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The house remained in the hands of Fish family descendants until roughly the turn of the 20th century. It served for a time as a rooming house thereafter before undergoing restoration in the 1960s. [3] The house was designated a New York City landmark in 1965, [6] and was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1975.
The main character, an advertising artist, travels back in time from 1970s New York City to January 1882, and rents a room at 19 Gramercy Park, which is a boarding house in the novel. It is described as "a plain three-story brownstone with white-painted window frames and a short flight of scrubbed stone steps with a black wrought-iron railing."
Marion ("Mamie") Graves Anthon, as she was called, was born in the vicinity of Grimes Hill, New York, which at the time may have been known as Castleton Heights, in Castleton, New York. At the time this was a town in Richmond County, New York, the area along with the rest of Richmond County of Staten Island later became part of New York City.
The landmark destination feels like a never-before-seen hybrid of urban street architecture and a fish tank. New York's sidewalk fish pond is still going strong. Never heard of it?
Stuyvesant Fish House. The Stuyvesant Fish House is a brick and limestone Italianate mansion located at 25 East 78th Street, at the corner of Madison Avenue in New York City. It was constructed for railroad executive Stuyvesant Fish and designed by Stanford White of McKim, Mead and White in 1898.
Stuyvesant Fish House refers to houses in Manhattan, New York City, that were built for, occupied by or otherwise connected with railroad executive Stuyvesant Fish and his family. The term may refer to: Hamilton Fish House – at 21 Stuyvesant Street, also known as Nicholas and Elizabeth Stuyvesant Fish House.
The New York Department for Environmental Conservation has announced new length limits for recreational striped bass fishing during the 2024 season.
South Street Seaport is served by the M15 and M15 SBS New York City Bus routes. [68] New York Water Taxi directly serves South Street Seaport on Fridays, weekends, and holidays during the summer, while other New York Water Taxi, NYC Ferry, and SeaStreak ferries serve the nearby ferry slip at Pier 11/Wall Street daily. [69]