Friday, July 5, 2013

Carl Schurz Park, the Esplanade, and Gracie Mansion...

Today was a very hot humid day but it was a little better in Carl Schurz Park on the East River  at the Eastern end of Yorkville....sunbathers were on its lawns and its grassy areas off the Esplanade, but I did not see the dog run that used to be there...probably just out of view up those stairs which my mother used to roller skate down when she was a little girl risking life and limb with all the other kids from just outside the area, where the tenements were..(actually, the last time I was here, there were TWO runs--one for small dogs and the other for the Labs and German Shepherds and Retrievers...and all of them endlessly chasing and bringing back tennis balls etc.

The Esplanade area was built up above the FDR Drive, and has great views..shown here just two of the many vistas.. the last one just North of the Park on the Western Side where the FDR has come out of its tunnel...
Finally, hidden in the trees with security around it is Gracie Mansion, the official residence of the Mayor. No mayors have lived here in a long time, it is just a place for ceremonies...
I always thought they moved the Mansion up here from someplace else many, many years ago... but this article suggests otherwise--just a word or two from Wikipedia:

Gracie Mansion is the official residence of the mayor of the City of New York.[2] Built in 1799, it is located in Carl Schurz Park, at East End Avenue and Eighty-eighth Street in Manhattan. The mansion is on the shore of the East River, overlooking the channel known as Hell Gate.

Architecture

Archibald Gracie built the two-story wooden mansion in the Federal style. The design of the structure is attributed to Ezra Weeks, a prominent builder or John McComb, Jr., the architect of New York City Hall and Hamilton Grange, Alexander Hamilton's country home in Harlem, New York.[3]

By suggestion of Mayor Robert F. Wagner, Jr.'s wife, Susan, plans were initiated for a new west wing, completed in 1966. The architect of the Susan B. Wagner Wing, as it is now called, was Mott B. Schmidt. Though criticized at the time for not being "modern," the wing has come to be regarded as an appropriate solution to the problem of expanding the small house for official functions. The Gracie Mansion Conservancy restored portions of the building during 1981-84, and made substantial decorative and functional restorations in 2002.

History

A different building on approximately the same site was commandeered by George Washington during the American Revolutionary War, as it strategically overlooked Hell Gate. That building was called Belview Mansion and was the country residence of Jacob Walton, a New York merchant. The British destroyed this house during that war.
Archibald Gracie then built another building, what is now known as Gracie Mansion, on the site in 1799, and used it as a country home until 1823, when he had to sell it to pay debts. In the fall of 1801, Gracie hosted a meeting there of New York Federalists, called by Alexander Hamilton, to raise $10,000 for starting a newspaper, the New York Evening Post, which eventually became the New York Post.
Other people lived in the house until 1896, when the municipal government seized it and made its grounds part of Carl Schurz Park. It served various functions as part of that park (at various times it housed public restrooms, an ice-cream stand, and classrooms) until 1924. From 1924 until 1936 it housed the Museum of the City of New York, and from 1936 until 1942 it was shown as a historical house.
In 1942, Robert Moses convinced Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia to appropriate the house as a mayoral residence. Its main two floors are open to the public on a limited basis for guided tours, and serve as a small museum.
It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1975.[1]

Gracie Mansion today

The house may only be used for official city business. Only visiting public officials and the mayor's family may reside with the mayor at the mansion, even for a single overnight stay. As a result, Mayor Rudy Giuliani was unable to have his then-girlfriend live with him (because they were not married), because it would have violated using a taxpayer-funded home for a private citizen. Giuliani was forced to relocate.[citation needed]
Likewise, current mayor Michael Bloomberg has never resided at Gracie Mansion, although he uses it for meetings and events and has used the Mansion as a place for official visitors to stay while in the city. At the beginning of Bloomberg's term he initiated a major restoration of the mansion, funded by an anonymous donor, suspected of being the billionaire mayor himself.[4]

In popular culture




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