Built 1840 (1840) Opened 1840 Added to NRHP 13 May 1971 | NRHP Reference # 71000546 Area 3,642 m² | |
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Location 170-176 John Street, Manhattan, New York City, New York Architectural style Greek Revival architecture Similar Saddle River County P, Headless Horseman Hayrides, Franklin D Roosevelt President, Prospect Park Zoo, 48 Wall Street |
170-176 John Street is a commercial building erected in 1840 facing Burling Slip (now filled in) along the East River in lower Manhattan, New York City. It is one of possibly two surviving granite Greek Revival buildings in New York.
It was originally known as the Hickson W. Field building; later, it was used as a ship chandlery and known as the Baker, Carver & Morrell Building. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
References
170-176 John Street Building Wikipedia(Text) CC BY-SA