Search for easy dinners, fashion, etc.
When autocomplete results are available use up and down arrows to review and enter to select. Touch device users, explore by touch or with swipe gestures.

nyc

490 Pins
·
8y
Andrew Carnegie's Fifth Avenue Palace of a Home
The Andrew Carnegie Mansion, 2 East 91st Street at Fifth Avenue, Manhattan, New York City. Designed by New York architects Babb, Cook & Willard, it was built in 1903, Carnegie lived there until his death in 1919; his wife, Louise, lived there until her death in 1946. Now the Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum, part of the Smithsonian Institution. The surrounding neighbourhood on Manhattan's Upper East Side has come to be called Carnegie Hill. Named a National Historic Landmark in 1966.
Mapping the Moves of New York City's Past Property Barons
John D. Rockefeller (1839-1937) Worlds first Billionaire 4 W. 54th St. 10019
Second Avenue Mansions of Yesteryear - Village Preservation
2nd Avenue & St. Mark's Place, 1903, NYC
Rare Historic Pictures of New York City
Rare Historic Pictures of New York City 1912
Gilded New York - the style of the wealthiest 19th century New Yorkers
An old block from the late 19th century remains in Washington Square South in Greenwich Village, and is surrounded by newer brick apartments
The Dakota Circa 1890 Long Before It Was Famous For Its Tenets It Was Known For Its Architectural Beauty, -- New York Pictures
the Dakota Building (NY)... the house of NY's elite... originally built in isolation... its ambition was to set off a migration of the wealthy to the central park west. guess it worked out
Mary Mason Jones Residence, 741-753 Fifth Avenue at 57th & 58th Streets, New York City. Circa 1869-1929
680 and 684 Fifth Ave Residences - 684 Fifth Ave was built as wedding gift of William H. Vanderbilt for his daughter Florence and her husband Hamilton Twombly. The other mansion (left) at 680 was the home of Dr. William Seward Webb and Vanderbilt's other daughter Eliza Osgood.
An crisp autumn weekend in New York
After George Jay Gould married the pretty actress Edith Kingdon, against his mother's wishes, his loathed financier/doting father, gave the young married couple a Victorian mansion on the northeast corner of Fifth Avenue and 67th Street in 1886.