2013년 11월 24일 일요일

About 'lincoln university tuition'|Lincoln diocese in the News







About 'lincoln university tuition'|Lincoln diocese in the News








As               any               visitor               to               New               York               knows,               there               is               no               shortage               of               things               to               see               and               do               in               New               York               City.

From               Times               Square,               to               the               Empire               State               Building,               the               great               museums,               the               Statue               of               Liberty,               and               the               Brooklyn               Bridge,               to               name               just               a               few,               New               York               has               a               seemingly               endless               number               of               interesting               sites.

But               for               the               traveler               that               has               seen               all               the               major               sites,               or               maybe               just               for               the               traveler               who               wants               to               get               away               from               the               crowds               of               tourists,               there               are               a               lot               of               sites               in               New               York               that               rarely               make               into               the               average               travel               guide.

Federal               Hall               When               this               building               was               first               built,               1834-1842,               it               served               as               the               US               Customs               House               of               New               York.

Today,               Federal               Hall               is               a               museum               that               celebrates               the               fact               that               America's               first               national               capital               once               stood               on               this               site.

It               was               here,               in               New               York,               that               George               Washington               was               inaugurated               in               1789               and               where               Congress               wrote               the               Bill               of               Rights.

The               Federal               Hall               Museum               is               free               of               charge,               and               guided               tours               are               given               three               times               a               day.

26               Wall               Street
               Trinity               Church               Designed               by               Richard               Upjohn               in               the               Gothic               Revival               style,               the               Trinity               Church               of               New               York               was               consecrated               in               1846.

Today,               Trinity               is               surrounded               by               skyscrapers,               but               in               the               19th               century,               Trinity               was               by               far               the               tallest               building               in               New               York,               serving               as               a               beacon               for               ships               sailing               into               New               York               Harbor               to               the               south.

Its               surrounding               graveyard               serves               as               the               final               resting               place               of               many               of               the               elites               of               New               York,               including               Alexander               Hamilton               and               Robert               Fulton.

The               church               is               open               to               the               public               and               guided               tours               are               offered               seven               days               a               week               at               2pm.

Broadway               at               Wall               Street
               Fraunces               Tavern               Museum               What               stands               here               today               is               a               replica               of               the               original               Fraunces               Tavern,               which               first               opened               in               1719.

Famous               for               playing               host               to               General               George               Washington's               farewell               to               his               officers               in               1783,               the               Fraunces               Tavern               today               is               the               only               remaining               remnant               of               commercial               colonial               New               York.

There               is               a               restaurant               on               the               ground               floor,               which               features               a               colonial               type               interior,               while               upstairs               there               is               a               museum               whose               exhibits               share               the               history               of               colonial               and               revolutionary               New               York.

54               Pearl               Street
               St.

Paul's               Chapel               Built               in               1766               in               what               was,               at               the               time,               rural               New               York,               St.

Paul's               Chapel               is               the               sole               surviving               church               from               colonial               New               York.

George               Washington               was               a               regular               worshiper               here               during               his               Presidency               in               New               York,               and               his               pew               box               has               been               preserved               to               this               day.

Located               next               to               the               World               Trade               Center               site,               St.

Paul's               Chapel               was               amazingly               not               harmed               by               the               2001               terrorist               attacks               which               leveled               its               neighboring               towers.

Today,               there               is               a               very               interesting               Ground               Zero               Ministry               Exhibit.

Open               to               the               public.

209-11               Broadway.
               Lower               East               Side               Tenement               Museum               The               idea               of               the               Lower               East               Side               Tenement               Museum               in               New               York               is               to               give               its               visitors               an               idea               of               the               horrific               housing               conditions               that               existed               in               New               York               in               the               late               19th               and               early               20th               centuries.

There               are               specific               exhibits               that               recreate               tenement               apartment               dating               to               the               1870s,               1916,               1918,               and               1935.

There               is               a               new               exhibit               called               the               "Sweatshop               Apartment."               Admission               is               by               tour               only.

Several               different               tours               are               available.

Fees               are               $15-$17.

90               Orchard               Street.
               Old               St.

Patrick's               Cathedral               Please               do               not               confuse               the               Old               St.

Patrick's               Cathedral               of               New               York               with               the               "new"               and               famous               St.

Patrick's               Cathedral               on               5th               Avenue.

Old               St.

Pat's               is               the               original,               the               very               first               cathedral               church               in               New               York,               which               was               established               in               1809.

Today's               building,               which               was               built               in               the               1860s               is               a               replica               of               the               original,               which               was               destroyed               by               fire.

Open               to               the               public.

263               Mulberry               Street.
               75               ½               Bedford               Street               This               interesting               building               has               the               distinction               of               the               being               the               most               narrow               home               in               New               York.

Measuring               a               slim               9.5               feet               and               three               stories,               the               house               dates               to               1893.

Interestingly,               it               has               been               the               New               York               home               to               some               rather               famous               people,               including               Edna               St.

Vincent               Millay,               John               Barrymore,               and               Cary               Grant.

It               is               today               a               private               home               and               is               not               open               to               the               public.
               Cooper               Union               Founded               by               19th               century               industrialist,               Peter               Cooper,               in               1859,               Cooper               Union               is               today               one               of               the               most               selective               colleges               not               only               in               New               York,               but               in               the               nation               and               one               of               the               very               few               which               does               not               charge               its               students               any               tuition.

Cooper               Union's               Great               Hall               was               the               site               of               the               school's               inauguration               whose               primary               address               was               given               by               Mark               Twain.

Months               later,               when               Abraham               Lincoln               came               to               New               York,               he               came               to               Cooper               Union               to               give               what               would               become               his               famous               "Right               Makes               Might"               speech               at               the               Great               Hall.

Open               to               the               public.

7               East               7th               Street
               Theodore               Roosevelt               Birthplace               This               is               the               New               York               townhouse               where               President               Theodore               Roosevelt               was               born               and               spent               his               childhood.

Operated               by               the               National               Park               Service,               the               house's               furnishings               feature               things               such               as               toys               that               Roosevelt               played               with               as               a               boy               to               political               campaign               memorabilia               to               souvenirs               from               the               Spanish-American               War.

There               are               exhibits               that               cover               Roosevelt's               personal               interests               as               well               as               those               that               highlight               his               political               career.

Admission               is               by               tour               only.

They               are               30               minutes               in               length               and               cost               $3.

28               East               20th               Street.
               The               Little               Church               Around               the               Corner               Formally               called               The               Church               of               the               Transfiguration,               this               Episcopal               church               first               opened               in               1849.

It               got               its               nickname,               "The               Little               Church               Around               the               Corner,"               when               a               New               York               actor               by               the               name               of               George               Holland               passed               away               in               1870.

His               good               friend,               Joseph               Jefferson               tried               to               arrange               a               funeral               service               at               a               nearby               church               but               was               turned               away               because               the               minister               was               offended               by               the               theatre               and               didn't               believe               that               actors               were               worthy               of               proper               burial               services.

The               minister               dismissively               suggested               that               Jefferson               take               his               dead               actor               friend               to               "the               little               church               around               the               corner."               And               that's               exactly               what               Jefferson               did.

And               ever               since               then,               The               Little               Church               Around               the               Corner               has               enjoyed               a               special               relationship               with               the               theatre               world               of               New               York.

Of               special               note               is               a               stained               glass               window               by               John               LaFarge               depicting               the               great               Edwin               Booth               playing               Hamlet.

Open               to               the               public.

1               East               29th               Street
               Hotel               Chelsea               Built               in               1884,               the               Hotel               Chelsea               was               originally               a               co-operative               apartment               building               located               on               what               was               the               leading               entertainment               boulevard               in               New               York               at               the               time.

But               when               all               the               theatres               moved               to               the               north               to               what               is               today               Times               Square,               the               Chelsea               neighborhood               of               New               York               changed               quickly.

In               1905,               the               building               re-opened               as               the               Hotel               Chelsea.

Originally               catering               to               many               long               term               guests,               every               room               was               uniquely               designed,               and               to               this               day,               no               two               rooms               are               alike.

Famous               guests               of               the               Hotel               Chelsea               include               Mark               Twain,               Tennessee               Williams,               Jack               Kerouac,               Brendan               Behan,               Dylan               Thomas,               and               Sid               Vicious.

The               lobby               is               open               to               the               public.

222               West               23rd               Street
               Temple               Emanu-El               Founded               in               1845,               the               Temple               Emanu-El               is               the               largest               synagogue               in               the               world               and               the               first               Reform               congregation               in               New               York.

Dating               to               1929,               the               Temple               was               built               on               the               site               of               the               home               of               the               famous               New               York               socialite,               Lady               Astor,               who               had               decided               to               move               further               uptown.

Some               features               of               her               home               are               still               evident,               the               wine               cellar               and               three               marble               fireplaces               remain               intact.

Temple               Emanu-El               boasts               nearly               10,000               individual               members.

The               temple               is               open               to               the               public               and               tours               are               available.

1               East               65th               Street
               Mount               Vernon               Hotel               Museum               Dating               to               1799,               the               Mt.

Vernon               Hotel               was               originally               a               country-side               retreat               for               those               who               needed               a               break               from               the               hustle               and               bustle               of               city               life               in               19th               century               New               York.

In               1924,               it               was               turned               into               a               museum,               and               today,               costumed               guides               are               available               to               show               visitors               a               little               bit               of               how               life               was               lived               in               New               York               200               years               ago.

Admission               is               $8               421               East               61st               Street
               Gracie               Mansion               Also               dating               to               1799               is               Gracie               Mansion.

Built               by               New               York               merchant               Archibald               Gracie,               this               house               is               considered               to               be               one               of               the               finest               Federal               era               houses               in               New               York.

Between               1887               and               1942,               it               served               as               the               Museum               of               the               City               of               New               York.

Today,               it               is               the               official               residence               of               the               Mayor               of               New               York.

Guided               tours               are               given               on               Wednesdays.

Admission               is               $7.

East               End               Avenue               and               East               88th               Street.
               St.

Paul's               Chapel               Not               to               be               confused               with               the               St.

Paul's               Chapel               on               Broadway               (mentioned               above),               this               St.

Paul's               is               located               on               the               campus               of               Columbia               University,               the               oldest               university               in               New               York.

Consecrated               in               1907,               the               chapel               is               designed               in               the               Northern               Italian               Renaissance               style               using               an               interesting               combination               of               red               brick               and               limestone.

The               interior               of               the               dome               is               clad               in               green               ceramic               tiles               and               crowned               by               a               terra-cotta               lantern.

The               chancel               is               adorned               by               three               stained               glass               windows               by               John               LaFarge.

The               chapel               is               open               to               the               public.

It               is               located               on               the               campus               of               Columbia               Univeristy,               just               off               of               the               Central               Quadrangle               (next               to               the               library).
               Cathedral               of               St.

John               the               Divine               The               Mother               Church               of               the               Episcopal               Diocese               of               New               York               and               seat               of               the               Bishop               of               New               York,               the               Cathedral               of               St.

John               the               Divine               is,               believe               it               or               not,               still               a               work               in               progress.

Begun               in               1892,               construction               on               the               cathedral               is               still               only               two-thirds               complete.

When               complete,               St.

John               the               Divine               will               be               the               largest               cathedral               in               the               world.

The               interior               is               over               600               feet               long               and               146               feet               wide.

The               church               is               open               to               the               public.

Guided               tours               are               available               at               11am               and               cost               $5.

1047               Amsterdam               Avenue               at               West               112th               Street.






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