Years ago I visited the Old City Hall with a bunch of corporation presidents for a special tour, and of course we just sailed in and wandered all over the place.
Today it is guarded like Fort Knox.
This place takes some kind of prize in the annals of Super-Graft in the erection of a Public Building...our tour guide said that in terms of currency adjusted for today's dollars, this simple place cost the taxpayers a couple of billion...all into pockets of politicians and their friends.
Well, let me let Wikipedia their more sympathetic version of the place:
In 1802 the City held a competition for a new City Hall. The first prize of $350 was awarded to Joseph Francois Mangin and John McComb, Jr.. Mangin, who was the principal designer,[3]
studied architecture in his native France before becoming a New York
City surveyor in 1795 and publishing an official map of the city in
1803. Mangin was also the architect of the landmark St. Patrick's Old Cathedral on Mulberry Street. McComb, whose father had worked on the old City Hall, was a New Yorker and designed Castle Clinton in Battery Park. He would supervise the construction of the building, and designed the architectural detailing as well.[3]
Construction of the new City Hall was delayed after the City Council
objected that the design was too extravagant. In response, McComb and
Mangin reduced the size of the building and used brownstone
at the rear of the building to lower costs; the brownstone, along with
the original deteriorated Massachusetts marble facade, quarried from
Alford, Massachusetts, was replaced with Alabama limestone in 1954 to
1956. Labor disputes and an outbreak of yellow fever further slowed construction. The building was not dedicated until 1811, and opened officially in 1812.
The building's Governor's Room hosted President-elect Abraham Lincoln in 1861, and his coffin was placed on the staircase landing across the rotunda when he lay in state in 1865 after his assassination. Ulysses S. Grant also lay in state beneath the soaring rotunda dome as did Colonel Elmer Ephraim Ellsworth, first Union officer killed in the Civil War and commander of the 11th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment
(First Fire Zouaves). The Governor's Room, which is used for official
receptions, also houses one of the most important collections of 19th
century American portraiture and notable artifacts such as George Washington's desk. There are 108 paintings from the late 18th century through the 20th. The New York Times declared it "almost unrivaled as an ensemble, with several masterpieces."[8] Among the collection is John Trumbull’s 1805 portrait of Alexander Hamilton, the source of the face on the United States ten-dollar bill.
There were significant efforts to restore the paintings in the 1920s
and 1940s. In 2006 a new restoration campaign began for 47 paintings
identified by the Art Commission as highest in priority.
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