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The Stuyvesant Apartments, Stuyvesant Flats, Rutherfurd Stuyvesant Flats or simply The Stuyvesant, was an apartment building located at 142 East 18th Street between Irving Place and Third Avenue in the Gramercy Park neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City.
The earliest surviving map of the area now known as New York City is the Manatus Map, depicting what is now Manhattan, Brooklyn, the Bronx, Queens, Staten Island, and New Jersey in the early days of New Amsterdam. [7] The Dutch colony was mapped by cartographers working for the Dutch Republic. New Netherland had a position of surveyor general.
name = Manhattan Name used in the default map caption; image = Location map United States Manhattan.png The default map image, without "Image:" or "File:" top = 40.8383 Latitude at top edge of map, in decimal degrees; bottom = 40.6909 Latitude at bottom edge of map, in decimal degrees; left = -74.0343 Longitude at left edge of map, in decimal ...
Since 1914, each of New York City's five boroughs has been coextensive with a county of New York State – unlike most U.S. cities, which lie within a single county or extend partially into another county, constitute a county in themselves, or are completely separate and independent of any county. Each borough is represented by a borough ...
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 22:57, 9 February 2023: 2,000 × 1,978 (138 KB): Nafsadh: Reverted to version as of 18:55, 26 October 2014 (UTC) Intention to not add English label to the svg itself was to keep it mostly language independent and not having to be subject to svg text rendering issues.
5 Manhattan West; 731 Lexington Avenue, 1,400,000 square foot glass skyscraper on the East Side of Midtown Manhattan, New York City; 76 Eleventh Avenue; 85 Tenth Avenue; 99 Tenth Avenue; Alexander Hamilton U.S. Custom House, built in 1902–07 by the federal government to house the duty collection operations for the Port of New York
The razing of buildings for the construction of the complex began in 1950, and the buildings were completed on April 1, 1953. [3] [7]The key sponsor of the development was State assemblyman John J. Lamula and it was named after four-time New York Governor Al Smith (1873–1944), the first Catholic to win a Presidential nomination by a major political party and a social reformer who made ...
Lincoln Towers is an apartment complex on the Upper West Side of Manhattan in New York City, consisting of six buildings with eight addresses on a 20-acre (81,000 m 2) campus. [ 1 ] Location and description