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Chickering Hall (New York City, 1875)

Coordinates: 40°44′20″N 73°59′31″W / 40.73889°N 73.99194°W / 40.73889; -73.99194
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chickering Hall
Map
Address437 Fifth Avenue at 18th Street
New York City
United States
LocationManhattan
Coordinates40°44′20″N 73°59′31″W / 40.73889°N 73.99194°W / 40.73889; -73.99194
OwnerChickering & Sons
Capacity1,450
Construction
Built1870s
Opened15 September 1875 (1875-09-15)
Closed1893
Demolished1901
Construction cost$175,000 (Inflation: 4855455)
ArchitectGeorge B. Post

Chickering Hall (1875 - 1893) was a concert and music hall in Manhattan, New York City, New York, located on Fifth Avenue.[1]

History

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Chickering Hall, commissioned by Chickering & Sons, was situated at the northwest corner of Fifth Avenue and 18th Street in the New York City borough of Manhattan.[2] It was designed by the American architect George B. Post and F.C. Murray.[3] Opening on November 15, 1875, it housed a music store, piano warehouse, and concert hall.[2] Above the ground-level salesroom, its 1,450-seat auditorium, located on the second and third floors, hosted concerts, lectures, and conferences.[4]

The concert hall was managed by Edward H. Colell in 1891 and still under the ownership of Chickering and Sons.[5] In 1893, the building was entirely repurposed into a retail space for John Wanamaker's department store, taking over city piano sales.[2]

The original Chickering Hall building in New York City was sold and demolished in the early 1900s. Chickering & Sons merged with the American Piano Company who later established a new building in the borough of Manhattan on 57th Street under the same name in 1924.[6]

Events & Performances

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Appleton's General Guide to the United States and Canada. (1891). United Kingdom: Black.
  2. ^ a b c "Chickering Hall à New York, from "Moniteur des Architectes". metmuseum.org. Retrieved 2024-09-14.
  3. ^ Stokes, I. N. P. (1915). The iconography of Manhattan Island. United States: Dodd.
  4. ^ Ingersoll, E. (1891). A Week in New York. United States: Rand, Mc Nally & Company.
  5. ^ New York Amusement Gazette. (1891). United States: F. T. Low..
  6. ^ Poor's...1925. (1925). United States: Poor's Publishing Company.
  7. ^ Report of the Fifth International Ophthalmological Congress: Held in New York, Sept. 1876.... (1877). United States: D. Appleton & Company.
  8. ^ Ingersoll, R. G. (1878). "Hell": Lecture [at] Chickering Hall, New York, February 3d, 1878. United States: E. McCormack.
  9. ^ Concert program, 1 Apr 1879, Program ID 10110, New York Philharmonic Shelby White & Leon Levy Digital Archives. https://archives.nyphil.org/index.php/artifact/f5e83c34-26a9-4027-923b-51cef82b0bb3-0.1
  10. ^ The Dental Cosmos. (1881). United States: S. S. White Dental Manufacturing Company.
  11. ^ Oscar Wilde: Interviews and Recollections Volume I. (1979). United Kingdom: Palgrave Macmillan UK.
  12. ^ Bradley, W., Plançon, P. (1898). Program: Opening Concert Friday Evening, February 8th. United States: Chickering & Sons.
  13. ^ Farrar, F. W. (1866). Temperance Address, Delivered at Chickering Hall, New York, October 29, 1885. United States: John B. Alden.