Lexow Committee (1894 to 1895) was a major New York State Senate probe into police corruption in New York City . The Lexow Committee inquiry, which took its name from the committee's chairman, State Senator Clarence Lexow , was the widest-ranging of several such commissions empaneled during the 19th century. The testimony collected during its hearings ran to over 10,000 pages and the resultant scandal played a major part in the defeat of Tammany Hall in the elections of 1894 and the election of the reform administration of Mayor William L. Strong . The investigations were initiated by pressure from Charles Henry Parkhurst .
100-479: Robert C. Kennedy writes: The Lexow Committee, ironically headquartered at the Tweed Courthouse on Chambers Street, examined evidence from Parkhurst's City Vigilance League, as well as undertook its own investigations. The Lexow Committee uncovered police involvement in extortion, bribery, counterfeiting, voter intimidation, election fraud, brutality, and scams. Attention focused on [William] Devery, then
200-672: A balustrade running along the roof. The courthouse's original design included an iron dome with a high tholobate , inspired by the United States Capitol dome . The dome, planned to rival the Kings County Courthouse in Brooklyn , was ultimately not built. The main entrance of the Tweed Courthouse is located on Chambers Street, on the building's northern elevation. It is composed of
300-581: A contractor was paid $ 133,180 for two days' work on the window frames, and to justify the per-pound cost of the material, he included excessively thick screws within the frames. Some $ 1.3 million was spent on the building's plaster in two years, and a set of three tables and forty chairs set the city back $ 179,729.60. The "Special Committee on the New Court House", created by the Board of Supervisors to address Ely's concerns, found no wrongdoing in
400-506: A feasibility study for the courthouse, which was completed the next year. A long-term $ 6.3 million renovation began in 1990, with an expected completion date of 1994. At the time, the city was planning to restore the remainder of the Tweed Courthouse for $ 21 million. During the project, New York City Department of General Services architects found severe deterioration in the Chambers Street portico and at five places in
500-498: A floor made of concrete and wood. A lattice truss and other structures supporting the roof, as well as the rotunda's skylight, are also located in the attic. With the city's rapid rate of growth in the 1850s, several new structures were built or planned around City Hall, including a brownstone building built to the west of the Rotunda in 1852. Furthermore, several courthouses in the area had been destroyed in an 1854 fire. A bill
600-541: A marble surround. Each window opening contains a cornice above it and a window sill below it. When the building was constructed in the 1870s, there were striped awnings above each window, a detail that The New York Times derided. On the northern elevation, the windows of each wing are more elaborately decorated. The window openings on the second and third floors contain double-hung sash windows with sash bars made of wood. The ground-floor windows are simpler two-by-two windows with architrave trim. An entablature in
700-404: A medievalist design with multicolored patterned tile floors; arcade walls with stone arches; a stone-paneled ceiling; and a set of oak double doors to the main hall, containing glass panels decorated with the seal of New York City . Room 201–2's other features include four decorative round granite columns, several brown stone columns, a stone fireplace, and iron radiators under each window. There
800-480: A new municipal building surrounding the courthouse. The perception of the Tweed Courthouse as a symbol of wasteful spending persisted until the late 20th century, and there were also several attempts to demolish the courthouse throughout most of its first century of existence. In 1938, mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia studied the feasibility of destroying the Tweed Courthouse after a suggestion from New York City parks commissioner Robert Moses . Under La Guardia's plan,
900-406: A police captain, who stonewalled before the committee by only responding vaguely to questions: "touchin' on and appertainin' to that matter, I disremember." The state probe and Devery's impudent testimony prodded the police commissioners to clean house. Charged with accepting bribes, Devery feigned illness and his case never reached trial, although he was temporarily demoted. One newspaper wrote about
1000-442: A portico for the southern wing, similar to that on the northern entrance, but it was left out of Eidlitz's revised plan due to budgetary constraints. Eidlitz was not concerned about using a style that was different from the original design. He had been inspired partially by medieval cathedrals, which often took several centuries to build and, thus, used several styles. The exterior of the southern wing measures three windows wide on
1100-431: A portico with four Corinthian columns, which covers a three-window-wide central bay. Large Italianate wooden doors are located on the second floor of the central bay, while the third floor contains three sash windows . The portico is approached by a reproduction of the building's original large granite stairway which was removed to accommodate a widening of that street in the mid-20th century, but restored in 2002, when
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#17327722841401200-412: A profit with its control of the bail system. The boss of Tammany Hall, Richard Croker, left for his European residences for a period of three years at the onset of the committee. A new Committee of Seventy was formed, again largely consisting of upper-class reformers, and in the mayoral election of 1894, Republican William L. Strong won. Tweed Courthouse The Tweed Courthouse (also known as
1300-407: A rear wing to the south. Architect John Kellum and political appointee Thomas Little designed the first portion of the building, which was constructed from 1861 to 1872. Construction was interrupted in 1871 when Kellum died and the corruption involved in the building's construction was exposed to the public. The project was completed by architect Leopold Eidlitz , who added the rear wing and finished
1400-425: A reference to the fact that Miller had been paid more than $ 350,000 in one month. Likewise, Garvey had been paid almost $ 3 million over two years. Nast's caricatures, meanwhile, were targeted toward Tweed's largely illiterate constituents. Tweed offered Nast $ 500,000 in an unsuccessful attempt to stop Nast from making more cartoons. The ring was disbanded in 1871 upon the arrest of Boss Tweed. This, coupled with
1500-400: A ring of political allies, who as a whole embezzled up to $ 300 million (about $ 8 billion in 2023 ). The author Albert Paine wrote that the collective's "methods were curiously simple and primitive", in that city controller Richard B. Connolly "had charge of the books, and declined to show them". The chief portion of this theft came from the extremely slow pace of construction on
1600-454: A second almshouse. The now-demolished Rotunda art gallery was directly to the east of the courthouse's site. The Tweed Courthouse includes a central section, two wings on the western and eastern ends, and an annex on its southern portion. It is four and a half stories tall. The floor count includes a half-story attic, but not the building's two mezzanine levels, which are considered to be intermediate staircase landings. The first floor
1700-639: A similar design to the New York State Capitol . The Romanesque style and his extensive use of brick and stone contrasted with Kellum's intricate cast-iron design. The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) said Eidlitz's style departs from Kellum's classicism with "an American version of organic architecture expressed through medieval forms". The two original wings, designed by Kellum, were arranged in an Ɪ shape. The wings measured 250 feet (76 m) wide along Chambers Street and 150 feet (46 m) deep. The entry portico on
1800-407: A west–east main hall; the secondary halls' ceilings are shorter than that of the main hall. Doors made from walnut wood lead to the rooms on the ground floor. The second floor contains the main entrance to the building from the Chambers Street staircase. Within the rotunda, there is a cast-iron ceiling, balustrade, and marble-and-glass floor. The stair halls are located behind archways just outside
1900-647: A yellow paint job with black-and-orange stains on the marble. At the time, the building housed the office of the city's ombudsman, the New York City Municipal Archives , and the Mayor's Printing Press. The courthouse was also used for events such as a theatrical performance in 1979. The Tweed Courthouse was being used as municipal offices by the 1980s. The deterioration of the Tweed Courthouse made it an unfavorable workplace for many municipal employees, and, by 1981, only fifty people worked in
2000-470: Is also a mezzanine above the second floor with marble floors and plaster walls and ceilings. The third floor is similar to the ground and second floors, except that the rotunda floor is made of marble tile. The rotunda contains red, tan, and black brick patterns at the third floor, which were painted over in 1908. Particularly elaborate in design are rooms 308 and 316, which contain tall coved ceilings . The windows in these rooms contain foliate decoration at
2100-554: Is at ground level but was formerly known as the basement. The structure lies atop a low foundation made of granite . The roof was replaced three times: first with iron in the early 20th century, then with asphalt in 1978 or 1979, and finally with a stainless steel-over-rubber surface in 2001. The Guide to New York City Landmarks characterizes the building as containing "some of the finest mid-19th century interiors in New York". John Kellum and Thomas Little were responsible for
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#17327722841402200-473: Is at the roof of the 85-foot-high (26 m) rotunda. The original stained-glass skylight from Henry E. Sharpe Son & Co. was removed in the 1940s; a replica was installed in 2001. The rotunda mostly contains elements from Eidlitz's designs, but a few vestiges of Kellum's original style remain. Kellum used classical cast iron and plaster elements such as palmettes , triangular pediments, and geometric banding; he also included large rectangular openings in
2300-537: Is bounded by Chambers Street to the north, Centre Street to the east, and Broadway to the west. The structure measures 258 by 149 feet (79 by 45 m), the longer side being located on the west–east axis. The portion of the park outside the courthouse building contains shaded walkways and lawns. Across Chambers Street, the Tweed Courthouse faces 280 Broadway , 49 Chambers , and the Surrogate's Courthouse from west to east. The Manhattan Municipal Building and
2400-404: Is located above the third floor and is similar to the mezzanine above the second floor. This staircase contains a Gothic-style balustrade. The fourth floor contains a similar T-shaped plan to the floors underneath it. Like the floors below, it contains marble floors, plaster walls and ceilings, and corner stairs leading from the third floor. Stairs extend upward to the attic. The attic contains
2500-802: Is officially recognized by the United States government for its outstanding historical significance. Only some 2,500, or roughly three percent, of over 90,000 places listed on the country's National Register of Historic Places are recognized as National Historic Landmarks. A National Historic Landmark District sometimes called a National Historical Park may include more than one National Historic Landmark and contributing properties that are buildings, structures, sites or objects, and it may include non-contributing properties. Contributing properties may or may not also be separately listed or registered. Prior to 1935, efforts to preserve cultural heritage of national importance were made by piecemeal efforts of
2600-453: Is the greatest, the vulgarity or the corruptness of the place." Such was the reputation of the courthouse that in 1871, a poem entitled "The House That Tweed Built" was published, describing the courthouse's corruption "in an amusing satirical tone". The following year, the guidebook Miller's New York As It Is described the courthouse in an unbiased perspective: "The court-rooms are large, airy, unobstructed by columns, made with reference to
2700-473: The 1975 New York City fiscal crisis , the city could no longer afford to demolish the courthouse, much less build a new structure. In 1978, the mayoral administration of Ed Koch commissioned another report, which found that the courthouse would need to be renovated at a cost of between $ 3 million for minimal repairs and $ 9 million for a complete restoration. Under the Koch administration, each room of
2800-799: The Brooklyn Bridge ramp are across Centre Street. Several buildings face the Tweed Courthouse on Broadway, including the Broadway–Chambers Building , Tower 270 , the Rogers Peet Building , and the Home Life Building . The Tweed Courthouse is the second-oldest municipal government building in Manhattan, after New York City Hall. During the 17th century, the site had been occupied by the city's public commons . The Dutch settlers of New Amsterdam used
2900-895: The Historic American Buildings Survey amassed information about culturally and architecturally significant properties in a program known as the Historic Sites Survey. Most of the designations made under this legislation became National Historic Sites , although the first designation, made December 20, 1935, was for a National Memorial , the Gateway Arch National Park (then known as the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial) in St. Louis , Missouri. The first National Historic Site designation
3000-550: The New York City Court , which occupied the Tweed Courthouse at the time, would move into the recently built New York County Courthouse, but the New York Supreme Court refused to cede any space within the newer courthouse. The Tweed Courthouse was seen as outdated by the 1950s, and the city government filed plans in 1955 to demolish the courthouse as part of the restoration of City Hall Park. It
3100-671: The New York City Department of Education 's headquarters on its upper floors and schools on its ground level. The Tweed Courthouse is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as a National Historic Landmark , and its facade and interior are both New York City designated landmarks . The Tweed Courthouse is in the Civic Center neighborhood of Manhattan , in the northern portion of City Hall Park and just north of New York City Hall . The plot
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3200-659: The Old New York County Courthouse ) is a historic courthouse building at 52 Chambers Street in the Civic Center of Manhattan in New York City. It was built in the Italianate style with Romanesque Revival interiors. William M. "Boss" Tweed – the corrupt leader of Tammany Hall , a political machine that controlled the New York state and city governments when
3300-633: The United States Congress . In 1935, Congress passed the Historic Sites Act , which authorized the interior secretary authority to formally record and organize historic properties, and to designate properties as having "national historical significance", and gave the National Park Service authority to administer historically significant federally owned properties. Over the following decades, surveys such as
3400-842: The 50 states. New York City alone has more NHLs than all but five states: Virginia , California , Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and New York, the latter of which has the most NHLs of all 50 states. There are 74 NHLs in the District of Columbia . Some NHLs are in U.S. commonwealths and territories, associated states, and foreign states . There are 15 in Puerto Rico , the Virgin Islands , and other U.S. commonwealths and territories ; five in U.S.-associated states such as Micronesia ; and one in Morocco . Over 100 ships or shipwrecks have been designated as NHLs. Approximately half of
3500-492: The Corinthian style surrounds the top of the Tweed Courthouse's northern, western, and eastern elevations and remains mostly intact. The western and eastern elevations contain mirror-image designs, with three bays each containing three window openings on each floor, for a total width of nine window openings per story on both elevations. The central bay on each side is topped by a simpler triangular pediment than that found on
3600-672: The National Historic Landmarks are privately owned . The National Historic Landmarks Program relies on suggestions for new designations from the National Park Service, which also assists in maintaining the landmarks . A friends' group of owners and managers, the National Historic Landmark Stewards Association, works to preserve, protect and promote National Historic Landmarks. If not already listed on
3700-623: The National Register, or as an NHL) often triggered local preservation laws, legislation in 1980 amended the listing procedures to require owner agreement to the designations. On October 9, 1960, 92 places, properties, or districts were announced as eligible to be designated NHLs by U.S. Secretary of the Interior Fred A. Seaton . Agreements of owners or responsible parties were subsequently obtained, but all 92 have since been considered listed on that 1960 date. The origins of
3800-470: The New York City Board of Supervisors, was given ex officio credit by virtue of his membership on the Board of Supervisors. He submitted plans for the Tweed Courthouse in 1859; documents and testimony indicate that Little was likely the first architect of the courthouse. Leopold Eidlitz , who was hired to finish the courthouse in 1876, added the building's south wing and domed rotunda in
3900-515: The New York County Courthouse. Having been appropriated $ 600,000 by the state legislature, the commissioners challenged all outstanding construction bills. They also moved to replace the proposed dome with a slate roof, which would use tiles from one of Tweed's quarries. Each commissioner received a 20 percent kickback from the bills for the supplies. Few media outlets, except for The New York Times and Thomas Nast ,
4000-651: The Supervisors of the County of New York to Acquire and Take Land for the Building of a Court House in Said County" was passed on April 10 of the same year. Late in 1861, the land was appraised at $ 450,000 (equivalent to $ 11,987,000 in 2023 ). From 1861 to 1871, William M. Tweed , also known by his nickname "Boss", was among the most powerful politicians in Manhattan. The son of a chair manufacturer, he
4100-548: The United States secretary of the interior because they are: More than 2,500 NHLs have been designated. Most, but not all, are in the United States. There are NHLs in all 50 states and the national capital of Washington, D.C. Three states ( Pennsylvania , Massachusetts , and New York ) account for nearly 25 percent of the nation's NHLs. Three cities within these states, Philadelphia , Boston , and New York City , respectively, all separately have more NHLs than 40 of
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4200-531: The appearance of the interior spaces. The front steps on Chambers Street were also restored. John G. Waite Associates also rebuilt some of the damaged decorative details, such as the capitals of the columns and pilasters, in their studio. The restoration was completed in December 2001. Following the September ;11 attacks , which occurred near the courthouse toward the completion of the restoration,
4300-410: The asphalt roof. The ornate staircase at the southwest corner was replaced with a plain steel staircase when elevators were installed there in the early 1910s. Between 1911 and 1913, a pair of elevators was added on the southwestern side of the building. The elevator cabs were initially not enclosed, consisting of only open cages. This meant patrons could touch the walls of the elevator shaft while
4400-401: The bottom and cartouches at the top, while the fireplaces consist of flat mantelpieces above colonnettes and pilasters. In addition, room 303 has an arched fireplace, ornamental brass fixtures, and oak doors. The third floor serves as the top floor for the two main staircase halls from the rotunda. There are four more stairs leading to the fourth floor from the secondary halls. Another mezzanine
4500-545: The budget was declined, and the construction of the courthouse building was authorized by a resolution passed on May 3, 1859. The same year, Thomas Little submitted the first plans for what would become the courthouse building. The first explicit reference to the new building as a courthouse was in a resolution passed by the New York County Board of Supervisors in March 1860. A law called "An Act to Enable
4600-437: The building. The LPC designated the Tweed Courthouse's exterior and interior as official city landmarks in 1984; the designations prevented "alteration, reconstruction, demolition, or new construction" without the commission's approval. By 1986, after some repairs had been completed, there were 250 to 300 people working in the courthouse. The city government hired architectural firm John G. Waite Associates in 1989 to prepare
4700-505: The cab was in motion. In 1992, the elevators were retrofitted with plate glass walls and automated operation systems. At the time, these elevators were the last manually operated elevators in a New York City government building. Rooms generally contained lime mortar, which provided soundproofing. The cast-iron beams of the superstructure were embedded in the walls so the rooms did not have any obstructions. Many rooms were accessed by wooden doors within cast-iron frames. Kellum also designed
4800-459: The cartoonist from Harper's Weekly , pointed out Tweed's corruption. The New York Times published several articles in July 1871, bringing attention to the exorbitant expenditures for materials in the courthouse, which had previously not been disclosed to the public. One article stated, "As G. S. Miller is the luckiest carpenter in the world, so Andrew J. Garvey is clearly the prince of plasterers",
4900-405: The ceilings and walls. The ceilings in many of the rooms are 28 feet (8.5 m) tall. The interior of the courthouse converges around an octagonal rotunda measuring 53 feet (16 m) across. The space is surrounded by a brick wall with arcades , cast-iron and stone trim, and a brick cornice. Iron-balustraded balconies project into the rotunda from the second and third floors. A skylight
5000-403: The city began planning for the full renovation of the Tweed Courthouse. The initial cost projection was $ 39 million, but, following the discovery of further damage, the construction cost rose to $ 59 million, then to $ 89 million. In May 1999, John G. Waite Associates began a complete restoration of the building. The firm carefully removed as much as 18 layers of paint to reveal
5100-505: The city to avoid prosecution; he was ultimately captured, dying in the Ludlow Street Jail in 1878. Nonetheless, the New York County Courthouse soon was named after Tweed. Eidlitz was commissioned to complete an expanded design in 1876. By this point, much of the courthouse was already occupied and in use by several courts and city governmental departments. Eidlitz was to finish the north porch facing Chambers Street; complete
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#17327722841405200-427: The cornice, necessitating the temporary closure of the Chambers Street entrance. The elevator cabs, which were unenclosed and posed a fire hazard, were retrofitted with plate glass walls and automated controllers. After workers discovered old skeletal remains under the courthouse, work on the elevators was temporarily halted while city officials investigated whether the bones were historically significant. Afterward,
5300-463: The courthouse "bright and clean as a mirror", nevertheless expressed worry that the costs were rising and the schedule was being pushed back. The New York County Court of Appeals moved to the building in March 1867, despite it being largely incomplete. The cupola was not yet installed, the main iron staircase reached only to the second floor, and stucco had been placed in only a few rooms. At that point, The New York Times said "many holes both in
5400-474: The courthouse was built – oversaw the building's erection. The Tweed Courthouse served as a judicial building for New York County , a county of New York state coextensive with the New York City borough of Manhattan . It is the second-oldest city government building in the borough, after City Hall . The structure comprises pavilions to the east and west of a central section, as well as
5500-410: The courthouse was restored individually and then retrofitted with modern furnishings. The New York Landmarks Conservancy repaired the roof in the late 1970s. During the project, the iron roof was replaced with an asphalt roof, and the skylight's wood supports were replaced with cast-iron supports. The conservancy also repainted the interior, though the dilapidated exterior remained untouched, sporting
5600-577: The courthouse's initial design. Kellum was hired for the Tweed Courthouse project in August 1861 and died exactly ten years later. While his obituary in Harper's Weekly praised him profusely, an anonymous writer for the American Architect and Building News said his involvement in the Tweed Courthouse negated the merits of anything else he had designed. Thomas Little, a political appointee of
5700-474: The death of John Kellum that August, halted construction for five years. At the time, some $ 11 million had been expended on the courthouse, though its true value was estimated to be less than $ 3 million. The expenditure was more than four times that for London's Palace of Westminster and more than twice the value of the Alaska Purchase . Tweed, his reputation having become disgraced, fled
5800-422: The east–west axis and three windows deep on the north–south axis. The elevation is made of ashlar , of a similar color to the rest of the building. A doorway leads to a cellar on the wing's western elevation. The ground floor contains three arched windows on the western and eastern elevations, and two doorways on each side of the southern elevation. The second and fourth floors contain compound arched windows, while
5900-509: The elaborate finishing and classic exterior of the present structure". The American Architect and Building News described how the addition was "grafted" onto the original building: "Of course no attention was paid to the design of the existing building and within and without a rank Romanesque runs cheek by jowl with the old Italian, one bald, the other florid; cream-colored brick and buff sandstone come in juxtaposition to white marble." According to one biography of Eidlitz, he could not understand
6000-593: The first National Historic Landmark was a simple cedar post, placed by the Lewis and Clark Expedition on their 1804 outbound trek to the Pacific in commemoration of the death from natural causes of Sergeant Charles Floyd . The cedar plank was later replaced by a 100 ft (30 m) marble obelisk. The Sergeant Floyd Monument in Sioux City, Iowa , was officially designated on June 30, 1960. NHLs are designated by
6100-521: The floor and roof are visible in which to bury the money of the tax-payers." In the first four years of construction, the supervisors were able to harvest $ 3 million from the project (equivalent to $ 80 million in 2023 ) by taking 65 percent of the commission on each of the contracts. Supervisor Smith Ely Jr. made the first allegation of corruption in the courthouse's construction in 1866. Ely claimed that "grossly extravagant and improper expenditures have been made [...] in reference to
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#17327722841406200-545: The hearing that it was "[t]he most detailed accounting of municipal malfeasance in history." It was discovered that the promotion of officers was largely dependent on the payment for a position, and that that payment was largely recovered from the protection of vice businesses including prostitution. A Captain Timothy J. Creedon describes how he paid $ 15,000 to obtain a captain's rank. He did not achieve this rank prior to this payment even though his examination score for promotion
6300-514: The initial design as much as possible by requesting materials from the original manufacturers, which further increased costs. The New York Times reported that marble for the restoration came from Tweed's quarry in Massachusetts. Old stone already on the building was reused for other elements of the facade. National Historic Landmark A National Historic Landmark ( NHL ) is a building, district, object, site, or structure that
6400-415: The interior between 1877 and 1881. The media criticized the project as wasteful and gaudy during the courthouse's construction, and for a century after its completion, there were frequent proposals to demolish the building. Several modifications were made after completion, including removal of its front steps. Modern restoration and historic preservation were completed in 2001. The building has since housed
6500-403: The late 20th century. The four floors leading from the rotunda share a similar floor plan, with staircases or light wells on the interior, and the former courtrooms (now offices) along the exterior. The spaces to the west and east of the rotunda are symmetrical. The ground-floor plan has had several modifications, including the addition or removal of several staircases. Directly adjacent to
6600-702: The location as a grazing site for animals. In 1686 the courthouse site was acquired by the English authorities as a punishment location for prisoners and an African burial ground . Eight graves from the American colonial era still exist beneath the courthouse. Other government buildings would be built, including an almshouse , the Upper Barracks, the New Gaol , a military jail called the Bridewell, and
6700-406: The main Chambers Street elevation of the facade rises three and a half stories from a low granite curb. Panels of granite, Tuckahoe marble , and Sheffield marble are anchored on the facade, with rusticated stone at the basement level. Behind the granite and marble cladding is the brick superstructure . According to an LPC report in 1984, no documentation regarding the use of other quarries
6800-681: The main hall and rotunda; and build a replacement south porch. He was also commissioned to build a southern wing, which in Kellum's original plan was to measure 50 by 70 feet (15 by 21 m). Though Eidlitz's initial design for the southern wing was supposed to be similar to that of the main building, the real plans turned out to be much different. He redesigned Kellum's neoclassical interiors with rich polychrome effects in Romanesque Revival style, and added ornamental and architectural detailing (such as arches and foliate detail) to integrate
6900-489: The new courthouse. The historian Alexander Callow later called the courthouse corruption "a classic in the annals of American graft". Construction started on the courthouse on September 16, 1861, though the cornerstone was laid on December 26. Tweed bought a marble quarry in Sheffield, Massachusetts , to provide much of the marble for the courthouse, in the process making a large profit for himself. Tweed
7000-403: The new wing's design with the rest of the courthouse. The expanded design provided thirty monumental courtrooms around the central three-story octagonal rotunda. Eidlitz's design incorporated a polygonal skylight in the rotunda, a significant deviation from Kellum's original plans for a dome. The New York Times criticized the new wing's design, calling it "cheap and tawdry in comparison with
7100-555: The northern side. The ground-floor wooden doors, set within the central opening on each elevation, are more simply detailed than the second-floor main entry portico. The southern elevation is similar to the northern elevation, except for its central wing, which was completed later. Eidlitz designed the four-story southern wing of the courthouse in the Romanesque Revival style. The addition by Eidlitz extends 48 feet (15 m) southward toward City Hall. Kellum had designed
7200-505: The original brick walls and cast iron to recreate the original paint colors. The skylights and structure of the roof over the rotunda were replaced, marble and glass tiled floors were restored, and additional detail was carved into the capitals of the exterior columns at the portico where the sheared-away entrance steps were replaced. The original ventilation shafts embedded within the Tweed Courthouse's walls were refitted with heating, ventilation, and air conditioning ( HVAC ) systems to maintain
7300-505: The portion of Chambers Street in front of the courthouse was narrowed. On each side of the northern elevation, there is a flanking bay within the building's main section, as well as a wing that projects northward slightly. Each bay and each wing contains three windows, giving the northern elevation a total of fifteen window openings per story. Each of the windows on the northern elevation contains their original pilasters, centered colonnettes , and paneled blind railings, which are set within
7400-479: The portion of City Hall Park around the building was closed due to security concerns. That section of the park reopened in 2007. The New York Daily News , investigating the causes behind the high cost of the renovation, found that much of the cost was due to the opulence of the original design. For instance, the facade cost $ 13 million to restore, and the reproduction of the skylights, masonry, and doors cost another $ 3.2 million. Officials sought to restore
7500-526: The principles of acoustics, and finished in an agreeable and pleasing manner." The corruption associated with the Tweed Courthouse was so potent that, when space for municipal functions became scarce in the late 19th century, mayoral administrations were reluctant to destroy the building, even as they also proposed demolition for the much-admired City Hall. One such scheme, proposed in 1893, would have replaced all other buildings in City Hall Park with
7600-468: The public, and Beame created a special task force that April to investigate the feasibility of preserving the courthouse. The task force's draft report, published in June 1974, recommended destroying the courthouse; this aligned with Beame's past comments that the courthouse should be "replaced with a more functional structure". The report stated that the projected $ 12 million cost of a brand-new structure
7700-430: The purchase of iron, marble and brick, and in the payment of various persons for services." One particularly egregious example of these expenditures was a $ 350,000 bill for carpeting in the new courthouse; despite the high price of the contract, which would have paid for enough carpeting to cover the 9-acre (3.6 ha) City Hall Park three times, some offices remained without carpets several years later. In another case,
7800-410: The reason behind the controversy surrounding his design: Standing in the rotunda of the courthouse one day, when his own vari-colored brick arches and columns had been inserted between the cast-iron panels of the older work, he said, "Is it possible for anybody to fail to see that this," pointing to the new work, "performs a function and that that," pointing to the old, "does not?" The Tweed Courthouse
7900-468: The rotunda wall on the ground and second floors. Eidlitz used medieval-style brick and stone motifs including Norman arches and leaves, and he filled in Kellum's rectangular openings with brick arches topped by foliate capitals. Originally, the rotunda's outer walls contained niches with busts depicting former New York County justices. Eidlitz's design originally contained polychrome panels with floral decorations, which were painted gray at some point before
8000-412: The rotunda; they contain marble floors and plaster walls and ceilings. Like the ground floor, there is a main hall leading to the west and east, as well as north–south secondary halls closed off by doorways. The second floor contains four primary spaces, of which three are entered through double doors leading off the main corridor. The fourth room, 201–2, is on the southern side of the building. It contains
8100-562: The space was occupied by the City Court, with nine justices' chambers being located inside the Tweed Courthouse. The original skylight was removed by World War II . The grand steps leading to Chambers Street on the north side were removed to accommodate a widening of that street sometime in the mid-20th century, forcing workers and visitors to enter through the ground floor. Sources disagree on whether this happened in 1940, 1942, or 1955. Architectural writer Donald Reynolds wrote that
8200-506: The staircase's removal "left the building looking awkward without a proper front". After the City Court moved out of the courthouse by 1961, the building was occupied by several county offices and the New York Family Court in the 1960s. Mayor Abraham Beame proposed demolishing Tweed Courthouse in March 1974 in conjunction with a restoration of the nearby Manhattan Municipal Building . These plans elicited criticism from
8300-467: The supervisors' actions. State Republican leader Roscoe Conkling alleged that more money was being spent on the New York County Courthouse's furnishings alone than on the entire United States Postal Service . After the Tweed Charter to reorganize the city's government was passed in 1870, four commissioners were appointed by mayor A. Oakey Hall , a Tweed loyalist, to oversee the completion of
8400-464: The third floor contains foliated banding. Pilasters separate the window openings on the third and fourth floors. There are also foliate belt courses that run horizontally along the facade. The interior of the Tweed Courthouse contains several opulent features, the most prominent of which is a central rotunda . There are over one hundred rooms in the building. Many of the spaces contain cast-iron baseboards and elaborate steel lighting fixtures on
8500-523: The time of the Tweed Courthouse's construction. The most prominent element from the Capitol used in the Tweed Courthouse was a large entry stairway that approached a triangular portico, supported by massive columns in the Corinthian order . The courthouse also contained a basement with rustication, pediments above the ground-floor windows, pilasters separating each vertical bay of windows, and
8600-509: The tri-colored brickwork" following the addition of gray paint. Shortly afterward, in 1911 and 1913, elevators were added to the building, and steel-and-iron elevator machinery rooms were built atop the roof. The roof itself was replaced with an iron roof in the early 20th century. In 1927, the County Court moved from the Tweed Courthouse to the recently built New York County Courthouse a few blocks north on Centre Street . Subsequently,
8700-457: The trick Of charging as if he himself were a brick Of the well-plaster'd House That TWEED built W. J. Linton, "The House That Tweed Built", excerpt In the years following its completion, the Tweed Courthouse was associated with the crimes of William Tweed, and many critics and newspapers viewed it negatively. For instance, reformer George C. Barrett said, "You look up at its ceilings and find gaudy decorations; you wonder which
8800-466: The underside of each flight of stairs and are a Renaissance -style design used by Kellum. The topmost flights were formerly illuminated by glass-in-cement skylights. The staircases' cast-iron handrails were painted with a wood-grained finish. The third and fourth floors are connected by four staircases, one at each corner of the main structure. Three of the stairs contain fluted iron banisters and were formerly illuminated by skylights, later covered by
8900-565: The western and eastern sides of the rotunda, there are two cast iron staircases in open wells, connecting the first, second, and third floors. The staircases, designed as mirror images of each other, were each laid out so one wide stairway leads upward to a mezzanine which then splits into two smaller stairways to the rotunda of the floor above it. The railings of these stairs have ornately designed four-sided iron newels with lampposts atop them, as well as simpler four-sided balusters . Rectangular panels with circles at their centers are located on
9000-437: The western and eastern wings with marble tile floors. On the ground floor, several rooms have been rearranged, though the rotunda and stair halls are in their original layout. The rotunda floor is made of an iron frame set with marble and glass; cast-iron Corinthian columns support the balcony above it. The rest of the ground story contains a marble tile floor and plaster ceilings. There are multiple north–south secondary halls and
9100-471: Was $ 5 million more than a basic renovation of the Tweed Courthouse and $ 1.2 million more than a full renovation. The plan drew opposition from preservationists and from some politicians. The Tweed Courthouse was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in October 1974, which made the courthouse eligible for federal funds, but did not yet protect the structure from demolition. Following
9200-463: Was a 97.82. Originally, he was quoted a price of $ 12,000, but his Tammany district leader, John W. Reppenhagen, told Creedon that another officer had already come up with that amount and the new price was $ 15,000, which Creedon paid. Creedon also revealed that a portion of that cost was paid by local businesses. The committee also revealed that when the police did go after prostitutes, they were largely independent street walkers, and even then, Tammany made
9300-406: Was a direct cost "on the books" and the remainder was adjusted claims and county liabilities . Other estimates placed the construction cost at $ 13 million (about $ 353 million in 2023 ). This is BOSS TWEED […] Who controll'd the plastering laid on so thick By the comptroller's plasterer, Garvey by name, The Garvey whose fame is the little game Of laying on plaster and knowing
9400-499: Was able to engage in many other acts of corruption, though not necessarily related to the courthouse's construction. Separate from Tweed's corruption was the slowdown of work on the courthouse due to the American Civil War . In December 1865, an anonymous writer for The New York Times stated that much of the exterior was built, but the interior, except for the basement, had yet to be constructed. The reporter, who called
9500-477: Was elected to the New York City Board of Aldermen in 1851 and became part of the New York County Board of Supervisors in 1857. It was in this capacity that he was able to oversee the construction of the New York County Courthouse and earn millions through embezzlement related to the construction process. Tweed, considered one of the most corrupt politicians in United States history, was assisted by
9600-482: Was found. The main wing was designed by Kellum in the style of a Renaissance palazzo , described as the "Anglo-Italianate" style , to reveal the influence of British Victorian architecture that was the foundation of the popular American Victorian style. The original design was inspired by that of the United States Capitol in Washington, D.C. , which was being used for other sub-national government buildings at
9700-684: Was made for the Salem Maritime National Historic Site on March 17, 1938. In 1960, the National Park Service took on the administration of the survey data gathered under this legislation, and the National Historic Landmark program began to take more formal shape. When the National Register of Historic Places was established in 1966, the National Historic Landmark program was encompassed within it, and rules and procedures for inclusion and designation were formalized. Because listings (either on
9800-412: Was not until the 1950s, when Henry Hope Reed Jr. wrote about the building, that writers started to argue in favor of the Tweed Courthouse for its historical significance. Several modifications were made to the Tweed Courthouse following its completion. By 1908, Montgomery Schuyler had written that Eidlitz's original rotunda colors had "been shorn of much of it pristine force, which was much promoted by
9900-486: Was officially finished in 1881, more than 20 years after work began. Much of the construction was financed through the sale of public stocks issued on several occasions throughout the construction process. Stock with a combined value of $ 4.55 million was issued six times, the first issued in 1862, and the last in 1871. The total cost of construction was estimated in 1914 at $ 11–12 million (equivalent to $ 299–326 million in 2023 ). Of this, $ 8 million
10000-477: Was passed in 1858 that provided for the construction of a new structure north of City Hall, in its rear. This would house several New York County courts, the grand and petit juries , and the county sheriff's office. Two commissioners were named for that task in November 1858. By early 1859, they had proposed a new budget of $ 1 million, saying the existing budget of $ 250,000 was insufficient. An amendment to
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