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Mrs. William B. Astor House

Astor family residencesDemolished buildings and structures in ManhattanFifth AvenueGilded Age mansionsHouses completed in 1893
Houses in ManhattanUpper East Side
Mrs. Astor mansion 1895
Mrs. Astor mansion 1895

The Mrs. William B. Astor House was a mansion on Fifth Avenue in the Upper East Side neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. It was located at 840 and 841 Fifth Avenue, on the northeast corner of 65th Street, completed in 1896 and demolished around 1926.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Mrs. William B. Astor House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Mrs. William B. Astor House
5th Avenue, New York Manhattan

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Wikipedia: Mrs. William B. Astor HouseContinue reading on Wikipedia

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N 40.768078 ° E -73.970218 °
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5th Avenue 838D
10065 New York, Manhattan
New York, United States
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Mrs. Astor mansion 1895
Mrs. Astor mansion 1895
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Bernard Museum of Judaica
Bernard Museum of Judaica

The Bernard Museum of Judaica, formally the Herbert & Eileen Bernard Museum of Judaica is part of Temple Emanu-El on Manhattan's Upper East Side. Their museum hosts temporary exhibits on various aspects of Jewish life, faith, and culture.The museum consists of three galleries which are housed in three relatively small rooms on the second floor. The first two galleries are often used for temporary exhibitions. The third gallery is the permanent collection which contains items of Judaica and Temple memorabilia. Some of the museum's more than 1,000 objects date back to the 14th century. Not limited to items from Emanu-El's history, the collection also includes items from the histories of Temple Emanu-El, Temple Beth-El (merged with Temple Emanu-El in 1927), Ansche Chesed and Adas Jeshurun who merged to form Beth-El in 1974.Among the list of artifacts in the third room are a vast number of silver items, a large collection of menorahs, and pieces spanning a broad historical and global geographic range. Among the items is a 1891 silver, copper, and gilt torah case from Calcutta. Silversmiths in China made it for use by a congregation of Jewish ex-patriots from Baghdad.Other objects and topics include: A contemporary maker illuminated books Information and descriptions of Jewish communities around the world Fashion Jewish marriage contracts (ketubot) as art objects A statue of Golda Meir that greets visitors at the entrance Descriptions and depictions of Jewish life in the early 1900s as reflected in old postcards Kabbalah Stereoscopic images of the Holy Land in the 19th century

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New York City Department of Parks and Recreation

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