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Waldorf-Astoria (1893–1929)

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1185:(1851–1916), the founding proprietor, was a Prussian-born American hotelier and self-made millionaire who influenced the development of the urban hotel as a civic social center and luxury destination. His motto was "the guest is always right", and he became a wealthy and prominent figure internationally. The hotel was built to his specifications. He served as president and director of the Waldorf Astoria Hotel Company, as well as the Waldorf-Astoria Segar Company and the Waldorf Importation Company. He also owned and operated the Bellevue-Stratford Hotel, an elite boutique hotel on Broad Street in Philadelphia, with his wife, Louise. Boldt was described as "Mild mannered, undignified, unassuming", resembling "a typical German professor with his close-cropped beard which he kept fastidiously trimmed... and his pince-nez glasses on a black silk cord". Boldt retained his contacts with the European elite and he and his wife made frequent trips to Europe, bringing back with them many antiques, a characteristic of the Waldorf Astoria. Boldt continued to own the Bellevue even after his relationship with the Astors blossomed. 445:, it was surrounded by streets on all sides. The Waldorf-Astoria had a frontage of 200 feet (61 m) on Fifth Avenue, 350 feet (110 m) on 33rd Street, 350 feet (110 m) on 34th Street, and 200 feet (61 m) on Astor Court, with 13 entrances opening directly from these thoroughfares. Below, extending to a depth 42 feet (13 m) beneath the sidewalk, and occupying an additional area of 75 by 242 feet (23 m × 74 m) running toward Broadway, were the basements, which contained the engine room, laundries, and kitchens. From the sidewalk to the observatory roof was a height of 250 feet (76 m). It was the largest hotel in the world at the time. The cost of the two buildings, exclusive of the furnishings but including the land, was about $ 15 million ($ 473 million in 2023). The assessed value in 1897 was $ 12.125 million ($ 382 million in 2023) making it the next most valuable parcel on Fifth Avenue, after the 1203:(1878–1947) was an American hotelier and businessman, responsible for the general management of the hotel for many years. Physically impressive and brassy, he displayed total dedication to his job and great discipline and care towards his staff, becoming one of the most famous hoteliers of his time. Boomer became interested in the hotel after the death of Boldt in 1916 and purchased it, before buying the Bellevue-Stratford two years later. Following the retirement of Louis Sherry in 1920, he became directing head of the Louis Sherry Ice Cream and Chocolate Company, and was later president of restaurant chain Savarin, Inc. Boomer was primarily responsible for the decision to demolish the hotel and build the new one on Park Avenue in 1931. He continued to manage the hotel until his death in Norway in July 1947. 953:× 107 m), its height, from the floor of the sub-basement, which was 33 feet (10 m) below the street level, to the roof-line, was about 270 feet (82 m), or about 240 feet (73 m) above the street-level. It was 16 stories in height, including the four stories in the roof. The building was constructed of stone, marble and brick, with a steel skeleton frame and modern fireproof interior construction, and was embellished with "French Second Empire Mansard-roofed towers with iron-work cresting as well as Austrian Baroque onion-domes over corners turrets". There were 25 public rooms and 550 guest rooms, with miles of corridors, vestibules and balls. The entrance featured a double set of plate glass doors to give protection in cold weather, and a U-shaped driveway for horse and carriages. 1116:× 61 m), on solid footing high in the air, with a band stand, fountains, and trellises of columns. The roof garden restaurant occupied a space 75 by 84 feet (23 m × 26 m), and was roofed in. The ceiling was 24 feet (7.3 m) high. At the northeast and northwest corners of the roof garden were towers, with spiral stairways within, leading up to the copper covered roofs of the pavilions, which were 250 feet (76 m) above the sidewalk. The palm gardens, used as cafes, rose to a height of two and three stories respectively and were roofed-over with domes of tinted glass. Balconies at the various floor levels opened on to these courts to overlook them. The materials used were cream-colored brick and terracotta, and were Italian Renaissance in style. 1120:
plant within the building. There were 18 elevators. The machinery was located in the sub-basement. The boilers aggregated about 3,000 horse power, the electric generators taking 2,200 horse-power of the total energy. The elevators were run by it, as were the 15,000 incandescent lamps, branching from 7,500 outlets. The system of heating and ventilating the public rooms was that of forced draught by means of powerful blowers situated in the sub-basement that forced the fresh air between steam-coils, where it became moderately heated before entering the ducts that lead it to the various rooms. This heat was further augmented by direct radiators placed behind screens in the recesses of the windows and elsewhere.
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solid brass or lacquered. The main corridor ran the entire length of the building from east to west. To the left of it was the Astor Dining Room, fronting on Fifth Avenue, which measured 50 by 92 feet (15 m × 28 m). Great care was taken with it to faithfully reproduce the original dining room of the mansion, three floors above where the original dining room had stood, including all of the original dining room's paneling, carpeting, drapery and fireplace mantel; Italian Renaissance pilasters and columns, carved of marble from northern Russia. The panels of silk hangings were of rose pompadour, and a series of
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were angry because they viewed the construction of the hotel as the ruination of a good neighborhood. Business travelers found it too expensive and too far uptown for their needs. In the face of all of this, Boldt decided that the hotel would host a benefit concert for St. Mary's Hospital for Children the day after its opening. The hospital was the favorite charity of those on the Social Register. Despite the rain the night of the ball, the ballroom filled with many of New York's First Families, who had paid $ 5.00 ($ 170.00 in 2023) for the concert and dinner. Mrs. William K. Vanderbilt donated the services of the
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successful when it hosted the charity concert and dinner. Business soon picked up and the hotel earned $ 4.5 million ($ 137 million in 2023) in its first year, exorbitant for that period. By 1895, the Waldorf added a five-story addition. This brought the hotel's ballroom down to the main floor; the move brought many parties and dinners which were formerly held in private homes, into the Waldorf. Adjacent to the new ballroom was the Oak Room, where one could sit by large fireplaces where there were always logs on the hearth. In winter, waiters would offer patrons complimentary baked potatoes with butter.
508: 490: 1061: 351:, built the Waldorf Hotel next door to her house, on the site of his father's mansion at the corner of Fifth Avenue and 33rd Street. After Astor's decision to leave the United States, he also decided to demolish his father's home and build a hotel on the property. When the 1870 Astor home was demolished, there was no idea that Astor would build a hotel on the property. Astor did not stay in his own hotel when visiting the U.S., preferring to stay elsewhere; he is known to have visited the Waldorf-Astoria only once. 3328: 2614: 2571: 2492: 2443: 2402: 1990: 1948: 1891: 1756: 1713: 1547: 1171: 912: 992: 926: 697:
the floors were arranged as separate hotels to further the comfort of the guests. Each of these floors had its own team of assistants—clerks, maids, page boys, waiters—as well as telephone and dumbwaiter service, and refrigerators. The bedrooms and corridors were heated by direct radiation. The family included a stained glass picture of the town of Walldorf in the design of the hotel; it was located on the 33rd Street side over the main entrance to the South Palm Garden.
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dining room. It was decorated in the Italian style, finished in gray, terracotta and Pavonazzo marble. On the 34th Street side of the corridor was the cafe, 40 by 95 feet (12 m × 29 m), finished in English oak in the style of the German Renaissance, with Flemish decoration. The bar formed another room 40 by 50 feet (12 m × 15 m).
434: 1163:. He was called to the United States Bar in 1875. He worked for a short time in law practice and in the management of his father's estate of financial and real estate holdings. On his death in 1919, he was reputed to have been worth £200 million, which he left in trust for his two sons Waldorf and John Jacob. His half share of the Waldorf Astoria and the 3447: 3435: 3423: 3411: 3399: 1095:
three maids' bedrooms and five bathrooms, all finished in old English oak. All the floors above the third were given up to suites and bedrooms up to the 14th floor. There was a bath for nearly every room, and every bathroom had windows opening to the air, not into shafts. In every room, there was a large trunk closet.
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The color scheme was in tints of pale-green and cream. The panels of the ceiling were frescoed with figures in pinkish-red on a blue sky or field. The walls were principally mahogany and gold, with a little color in the comparatively small wall-spaces left between openings. Among the other rooms were the Turkish
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In the sub-basement were the Sprague screw machines for the electric elevators, the fire pumps, the house pumps, the ice plant, and the six Babcock & Wilcox water tube boilers. The elevator system, which served the house from subbasement to roof, was electric, taking its power from the generating
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The ballroom, in the Louis XIV style, has been described as the "pièce de résistance" of the hotel, measuring 65 feet (20 m) by 95 feet (29 m) and 40 feet (12 m) (three stories) in height. It had a capacity to seat 700 at banquets and 1,200 at concerts, and featured tints of ivory-gray
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On the first floor, at the head-of the east main staircase, was the Astor Gallery, 87 by 102 feet (27 m × 31 m), looking out on 34th Street. The gallery, with seven French windows reaching 26 feet (7.9 m) from floor to ceiling, opened onto a terrace over the entrance to the hotel.
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The main corridor was nicknamed "Peacock Alley" by the New York press. The corridor and foyer were treated with pilasters and columns of Sienna marble and a color scheme on the walls and ceilings of salmon-pink, with cream-color and pale-green. The capitals of the columns and pilasters were gilded of
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were given a banquet, during which the gallery was decorated with silk banners and flags. One article that year claimed that at any one time the hotel had $ 7 million ($ 217 million in 2023) worth of valuables locked in the safe, testament to the wealth of its guests. In 1909, banquets, attended
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was one of the key factors in the hotel's success. Oscar was personable, humble and very willing to tend to patrons' needs on an individual basis. More than thirty years later, Tschirky was able to recall the Waldorf's opening day and the names of many of the Social Register guests who made the hotel
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with his wife, Louisa Augusta Kehrer Boldt (1860–1904). The original plans for the Waldorf were for a hotel with eleven stories; Louise believed that thirteen was a lucky number and persuaded her husband to add two floors to the construction. William Astor's construction of a hotel next to his aunt's
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work in the panels. The caps and bases of both columns and pilasters were gilded. This treatment occupied most of the wall space. The ceiling was divided by heavy beams running from column to column, and between these the flat space was divided into oval and other shaped panels with light mouldings.
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Early on, the Waldorf was regarded with mockery over its large number of bathrooms and was known briefly as "Boldt's Folly" after Boldt, or "Astor's Folly", with the general perception of the palatial hotel being that it had no place in New York. It appeared destined for failure. Wealthy New Yorkers
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depicted the four seasons and the twelve months of the year. The "Colonial Room" was decorated in red, contrasting with white woodwork. The second floor contained a private suite of apartments at the northeast corner, with large drawing rooms, dining room, butler's pantry, hallway, three bedrooms,
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The combined hotel, after merging in 1897, had 1,300 bedrooms and 178 bathrooms, making it the largest hotel in the world at the time. With a telephone in every room and first-class room service, the hotel featured numerous Turkish and Russian baths for the gentlemen of the day to relax in. Many of
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The hotel was also influential in advancing the status of women, who were admitted singly without escorts. Boldt's wife, Louise, was influential in evolving the idea of the grand urban hotel as a social center, particularly in making it appealing to women as a venue for social events, or just to be
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When a decision was made to build a second hotel next to the Waldorf, truce provisions were developed between the Astors which reserved some proprietary rights. The plan design used corridors to join the two buildings and there was even a bond provision for bricking up the corridors should the need
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The Astoria Hotel opened in 1897 on the southwest corner of Fifth Avenue and 34th Street, next door to the Waldorf. It was also designed in the German Renaissance style by Hardenbergh, at a height of about 270 feet (82 m), with sixteen stories, twenty-five public rooms and 550 guest rooms. The
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The Waldorf State Apartments, consisting of nine suites, were located on the second floor. The apartments, including the Henry IV Drawing Room, featured 16th and 17th century French and Italian antiques which Boldt and his wife had brought back from Europe. Francois V Bedroom was a reproduction of
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had previously built his mansion. The hotel stood 225 feet (69 m) high, about 50 feet (15 m) lower than the Astoria, with a frontage of about 100 feet (30 m) on Fifth Avenue, and a total area of 69,475 square feet (6,454.4 m). It was a German Renaissance structure, designed by
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On the exterior, the two and three lower stories in the respective buildings were of red sandstone, while the balance of the work to the roof-line was red brick and red terracotta. The building rested on solid rock and contained a fireproof steel frame. The first and second floors contained public
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which he brought with him. Li also brought his own stoves, chefs and servants with him to prepare and serve his meals. Upon his departure from the Waldorf, he ordered a basket of roses to be sent to every female guest at the hotel, and was very generous in the gifts and gratuities he provided for
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Connected by the 300 metres (980 ft) long corridor, known as "Peacock Alley" after the merger in 1897, the hotel had 1,300 bedrooms, making it the largest hotel in the world at the time. It was designed specifically to cater to the needs of socially prominent "wealthy upper crust" of New York
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from the hotel's inauguration in 1893 until his retirement in 1943. Tschirky had arrived in the United States from Switzerland ten years prior to applying for the position at the new Waldorf and over the years grew to possess an encyclopedic-like knowledge of cuisine and the special trimmings and
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mural paintings filled arches and panels at the south end of the room. On the right of the main corridor was the Garden Court of Palms, 88 by 57 feet (27 m × 17 m), rising three stories to a dome-like roof of amber glass 56 feet (17 m) above the floor. This, too, was used as a
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Beyond the lobby was the main corridor leading to the Empire Room, with an alcove containing elevators and a grand staircase. Near this was the Marie Antoinette parlor, which was used as a reception room for women. It contained 18th century antiques brought back by Boldt and his wife from an 1892
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to provide the music for the event. Even with a proper escort, women of the times generally did not venture into hotels, but those attending also toured the facilities. While Boldt made news by insisting the Waldorf's waiters be clean-shaven even though he wore a beard, his decision to hire young
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the room at the Palais de Fontainebleau, and over the years was occupied by the likes of Li Hung-Chang of China, Chowfa Maha Rajiravuth, Prince of Siam, and Albert of Saxe-Coburg. The apartments had their own music room and a banquet hall to seat 20, with a handsome china collection including 48
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On the hotel's top floor was the roof-garden, enclosed on all sides by glass, with a glass roof over. It was furnished with rattan chairs and lounges in pale-green and pink, hung across with gauzy fabric. On the roof on the 34th Street side was the grand promenade, 90 by 200 feet (27 m
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The exterior featured loggias, balconies, gables, groups of chimneys, and tiled roofs. One of the chief features was the interior garden court, with fountains and flowers, walls of white terracotta, frescoes and stained glass. The main entrance to the hotel was "sheltered by an elaborate
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The Astoria Hotel, opened in 1897, was situated on the southwest corner of Fifth Avenue and 34th Street. Like the Waldorf, it was designed in the German Renaissance style by Henry J. Hardenbergh, the same architect who designed the Waldorf. With dimensions of 99 by 350 feet (30 m
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frosted-glass-and-wrought-iron marquee", and the entrance hall was built in Sienna marble, with a mosaic title floor and a coffered ceiling. The original reception desk of the Waldorf Hotel became a registration desk when it merged with the Astoria Hotel in 1897.
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leading a series of concerts there in the year the combined hotels opened for business. It was possible to buy season tickets for the musical offerings; a box for a season was US$ 350 and a seat for a season on the ballroom floor was priced at US$ 60.
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After the Waldorf Hotel rose above their home, both Astors threatened to demolish their home and build a stable on the property. Advisers were able to convince John Astor that it would be more sensible to construct a larger hotel on the property
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from 32nd to 35th streets, for $ 20,500. He built an unpretentious square red brick house on the southwest corner of 34th Street and Fifth Avenue, while John Jacob Astor erected a home at the northwest corner of 33rd Street.
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and distinguished foreign visitors to the city. It was the first hotel to offer electricity and private bathrooms throughout. The Waldorf gained world renown for its fundraising dinners and balls, as did its celebrity
5012: 3406:: H. M. Biggs' "Preventive Medicine in the City of New York: The Address in Public Medicine Delivered at the 65th Annual Meeting of the British Medical Association, in Montreal, Canada, September, 1897" (1897) 1151:(1822–1890) and Charlotte Augusta Gibbes (1825–1887). Described as being a "very prickly sort of person", he had a background in Europe and earned wealth buying and selling country estates in England including 885:
plates with European portraits. There were about 6,000 lights in the hotel, with as many as 1,000 small candelabra lamps mounted in specially designed fixtures. The electric fixtures were all furnished by the
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The Waldorf Hotel, built at a reported cost of about $ 5 million ($ 152 million in 2023), opened on March 13, 1893, at the corner of Fifth Avenue and 33rd Street, on the site where millionaire developer
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and his wife during an 1892 visit to Europe. The Empire Room was the largest and most lavishly adorned room in the Waldorf, and soon after opening it became one of the best restaurants in New York, rivaling
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The Astor family requested that their complete dining room be preserved and made part of the hotel. It was dismantled piece by piece and stored until the completion of the hotel. It was then reconstructed
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The Boldts' first two children were born when the couple lived at addresses with the number 13 in them. Boldt himself made important decisions and signed important documents dated on the 13th of the given
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This article is about the original Waldorf Astoria hotel buildings and contains historical and architectural details related to it. For details of the current hotel built in 1931 and its architecture, see
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The first Peacock Alley was a corridor in the Waldorf which was the way to the Empire Room and Palm Court. Neither hotel had planned they would be anything more than entries into various public rooms.
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who became a fixture. Banquets were often held in the ballroom for esteemed figures and international royalty. On February 11, 1899, Oscar of the Waldorf hosted a lavish dinner reception which the
468:(1927). By the 1920s, the hotel was becoming dated, and the elegant social life of New York had moved much farther north than 34th Street. The Astor family sold the hotel to the developers of the 596: 4645: 1283:. In 1919, Sherry announced an "alliance" with the Waldorf-Astoria that involved both his candies and catering services. Although it was not disclosed at that time, at some point ownership of 6504: 3513:
Preventive Medicine in the City of New York: The Address in Public Medicine Delivered at the 65th Annual Meeting of the British Medical Association, in Montreal, Canada, September, 1897
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house worsened his feud with her, but, with Boldt's assistance, John Astor persuaded his mother to move uptown. The Waldorf Hotel, named after the Astor family's ancestral hometown of
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that Oscar gained renown among the general public as an artist who "composed sonatas in soups, symphonies in salads, minuets in sauces, lyrics in entrees". In 1902 Tschirky published
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who would gamble on stocks on Wall Street and play poker at the hotel. He paid up to $ 50,000 a year to hire suites at the hotel, where he had his own private entrance and elevator.
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The Waldorf-Astoria Bar was a favorite haunt of many of the financial elite of the city from the hotel's inception in 1893, and colorful characters who adopted the venue such as
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Fifth Avenue and 33rd Street (1885). On the right hand side are the residences of John Jacob and William B. Astor. The homes were later razed to build the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel.
6474: 5022: 6499: 629:. Consisting of fifty musicians, it was maintained by Boldt at an annual expense of $ 100,000. The orchestra performed regular Sunday night concerts in the grand ballroom. 6229: 4068: 545: 6024: 5017: 6464: 832:
The Empire Room was the largest and most lavishly adorned room in the Waldorf, and soon after opening it became one of the best restaurants in New York City, rivaling
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cited as the city's costliest dinner at the time. Some $ 250 ($ 7,739 in 2023) was spent per guest, with bluepoint oysters, green turtle soup, lobster, ruddy duck and
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While Boldt initially faced much public criticism for his rule that Waldorf waiters would be clean-shaven, other hotels adopted the same tenet for their wait staff.
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The feud centered on whether Caroline, the wife of John Jacob Astor III, or William's wife, Mary Dahlgren Paul Astor, would be known in society as "the" Mrs. Astor.
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site immediately northeast. The hotel became, according to author Sean Dennis Cashman, "a successful symbol of the opulence and achievement of the Astor family".
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and early 20th century, who was of considerable renown in the business. His name is typically associated with an upscale brand of candy and ice cream, and
6420: 4422: 2654:"Congratulatory addresses delivered at a complimentary dinner tendered to Judge Elbert H. Gary at the Waldorf-Astoria, New York City, October 15th, 1909" 1776:
How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda
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in 1884, and after building the Waldorf he went on to have an illustrious career as "America's premiere architect of grand hotels", designing the
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purchased Thompson's parcel, as well as one from Mary and John Murray who owned a farm on Murray Hill, in the area which is now Madison Avenue to
2891: 2657: 2102: 1221:(1847–1918) was an American architect who designed both hotels in the German Renaissance style. Apprenticed in New York from 1865 to 1870 under 6222: 5970: 5245: 4784: 4061: 5027: 5007: 4935: 4005: 3949: 3916: 3883: 3850: 3810: 3745: 3724: 3691: 3632: 3588: 3532: 3500: 3040: 1871: 6034: 5032: 4494: 234:
The original Waldorf Hotel opened on March 13, 1893, at the corner of Fifth Avenue and 33rd Street, on the site where millionaire developer
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seen in the Peacock Alley. The combined hotel was the first to do away with a ladies-only parlor and provided women with a place to play
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There was no bar room, per se, at the hotel until the addition of the Astoria. The original plans for the Waldorf did not include one.
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The Waldorf-Astoria gained significant renown for its fundraising dinners and balls, regularly attracting notables of the day such as
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and closed the hotel on May 3, 1929; it was demolished soon afterward. The Waldorf-Astoria Hotel records of 1893–1929 are held by the
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The hotel faced stiff competition from the early 20th century, with a range of new hotels springing up in New York City such as the
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How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States
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was significantly vested in "Boomer-duPont interests", a reference to Lucius M. Boomer, then chairman of the Waldorf-Astoria, and
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in style, the Waldorf's restaurant featured feathered columns of dark-green marble, and the pilasters that were opposite were of
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which was founded by John Jacob Astor in 1811, stood on the site of William B. Astor's house, and was leased to Boldt.
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There were also prominent social families who had come from Baltimore, Boston and Philadelphia for the charity event.
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was opened at the hotel on April 19, 1912, and continued there for some time in the Myrtle Room, before moving on to
6494: 6330: 6082: 5775: 5577: 5238: 5094: 4940: 4599: 4594: 4484: 4443: 4428: 4383: 4168: 2628:"Banquet in honor of Frederick A. Cook, M.D., by the Arctic Club of America, Sept. 23, 1909, Waldorf-Astoria, N.Y." 1642: 1354: 4448: 829:. The Gentleman's Cafe was furnished with "robust black oak paneling, hunting murals, and stag-horn chandaliers". 6264: 6122: 5836: 5829: 5582: 5405: 5099: 4889: 4874: 4228: 2631: 1962: 1250: 1230: 1217: 1210: 802: 610: 243: 191: 441:
The two hotels, under one management, were renamed the Waldorf-Astoria. Situated on Fifth Avenue in what is now
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From its inception, the Waldorf was always a "must stay" hotel for foreign dignitaries. The viceroy of China,
3300: 2740: 6182: 5807: 5740: 5668: 5617: 5485: 5450: 5374: 5273: 5109: 5104: 4899: 4630: 4303: 4233: 1688: 1369:. Mary Murray invited the British officers into her home for food and drink. She offered such a repast that 473: 3327: 2613: 2570: 2491: 2442: 2401: 1989: 1947: 1890: 1755: 1712: 1546: 1311: 279: 6162: 6072: 5992: 5987: 5980: 5927: 5824: 5760: 5693: 5547: 5186: 5053: 4799: 4744: 4294: 4273: 1920: 1018: 4328: 2805: 6489: 6479: 6254: 6167: 6137: 5889: 5780: 5628: 5395: 5354: 5309: 5231: 5196: 5058: 5048: 4804: 4759: 4706: 4696: 4635: 4248: 4198: 2584: 2541: 1683: 1276: 840: 469: 256: 235: 220: 142: 5304: 6279: 1199: 1192: 911: 6399: 6355: 6187: 6013: 5755: 5181: 5114: 4988: 4904: 4479: 4353: 4348: 4343: 4143: 3418:: The American Architect and Building News Company's "American Architect and Architecture" (1898) 2885: 2653: 2106: 1233:—the expansion of Alexander Johnston Hall (1871), designing and building Geology Hall (1872) and the 1148: 1143:(1848–1919) was a wealthy American attorney, politician, businessman, and newspaper publisher of the 845: 372: 1170: 991: 925: 6411: 6350: 6325: 6310: 6259: 5937: 5874: 5735: 5730: 4701: 4489: 4333: 4323: 4213: 4193: 4178: 4133: 2812: 2546: 1863: 1160: 1087: 857: 649: 423: 3036: 898:. The building was wired throughout on the system of the Interior Conduit and Insulation Company. 6177: 6172: 6077: 6062: 5975: 5819: 5648: 5592: 5542: 5480: 5171: 4655: 4363: 4358: 4278: 4268: 4253: 4243: 2268: 2266: 2264: 1288: 1234: 1226: 1225:, in 1870, opened his own practice there. He obtained his first contracts for three buildings at 849: 645: 457: 321: 239: 3467: 2262: 2260: 2258: 2256: 2254: 2252: 2250: 2248: 2246: 2244: 1726: 770: 740: 677: 1794: 1774: 6152: 6142: 6117: 5962: 5879: 5792: 5787: 5770: 5765: 5455: 5349: 5324: 5314: 5299: 4604: 4458: 4403: 4077: 4001: 3995: 3945: 3939: 3912: 3906: 3879: 3873: 3846: 3840: 3825: 3806: 3741: 3735: 3720: 3687: 3672: 3643: 3628: 3584: 3578: 3528: 3522: 3496: 2744: 2374: 1362: 1284: 1238: 1030: 637: 633: 613:
included several conductors over the years. In the early 1900s, it was under the direction of
573: 560: 496: 465: 442: 3972: 3774: 3714: 3681: 3622: 3611: 3555: 3511: 3490: 5932: 5750: 5745: 5725: 5715: 5710: 5705: 5698: 5688: 5678: 5663: 5658: 5653: 5557: 5537: 5522: 5517: 5512: 5507: 5465: 5445: 5435: 5425: 5415: 5410: 5390: 5339: 5124: 4764: 4558: 4548: 4373: 4368: 4153: 4148: 4046: 3787: 3345:"Sherry's To Move May 17; Fifty-Eighth Street Plan Modified by 'Prohibition and Bolshevism'" 1790: 1770: 1731: 1634: 895: 818: 710: 603: 541: 532: 329: 325: 216: 103: 1206: 939: 890:, of New York, while the contract for the general installation work was carried out by the 821:, and an antique clock which was once owned by the queen. The ceiling featured frescoes by 782: 6340: 6132: 5289: 5223: 4774: 4660: 4388: 4338: 1242: 552: 427: 396: 264: 2468: 2415: 1271:(1855–1926) was an American restaurateur, caterer, confectioner and hotelier during the 665: 6274: 5294: 5129: 4238: 4128: 4123: 3320: 2780: 2606: 2563: 2484: 2435: 2394: 2020: 1982: 1940: 1883: 1748: 1705: 1626:"When the Astors Owned New York: Blue Bloods and Grand Hotels in a Gilded Age (review)" 1539: 1305: 1298: 1072: 834: 822: 569: 401: 313: 284: 252: 1523: 1128: 617:, who spent his career between the United States and Mexico. Later he was replaced by 6453: 6387: 6315: 5562: 5502: 5344: 5119: 4789: 4670: 4665: 4650: 4640: 4543: 4463: 4318: 4313: 4308: 4138: 4094: 4081: 3768: 3451: 3439: 3427: 3415: 3403: 2703: 1370: 1321: 1280: 1222: 1159:. In his early adult years, Astor returned to the United States and began studies at 1100: 641: 622: 618: 528: 376: 312:
In 1799, John Thompson bought a 20-acre (8 ha) tract of land roughly bounded by
212: 99: 3666: 752: 6335: 6284: 6269: 5922: 5255: 5089: 5084: 5079: 4258: 3791: 1654: 1366: 1358: 1267: 1260: 1181: 1174: 1156: 1144: 1104: 1042: 973: 894:, of New York, the actual work of wiring being done by the Eastern District of the 874: 861: 589: 548:
was invited by Waldorf president Lucius Bloomer to stay at the hotel in the 1920s.
363: 355: 337: 317: 247: 208: 1188: 1003: 961: 722: 426:, opened the 16 story Astoria Hotel on an adjacent site. The Astoria, named after 413: 382: 3800: 3215: 606:
John Jacob Astor IV was one of the people who perished on its ill-fated journey.
5942: 5917: 5597: 5567: 5134: 4848: 4729: 4398: 2272: 2015: 1246: 1108: 614: 514: 228: 1526:. San Francisco, California: San Francisco Chronicle. July 4, 1905. p. 1. 1253:(1911) and numerous other hotels in cities such as Boston and Washington, D.C. 291:(1896), a 900-page book featuring recipes that remain popular worldwide today. 5643: 5319: 4183: 4173: 3908:
Wizard: The Life And Times Of Nikola Tesla: The Life and Times of Nikola Tesla
1272: 585: 6435: 6422: 2218: 1324:, which remain popular worldwide. James Remington McCarthy wrote in his book 856:, with satin hangings, upholstery and marble pillars, all of pale green, and 5633: 5259: 4568: 4563: 4090: 1294: 1256: 460:(1904), built by John Jacob Astor IV as a companion to the Waldorf-Astoria; 107: 6207: 1902: 1900: 1830: 1828: 1594: 1592: 4035: 4538: 2471:. Parsons, Kansas: The Parsons Daily Sun. September 29, 1911. p. 5. 1152: 865: 577: 368: 6406: 1666: 1664: 1638: 1625: 433: 4769: 2627: 3770:
Who's who in Pennsylvania: A Biographical Dictionary of Contemporaries
2855: 2853: 2851: 2849: 3580:
America in the Age of the Titans: The Progressive Era and World War I
3099: 3097: 882: 869: 853: 354:
The hotel was built to the specifications of the founding proprietor
2321: 437:
The hotel after the addition of the much larger Astoria wing (1915)
3217:
Funk & Wagnalls Standard Encyclopedia of the World's Knowledge
1293: 1255: 1205: 1187: 1169: 1127: 432: 412: 381: 298: 204: 3616:. Vol. 28 (Public domain ed.). New York: W.T. Comstock. 3450:
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the
3438:
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the
3426:
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the
3414:
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the
3402:
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the
1365:'s troops were in the city and in danger of being trapped by the 3560:(Public domain ed.). Mrs. David Allen Campbell, Publisher. 1309:(1866–1950), known as "Oscar of the Waldorf", was a Swiss chef, 644:. A number of cocktails were invented at the bar, including the 6211: 6051: 6011: 5906: 5853: 5614: 5371: 5270: 5227: 5160: 4976: 4830: 4520: 4105: 4050: 3648:. Vol. XV (Public domain ed.). Electrical Engineer. 3280: 3278: 3253: 3251: 2345: 2343: 536:
the hotel's staff. In 1902, a lavish dinner was organized for
170:
226 feet (69 m) (Waldorf), 269 feet (82 m) (Astoria)
1506: 1504: 3802:
Papi Chulo: A Legend, a Novel, and the Puerto Rican Identity
1237:(1873)—through family connections. Hardenbergh designed the 3734:
Lashley, Conrad; Lynch, Paul; Morrison, Alison J. (2007).
3516:. Vol. 9 (Public domain ed.). Health Department. 2076: 2074: 1167:
at the time were reported to have been worth £10 million.
3466:
The American Architect and Building News Company (1898).
3430:: W. T. Comstock's "Architecture and Building" (1898) 3114: 3112: 3060: 3058: 2983: 2981: 2979: 2977: 2975: 2973: 2971: 2969: 2967: 2965: 2940: 2938: 2936: 2422:. Altoona, Pennsylvania. September 19, 1936. p. 17. 1316:
preferences that the regular diners desired. He authored
456:(1904), perceived as a successor to the Waldorf-Astoria; 3454:: Electrical Engineer's "Electrical Engineer" (1893) 3442:: M. King's "Kings Handbook of New York City" (1898) 3378: 3376: 3374: 3372: 3370: 3301:"Lucius Boomer, 68, Waldorf Director, is Dead in Norway" 2593:. Indiana, Pennsylvania. September 20, 1899. p. 1. 2049: 2047: 1373:
was able to lead the 3,500 men out of the city and into
3784:
Peacock alley : the romance of the Waldorf-Astoria
3190: 3166: 3142: 2840: 2678: 2361: 2127: 2065: 1906: 1846: 1834: 1670: 1598: 1583: 1571: 1559: 1495: 1471: 1330:
Serving a Course Dinner by Oscar of the Waldorf-Astoria
809:
proclaimed the hotel a palace after it opened in 1893.
2923: 2921: 2324:. New York Public Library Archives & Manuscripts. 2189:"Guard shot during robbery attempt at Waldorf-Astoria" 6371: 2273:
The American Architect and Building News Company 1898
597:
United States Senate inquiry into the sinking of the
287:, known as "Oscar of the Waldorf". Tschirky authored 238:
had previously built his mansion. Constructed in the
3782:
McCarthy, James Remington; Rutherford, John (1931).
3624:
Gilded Mansions: Grand Architecture and High Society
2859: 2550:. Kansas City, Missouri. April 25, 1899. p. 6. 1692:. Lincoln, Nebraska. December 21, 1928. p. 13. 1147:. He was the only child of financier/philanthropist 6303: 6245: 5072: 5041: 4987: 4918: 4857: 4841: 4722: 4684: 4618: 4582: 4531: 4472: 4287: 4116: 3997:
The Empire State Building: The Making of a Landmark
3773:(Public domain ed.). L. R. Hammersly. p.  3103: 1735:. New York, New York. February 3, 1918. p. 1. 513:US Senate Committee hearing for the sinking of the 187: 182: 174: 166: 161: 153: 145:replaced the buildings on the same site, while the 137: 122: 114: 95: 87: 77: 69: 61: 56: 35: 3713:Kuntz, Tom; Smith, William Alden (March 1, 1998). 3220:. Funk & Wagnalls company. 1912. p. 367. 2009: 2007: 2005: 2003: 2001: 1999: 1624: 1361:from "the battle of the cornfield". Some 3,500 of 1320:(1896), a 900-page book featuring recipes such as 1099:and cream in its design. Noted vocalists such as 47:Engraved vignettes of the original hotels c. 1915 6505:Demolished buildings and structures in Manhattan 3307:. Kingston, New York. July 26, 1947. p. 1. 568:by hundreds, were organized for Arctic explorer 3941:The Oxford Companion to American Food and Drink 2871: 2175: 2014:Johnston, Louis; Williamson, Samuel H. (2023). 563:. Two months later, 120 sailors of the cruiser 347:, motivated in part by a dispute with his aunt 3295: 3293: 2381:. Lawrence, Kansas. March 3, 1902. p. 1. 1086:The interior was finished in the style of the 422:arise. On November 1, 1897, Waldorf's cousin, 207:, built side by side by feuding relatives, on 6223: 5239: 4062: 3284: 3257: 2912: 2528: 2504: 2455: 2349: 1510: 8: 5471:617–623 (Saks Fifth Avenue/Swiss Bank Tower) 320:, and 33rd Street, immediately north of the 6475:Buildings and structures demolished in 1929 3977:(Public domain ed.). Success Company. 3822:The Waldorf Astoria: America's Gilded Dream 3671:(Public domain ed.). M. King. p.  2469:"Stories Told Of the Life of John W. Gates" 888:Archer & Pancoast Manufacturing Company 844:. It was modelled after the grand salon in 546:Grand Duchess Viktoria Feodorovna of Russia 531:stayed at the hotel in 1896 and feasted on 6500:1929 disestablishments in New York (state) 6230: 6216: 6208: 6048: 6008: 5903: 5850: 5611: 5368: 5267: 5246: 5232: 5224: 5157: 4984: 4973: 4838: 4827: 4528: 4517: 4113: 4102: 4069: 4055: 4047: 2690: 2097: 2095: 2093: 2091: 2089: 1864:"Anger, Spite Tint History of the Waldorf" 1107:performed in the ballroom, with conductor 379:, was opened for business March 13, 1893. 332:, between 34th and 38th streets. In 1827, 32: 5421:453 (Stavros Niarchos Foundation Library) 3839:Morrison, William Alan (April 14, 2014). 2322:"Waldorf-Astoria Hotel records 1893-1929" 1857: 1855: 3492:Mad Men's Manhattan: The Insider's Guide 3339: 3337: 3202: 3178: 3154: 3130: 3118: 3088: 3076: 3064: 3023: 3011: 2999: 2987: 2956: 2944: 2763: 2163: 2080: 1633:. Vol. 8, no. 1. p. 208. 476:'s Archives & Manuscripts division. 409:Opening of the Astoria and consolidation 6465:1893 establishments in New York (state) 6378: 5023:42nd Street–Port Authority Bus Terminal 4926:Armenian Evangelical Church of New York 3269: 2800: 2798: 2296: 1812:"Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–" 1684:"Waldorf-Astoria to give way to office" 1464: 1346: 3974:Success Magazine and the National Post 2815:School of Professional Studies. 2009. 2308: 2229:from the original on September 9, 2013 2053: 1483: 1066:Fifth Avenue corner suite drawing room 308:Opening and early years of the Waldorf 5870:1220 (Museum of the City of New York) 3683:Dynastic America and Those Who Own It 3382: 3242: 3043:from the original on January 19, 2015 2634:from the original on January 18, 2015 2516: 2385:from the original on January 20, 2015 2284: 2151: 2139: 1810:Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. 1530:from the original on October 22, 2017 817:visit to Europe, including a bust of 157:$ 4.5 million ($ 126 million in 2017) 7: 6520:Upper class culture in New York City 6025:42nd Street–Bryant Park/Fifth Avenue 5885:2067 (St. Andrew's Episcopal Church) 5018:42nd Street–Bryant Park/Fifth Avenue 4712:The Theater at Madison Square Garden 3680:Klein, Henry H. (December 1, 2005). 3355:from the original on January 5, 2015 3037:"Frederick Crowninshield1845 - 1918" 2927: 2779:. Waldorfnewyork.com. Archived from 2328:from the original on January 7, 2015 2105:. Waldorfnewyork.com. Archived from 1623:Salzman, Joshua A. T. (March 2007). 1610: 1318:The Cookbook by Oscar of The Waldorf 892:Edison Electric Illuminating Company 324:, for (US$ 2400) £482 10s. In 1826, 289:The Cookbook by Oscar of The Waldorf 5798:1071 (Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum) 4895:Stavros Niarchos Foundation Library 4885:New York Public Library Main Branch 4870:CUNY School of Professional Studies 3958:from the original on April 29, 2016 3564:from the original on April 28, 2016 3554:Campbell, Mrs. David Allen (1916). 3541:from the original on April 24, 2016 3469:American Architect and Architecture 2894:from the original on March 13, 2016 2822:from the original on April 18, 2015 2660:from the original on March 17, 2016 1961:Tschirky, Oscar (October 5, 1937). 1919:Tschirky, Oscar (October 5, 1937). 1870:. Salt Lake City, Utah. p. 2. 358:, who owned and operated the elite 349:Caroline Webster Schermerhorn Astor 16:Former hotel in Manhattan, New York 6510:Demolished hotels in New York City 5803:1085 (Church of the Heavenly Rest) 4865:CUNY Graduate School of Journalism 4014:from the original on July 29, 2016 3892:from the original on June 23, 2016 3311:from the original on June 26, 2015 3224:from the original on June 17, 2016 2860:Lashley, Lynch & Morrison 2007 2714:from the original on July 14, 2014 2597:from the original on June 26, 2015 2554:from the original on March 4, 2016 2475:from the original on April 2, 2015 2426:from the original on March 4, 2016 2195:. October 17, 2004. Archived from 1973:from the original on June 26, 2015 1931:from the original on June 26, 2015 1874:from the original on June 26, 2015 1739:from the original on June 26, 2015 1696:from the original on June 26, 2015 825:, the central of which was called 336:bought a half interest, including 14: 6128:840 (Mrs. William B. Astor House) 5756:1000 (Metropolitan Museum of Art) 5441:510 (Manufacturers Trust Company) 4946:Our Saviour Roman Catholic Church 4291: 3994:Tauranac, John (March 21, 2014). 3872:Nasaw, David (October 30, 2007). 3754:from the original on May 27, 2016 3700:from the original on June 3, 2016 3652:from the original on May 11, 2016 3597:from the original on June 3, 2016 3521:Blanke, David (January 1, 2002). 3476:from the original on May 18, 2016 2736:Magic music from the Telharmonium 1969:. Danville,Virginia. p. 12. 1645:from the original on May 12, 2015 6405: 6393: 6381: 6073:Fifth Avenue Hotel (28th Street) 5837:1130 (Willard D. Straight House) 5553:Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church 4034: 3981:from the original on May 7, 2016 3938:Smith, Andrew F. (May 1, 2007). 3925:from the original on May 5, 2016 3859:from the original on May 6, 2016 3445: 3433: 3421: 3409: 3397: 3326: 2612: 2569: 2490: 2441: 2400: 1988: 1946: 1927:. Danville,Virginia. p. 6. 1889: 1862:Bishop, Jim (January 26, 1958). 1754: 1711: 1545: 1357:, shots rang out on what is now 1071: 1059: 1041: 1029: 1002: 990: 972: 960: 938: 924: 910: 781: 769: 751: 739: 721: 709: 676: 664: 506: 488: 149:was rebuilt at another location) 82:Renaissance Revival architecture 41: 26:Waldorf-Astoria (disambiguation) 5192:Sniffen Court Historic District 4219:Greenwich Savings Bank Building 4204:Engineering Societies' Building 3668:Kings Handbook of New York City 3510:Biggs, Hermann Michael (1897). 3489:Bernardo, Mark (July 1, 2010). 2035:Gross Domestic Product deflator 223:. Their successor, the current 136: 91:5th Avenue and West 34th Street 6183:1115 (Jacob Ruppert Sr. House) 6148:871 (William C. Whitney House) 5330:272 (Marble Collegiate Church) 4931:First Zen Institute of America 4590:Girl Scout Museum and Archives 3527:. Greenwood Publishing Group. 1963:"The Voice of Broadway-part 2" 499:, a founder of US Steel (1909) 447:B. Altman and Company Building 1: 6295:Waldorf-Astoria Cigar Company 5825:1109 (Felix M. Warburg House) 5761:1009 (Benjamin N. Duke House) 5741:974 (Harry F. Sinclair House) 5461:597 (Charles Scribner's Sons) 5431:476 (New York Public Library) 4880:High School of Art and Design 4532:Shops, restaurants, nightlife 4419:Joseph Raphael De Lamar House 3716:The Titanic Disaster Hearings 3627:. W.W. Norton & Company. 3610:Comstock, William T. (1898). 3577:Cashman, Sean Dennis (1988). 2016:"What Was the U.S. GDP Then?" 1524:"Astor Families Bury Hatchet" 684:Waldorf-Astoria Cigar Company 621:, who was formerly assistant 267:, has been described as the " 6321:International Debutante Ball 6168:1020 (William Salomon House) 6163:962 (William A. Clark House) 5890:2366 (369th Regiment Armory) 4956:St. Francis of Assisi Church 4951:Redeemer Presbyterian Church 4454:Tiffany and Company Building 4379:Adelaide L. T. Douglas House 4000:. Cornell University Press. 3905:Seifer, Marc (May 1, 1998). 3820:Morehouse III, Ward (1991). 3642:Electrical Engineer (1893). 3351:. May 17, 1919. p. 28. 3191:McCarthy and Rutherford 1931 3167:McCarthy and Rutherford 1931 3143:McCarthy and Rutherford 1931 2841:McCarthy and Rutherford 1931 2739:. Scarecrow Press. pp.  2679:McCarthy and Rutherford 1931 2362:McCarthy and Rutherford 1931 2128:McCarthy and Rutherford 1931 2066:McCarthy and Rutherford 1931 1907:McCarthy and Rutherford 1931 1847:McCarthy and Rutherford 1931 1835:McCarthy and Rutherford 1931 1804:American Antiquarian Society 1784:American Antiquarian Society 1671:McCarthy and Rutherford 1931 1599:McCarthy and Rutherford 1931 1584:McCarthy and Rutherford 1931 1572:McCarthy and Rutherford 1931 1560:McCarthy and Rutherford 1931 1496:McCarthy and Rutherford 1931 1472:McCarthy and Rutherford 1931 1036:Astor Gallery at the Astoria 6485:Defunct hotels in Manhattan 6188:2122 (Jordan L. Mott House) 6138:857 (George J. Gould House) 6113:William K. Vanderbilt House 5684:Mrs. William B. Astor House 5674:Temple Emanu-El of New York 5629:781 (The Sherry-Netherland) 5583:754 (Bergdorf Goodman Bldg) 5533:University Club of New York 5396:400 (The Langham, New York) 5386:355 (B. Altman and Company) 5215:Manhattan Community Board 5 5064:Port Authority Bus Terminal 4600:Morgan Library & Museum 4554:J. Levine Books and Judaica 4394:Civic Club / Estonian House 4334:29 E 32nd St (Grolier Club) 4041:Waldorf-Astoria (1893-1929) 3944:. Oxford University Press. 3039:. National Academy Museum. 917:Astoria's Ground Floor plan 393:New York Symphony Orchestra 6536: 6470:Hotels established in 1893 5875:1230 (El Museo del Barrio) 4941:Millinery Center Synagogue 4595:Houdini Museum of New York 4485:Kaskel and Kaskel Building 4429:Lefcourt Colonial Building 4384:Allerton 39th Street House 4229:Lord & Taylor Building 4169:American Radiator Building 3737:Hospitality: A Social Lens 3305:The Kingston Daily Freeman 2733:Reynold Weidenaar (1995). 178:13 (Waldorf), 16 (Astoria) 18: 6290:Waldorf–Astoria Orchestra 6265:Henry Janeway Hardenbergh 6178:1063 (Henry Phipps House) 6173:1058 (James Speyer House) 6123:Elbridge T. Gerry Mansion 6058: 6047: 6020: 6007: 5913: 5902: 5860: 5849: 5736:972 (Payne Whitney House) 5624: 5610: 5466:608 (Goelet/Swiss Center) 5401:401 (Tiffany and Company) 5381: 5367: 5280: 5266: 5209: 5167: 5156: 5073:Streets and intersections 5028:Grand Central–42nd Street 5008:34th Street–Herald Square 4983: 4972: 4890:Norman Thomas High School 4875:Guttman Community College 4837: 4826: 4527: 4516: 4112: 4101: 4088: 3767:Leonard, John W. (1908). 3613:Architecture and Building 3495:. Roaring Forties Press. 1231:New Brunswick, New Jersey 1211:Henry Janeway Hardenbergh 803:Henry Janeway Hardenbergh 611:Waldorf-Astoria Orchestra 386:Floor plan of the Waldorf 244:Henry Janeway Hardenbergh 192:Henry Janeway Hardenbergh 52: 40: 6460:Waldorf Astoria New York 6346:Alphonse W. Salomone Jr. 6239:Waldorf Astoria New York 6108:Vanderbilt Triple Palace 6098:West Presbyterian Church 6063:200 (Fifth Avenue Hotel) 6035:Fifth Avenue–59th Street 6030:Fifth Avenue/53rd Street 5956:William Tecumseh Sherman 5880:1280 (The Africa Center) 5721:Edward S. Harkness House 5033:Times Square–42nd Street 5013:34th Street–Penn Station 5003:34th Street–Penn Station 4832:Other points of interest 4785:Metropolitan Opera House 4780:Maxine Elliott's Theatre 4676:Wyndham New Yorker Hotel 4583:Museums/cultural centers 4439:Pershing Square Building 4434:Madison Belmont Building 4414:Jonathan W. Allen Stable 4409:George S. Bowdoin Stable 4224:James A. Farley Building 4209:Engineers' Club Building 3971:Success Company (1907). 3799:Mock, Carlos T. (2007). 3104:Electrical Engineer 1893 2704:"Six Degrees of Titanic" 2590:Indiana Weekly Messenger 997:Main ballroom as theater 896:General Electric Company 627:Metropolitan Opera House 360:Bellevue-Stratford Hotel 225:Waldorf Astoria New York 147:Waldorf Astoria New York 22:Waldorf Astoria New York 6515:34th Street (Manhattan) 6143:858 (Isaac Stern House) 6118:767 (Savoy-Plaza Hotel) 6083:316 (Kaskel and Kaskel) 5908:Parks and park features 5808:Andrew Carnegie Mansion 5669:Edward J. Berwind House 5573:727 (Tiffany & Co.) 5486:British Empire Building 5476:St. Patrick's Cathedral 5456:556 (Philippine Center) 5406:424 (Lord & Taylor) 4910:Wood Tobé–Coburn School 4900:Stern College for Women 4304:One Grand Central Place 4154:452 5th Av (HSBC Tower) 4078:Midtown (30th–42nd Sts) 3792:2027/mdp.39015002634015 1921:"The Voice of Broadway" 1689:Lincoln Evening Journal 746:Marie Antoinette parlor 671:Waldorf-Astoria kitchen 580:, the following month. 557:New York Herald Tribune 538:Prince Henry of Prussia 474:New York Public Library 183:Design and construction 5988:Washington Square Park 5981:Harlem Fire Watchtower 5694:Henry Clay Frick House 5496:International Building 5054:Grand Central Terminal 4274:Springs Mills Building 3845:. Arcadia Publishing. 3719:. Simon and Schuster. 3621:Craven, Wayne (2009). 2890:. unknown. p. 3. 2691:Kuntz & Smith 1998 2379:Lawrence Daily Journal 2375:"All Around The World" 1631:Enterprise and Society 1301: 1263: 1213: 1195: 1177: 1135: 1078:Astoria double bedroom 1019:Charles Yardley Turner 438: 418: 387: 304: 24:. For other uses, see 6436:40.74833°N 73.98556°W 6356:Schultze & Weaver 6255:William Waldorf Astor 6133:857 (Jay Gould House) 6088:350 (Waldorf–Astoria) 5781:Neue Galerie New York 5059:New York Penn Station 5049:Grand Central Madison 4936:Holy Innocents Church 4805:Sam H. Harris Theatre 4760:Herald Square Theatre 4707:Madison Square Garden 4697:New Amsterdam Theatre 4574:Wolfgang's Steakhouse 4449:Socony–Mobil Building 4249:Million Dollar Corner 4199:Empire State Building 2630:Library of Congress. 2585:"High Life in Gotham" 2223:New York Architecture 2219:"The Waldorf Astoria" 1868:The Salt Lake Tribune 1297: 1277:The Sherry-Netherland 1259: 1209: 1191: 1173: 1140:William Waldorf Astor 1133:William Waldorf Astor 1131: 798:William Waldorf Astor 776:Henry IV drawing room 470:Empire State Building 436: 416: 385: 345:William Waldorf Astor 334:William B. Astor, Sr. 302: 236:William Waldorf Astor 221:Empire State Building 143:Empire State Building 5865:Mount Sinai Hospital 5588:767 (General Motors) 5451:551 (Fred F. French) 5290:47 (Salmagundi Club) 4905:William Esper Studio 4495:Pennsylvania Station 4480:Bryant Hall Building 4354:152 East 38th Street 4349:146 East 38th Street 4288:5th Av – 3rd Av 4234:Macy's Herald Square 4117:8th Av – 5th Av 4043:at Wikimedia Commons 3805:. Floricanto Press. 3665:King, Moses (1893). 2872:Success Company 1907 2656:. Internet Archive. 2199:on December 10, 2008 2176:Success Company 1907 2109:on November 27, 2013 1218:Henry J. Hardenbergh 1149:John Jacob Astor III 417:Waldorf Hotel (1893) 6441:40.74833; -73.98556 6432: /  6311:April in Paris Ball 6260:John Jacob Astor IV 5971:Madison Square Park 5938:Conservatory Garden 5731:James B. Duke House 5548:696 (The Peninsula) 5528:Saint Thomas Church 5503:641 (Olympic Tower) 5491:La Maison Francaise 5345:284 (The Wilbraham) 5335:276 (Holland House) 5325:255 (Grand Madison) 4800:Reuben's Restaurant 4745:Browne's Chop House 4702:Nederlander Theatre 4685:Venues and theaters 4646:Martinique New York 4490:Latting Observatory 4264:New York Times Bldg 4194:The Continental NYC 4179:Bryant Park Studios 3645:Electrical Engineer 3557:The Musical Monitor 2887:The Waldorf-Astoria 2813:New York University 2547:Kansas City Journal 2364:, pp. 117–120. 2037:figures follow the 1727:"Hotel World Known" 1161:Columbia Law School 1009:Astoria restaurant. 979:Astoria main office 424:John Jacob Astor IV 270:pièce de résistance 78:Architectural style 57:General information 6078:Caspar Samler farm 5976:Marcus Garvey Park 5820:Otto H. Kahn House 5649:Knickerbocker Club 5593:Apple Fifth Avenue 5481:Rockefeller Center 5355:350 (Empire State) 5310:170 (Sohmer Piano) 5172:Caspar Samler farm 5140:Park Avenue Tunnel 4656:Hotel Pennsylvania 4279:Times Square Tower 4269:Pennsylvania Plaza 4244:Marbridge Building 3349:The New York Times 3285:Morehouse III 1991 3258:Morehouse III 1991 2913:Morehouse III 1991 2806:"Hotel fact sheet" 2529:Morehouse III 1991 2505:Morehouse III 1991 2456:Morehouse III 1991 2350:Morehouse III 1991 1511:Morehouse III 1991 1302: 1289:T. Coleman du Pont 1264: 1235:Kirkpatrick Chapel 1214: 1196: 1178: 1136: 967:Astoria main foyer 827:The Birth of Venus 807:The New York Times 439: 419: 388: 322:Caspar Samler farm 305: 240:German Renaissance 203:originated as two 6495:Midtown Manhattan 6369: 6368: 6205: 6204: 6201: 6200: 6153:Ogden Mills House 6043: 6042: 6003: 6002: 5963:Pulitzer Fountain 5898: 5897: 5855:Above 96th Street 5845: 5844: 5639:Metropolitan Club 5606: 5605: 5598:768 (Plaza Hotel) 5568:721 (Trump Tower) 5363: 5362: 5221: 5220: 5205: 5204: 5152: 5151: 5148: 5147: 4968: 4967: 4964: 4963: 4822: 4821: 4818: 4817: 4631:The Knickerbocker 4610:Scandinavia House 4605:Museum of the Dog 4512: 4511: 4508: 4507: 4459:Union League Club 4404:Demarest Building 4039:Media related to 4007:978-0-8014-7109-4 3951:978-0-19-530796-2 3918:978-0-8065-3556-2 3885:978-1-101-20179-4 3852:978-1-4671-2128-6 3824:. Xlibris, Corp. 3812:978-0-9796457-0-9 3747:978-0-08-045093-3 3726:978-0-671-02553-3 3693:978-1-59605-671-8 3634:978-0-393-06754-5 3590:978-0-8147-1411-9 3534:978-0-313-31251-9 3502:978-0-9843165-7-1 3193:, pp. 80–82. 3145:, pp. 60–64. 2681:, pp. 94–95. 2068:, pp. 75–76. 1909:, pp. 34–37. 1837:, pp. 23–28. 1639:10.1093/es/khm011 1601:, pp. 31–32. 1586:, pp. 17–18. 1363:George Washington 1355:Revolutionary War 1285:Louis Sherry Inc. 1239:Dakota Apartments 788:Louis XIV bedroom 638:Buffalo Bill Cody 634:Diamond Jim Brady 574:Elbert Henry Gary 572:in September and 533:100-year-old eggs 497:Elbert Henry Gary 466:Savoy-Plaza Hotel 462:The Knickerbocker 443:Midtown Manhattan 373:Baden-Württemberg 263:ballroom, in the 197: 196: 162:Technical details 6527: 6447: 6446: 6444: 6443: 6442: 6437: 6433: 6430: 6429: 6428: 6425: 6410: 6409: 6398: 6397: 6396: 6386: 6385: 6384: 6377: 6280:Lucius M. Boomer 6232: 6225: 6218: 6209: 6049: 6009: 5950:Grand Army Plaza 5933:Central Park Zoo 5904: 5851: 5699:Frick Collection 5612: 5369: 5320:200 (Toy Center) 5268: 5248: 5241: 5234: 5225: 5177:Garment District 5158: 5125:Lexington Avenue 4985: 4974: 4839: 4828: 4795:Princess Theatre 4765:Hotel Pierrepont 4740:Broadway Theatre 4559:Keens Steakhouse 4549:The Cutting Room 4529: 4518: 4423:Polish Consulate 4293: 4189:Candler Building 4114: 4103: 4071: 4064: 4057: 4048: 4038: 4023: 4021: 4019: 3990: 3988: 3986: 3967: 3965: 3963: 3934: 3932: 3930: 3901: 3899: 3897: 3868: 3866: 3864: 3835: 3816: 3795: 3778: 3763: 3761: 3759: 3730: 3709: 3707: 3705: 3676: 3661: 3659: 3657: 3638: 3617: 3606: 3604: 3602: 3573: 3571: 3569: 3550: 3548: 3546: 3517: 3506: 3485: 3483: 3481: 3449: 3448: 3437: 3436: 3425: 3424: 3413: 3412: 3401: 3400: 3386: 3380: 3365: 3364: 3362: 3360: 3341: 3332: 3331: 3330: 3324: 3318: 3316: 3297: 3288: 3282: 3273: 3267: 3261: 3255: 3246: 3240: 3234: 3233: 3231: 3229: 3212: 3206: 3200: 3194: 3188: 3182: 3176: 3170: 3164: 3158: 3152: 3146: 3140: 3134: 3128: 3122: 3116: 3107: 3101: 3092: 3086: 3080: 3074: 3068: 3062: 3053: 3052: 3050: 3048: 3033: 3027: 3021: 3015: 3009: 3003: 2997: 2991: 2985: 2960: 2954: 2948: 2942: 2931: 2925: 2916: 2910: 2904: 2903: 2901: 2899: 2881: 2875: 2869: 2863: 2857: 2844: 2838: 2832: 2831: 2829: 2827: 2821: 2810: 2802: 2793: 2792: 2790: 2788: 2783:on March 4, 2014 2773: 2767: 2761: 2755: 2754: 2730: 2724: 2723: 2721: 2719: 2700: 2694: 2688: 2682: 2676: 2670: 2669: 2667: 2665: 2650: 2644: 2643: 2641: 2639: 2624: 2618: 2617: 2616: 2610: 2604: 2602: 2581: 2575: 2574: 2573: 2567: 2561: 2559: 2542:"Sailor Honored" 2538: 2532: 2526: 2520: 2514: 2508: 2502: 2496: 2495: 2494: 2488: 2482: 2480: 2465: 2459: 2453: 2447: 2446: 2445: 2439: 2433: 2431: 2412: 2406: 2405: 2404: 2398: 2392: 2390: 2371: 2365: 2359: 2353: 2347: 2338: 2337: 2335: 2333: 2318: 2312: 2306: 2300: 2294: 2288: 2282: 2276: 2270: 2239: 2238: 2236: 2234: 2215: 2209: 2208: 2206: 2204: 2185: 2179: 2173: 2167: 2161: 2155: 2149: 2143: 2137: 2131: 2125: 2119: 2118: 2116: 2114: 2099: 2084: 2078: 2069: 2063: 2057: 2051: 2042: 2032: 2030: 2028: 2011: 1994: 1993: 1992: 1986: 1980: 1978: 1958: 1952: 1951: 1950: 1944: 1938: 1936: 1916: 1910: 1904: 1895: 1894: 1893: 1887: 1881: 1879: 1859: 1850: 1844: 1838: 1832: 1823: 1822: 1820: 1818: 1807: 1801: 1787: 1781: 1766: 1760: 1759: 1758: 1752: 1746: 1744: 1732:New York Tribune 1723: 1717: 1716: 1715: 1709: 1703: 1701: 1680: 1674: 1668: 1659: 1658: 1652: 1650: 1628: 1620: 1614: 1608: 1602: 1596: 1587: 1581: 1575: 1569: 1563: 1557: 1551: 1550: 1549: 1543: 1537: 1535: 1520: 1514: 1508: 1499: 1498:, pp. 6, 7. 1493: 1487: 1481: 1475: 1469: 1453: 1449: 1443: 1440: 1434: 1431: 1425: 1422: 1416: 1413: 1407: 1403: 1397: 1393: 1387: 1384: 1378: 1351: 1251:Martinique Hotel 1200:Lucius M. Boomer 1193:Lucius M. Boomer 1088:Hôtel de Soubise 1075: 1063: 1045: 1033: 1006: 994: 976: 964: 942: 931:First Floor plan 928: 914: 819:Marie Antoinette 785: 773: 755: 743: 725: 716:Gentlemen's Cafe 713: 680: 668: 604:Washington, D.C. 561:blue raspberries 510: 492: 464:(1906); and the 330:Lexington Avenue 326:John Jacob Astor 45: 33: 6535: 6534: 6530: 6529: 6528: 6526: 6525: 6524: 6450: 6449: 6440: 6438: 6434: 6431: 6426: 6423: 6421: 6419: 6418: 6416: 6404: 6394: 6392: 6382: 6380: 6372: 6370: 6365: 6341:Claude Philippe 6299: 6241: 6236: 6206: 6197: 6103:Temple Emanu-El 6054: 6039: 6016: 6014:Subway stations 5999: 5909: 5894: 5856: 5841: 5634:785 (Park Cinq) 5620: 5602: 5543:693 (St. Regis) 5377: 5359: 5276: 5262: 5252: 5222: 5217: 5201: 5163: 5144: 5068: 5037: 4979: 4960: 4914: 4853: 4833: 4814: 4775:Liberty Theatre 4755:Garrick Theatre 4718: 4680: 4661:The Roger Hotel 4614: 4578: 4523: 4504: 4500:Waldorf–Astoria 4468: 4389:Chanin Building 4289: 4283: 4108: 4097: 4084: 4075: 4031: 4026: 4017: 4015: 4008: 3993: 3984: 3982: 3970: 3961: 3959: 3952: 3937: 3928: 3926: 3919: 3904: 3895: 3893: 3886: 3875:Andrew Carnegie 3871: 3862: 3860: 3853: 3842:Waldorf Astoria 3838: 3832: 3819: 3813: 3798: 3781: 3766: 3757: 3755: 3748: 3733: 3727: 3712: 3703: 3701: 3694: 3686:. Cosimo, Inc. 3679: 3664: 3655: 3653: 3641: 3635: 3620: 3609: 3600: 3598: 3591: 3576: 3567: 3565: 3553: 3544: 3542: 3535: 3520: 3509: 3503: 3488: 3479: 3477: 3465: 3461: 3446: 3434: 3422: 3410: 3398: 3394: 3389: 3381: 3368: 3358: 3356: 3343: 3342: 3335: 3325: 3314: 3312: 3299: 3298: 3291: 3283: 3276: 3268: 3264: 3256: 3249: 3241: 3237: 3227: 3225: 3214: 3213: 3209: 3201: 3197: 3189: 3185: 3177: 3173: 3165: 3161: 3153: 3149: 3141: 3137: 3129: 3125: 3117: 3110: 3102: 3095: 3087: 3083: 3075: 3071: 3063: 3056: 3046: 3044: 3035: 3034: 3030: 3022: 3018: 3010: 3006: 2998: 2994: 2986: 2963: 2955: 2951: 2943: 2934: 2926: 2919: 2911: 2907: 2897: 2895: 2884:Boldt, George. 2883: 2882: 2878: 2870: 2866: 2858: 2847: 2839: 2835: 2825: 2823: 2819: 2808: 2804: 2803: 2796: 2786: 2784: 2775: 2774: 2770: 2762: 2758: 2751: 2732: 2731: 2727: 2717: 2715: 2702: 2701: 2697: 2689: 2685: 2677: 2673: 2663: 2661: 2652: 2651: 2647: 2637: 2635: 2626: 2625: 2621: 2611: 2600: 2598: 2583: 2582: 2578: 2568: 2557: 2555: 2540: 2539: 2535: 2527: 2523: 2515: 2511: 2503: 2499: 2489: 2478: 2476: 2467: 2466: 2462: 2454: 2450: 2440: 2429: 2427: 2420:Altoona Tribune 2414: 2413: 2409: 2399: 2388: 2386: 2373: 2372: 2368: 2360: 2356: 2348: 2341: 2331: 2329: 2320: 2319: 2315: 2307: 2303: 2295: 2291: 2283: 2279: 2271: 2242: 2232: 2230: 2217: 2216: 2212: 2202: 2200: 2187: 2186: 2182: 2174: 2170: 2162: 2158: 2150: 2146: 2138: 2134: 2126: 2122: 2112: 2110: 2103:"Hotel history" 2101: 2100: 2087: 2079: 2072: 2064: 2060: 2052: 2045: 2026: 2024: 2013: 2012: 1997: 1987: 1976: 1974: 1960: 1959: 1955: 1945: 1934: 1932: 1918: 1917: 1913: 1905: 1898: 1888: 1877: 1875: 1861: 1860: 1853: 1845: 1841: 1833: 1826: 1816: 1814: 1809: 1799: 1791:McCusker, J. J. 1789: 1779: 1771:McCusker, J. J. 1769: 1767: 1763: 1753: 1742: 1740: 1725: 1724: 1720: 1710: 1699: 1697: 1682: 1681: 1677: 1669: 1662: 1648: 1646: 1622: 1621: 1617: 1609: 1605: 1597: 1590: 1582: 1578: 1570: 1566: 1558: 1554: 1544: 1533: 1531: 1522: 1521: 1517: 1509: 1502: 1494: 1490: 1482: 1478: 1470: 1466: 1462: 1457: 1456: 1450: 1446: 1441: 1437: 1432: 1428: 1423: 1419: 1414: 1410: 1404: 1400: 1394: 1390: 1385: 1381: 1352: 1348: 1343: 1338: 1243:Manhattan Hotel 1227:Rutgers College 1126: 1083: 1082: 1081: 1080: 1079: 1076: 1068: 1067: 1064: 1053: 1052: 1051: 1050: 1049: 1046: 1038: 1037: 1034: 1014: 1013: 1012: 1011: 1010: 1007: 999: 998: 995: 984: 983: 982: 981: 980: 977: 969: 968: 965: 950: 949: 948: 947: 946: 943: 934: 933: 932: 929: 920: 919: 918: 915: 904: 793: 792: 791: 790: 789: 786: 778: 777: 774: 763: 762: 761: 760: 759: 756: 748: 747: 744: 733: 732: 731: 730: 729: 726: 718: 717: 714: 703: 690: 689: 688: 687: 686: 681: 673: 672: 669: 658: 648:(1894) and the 576:, a founder of 553:Andrew Carnegie 525: 524: 523: 522: 521: 511: 502: 501: 500: 493: 482: 428:Astoria, Oregon 411: 397:Walter Damrosch 316:, 36th Street, 310: 297: 265:Louis XIV style 227:, was built on 201:Waldorf-Astoria 48: 36:Waldorf-Astoria 29: 17: 12: 11: 5: 6533: 6531: 6523: 6522: 6517: 6512: 6507: 6502: 6497: 6492: 6487: 6482: 6477: 6472: 6467: 6462: 6452: 6451: 6415: 6414: 6402: 6390: 6367: 6366: 6364: 6363: 6358: 6353: 6348: 6343: 6338: 6333: 6328: 6323: 6318: 6313: 6307: 6305: 6301: 6300: 6298: 6297: 6292: 6287: 6282: 6277: 6275:Oscar Tschirky 6272: 6267: 6262: 6257: 6251: 6249: 6247:Original hotel 6243: 6242: 6237: 6235: 6234: 6227: 6220: 6212: 6203: 6202: 6199: 6198: 6196: 6195: 6193:Temple Beth-El 6190: 6185: 6180: 6175: 6170: 6165: 6160: 6155: 6150: 6145: 6140: 6135: 6130: 6125: 6120: 6115: 6110: 6105: 6100: 6095: 6090: 6085: 6080: 6075: 6070: 6068:Hotel Victoria 6065: 6059: 6056: 6055: 6052: 6045: 6044: 6041: 6040: 6038: 6037: 6032: 6027: 6021: 6018: 6017: 6012: 6005: 6004: 6001: 6000: 5998: 5997: 5996: 5995: 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(Scribner) 5297: 5292: 5287: 5281: 5278: 5277: 5271: 5264: 5263: 5254:Structures on 5253: 5251: 5250: 5243: 5236: 5228: 5219: 5218: 5210: 5207: 5206: 5203: 5202: 5200: 5199: 5194: 5189: 5184: 5179: 5174: 5168: 5165: 5164: 5162:Related topics 5161: 5154: 5153: 5150: 5149: 5146: 5145: 5143: 5142: 5137: 5132: 5130:Madison Avenue 5127: 5122: 5117: 5112: 5107: 5102: 5097: 5095:Seventh Avenue 5092: 5087: 5082: 5076: 5074: 5070: 5069: 5067: 5066: 5061: 5056: 5051: 5045: 5043: 5039: 5038: 5036: 5035: 5030: 5025: 5020: 5015: 5010: 5005: 5000: 4994: 4992: 4981: 4980: 4978:Transportation 4977: 4970: 4969: 4966: 4965: 4962: 4961: 4959: 4958: 4953: 4948: 4943: 4938: 4933: 4928: 4922: 4920: 4916: 4915: 4913: 4912: 4907: 4902: 4897: 4892: 4887: 4882: 4877: 4872: 4867: 4861: 4859: 4855: 4854: 4852: 4851: 4845: 4843: 4835: 4834: 4831: 4824: 4823: 4820: 4819: 4816: 4815: 4813: 4812: 4807: 4802: 4797: 4792: 4787: 4782: 4777: 4772: 4767: 4762: 4757: 4752: 4747: 4742: 4737: 4732: 4726: 4724: 4720: 4719: 4717: 4716: 4715: 4714: 4704: 4699: 4694: 4688: 4686: 4682: 4681: 4679: 4678: 4673: 4668: 4663: 4658: 4653: 4648: 4643: 4638: 4633: 4628: 4622: 4620: 4616: 4615: 4613: 4612: 4607: 4602: 4597: 4592: 4586: 4584: 4580: 4579: 4577: 4576: 4571: 4566: 4561: 4556: 4551: 4546: 4541: 4535: 4533: 4525: 4524: 4521: 4514: 4513: 4510: 4509: 4506: 4505: 4503: 4502: 4497: 4492: 4487: 4482: 4476: 4474: 4470: 4469: 4467: 4466: 4461: 4456: 4451: 4446: 4441: 4436: 4431: 4426: 4416: 4411: 4406: 4401: 4396: 4391: 4386: 4381: 4376: 4371: 4366: 4364:275 Madison Av 4361: 4359:200 Madison Av 4356: 4351: 4346: 4341: 4336: 4331: 4326: 4321: 4316: 4311: 4306: 4300: 4298: 4285: 4284: 4282: 4281: 4276: 4271: 4266: 4261: 4256: 4251: 4246: 4241: 4239:Manhattan Mall 4236: 4231: 4226: 4221: 4216: 4211: 4206: 4201: 4196: 4191: 4186: 4181: 4176: 4171: 4166: 4161: 4156: 4151: 4146: 4141: 4136: 4131: 4126: 4124:One Penn Plaza 4120: 4118: 4110: 4109: 4106: 4099: 4098: 4089: 4086: 4085: 4076: 4074: 4073: 4066: 4059: 4051: 4045: 4044: 4030: 4029:External links 4027: 4025: 4024: 4006: 3991: 3968: 3950: 3935: 3917: 3902: 3884: 3869: 3851: 3836: 3831:978-1413465044 3830: 3817: 3811: 3796: 3779: 3764: 3746: 3731: 3725: 3710: 3692: 3677: 3662: 3639: 3633: 3618: 3607: 3589: 3574: 3551: 3533: 3518: 3507: 3501: 3486: 3462: 3460: 3457: 3456: 3455: 3443: 3431: 3419: 3407: 3393: 3390: 3388: 3387: 3385:, p. 595. 3366: 3333: 3321:Newspapers.com 3289: 3274: 3262: 3247: 3235: 3207: 3195: 3183: 3171: 3169:, p. 106. 3159: 3147: 3135: 3123: 3108: 3106:, p. 591. 3093: 3081: 3069: 3054: 3028: 3016: 3004: 2992: 2961: 2949: 2932: 2930:, p. 218. 2917: 2915:, p. 132. 2905: 2876: 2864: 2862:, p. 102. 2845: 2833: 2794: 2768: 2756: 2749: 2725: 2695: 2683: 2671: 2645: 2619: 2607:Newspapers.com 2576: 2564:Newspapers.com 2533: 2521: 2519:, p. 841. 2509: 2497: 2485:Newspapers.com 2460: 2448: 2436:Newspapers.com 2416:"World's Host" 2407: 2395:Newspapers.com 2366: 2354: 2339: 2313: 2311:, p. 121. 2301: 2299:, p. 373. 2289: 2277: 2240: 2210: 2180: 2168: 2156: 2144: 2132: 2120: 2085: 2083:, p. 114. 2070: 2058: 2056:, p. 204. 2043: 2039:MeasuringWorth 2033:United States 2021:MeasuringWorth 1995: 1983:Newspapers.com 1953: 1941:Newspapers.com 1911: 1896: 1884:Newspapers.com 1851: 1839: 1824: 1808:1800–present: 1761: 1749:Newspapers.com 1718: 1706:Newspapers.com 1675: 1660: 1615: 1603: 1588: 1576: 1564: 1552: 1540:Newspapers.com 1515: 1500: 1488: 1476: 1463: 1461: 1458: 1455: 1454: 1444: 1435: 1426: 1417: 1408: 1398: 1388: 1379: 1375:Harlem heights 1371:General Putnam 1345: 1344: 1342: 1339: 1337: 1334: 1312:maître d'hôtel 1306:Oscar Tschirky 1299:Oscar Tschirky 1125: 1124:Notable people 1122: 1092:Edward Simmons 1077: 1070: 1069: 1065: 1058: 1057: 1056: 1055: 1054: 1047: 1040: 1039: 1035: 1028: 1027: 1026: 1025: 1024: 1008: 1001: 1000: 996: 989: 988: 987: 986: 985: 978: 971: 970: 966: 959: 958: 957: 956: 955: 944: 937: 936: 935: 930: 923: 922: 921: 916: 909: 908: 907: 906: 905: 903: 900: 823:Will Hicok Low 787: 780: 779: 775: 768: 767: 766: 765: 764: 757: 750: 749: 745: 738: 737: 736: 735: 734: 727: 720: 719: 715: 708: 707: 706: 705: 704: 702: 699: 682: 675: 674: 670: 663: 662: 661: 660: 659: 657: 654: 570:Frederick Cook 512: 505: 504: 503: 494: 487: 486: 485: 484: 483: 481: 478: 410: 407: 402:Oscar Tschirky 314:Madison Avenue 309: 306: 296: 293: 285:Oscar Tschirky 280:maître d'hôtel 195: 194: 189: 185: 184: 180: 179: 176: 172: 171: 168: 164: 163: 159: 158: 155: 151: 150: 139: 135: 134: 133: 132: 131:1897 (Astoria) 129: 128:1893 (Waldorf) 124: 120: 119: 116: 112: 111: 97: 93: 92: 89: 85: 84: 79: 75: 74: 71: 67: 66: 63: 59: 58: 54: 53: 50: 49: 46: 38: 37: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 6532: 6521: 6518: 6516: 6513: 6511: 6508: 6506: 6503: 6501: 6498: 6496: 6493: 6491: 6488: 6486: 6483: 6481: 6478: 6476: 6473: 6471: 6468: 6466: 6463: 6461: 6458: 6457: 6455: 6448: 6445: 6413: 6408: 6403: 6401: 6400:New York City 6391: 6389: 6379: 6375: 6362: 6359: 6357: 6354: 6352: 6349: 6347: 6344: 6342: 6339: 6337: 6334: 6332: 6329: 6327: 6324: 6322: 6319: 6317: 6316:Conrad Hilton 6314: 6312: 6309: 6308: 6306: 6304:Present hotel 6302: 6296: 6293: 6291: 6288: 6286: 6283: 6281: 6278: 6276: 6273: 6271: 6268: 6266: 6263: 6261: 6258: 6256: 6253: 6252: 6250: 6248: 6244: 6240: 6233: 6228: 6226: 6221: 6219: 6214: 6213: 6210: 6194: 6191: 6189: 6186: 6184: 6181: 6179: 6176: 6174: 6171: 6169: 6166: 6164: 6161: 6159: 6158:Lenox Library 6156: 6154: 6151: 6149: 6146: 6144: 6141: 6139: 6136: 6134: 6131: 6129: 6126: 6124: 6121: 6119: 6116: 6114: 6111: 6109: 6106: 6104: 6101: 6099: 6096: 6094: 6093:391 (Gunther) 6091: 6089: 6086: 6084: 6081: 6079: 6076: 6074: 6071: 6069: 6066: 6064: 6061: 6060: 6057: 6050: 6046: 6036: 6033: 6031: 6028: 6026: 6023: 6022: 6019: 6015: 6010: 6006: 5994: 5991: 5990: 5989: 5986: 5982: 5979: 5978: 5977: 5974: 5972: 5969: 5965: 5964: 5960: 5958: 5957: 5953: 5952: 5951: 5948: 5944: 5941: 5939: 5936: 5934: 5931: 5929: 5926: 5925: 5924: 5921: 5919: 5916: 5915: 5912: 5905: 5901: 5891: 5888: 5886: 5883: 5881: 5878: 5876: 5873: 5871: 5868: 5866: 5863: 5862: 5859: 5852: 5848: 5838: 5835: 5831: 5830:Jewish Museum 5828: 5827: 5826: 5823: 5821: 5818: 5814: 5813:Cooper Hewitt 5811: 5810: 5809: 5806: 5804: 5801: 5799: 5796: 5794: 5791: 5789: 5786: 5782: 5779: 5778: 5777: 5774: 5772: 5769: 5767: 5764: 5762: 5759: 5757: 5754: 5752: 5749: 5747: 5744: 5742: 5739: 5737: 5734: 5732: 5729: 5727: 5724: 5722: 5719: 5717: 5714: 5712: 5709: 5707: 5704: 5700: 5697: 5696: 5695: 5692: 5690: 5687: 5685: 5682: 5680: 5677: 5675: 5672: 5670: 5667: 5665: 5662: 5660: 5657: 5655: 5652: 5650: 5647: 5645: 5642: 5640: 5637: 5635: 5632: 5630: 5627: 5626: 5623: 5619: 5613: 5609: 5599: 5596: 5594: 5591: 5589: 5586: 5584: 5581: 5579: 5576: 5574: 5571: 5569: 5566: 5564: 5561: 5559: 5556: 5554: 5551: 5549: 5546: 5544: 5541: 5539: 5538:689 (Aeolian) 5536: 5534: 5531: 5529: 5526: 5524: 5521: 5519: 5518:653 (Cartier) 5516: 5514: 5511: 5509: 5506: 5504: 5501: 5497: 5494: 5492: 5489: 5487: 5484: 5483: 5482: 5479: 5477: 5474: 5472: 5469: 5467: 5464: 5462: 5459: 5457: 5454: 5452: 5449: 5447: 5444: 5442: 5439: 5437: 5434: 5432: 5429: 5427: 5424: 5422: 5419: 5417: 5414: 5412: 5409: 5407: 5404: 5402: 5399: 5397: 5394: 5392: 5389: 5387: 5384: 5383: 5380: 5376: 5370: 5366: 5356: 5353: 5351: 5348: 5346: 5343: 5341: 5338: 5336: 5333: 5331: 5328: 5326: 5323: 5321: 5318: 5316: 5313: 5311: 5308: 5306: 5303: 5301: 5298: 5296: 5293: 5291: 5288: 5286: 5283: 5282: 5279: 5275: 5269: 5265: 5261: 5257: 5249: 5244: 5242: 5237: 5235: 5230: 5229: 5226: 5216: 5213: 5208: 5198: 5195: 5193: 5190: 5188: 5185: 5183: 5180: 5178: 5175: 5173: 5170: 5169: 5166: 5159: 5155: 5141: 5138: 5136: 5133: 5131: 5128: 5126: 5123: 5121: 5120:Herald Square 5118: 5116: 5113: 5111: 5108: 5106: 5103: 5101: 5100:Eighth Avenue 5098: 5096: 5093: 5091: 5088: 5086: 5083: 5081: 5078: 5077: 5075: 5071: 5065: 5062: 5060: 5057: 5055: 5052: 5050: 5047: 5046: 5044: 5040: 5034: 5031: 5029: 5026: 5024: 5021: 5019: 5016: 5014: 5011: 5009: 5006: 5004: 5001: 4999: 4996: 4995: 4993: 4990: 4986: 4982: 4975: 4971: 4957: 4954: 4952: 4949: 4947: 4944: 4942: 4939: 4937: 4934: 4932: 4929: 4927: 4924: 4923: 4921: 4917: 4911: 4908: 4906: 4903: 4901: 4898: 4896: 4893: 4891: 4888: 4886: 4883: 4881: 4878: 4876: 4873: 4871: 4868: 4866: 4863: 4862: 4860: 4856: 4850: 4847: 4846: 4844: 4840: 4836: 4829: 4825: 4811: 4810:Savoy Theatre 4808: 4806: 4803: 4801: 4798: 4796: 4793: 4791: 4790:Morgans Hotel 4788: 4786: 4783: 4781: 4778: 4776: 4773: 4771: 4768: 4766: 4763: 4761: 4758: 4756: 4753: 4751: 4748: 4746: 4743: 4741: 4738: 4736: 4735:Belmont Hotel 4733: 4731: 4728: 4727: 4725: 4721: 4713: 4710: 4709: 4708: 4705: 4703: 4700: 4698: 4695: 4693: 4692:AMC Empire 25 4690: 4689: 4687: 4683: 4677: 4674: 4672: 4671:Hotel Wolcott 4669: 4667: 4666:The Wilbraham 4664: 4662: 4659: 4657: 4654: 4652: 4651:Hotel McAlpin 4649: 4647: 4644: 4642: 4641:Library Hotel 4639: 4637: 4634: 4632: 4629: 4627: 4624: 4623: 4621: 4617: 4611: 4608: 4606: 4603: 4601: 4598: 4596: 4593: 4591: 4588: 4587: 4585: 4581: 4575: 4572: 4570: 4567: 4565: 4562: 4560: 4557: 4555: 4552: 4550: 4547: 4545: 4542: 4540: 4537: 4536: 4534: 4530: 4526: 4519: 4515: 4501: 4498: 4496: 4493: 4491: 4488: 4486: 4483: 4481: 4478: 4477: 4475: 4471: 4465: 4464:Williams Club 4462: 4460: 4457: 4455: 4452: 4450: 4447: 4445: 4442: 4440: 4437: 4435: 4432: 4430: 4427: 4424: 4420: 4417: 4415: 4412: 4410: 4407: 4405: 4402: 4400: 4397: 4395: 4392: 4390: 4387: 4385: 4382: 4380: 4377: 4375: 4372: 4370: 4367: 4365: 4362: 4360: 4357: 4355: 4352: 4350: 4347: 4345: 4344:110 E 42nd St 4342: 4340: 4337: 4335: 4332: 4330: 4327: 4325: 4322: 4320: 4317: 4315: 4312: 4310: 4307: 4305: 4302: 4301: 4299: 4296: 4286: 4280: 4277: 4275: 4272: 4270: 4267: 4265: 4262: 4260: 4257: 4255: 4252: 4250: 4247: 4245: 4242: 4240: 4237: 4235: 4232: 4230: 4227: 4225: 4222: 4220: 4217: 4215: 4212: 4210: 4207: 4205: 4202: 4200: 4197: 4195: 4192: 4190: 4187: 4185: 4182: 4180: 4177: 4175: 4172: 4170: 4167: 4165: 4162: 4160: 4157: 4155: 4152: 4150: 4147: 4145: 4144:130 W 30th St 4142: 4140: 4139:15 Penn Plaza 4137: 4135: 4132: 4130: 4127: 4125: 4122: 4121: 4119: 4115: 4111: 4104: 4100: 4096: 4095:New York City 4092: 4087: 4083: 4082:Midtown South 4079: 4072: 4067: 4065: 4060: 4058: 4053: 4052: 4049: 4042: 4037: 4033: 4032: 4028: 4013: 4009: 4003: 3999: 3998: 3992: 3980: 3976: 3975: 3969: 3957: 3953: 3947: 3943: 3942: 3936: 3924: 3920: 3914: 3910: 3909: 3903: 3891: 3887: 3881: 3877: 3876: 3870: 3858: 3854: 3848: 3844: 3843: 3837: 3833: 3827: 3823: 3818: 3814: 3808: 3804: 3803: 3797: 3793: 3789: 3785: 3780: 3776: 3772: 3771: 3765: 3753: 3749: 3743: 3739: 3738: 3732: 3728: 3722: 3718: 3717: 3711: 3699: 3695: 3689: 3685: 3684: 3678: 3674: 3670: 3669: 3663: 3651: 3647: 3646: 3640: 3636: 3630: 3626: 3625: 3619: 3615: 3614: 3608: 3596: 3592: 3586: 3583:. NYU Press. 3582: 3581: 3575: 3563: 3559: 3558: 3552: 3540: 3536: 3530: 3526: 3525: 3519: 3515: 3514: 3508: 3504: 3498: 3494: 3493: 3487: 3475: 3471: 3470: 3464: 3463: 3458: 3453: 3452:public domain 3444: 3441: 3440:public domain 3432: 3429: 3428:public domain 3420: 3417: 3416:public domain 3408: 3405: 3404:public domain 3396: 3395: 3391: 3384: 3379: 3377: 3375: 3373: 3371: 3367: 3354: 3350: 3346: 3340: 3338: 3334: 3329: 3322: 3310: 3306: 3302: 3296: 3294: 3290: 3287:, p. 40. 3286: 3281: 3279: 3275: 3272:, p. 81. 3271: 3266: 3263: 3260:, p. 18. 3259: 3254: 3252: 3248: 3245:, p. 25. 3244: 3239: 3236: 3223: 3219: 3218: 3211: 3208: 3205:, p. 12. 3204: 3203:Morrison 2014 3199: 3196: 3192: 3187: 3184: 3181:, p. 55. 3180: 3179:Comstock 1898 3175: 3172: 3168: 3163: 3160: 3157:, p. 24. 3156: 3155:Morrison 2014 3151: 3148: 3144: 3139: 3136: 3133:, p. 53. 3132: 3131:Morrison 2014 3127: 3124: 3121:, p. 31. 3120: 3119:Morrison 2014 3115: 3113: 3109: 3105: 3100: 3098: 3094: 3091:, p. 22. 3090: 3089:Morrison 2014 3085: 3082: 3079:, p. 21. 3078: 3077:Morrison 2014 3073: 3070: 3067:, p. 20. 3066: 3065:Morrison 2014 3061: 3059: 3055: 3042: 3038: 3032: 3029: 3026:, p. 15. 3025: 3024:Morrison 2014 3020: 3017: 3014:, p. 16. 3013: 3012:Morrison 2014 3008: 3005: 3002:, p. 14. 3001: 3000:Morrison 2014 2996: 2993: 2990:, p. 51. 2989: 2988:Comstock 1898 2984: 2982: 2980: 2978: 2976: 2974: 2972: 2970: 2968: 2966: 2962: 2959:, p. 11. 2958: 2957:Morrison 2014 2953: 2950: 2947:, p. 13. 2946: 2945:Morrison 2014 2941: 2939: 2937: 2933: 2929: 2924: 2922: 2918: 2914: 2909: 2906: 2893: 2889: 2888: 2880: 2877: 2874:, p. 53. 2873: 2868: 2865: 2861: 2856: 2854: 2852: 2850: 2846: 2843:, p. 65. 2842: 2837: 2834: 2818: 2814: 2807: 2801: 2799: 2795: 2782: 2778: 2772: 2769: 2766:, p. 77. 2765: 2764:Campbell 1916 2760: 2757: 2752: 2750:9780810826922 2746: 2742: 2738: 2737: 2729: 2726: 2713: 2709: 2705: 2699: 2696: 2693:, p. 77. 2692: 2687: 2684: 2680: 2675: 2672: 2659: 2655: 2649: 2646: 2633: 2629: 2623: 2620: 2615: 2608: 2596: 2592: 2591: 2586: 2580: 2577: 2572: 2565: 2553: 2549: 2548: 2543: 2537: 2534: 2531:, p. 32. 2530: 2525: 2522: 2518: 2513: 2510: 2507:, p. 27. 2506: 2501: 2498: 2493: 2486: 2474: 2470: 2464: 2461: 2458:, p. 22. 2457: 2452: 2449: 2444: 2437: 2425: 2421: 2417: 2411: 2408: 2403: 2396: 2384: 2380: 2376: 2370: 2367: 2363: 2358: 2355: 2352:, p. 21. 2351: 2346: 2344: 2340: 2327: 2323: 2317: 2314: 2310: 2305: 2302: 2298: 2293: 2290: 2287:, p. 10. 2286: 2281: 2278: 2274: 2269: 2267: 2265: 2263: 2261: 2259: 2257: 2255: 2253: 2251: 2249: 2247: 2245: 2241: 2228: 2224: 2220: 2214: 2211: 2198: 2194: 2190: 2184: 2181: 2178:, p. 14. 2177: 2172: 2169: 2165: 2164:Morrison 2014 2160: 2157: 2154:, p. 29. 2153: 2148: 2145: 2142:, p. 31. 2141: 2136: 2133: 2130:, p. 77. 2129: 2124: 2121: 2108: 2104: 2098: 2096: 2094: 2092: 2090: 2086: 2082: 2081:Tauranac 2014 2077: 2075: 2071: 2067: 2062: 2059: 2055: 2050: 2048: 2044: 2040: 2036: 2023: 2022: 2017: 2010: 2008: 2006: 2004: 2002: 2000: 1996: 1991: 1984: 1972: 1968: 1964: 1957: 1954: 1949: 1942: 1930: 1926: 1922: 1915: 1912: 1908: 1903: 1901: 1897: 1892: 1885: 1873: 1869: 1865: 1858: 1856: 1852: 1849:, p. 24. 1848: 1843: 1840: 1836: 1831: 1829: 1825: 1813: 1805: 1798: 1797: 1792: 1785: 1778: 1777: 1772: 1765: 1762: 1757: 1750: 1738: 1734: 1733: 1728: 1722: 1719: 1714: 1707: 1695: 1691: 1690: 1685: 1679: 1676: 1673:, p. 23. 1672: 1667: 1665: 1661: 1656: 1644: 1640: 1636: 1632: 1627: 1619: 1616: 1613:, p. 37. 1612: 1607: 1604: 1600: 1595: 1593: 1589: 1585: 1580: 1577: 1574:, p. 20. 1573: 1568: 1565: 1562:, p. 13. 1561: 1556: 1553: 1548: 1541: 1529: 1525: 1519: 1516: 1513:, p. 20. 1512: 1507: 1505: 1501: 1497: 1492: 1489: 1486:, p. 35. 1485: 1480: 1477: 1473: 1468: 1465: 1459: 1448: 1445: 1439: 1436: 1430: 1427: 1421: 1418: 1412: 1409: 1402: 1399: 1392: 1389: 1383: 1380: 1376: 1372: 1368: 1364: 1360: 1356: 1350: 1347: 1340: 1335: 1333: 1331: 1327: 1326:Peacock Alley 1323: 1322:Waldorf salad 1319: 1314: 1313: 1308: 1307: 1300: 1296: 1292: 1290: 1286: 1282: 1281:New York City 1278: 1274: 1270: 1269: 1262: 1258: 1254: 1252: 1248: 1244: 1240: 1236: 1232: 1228: 1224: 1223:Detlef Lienau 1220: 1219: 1212: 1208: 1204: 1202: 1201: 1194: 1190: 1186: 1184: 1183: 1176: 1172: 1168: 1166: 1162: 1158: 1154: 1150: 1146: 1142: 1141: 1134: 1130: 1123: 1121: 1117: 1113: 1110: 1106: 1102: 1101:Enrico Caruso 1096: 1093: 1089: 1074: 1062: 1044: 1032: 1023: 1020: 1005: 993: 975: 963: 954: 941: 927: 913: 902:Astoria Hotel 901: 899: 897: 893: 889: 884: 878: 876: 871: 867: 863: 860:'s frescoes. 859: 858:Crowninshield 855: 851: 847: 843: 842: 837: 836: 830: 828: 824: 820: 814: 810: 808: 804: 799: 784: 772: 754: 742: 724: 712: 701:Waldorf Hotel 700: 698: 694: 685: 679: 667: 655: 653: 651: 647: 643: 642:Bat Masterson 639: 635: 630: 628: 624: 623:concertmaster 620: 619:Joseph Knecht 616: 612: 607: 605: 601: 600: 593: 591: 587: 581: 579: 575: 571: 566: 562: 558: 554: 549: 547: 543: 539: 534: 530: 529:Li Hung-Chang 519: 518: 509: 498: 491: 479: 477: 475: 471: 467: 463: 459: 458:The St. Regis 455: 450: 448: 444: 435: 431: 429: 425: 415: 408: 406: 403: 398: 394: 384: 380: 378: 374: 370: 365: 361: 357: 352: 350: 346: 342: 339: 335: 331: 327: 323: 319: 315: 307: 301: 294: 292: 290: 286: 282: 281: 274: 272: 271: 266: 260: 258: 254: 249: 245: 241: 237: 232: 230: 226: 222: 218: 214: 210: 206: 202: 193: 190: 186: 181: 177: 173: 169: 165: 160: 156: 152: 148: 144: 140: 130: 127: 126: 125: 121: 117: 113: 109: 105: 101: 98: 94: 90: 86: 83: 80: 76: 72: 68: 64: 60: 55: 51: 44: 39: 34: 31: 27: 23: 6490:Fifth Avenue 6480:Astor family 6417: 6412:Architecture 6351:Arno Schmidt 6336:Elsa Maxwell 6326:John Doherty 6285:Louis Sherry 6270:George Boldt 6246: 6087: 5961: 5954: 5923:Central Park 5618:96th Streets 5391:390 (Gorham) 5375:59th Streets 5256:Fifth Avenue 5211: 5090:Sixth Avenue 5085:Fifth Avenue 5080:Third Avenue 5042:Railroad/bus 4842:Green spaces 4499: 4329:18 E 41st St 4324:10 E 40th St 4259:Nelson Tower 4016:. 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Index

Waldorf Astoria New York
Waldorf-Astoria (disambiguation)

Renaissance Revival architecture
New York
New York
Manhattan
Empire State Building
Waldorf Astoria New York
Henry Janeway Hardenbergh
hotels
Fifth Avenue
New York
New York
Empire State Building
Waldorf Astoria New York
Park Avenue
William Waldorf Astor
German Renaissance
Henry Janeway Hardenbergh
George Boldt
Delmonico's
Sherry's
Louis XIV style
pièce de résistance
maître d'hôtel
Oscar Tschirky

Madison Avenue
Sixth Avenue

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