopal), famous for its fine music and beau- tiful frescoes, is on the corner of West Thirty-fifth street ; and the Brick Church (Presbyterian) rises at the corner of West Thirty-seventh street. At the old home of Gov. E. D. Morgan, No. 415 (between East Thirty-seventh and Thirty-eighth streets), is the St. Nicholas Club, composed exclusively of gentlemen of the oldest Knickerbocker families — the Remsens, De Peysters, Rhinelanders, Roosevelts, etc. At No. 425 (beyond East Thirty-eighth street) is the home of Austin Corbin, the railway king ; at No. 459 (])eyond East Thirty-ninth street) that of Frederick W. Vanderbilt. The lofty and quaint Union League Club house is at the corner of Fifth avenue and East Thirty- ninth street, with its conspicuous gables and huge roof. From West Fortieth to Forty-second street ex- tends the Distributing Reservoir of the Croton Water- Works, crowning the summit of Murray Hill, 115 feet above tide-water, covering four acres and holding 23,000,000 gallons of water. It is a massive struct- ure in Egyptian architecture, forty-four feet high and 420 feet square. Back of it is the pleasant Bryant Park, on which the famous Crystal Palace stood thirty years or more ago. Opposite, on Fifth avenue, are Washington Inaugural Centennial. i i r the tall art-furniture buildings of Pettier & Stymus, the massive American Safe-Deposit buildin'^, and a few quaint dwellings, the remnants of the old-time block of yellow Gothic houses (one of them still occu- pied by Mrs. Lucian B. Chase), in part of which was the famous Rutgers Female College. Next the ave- nue crosses Forty-second street, which runs to the left to the Weehawken Ferry, and to the ri^ht to the Grand Central Depot. On the left corner of Fifth avenue and Forty-second street is the lofty stone Hotel Bristol, with Rus- sell Sage's house next door (No. 406), and opposite is the Hamilton. At the corner of East Forty-third street is the Temple Emanu-El, the great Hebrew synagogue, perhaps the richest piece of Saracenic archi- tecture in America, with its minaret-like towers, delicate carvings, Oriental arches, and a dazzlingly bril- liant interior. In the next block is the Sherwood, the home of Jesse Seligman, the banker, the Rev. G. H. Hepworth, and other well-known persons. Opposite, at 524, is the headquarters of the Manhattan Athletic Club, with its luxurious rooms, and finely equipped gymnasium. At No. 532 is Manton Marble's house, and No. 549 is Thomas T. Eckert's home. The Universalist Church of the Divine Paternity, so long ministered to by Dr. Chapin, stands at the corner of West Forty-fifth street. A little way to the right, on East Forty-fifth street, are the homes of the famous broker, Washington E. Conner (No. 14), and of the eloquent Chauncey M. Depew, president of the New York Central Railroad (No. 22), and one of the best after-dinner speakers in America. At No. 2 East Forty-sixth street is the mansion of Seligman, the well-known financier. Nearly opposite the Universalist Church is the narrow and richly carved facade of the Episcopal Church of the Heavenly Rest, whose interior is rich in polished granite pillars, with quaintly carved capitals, frescos after Era Angelico, and other beautiful adornments. The great Windsor Hotel extends from East Forty-sixth to East Forty-seventh street, and is the home of Andrew Carnegie and many other noted men. Opposite, at No. 562, dwells Joseph W. Harper, Jr., of the famous publishing house ; and at No. 574 are the rooms of the American Yacht Club, famous for its navy of costly steam yachts. On the corner beyond the Windsor, at No. 579, in a large brown-stone house, with lanterns in front, lives Jay Gould, the Napoleon of finance ; and at the other end of the block, with carved stone grifiins in front, is the home of Robert Goelet. The Goelet estate is above $20,000,000. At No. 50 West Forty-seventh street lives Joseph H. Choate, lawyer and orator, and one of the greatest after-dinner speakers of this age. At West Forty-eighth street is the ornate and high-spired Collegiate Dutch Church, with its flying buttresses, carved portals and general richness of detail ; and the second house beyond (No. 608) belongs to Ogden Goelet. At the corner of East Forty-eighth street (No. 597) is the home of Roswell P. Flower, eminent in latter-day politics. The next block, from East Forty-ninth to Fiftieth street, is taken up largely by the great Buckingham Hotel, a quiet and expensive family hotel ; and at No. 615 lives Edward S. Jaffray, the drygoods merchant. Opposite, at No. 624, is the house of the late John Roach, the great ship-builder. At the corner of Fiftieth street rises the vast Cathedral of St. Patrick, described in the chapter on churches. At No. 634, opposite the Cathedral, is the home of D. O. Mills, ex-senator from California, and father-in-law of Whitelaw Reid, of the " Tribune." Back of the Cathedral is the Florentine palace built by Henry Villard, alongside of Columbia College. Beyond the Cathedral, on Fifth avenue, is the Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum for Boys, on high ground, with the Asylum for Orphan Girls behind it. Between West Fifty-first and Fifty-second streets are the magnificent brown-stone palaces of the Vanderbilt family, enriched by broad bands of carved foliage, and superbly furnished and decorated inside. No. 640 is the home of Mrs. William H. Vanderbilt, and No. 642 is the home of her daughter, Mrs. William D. Sloane. Across West Fifty-second street rises the handsome white stone French chateau of William K. Van- derbilt, rich in carvings and oriel windows. The author of " Recent Architecture in America" calls this " the most beautiful house in New York." Next comes the beautiful and fashionable Episcopal Church of St. Thomas, famous for society wed- dings. It is a brown-stone Gothic structure, with a melodious chime of bells, and famous altar-paintings by LaFarge. Among its clergy have been Bishops Upfold and Whitehouse, and the Rev. Dr. F. L. Hawks. Just beyond, on the same square, are the picturesque connected mansions of Dr. W. S. Webb and Hamilton McK. Twombly, who married daughters of William H. Vanderbilt. Between East Fifty- second and Fifty-third streets is the Langham, one of the most popular family hotels in the city. Between West Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth streets are the spacious buildings and grounds of St. Luke's Hospital I 12 Washington Inaugural Centennial. (open to visitors from lo to I2, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays), where Episcopal Sisters of tlie Holy Communion attend the sick, without regard to their sect or nation. In this vicinity dwell several of the Standard Oil Company magnates — Henry M. Flagler at No. 685, and William Rockefeller at No. 68g. At West Fifty-fifth street is the great Presbyterian Church under Dr. John Hall's ministration, the largest chuch of that sect in the world, with a spire that is a landmark for a great distance. No. 724, just beyond West Fifty-sixth street, is the home of R. Fulton Cutting — a very handsome piece of domestic architecture. At the lower corner of West Fifty-seventh street is the handsome house built and some time occupied by the famous Mrs. Frederick W. Stevens, the immensely wealthy heiress of Josiah Sampson, who deserted her husband after twenty years of married life, and in 18S6 married the Marquis de Talley- rand-Perigord, in Paris. The house now belongs to ex-Secretary-of-the-Navy Whitney. On the other corner of W^est Fifty-seventh street is the superb mansion of Cornelius Vanderbilt. A little way beyond is the beginning of Central Park, which forms one side of the avenue for over a, p miles and a half. The other side is being built up with noble mansions, and will at some future time be the most beautiful place of homes in America. At No. 810, corner of East Sixty-second street, is the town-house of William Belden, a many-millionaire, who defeated Jay Gould in the famous Black-Friday financial battle. Opposite East Sixty-fourth street is the old Arsenal and Menagerie. Between East Sixty-sixth and Sixty-seventh streets is the group of houses in which dwell the Soto family (No. 854), and Mrs. De Barrios (No. 855), the widow of the famous Central-American statesman, killed in battle a few years ago. No. 3 East Sixty-sixth street was the home of the late Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, and his family still dwell there. At No. 871 is the mansion of Mrs. Robert L. Stuart. The splendid Lenox Library extends from East Seventieth street to Seventy-first street. A little way to the right looms up the lofty, quaint and picturesque gray house of Charles L. Tiffany, designed by McKim, Mead and White, with its mediseval portcullis, red-marl)le Moorish stairway, teak- wood doors, blue-and-pearl dining-room, etc. Here also dwells the famous railway king, Henry Villard. The upper floor, under the great, dusky tiled roof, is a vast studio. This house is described in the " Cen- tury Magazine " for February, 1886. H. C. SHANNON, MANAGER. ,M^ FfFTH AVENUE, flw^' '' ' ' - ■ ' \i i. -=ai %• u 1S60. thp: ISB9. WASHINGTON LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY ASSKTS, OF= NeiM VORK. \A/. A. BREWER, Jr., President. ----- J^IO.OOO.OOO. The Combination Policy of the Washington guarantees to the holder of a $i,ooo policy $1,500 at maturity. A Policy for $5,000 is a contract for $7,500. A Pol- icy for $10,000 is a contract for $15,000. Say the amount of the Policy is $10,000, tlie insured is guar- anted $10,000 CASH and a paid- up Life Policy for $5,000; total, $15,000 at maturity, together with all accumulated and un- used dividends. The Combination Policy has three functions ; by it the insured secures under a single contract I. Protection for a term of years. II. The savings of an Endowment. 111. A permanent Estate. A strong, simple, and inexpensive provision guaranteeing INSURANCE, a CAPITAL SLM, and AN ESTATE, The Policies of the Washington are incontestable after three years, residence and travel unrestricted after two years. Immediate settlement of claims. W. HAXTUN, Vice-President and Secretary. CTRUS MUNH, Assistant Secretary. I. C. PIERSOH, Actua;it, J, W, BRANNAN, M. D., Medical Examiner. B, W. McCREADT, M. D., Consultinc Physician. FOSTER L THOMSON, 52 Wall Street, New Tori, Attorneys. i30-a.ru ok uirector?^. \V. A. Brewer, Jr., \Vm. Haxtu.n, Roland C">. Mitchell, (iEORGE N. LaWRENCK, Levi P. Morton, Ariel A. Low, Merritt Trimble, George A. Robbins, Thomas Hoi-e, James Thomson, Wilson G. Hunt, Chas. H. Ludington, Robert Bowne, Francis Steir, "Frederic R. Coudert, George Nevvmold, Benjamin Haxtun, Kdwin H. Mead, Henry F. Hitch, Charles P. Britton, Fiv^Ncis G. Adams, Benj. W. McCreadv, M. D David Thomson, Address E. S. KRENCH, Sup't of AgTencies, til Cnrtlautlt St., Nexf York City. ;!0MF OFFICE. 346 .^^ 345 BROADWAY. N. Y. ...x^ 'J.. v'^ .^^' -^^ * .A .-^ V . f^ (. "^y- v^ c^ ^> S^' -r. .\'' >• p. A^^ % .A^- ^^ -^ci- -^.^ v-^ ^/. V .^^ ''ct. •^, vi^' o 0^ ■A ,-^ -^• .^^' aN- - > -7-; ■\'' A^''"^ , r-^ 'j- y •^^, >^^ ,^^ -^c*.. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS ■ I miiJlMli milJIIIJIJi JlilMjIil 011 711 581 1 M ^"1 1 a \ \ ^^^^^^^^^KaLuMf