City
Hall
City Hall Park
New York, NY 10007
Date Built: 1803-1811
Architect: Joseph Francois Mangin and John McComb, Jr.
City
Hall has been the seat of New York City government since 1812. Located
in City Hall Park at the southern end of the Civic Center, City Hall
is one of the most treasured buildings in the City.
In
the 17th century, the Dutch City Hall was in the old City Tavern on
Pearl Street. A new City Hall was built in 1700 at Wall and Nassau Streets.
It was renamed Federal Hall when New York became the first capital of
the United States. The 1833-1842 Federal Hall National Memorial is now
on this site. The Common Council talked about a new City hall as early
as 1776 but the Revolutionary War intervened. A site was chosen, the
old Common at the northern limits of the City, now City Hall Park.
In
1802, a competition was held for the new City Hall and twenty-six proposals
were submitted. First prize of $350 was awarded to John McComb, Jr.
and Joseph Francois Mangin. John McComb's father repaired the old City
Hall in 1784. John McComb, Jr. was a New Yorker while Joseph Mangin
was trained in his native France. McComb designed the landmark Hamilton
Grange on Convent Avenue, Castel Clinton in Battery Park and the James
Watson House on State Street. Joseph Mangin was City Surveyor in 1795
and published an official City map with Casimir Goerck in 1803. He designed
the landmark Old St. Patrick's Church on Mott Street. City Hall is the
only known project the two architects collaborated on together.
Construction
was delayed until 1803 due to objections by the Common Council that
the design was too expensive. The size of the building was reduced and
brownstone was used on the rear to keep costs down. Construction moved
slowly due to labor disputes and a Yellow Fever outbreak. Workmen earned
one to one and one half dollars a day. The building was dedicated in
1811 but did not open until 1812.
The
architectural style of City Hall is a combination of two famous historical
movements. The exterior facade reflects that of the French Renaissance,
and the interior that of the American-Georgian style. The building consists
of a central pavilion with two projecting wings. The design of City
Hall influenced at least two later civic structures, the Tweed
Courthouse and the Surrogate's
Courthouse. The entrance, reached by a long flight of steps, has
figured prominently in civic events for over a century and a half. There
is a columned entrance portico capped by a balustrade, and another balustrade
at the roof. The domed tower in the center was rebuilt in 1917 after
the last of two major fires. The original deteriorated Massachusetts
marble facade, with brownstone on the rear, was completely reclad with
Alabama limestone above a Missouri granite base in 1954-6.
On the inside,
the rotunda is a soaring space with a grand marble stairway rising up
to the second floor, where ten fluted Corinthian columns support the
coffered dome. The rotunda has been the site of municipal as well as
national events. Abraham Lincoln and Ulysses S. Grant were laid in state
here, attracting enormous crowds to pay their respects.
City
Hall is a designated New York City Landmark. It is also listed on the
New York State and National Registers of Historic Places.
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