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1639:? It has an 1831 picture of the precursor Merchants' Exchange, an 1844 picture of the new building, and multiple pictures of the interior from the time of the renovation, all of which are out of copyright. It has a whole chapter on the building, but I can't yet tell you if there are any details you don't have. I have a copy of the book and can upload the pictures if you want any or all of them -- I think the 1844 one is a must, as you don't have any picture of that version, and the others would be good if you can find a way to use them. I found this book available to borrow electronically through my local library -- you may be able to do the same, which would save time. 2025:"National City Bank and the Farmers' Loan and Trust Company merged in 1929. Two years later, City Bank Farmers Trust erected 20 Exchange Place immediately to the south to house the operations of the expanded bank." From this I assumed the merged company was named "City Bank Farmers Trust", and was going to suggest making that explicit, but it appears from the following sentences that the bank was still called National City Bank. So what is City Bank Farmers Trust? And I see they're mentioned again, in 1961, so it does look like a totally separate company. 2434:, thanks for uploading these. I would be very interested in the entire book, actually. However, I think it may be more convenient for both of us if I borrowed it from the library rather than emailing you for each chapter. I've added an image of the 1842 building - it's actually very similar to one that's already in the article, which was described as having been taken in 1837. I also added a sentence about the dome collapsing during the fire. – 1614:"Though the building occupies an entire city block, each side is a different length, and none of the sides are parallel due to the irregular street grid in the area". I don't think this is accurate. William Street and Hanover Street are very close to parallel, but perhaps not perfectly so, but the building's sides on those two streets are parallel to each other. You can see this on the satellite view on Google Maps. 1593:"The upper portion of the building was turned into a hotel from 1998 to 1999": this makes it sound as if it was only used as a hotel during those two years. I think you mean the construction work was done at that time; if so I think the simplest solution would be to ignore the construction dates: "The upper portion of the building was operated as a hotel from 2000 to 2003, after which the upper floors were...". 379:"thereby making it easy to transport gold" "By the end of the century, the custom house's location at 55 Wall Street was no longer advantageous, as it was easier to use a check or certificate to make payments on revenue." These read a bit obscurely unless one's aware that they paid before in gold, and there was an obvious safety advantage to having the Custom House nearby the Subtreasury. 99:
States Custom House in the 19th century. The upper section was built when National City Bank took over in the 1900s. At one point, the bank was said to do "more business in its head office than is done under any other nongovernmental banking roof on the face of the earth". The building's massive cruciform banking hall is now an event venue, with people living in condo apartments above.
1983:"The transaction had been criticized by Democrats in the House of Representatives, who stated that the sale was an "extravagant" use of money": I don't follow this; it wasn't a use of money, it was a sale of an asset in return for money. If this refers to the rent that would have to be paid (as implied by the next couple of sentences) that should be clearer. 1941:"By the end of the century, the custom house's location at 55 Wall Street was no longer advantageous": I would make reference to the Subtreasury's location here, just to be clear: "By the end of the century, the custom house's proximity to the Subtreasury was no longer advantageous"; we already know the address so there's no need to mention it again. 1820:
different offices -- not the upper floors, which are covered in the "Other floors" subsection. So there's no hint as to why this paragraph, starting "There were three stories of offices" is in past tense -- we haven't said these offices have been replaced by anything. Are the balconies connecting the office mezzanines still there, for example?
1758:"Light gray stone was imported from Europe for the columns and floors, although gray marble was also used for the floors and walls." Why "although"? Perhaps "Light gray stone, imported from Europe, was used for the columns, and gray marble was used along with the European stone for the floors. The gray marble was also used for the walls." 1779:"Bookkeepers and National City Bank's bond and foreign departments were in the other corner": does "other corner" refer to the "three stories of offices at each corner"? If so it's confusing because you mention the southeastern corner between the two references -- changing the order of sentences here would resolve the confusion. 2004:"Messengers carried the bank's $ 500 million holdings between the old and new offices in leather satchels, each containing at least $ 10,000." A nice detail! Can we say where the old offices were? It seems relevant to this surprising bit of info -- i.e. were these messengers travelling one block, or the length of Manhattan? 421:
The first paragraph of "Conversion" seems to mix two different things that were going on: the fact that the (predominately rural) Democrats disliked spending money for a new federal building in NYC, and what appears to be something of a tax dodge, with the bank not taking title (which would have made
1643:
I see now you do have a couple of early pictures; don't know how I missed those when scrolling through. The 1831 picture I mentioned is better than the one you have; it's at less of an angle. The engraving of the new building might be slightly better, but I think the date you have must be wrong --
102:
This page was promoted as a Good Article almost two years ago after a Good Article review by one of FAC's very own coordinators, Hog Farm, for which I am very grateful. In addition, the page received a GOCE copyedit a few months ago from Rublov, whose efforts I also appreciate. I think it's up to FA
2295:
Just two points left; the one about Devens is entirely optional and you may think it's too tangential for this article. I think the Hoster pictures are worth a look, though. I will go ahead and upload them since you haven't said you have access, and I'll leave a note here with the file links when
2165:
regulations. If a building is constructed to less than its maximum, then the difference between the actual floor area and the maximum floor area is the unused potential. If a building exceeds its maximum floor area, it can acquire air rights from immediately adjacent sites with unused potential to
2452:
that you might find useful for the sort of articles you work on. For this one, since I can get an electronic copy, I can upload high-quality images much more easily than can be done from a physical copy, so if you do get a copy and are interested in using any of the images, let me know and I'll
98:
This article is about a building in Manhattan, New York City, whose long history can be seen just by looking at the two tiers of colonnades on its eight-story facade. The lower section was constructed for the Merchants' Exchange in 1841 and also housed the New York Stock Exchange and the United
2406:
To get these I took screen shots of all of the Hoster chapter, so if you want I can email you the whole chapter -- send me a Knowledge email if you're interested. The book also has chapters on "The Battery and Bowling Green", "Trinity and Broadway", "The New York Stock Exchange and the Curb",
1800:
Another past/present tense issue: you have present tense for e.g. "The room also features..." and "Corinthian columns support..." but past tense for e.g. "There were three stories of offices" and "The fourth through seventh floors were rented out...". I think it needs to be clearer when we're
2065:
They did merge, but each of the predecessor companies became a division of the merged company. Both companies used to have their own banking and trust operations. After the merger, National City Bank was responsible for the banking operations and Farmers' Trust became City Bank-Farmers Trust,
1819:
I think we need a bit more. At the start of the "Interior" section you say "there was originally office space on the fourth through seventh floors and staff facilities on the eighth floor", but then the paragraph describing this office space is in the "Banking hall" subsection and refers to
2227:"Likewise, other critics "viewed the renovation as an aesthetic aberration", especially with regards to the juxtaposition of the colonnades." Is this related to the earlier comment about the colonnades being "stylistically accurate"? That is, is that comment in reference to the criticism? 1003:
For me at least, the commons category box by itself just seems a bit unnatural (I'd rather put it at the end of a references section and just not have an "External links" section at all). However, I did find the official website for the building's current tenant, so I added that.
1846:
offices in the corners of the banking halls, which may explain the confusion. I've now moved the info about the upper-story offices to "Other floors". The balconies and corner offices still exist; they just aren't used by the bank anymore (as explained elsewhere in the article).
1962:"No progress was made until 1897, and, under the Tarsney Act, Cass Gilbert was selected": suggest "when" rather than "and", and unless you're going to explain the relevance of the Tarsney Act (e.g. in a footnote) I would cut mention of it as it just baffles the reader. 892:
National City Bank and the Farmers' Loan and Trust Company merged in 1929. National City Bank took over the expanded bank's banking operations, while Farmers' Trust became the City Bank Farmers Trust Company, a subsidiary of National City Bank and took over the trust
1730:
In the first couple of paragraphs of the "Interior" section I think you're using the past tense to indicate what used to be true of the original building, but that should be clearer. You have "there was office space" without any explanation of why this is past
611:
The building occupies a whole city block and fits in with the neighborhood's street grid, which is fairly angular. The grid dates back from the 17th century, when the colony of New Amsterdam was founded. These days, not only is the building a city landmark,
479:"The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission designated the building's exterior a landmark on December 21, 1965. It was one of the first landmarks to be designated by the LPC in Manhattan" This is the second time you've told us about this. 1916:, which is available on Google Books, with regard to the fire: apparently the Merchants' Exchange was thought to be a safe haven so people brought their valuables there during the fire, but in vain. Might be a tidbit worth adding to the history. 1920:"and 26 Wall Street became the Subtreasury building": this is a non sequitur where you have it. A couple of sentences later it becomes clearer why you mention it but I would cut this and give the Subtreasury's address at the later mention. 1444:
In , I would remove "Times, Special to the New York" from the first/last name parameters -- this is not an author, and the citation template is designed to handle situations like this perfectly well if you leave those fields
1801:
talking about current features and when we're talking about structures or usages that no longer exist. For example the discussion of the jail cells is in the past tense, and that's clear that it's talking about past usage.
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By 1861, the United States Custom House was looking to move into 55 Wall Street, since the custom house's former location at 26 Wall Street (now Federal Hall) had become too small to accommodate the agency's customs
322:"There is low relief in the center dome" These are, presumably the compass signs and zodiac spoken of a bit later. Since it is these designs that (I assume) are done in low relief, I might mention them together. 1320:
For , it looks like a bot has set the URL-status to "unfit". FAC doesn't require archives for links in footnotes, so this is optional, but the message implies you could improve the archive link if you want
1736:
You use "elegant" a couple of times in the description of the banking hall; I would cut both uses unless you either make it a quote or your sources are clear this is a general opinion among architectural
261:
This has been open for nearly three weeks and has yet to pick up a support. Unless it attracts considerable further attention over the next four or five days I am afraid that it is liable to be archived.
1358:
That is strange. I checked it just now and I had no problem accessing the report. Perhaps it is only accessible from certain geographical regions, or there was an earlier outage that has now been fixed.
2341: 284:" is the entrance to the Wall Street station on the New York City Subway's Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line (served by the 2 and ​3 trains)." I might say "an entrance" as there are multiple such. 2166:
expand its floor area. Since 55 Wall Street could not be expanded any further due to the landmark status, the only thing its owners can do is sell the air rights. Similar buildings such as
589:
You use decimal feet, which strikes me as a little odd. Are such precise measurements from the sources or have you fallen into the common Knowledge trap of converting a metric estimate?
2375: 2161:, but basically it's related to the construction of 60 Wall Street. Each building has air rights above it. In NYC, each land lot has a certain maximum floor area as specified under 2395: 2390: 2385: 718:
The building was looking to move in? Because that's where the link goes. I'm guessing you mean the agency, in which case most of the second half of the sentence is redundant.
1282:
Generally, if there's an author, I would sort by the last name; if there's no author, I would sort by the title. However, most of these sources don't have any author listed.
1173:
You're inconsistent about including publisher locations. E.g is missing a location, but and have locations. You don't have to include them but you should be consistent.
898:
I eliminated the second sentence. However, the first sentence is directly related to the bank's expansion into 20 Exchange Place in 1931 (as mentioned in your next point).
638:
I've cut half of the mentions now. This type of feedback is pretty helpful, actually, since I tend to become desensitized to repetition if I'm too familiar with a topic.
657:
The ", with" construction is journalistic and doesn't become a featured article and this sentence is far too wordy just to say there were some cells in the basement.
1278:
What's the sort order in the "Sources" section intended to be? It looks like you're doing it by title if there's no named author, but then Goodrich is out of place.
1687:
Sorry, I still don't follow. What stylistic rules are governing this? Is there some rule about when these kinds of columns can both be on the same building?
363:
The Subtreasury was indeed at Federal Hall after 1862. Actually, since this is related to the next point, I just moved the bit about the Subtreasury downward.
725:
article is about the building. However, since the Custom House was in several buildings, I would not say that article is about a particular structure per se.
2322:, thanks. I don't have access to the Hoster book at the moment; hence, I cannot currently address either point. I may be able to look for the book at the 722: 40: 1669:"Because the Corinthian columns are located above the Ionic columns, the arrangement of the colonnades is stylistically accurate": what does this mean? 2170:
and most Broadway theaters have had to sell off their air rights, since these structures have high development potential but are also city landmarks.
2008:
It was literally just across the street (52 Wall Street), but that building did not have an article, which may be why I did not mention that before.
1618:
Technically, they are at a very slight angle from each other. For all practical purposes though, you are correct, so I've removed the parallel part.
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I'll grant you that your uses of "subsequently" are correct in a literal sense (which is uncommon), but you over-use the word in this article.
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The image photo in the infobox has almost an exact duplicate just below it at the start of the main article. Seems a little redundant.
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Representatives of the bank said that because it had not taken title to the building, the bank should not have to pay property taxes
2043:
That helps, but if they ended up as two separate entities then presumably it wasn't a merger, but some other business transaction?
679:
I've combined a few of the subheaders, though I'll take a look at the rest of the article tomorrow. Thanks for the feedback Harry.
994: 616:, so the owners can't straighten out the dimensions even if they wanted to (though that whole backstory is a little tangential). 721:
That's weird. I always assumed the link is actually about the agency, but I can see why someone may get the impression that the
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Sorry, I meant "other corners", i.e. the northwestern, northeastern, and southwestern (not necessarily in that order though).
977:
Personally, I wouldn't put explanatory notes in the references section but I wouldn't oppose an FAC over such a trivial thing.
167:, died in 1909. However, this is already public domain anyway in the U.S., since the book was published in the U.S. in 1893. 1399:
Yes, I can reach it. I also turned on my VPN and set my location to the US, then to the UK. In both cases, it still worked.
816:(predecessor bank of Citibank), subsequently arranged for his company to buy 55 Wall Street and make it the headquarters of 2344:-- the account of the fire starts on page 353, and the bit I mentioned on 355. I'll upload the images from Hoster today. 1966:
Done (I removed mention of the Tarsney Act as that is more relevant to the Alexander Hamilton U.S. Custom House article).
505:- Pinging nominator for these comments, as the nomination is at risk of getting archived without gathering momentum soon. 341:"to accommodate all of the customs duties " Since "customs duties" has another meaning (i.e., tariffs), I might rephrase. 939:
This is a verbatim quote from the sources. I'm not sure what else to call it, but I removed the quotation marks now.
422:
the building subject to property taxes) despite paying most of the purchase price. I might separate them out a bit.
1213:
Oops, I forgot about the handful of specific-source templates that were used as citations. I've replaced them with
984: 1121:
Thanks for the comments. I have removed the second image and these two redlinks, as neither subject seems to be
608:
Why was it built in such an odd shape? Was it because of space constraints or was someone making a statement?
2111:"Years after First National City Bank moved its headquarters": we haven't said they moved their headquarters. 655:
The basement was used for such a purpose between 1863 and 1899, with 12 jail cells having been located there.
142:
File:(King1893NYC)_pg790_THE_OLD_MERCHANTS'_EXCHANGE_ON_WALL_STREET.jpg: what is the author's date of death?
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How relevant is this to the building? I feel it could at least be shortened and some repetition eliminated.
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Why did Klein need the air rights? I can't imagine they built anything above 55 Wall Street's footprint.
936:
Do we need the scare quotes on "universal tellers' station"? It draws unnecessary attention to the term.
844:
had paid all except $ 40,000 of the purchase price as part of its agreement with the federal government.
525:, thanks. Ironically I was just responding to Wehwalt's comments now, so I will address those shortly. – 1330: 1067: 1028: 398:"president William McKinley and U.S. treasury secretary Lyman Gage." These titles could be capitalized. 1805:
Regarding this, I have clarified that this is a past usage since the upper stories are now residences.
748:→ federal government. Which federal government is obvious from the context and the link isn't helpful. 676:
Per 2b, you could probably stand to lose some of the subheaders. Some of the sections are quite short.
635:
you mention the firm a lot (11 times in just over 4k words) to the point that it get a bit repetitive.
875:
I added something about that now. It was held up until the Customs Service moved to its new building.
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The archive link for doesn't work. I think generally interactive links like that can't be archived.
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If there are no external links besides Commons, you should eliminate the section and use the
2512: 1552:. I didn't use diacritics at all in this article (and in others) unless it's a proper name. 1549: 1061: 1040: 1022: 61: 1100:
Not sure that the redlinks for William Fryer, and, Milgrim and Lee are of particular note.
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The start of "Interior" was intended to be an overview for the entire section. There were
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The link to the 1978 NRHP Historic Structures Report in the sources section does not work.
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in the see also and let the MoS people be angry but I probably shouldn't recommend that!)
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has been promoted, but there may be a delay in bot processing of the close. Please see
2029:
The Farmers' Loan and Trust Company was renamed, but National City Bank kept its name.
72: 1043:, thanks for the detailed review. I've addressed the remainder of your comments now. 522: 506: 402: 199:, it does not seem that artists for each illustration were individually credited. – 563: 542: 485: 360:
Since the Subtreasury was, I believe, at Federal Hall, that might be a better pipe
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Odd; I tried again and it still fails. For definiteness, can you confirm that
164: 1644:
in 1837 the new building could not have looked anything like that complete.
915:
Subsequently, in 1931 City Bank Farmers Trust constructed a new structure
592:
It appears I have indeed fallen into such a trap. I have fixed this now.
1337:). The current url is missing a page, so it doesn't have a full report. 1253:
Thanks. I have fixed that one now; I forgot about it for some reason. –
2401:
File:National City Bank 55 Wall Street interior 4 executive offices.png
768:
As arranged, clerks were situated in the central rotunda under the dome
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Thanks for taking a look. I have addressed all of your comments now.
1331:
http://www.nyc.gov/html/lpc/downloads/pdf/reports/citybankfarmers.pdf
956:
purchased the building for $ 21.15 million, with Kajima losing money
441:"$ 10,000 apiece" the newspaper source says not less than $ 10,000. 217:
In that case I would suggest removing or replacing the life+70 tag.
39:
Subsequent comments should be made on the article's talk page or in
1177:
I have now removed all of the publisher locations for consistency.
1142:
Article looks better after that. Supporting article for promotion.
2245:
Struck; the earlier comment was the issue here and that's gone.
1466:
Sources all look reliable and I see no other formatting errors.
2184:
Very interesting. Can we get that explanation in a footnote?
103:
quality now, and I look forward to all comments and feedback.
1709:
After further thought, I've removed this as it's irrelevant.
790:
Among the notable employees of the building during this time
1325:
This footnote is for a PDF report. The issue is that the
2376:
File:First Merchants Exchange building New York 1931.png
2132:"moniker" is a little too informal for an encyclopedia. 1896:
They had to blast into the floor to install the vault.
1165: 65: 1333:) is now broken. The report was moved to another url ( 2396:
File:National City Bank 55 Wall Street interior 3.png
2391:
File:National City Bank 55 Wall Street interior 2.png
2386:
File:National City Bank 55 Wall Street interior 1.png
1060:. You've more than adequately addressed my concerns. 460:" A "universal tellers' station"" And this is what? 303:"a dome rising 124 feet (38 m)" above street level? 181:
Is the author of the book the creator of the image?
1548:I think, but am not sure, that this may fall under 2546:The above discussion is preserved as an archive. 633:McKim, Mead & White placed a second colonnade 1191:You still have locations in footnotes , , and . 1335:http://s-media.nyc.gov/agencies/lpc/lp/1941.pdf 660:That's also a good point. I've fixed this now. 43:. No further edits should be made to this page. 695:cupola could take a link and/or inline gloss. 2552:No further edits should be made to this page. 2525:template in place on the talk page until the 770:What purpose is "as arranged" serving there? 29:The following is an archived discussion of a 8: 1544:Suggest using "façade" instead of "facade". 1329:has the full report, but the original url ( 2080:Reading through again I think this is OK. 723:United States Custom House (New York City) 41:Knowledge talk:Featured article candidates 848:had not yet taken title to 55 Wall Street 744:federal government of the United States 2381:File:55 Wall Street 1842 S Walker.png 18:Knowledge:Featured article candidates 7: 405:said otherwise, but apparently not. 1068: 1029: 990:floaty box (personally I'd put the 872:What was the outcome of the case? 195:I cannot say definitively. In the 24: 1566:I think you're right, so struck. 1413:And now it's working for me too. 197:King’s Handbook of New York City 2066:managing the trust operations. 1635:Do you have a copy of Hoster's 958:"with" is adding nothing here 1: 614:so are the streets around it 2520:featured article candidates 1538:Comments from Mike Christie 31:featured article nomination 2569: 2539:12:42, 25 April 2022 (UTC) 2499:09:33, 24 April 2022 (UTC) 2471:09:02, 24 April 2022 (UTC) 2453:upload whatever you need. 2444:23:17, 23 April 2022 (UTC) 2425:18:15, 23 April 2022 (UTC) 2362:16:50, 23 April 2022 (UTC) 2336:16:41, 23 April 2022 (UTC) 2314:16:21, 23 April 2022 (UTC) 2290:15:22, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 2263:16:12, 23 April 2022 (UTC) 2241:15:56, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 2216:16:05, 23 April 2022 (UTC) 2202:17:37, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 2180:15:56, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 2146:15:56, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 2125:15:56, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 2098:16:20, 23 April 2022 (UTC) 2076:16:05, 23 April 2022 (UTC) 2061:17:37, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 2039:15:56, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 2018:15:56, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 1997:15:56, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 1976:15:56, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 1955:15:56, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 1934:15:56, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 1906:15:56, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 1879:16:16, 23 April 2022 (UTC) 1857:16:05, 23 April 2022 (UTC) 1838:17:35, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 1815:15:56, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 1793:15:56, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 1772:15:56, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 1751:15:56, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 1719:16:05, 23 April 2022 (UTC) 1705:17:25, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 1683:15:56, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 1662:14:15, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 1628:15:56, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 1607:15:56, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 1584:17:25, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 1562:15:56, 22 April 2022 (UTC) 1533:18:38, 21 April 2022 (UTC) 1506:13:26, 21 April 2022 (UTC) 1484:10:58, 21 April 2022 (UTC) 1459:13:26, 21 April 2022 (UTC) 1431:17:00, 21 April 2022 (UTC) 1409:14:52, 21 April 2022 (UTC) 1395:13:56, 21 April 2022 (UTC) 1369:13:26, 21 April 2022 (UTC) 1347:13:26, 21 April 2022 (UTC) 1313:13:26, 21 April 2022 (UTC) 1292:13:26, 21 April 2022 (UTC) 1263:18:37, 21 April 2022 (UTC) 1249:17:00, 21 April 2022 (UTC) 1227:14:52, 21 April 2022 (UTC) 1209:13:56, 21 April 2022 (UTC) 1187:13:26, 21 April 2022 (UTC) 1164:Footnote numbers refer to 1152:22:46, 20 April 2022 (UTC) 1135:21:40, 20 April 2022 (UTC) 1110:16:01, 20 April 2022 (UTC) 1096:16:01, 20 April 2022 (UTC) 1073:17:47, 19 April 2022 (UTC) 1053:13:12, 19 April 2022 (UTC) 1034:21:50, 18 April 2022 (UTC) 1014:13:12, 19 April 2022 (UTC) 971:13:12, 19 April 2022 (UTC) 949:13:12, 19 April 2022 (UTC) 930:13:12, 19 April 2022 (UTC) 908:13:12, 19 April 2022 (UTC) 885:13:12, 19 April 2022 (UTC) 863:13:12, 19 April 2022 (UTC) 834:13:12, 19 April 2022 (UTC) 805:13:12, 19 April 2022 (UTC) 783:13:12, 19 April 2022 (UTC) 761:13:12, 19 April 2022 (UTC) 735:13:12, 19 April 2022 (UTC) 708:13:12, 19 April 2022 (UTC) 689:00:11, 19 April 2022 (UTC) 670:00:11, 19 April 2022 (UTC) 648:00:11, 19 April 2022 (UTC) 626:00:11, 19 April 2022 (UTC) 602:00:11, 19 April 2022 (UTC) 572:17:48, 18 April 2022 (UTC) 555:13:59, 18 April 2022 (UTC) 535:13:44, 18 April 2022 (UTC) 517:13:38, 18 April 2022 (UTC) 494:18:05, 15 April 2022 (UTC) 473:13:59, 18 April 2022 (UTC) 454:13:59, 18 April 2022 (UTC) 435:13:59, 18 April 2022 (UTC) 415:13:59, 18 April 2022 (UTC) 392:13:59, 18 April 2022 (UTC) 373:13:59, 18 April 2022 (UTC) 354:13:59, 18 April 2022 (UTC) 335:13:59, 18 April 2022 (UTC) 316:13:59, 18 April 2022 (UTC) 297:13:59, 18 April 2022 (UTC) 272:11:42, 12 April 2022 (UTC) 241:16:21, 26 March 2022 (UTC) 227:01:24, 26 March 2022 (UTC) 209:00:48, 26 March 2022 (UTC) 191:23:11, 25 March 2022 (UTC) 177:22:29, 25 March 2022 (UTC) 152:03:29, 24 March 2022 (UTC) 136:22:29, 25 March 2022 (UTC) 113:12:33, 23 March 2022 (UTC) 91:12:33, 23 March 2022 (UTC) 2115:I've clarified that now. 1987:I've clarified this now. 463:I've clarified this now. 382:I've rephrased this now. 2549:Please do not modify it. 1231:Looks like you missed ? 1081:Comments by ErnestKrause 1069:Penny for your thoughts? 1030:Penny for your thoughts? 163:The author of the book, 123:Suggest adding alt text 36:Please do not modify it. 2450:a series of these books 2324:New York Public Library 995:Commons category-inline 920:I've trimmed that now. 2206:I have done that now. 2168:Grand Central Terminal 126:I have done this now. 2371:Here are the images: 2326:on Monday, though. – 2231:Yes, it seems to be. 1912:Hoster quotes Devens 1673:I've clarified this. 792:strikes me as trivia 231:I have done this. – 2159:complicated process 1511:Source review is a 698:I've added a link. 277:Comments by Wehwalt 2448:Arcadia Press has 1215:Template:Cite book 850:repetition again. 846:National City Bank 818:National City Bank 814:National City Bank 401:Done. I did think 1914:Our First Century 1637:Early Wall Street 306:That is correct. 94: 2560: 2551: 2524: 2518: 2515:, and leave the 2340:For Devens, see 2157:It's actually a 1861:That's clearer. 1495: 1120: 1070: 1031: 999: 993: 989: 985:Commons category 983: 504: 257:Coordinator note 162: 79: 64:) 25 April 2022 48:The article was 38: 2568: 2567: 2563: 2562: 2561: 2559: 2558: 2557: 2556: 2547: 2522: 2516: 1540: 1489: 1377:works for you? 1162: 1114: 1083: 997: 991: 987: 981: 586: 515: 498: 279: 259: 156: 76: 34: 22: 21: 20: 12: 11: 5: 2566: 2564: 2555: 2554: 2542: 2541: 2529:goes through. 2476: 2475: 2474: 2473: 2404: 2403: 2398: 2393: 2388: 2383: 2378: 2369: 2368: 2367: 2366: 2365: 2364: 2270: 2269: 2268: 2267: 2266: 2265: 2224: 2223: 2222: 2221: 2220: 2219: 2218: 2150: 2149: 2148: 2129: 2128: 2127: 2108: 2107: 2106: 2105: 2104: 2103: 2102: 2101: 2100: 2022: 2021: 2020: 2001: 2000: 1999: 1980: 1979: 1978: 1959: 1958: 1957: 1938: 1937: 1936: 1917: 1910: 1909: 1908: 1889: 1888: 1887: 1886: 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1752: 1748: 1744: 1740: 1739: 1738: 1737:commentators. 1734: 1732: 1728: 1720: 1716: 1712: 1708: 1707: 1706: 1702: 1698: 1694: 1690: 1689:Mike Christie 1686: 1685: 1684: 1680: 1676: 1672: 1671: 1670: 1667: 1663: 1659: 1655: 1651: 1647: 1646:Mike Christie 1642: 1641: 1640: 1638: 1633: 1629: 1625: 1621: 1617: 1616: 1615: 1612: 1608: 1604: 1600: 1596: 1595: 1594: 1591: 1585: 1581: 1577: 1573: 1569: 1568:Mike Christie 1565: 1564: 1563: 1559: 1555: 1551: 1547: 1546: 1545: 1542: 1541: 1537: 1535: 1534: 1530: 1526: 1522: 1518: 1517:Mike Christie 1514: 1507: 1503: 1499: 1493: 1492:Mike Christie 1488: 1487: 1486: 1485: 1481: 1477: 1473: 1469: 1468:Mike Christie 1460: 1456: 1452: 1448: 1447: 1446: 1442: 1432: 1428: 1424: 1420: 1416: 1415:Mike Christie 1412: 1411: 1410: 1406: 1402: 1398: 1397: 1396: 1392: 1388: 1384: 1380: 1379:Mike Christie 1376: 1372: 1371: 1370: 1366: 1362: 1357: 1356: 1355: 1352: 1348: 1344: 1340: 1336: 1332: 1328: 1324: 1323: 1322: 1318: 1314: 1310: 1306: 1302: 1301: 1300: 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100: 93: 92: 88: 84: 78: 77: 74: 71: 68: 66: 63: 59: 55: 51: 44: 42: 37: 32: 27: 26: 19: 2548: 2545: 2531:Gog the Mild 2505:Closing note 2504: 2478: 2477: 2405: 2370: 2271: 2226: 2152: 2131: 2110: 2024: 2003: 1982: 1961: 1940: 1919: 1913: 1891: 1843: 1799: 1778: 1757: 1735: 1729: 1668: 1636: 1634: 1613: 1592: 1543: 1512: 1510: 1465: 1443: 1353: 1327:archive link 1319: 1298: 1277: 1172: 1166:this version 1163: 1144:ErnestKrause 1139: 1122: 1117:ErnestKrause 1102:ErnestKrause 1088:ErnestKrause 1062: 1057: 1023: 1020: 955: 914: 891: 869: 845: 841: 840: 817: 813: 811: 789: 767: 741: 714: 654: 632: 559: 510: 484:That's it.-- 264:Gog the Mild 260: 118:Image review 117: 116: 101: 97: 80: 54:Gog the Mild 49: 47: 35: 28: 1063:HJ Mitchell 1024:HJ Mitchell 893:operations. 821:redundancy 2436:Epicgenius 2328:Epicgenius 2296:I'm done. 2233:Epicgenius 2208:Epicgenius 2172:Epicgenius 2138:Epicgenius 2117:Epicgenius 2068:Epicgenius 2031:Epicgenius 2010:Epicgenius 1989:Epicgenius 1968:Epicgenius 1947:Epicgenius 1926:Epicgenius 1898:Epicgenius 1849:Epicgenius 1807:Epicgenius 1785:Epicgenius 1764:Epicgenius 1743:Epicgenius 1711:Epicgenius 1675:Epicgenius 1620:Epicgenius 1599:Epicgenius 1554:Epicgenius 1498:Epicgenius 1451:Epicgenius 1401:Epicgenius 1361:Epicgenius 1339:Epicgenius 1305:Epicgenius 1284:Epicgenius 1255:Epicgenius 1219:Epicgenius 1179:Epicgenius 1127:Epicgenius 1045:Epicgenius 1006:Epicgenius 963:Epicgenius 941:Epicgenius 922:Epicgenius 900:Epicgenius 877:Epicgenius 855:Epicgenius 826:Epicgenius 797:Epicgenius 775:Epicgenius 753:Epicgenius 727:Epicgenius 700:Epicgenius 681:Epicgenius 662:Epicgenius 640:Epicgenius 618:Epicgenius 594:Epicgenius 547:Epicgenius 527:Epicgenius 501:Epicgenius 465:Epicgenius 446:Epicgenius 427:Epicgenius 407:Epicgenius 384:Epicgenius 365:Epicgenius 346:Epicgenius 327:Epicgenius 308:Epicgenius 289:Epicgenius 233:Epicgenius 219:Nikkimaria 201:Epicgenius 183:Nikkimaria 169:Epicgenius 165:Moses King 159:Nikkimaria 144:Nikkimaria 128:Epicgenius 105:Epicgenius 83:Epicgenius 2513:WP:FAC/ar 2509:candidate 1550:WP:ENGVAR 1449:Removed. 1217:instead. 1125:notable. 961:Removed. 842:City Bank 795:Removed. 773:Removed. 2507:: This 2491:contribs 2463:contribs 2417:contribs 2354:contribs 2306:contribs 2282:contribs 2255:contribs 2194:contribs 2090:contribs 2053:contribs 1871:contribs 1830:contribs 1697:contribs 1654:contribs 1576:contribs 1525:contribs 1476:contribs 1423:contribs 1387:contribs 1241:contribs 1201:contribs 523:Hog Farm 507:Hog Farm 50:promoted 2495:library 2479:Support 2467:library 2421:library 2358:library 2310:library 2286:library 2259:library 2198:library 2136:Fixed. 2094:library 2057:library 1875:library 1834:library 1701:library 1658:library 1580:library 1529:library 1480:library 1427:library 1391:library 1245:library 1205:library 1140:SUPPORT 1058:Support 853:Fixed. 824:Fixed. 751:Fixed. 716:offices 564:Wehwalt 560:Support 543:Wehwalt 486:Wehwalt 444:Fixed. 2163:zoning 1945:Done. 1924:Done. 1762:Done. 1741:Done. 1731:tense. 1597:Done. 1445:blank. 1303:Done. 425:Done. 344:Done. 325:Done. 287:Done. 58:FACBot 1041:Harry 584:Harry 16:< 2535:talk 2487:talk 2459:talk 2440:talk 2413:talk 2350:talk 2342:here 2332:talk 2302:talk 2278:talk 2251:talk 2237:talk 2212:talk 2190:talk 2176:talk 2142:talk 2121:talk 2086:talk 2072:talk 2049:talk 2035:talk 2014:talk 1993:talk 1972:talk 1951:talk 1930:talk 1902:talk 1867:talk 1853:talk 1844:also 1826:talk 1811:talk 1789:talk 1768:talk 1747:talk 1715:talk 1693:talk 1679:talk 1650:talk 1624:talk 1603:talk 1572:talk 1558:talk 1521:talk 1513:pass 1502:talk 1472:talk 1455:talk 1419:talk 1405:talk 1383:talk 1375:this 1365:talk 1343:talk 1309:talk 1288:talk 1259:talk 1237:talk 1223:talk 1197:talk 1183:talk 1148:talk 1131:talk 1123:that 1106:talk 1092:talk 1049:talk 1010:talk 967:talk 945:talk 926:talk 904:talk 881:talk 859:talk 830:talk 801:talk 779:talk 757:talk 742:The 731:talk 704:talk 685:talk 666:talk 644:talk 622:talk 598:talk 568:talk 551:talk 531:talk 512:Talk 490:talk 469:talk 450:talk 431:talk 411:talk 388:talk 369:talk 350:talk 331:talk 312:talk 293:talk 268:talk 237:talk 223:talk 205:talk 187:talk 173:talk 148:talk 132:talk 109:talk 87:talk 62:talk 56:via 2527:bot 2493:- 2465:- 2419:- 2356:- 2308:- 2284:- 2272:-- 2257:- 2196:- 2092:- 2055:- 1873:- 1832:- 1699:- 1656:- 1578:- 1527:- 1478:- 1425:- 1389:- 1321:to. 1243:- 1203:- 52:by 2537:) 2523:}} 2517:{{ 2497:) 2489:- 2481:. 2469:) 2461:- 2442:) 2423:) 2415:- 2360:) 2352:- 2334:) 2312:) 2304:- 2288:) 2280:- 2261:) 2253:- 2239:) 2214:) 2200:) 2192:- 2178:) 2144:) 2123:) 2096:) 2088:- 2074:) 2059:) 2051:- 2037:) 2016:) 1995:) 1974:) 1953:) 1932:) 1904:) 1877:) 1869:- 1855:) 1836:) 1828:- 1813:) 1791:) 1770:) 1749:) 1717:) 1703:) 1695:- 1681:) 1660:) 1652:- 1626:) 1605:) 1582:) 1574:- 1560:) 1531:) 1523:- 1515:. 1504:) 1482:) 1474:- 1457:) 1429:) 1421:- 1407:) 1393:) 1385:- 1367:) 1345:) 1311:) 1290:) 1261:) 1247:) 1239:- 1225:) 1207:) 1199:- 1185:) 1168:. 1150:) 1133:) 1108:) 1094:) 1066:| 1051:) 1027:| 1012:) 998:}} 992:{{ 988:}} 982:{{ 969:) 947:) 928:) 906:) 883:) 861:) 832:) 803:) 781:) 759:) 733:) 706:) 687:) 668:) 646:) 624:) 600:) 570:) 562:-- 553:) 533:) 492:) 471:) 452:) 433:) 413:) 390:) 371:) 352:) 333:) 314:) 295:) 270:) 239:) 225:) 207:) 189:) 175:) 150:) 134:) 111:) 89:) 67:. 33:. 2533:( 2485:( 2457:( 2438:( 2430:@ 2411:( 2348:( 2330:( 2318:@ 2300:( 2276:( 2249:( 2235:( 2210:( 2188:( 2174:( 2140:( 2119:( 2084:( 2070:( 2047:( 2033:( 2012:( 1991:( 1970:( 1949:( 1928:( 1900:( 1865:( 1851:( 1824:( 1809:( 1787:( 1766:( 1745:( 1713:( 1691:( 1677:( 1648:( 1622:( 1601:( 1570:( 1556:( 1519:( 1500:( 1494:: 1490:@ 1470:( 1453:( 1417:( 1403:( 1381:( 1363:( 1341:( 1307:( 1286:( 1257:( 1235:( 1221:( 1195:( 1181:( 1146:( 1129:( 1119:: 1115:@ 1104:( 1090:( 1047:( 1039:@ 1021:— 1008:( 965:( 943:( 924:( 902:( 879:( 857:( 828:( 799:( 777:( 755:( 729:( 702:( 683:( 664:( 642:( 620:( 596:( 566:( 549:( 541:@ 529:( 521:@ 503:: 499:@ 488:( 467:( 448:( 429:( 409:( 386:( 367:( 348:( 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Index

Knowledge:Featured article candidates
featured article nomination
Knowledge talk:Featured article candidates
Gog the Mild
FACBot
talk

55 Wall Street
Epicgenius
talk
12:33, 23 March 2022 (UTC)
Epicgenius
talk
12:33, 23 March 2022 (UTC)
Epicgenius
talk
22:29, 25 March 2022 (UTC)
Nikkimaria
talk
03:29, 24 March 2022 (UTC)
Nikkimaria
Moses King
Epicgenius
talk
22:29, 25 March 2022 (UTC)
Nikkimaria
talk
23:11, 25 March 2022 (UTC)
King’s Handbook of New York City
Epicgenius

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