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Castle Clinton

Castle Clinton (also known as Fort Clinton and Castle Garden) is a restored circular sandstone fort within Battery Park at the southern end of Manhattan in New York City. Built from 1808 to 1811, it was the first American immigration station, predating Ellis Island. More than 7.5 million people arrived in the United States at Fort Clinton between 1855 and 1890. Over its active life, it has also functioned as a beer garden, exhibition hall, theater, and public aquarium. The structure is a New York City designated landmark and a United States national monument, and it is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Castle Clinton National Monument
Castle Garden
LocationBattery Park, Manhattan, New York City
Coordinates40°42′13″N 74°01′00″W / 40.7035°N 74.0168°W / 40.7035; -74.0168
Area1 acre (0.40 ha)
Built1808
ArchitectJohn McComb Jr.; Jonathan Williams; U.S. War Department
Visitation3,471,661 (2022)[1]
WebsiteCastle Clinton National Monument
NRHP reference No.66000537
NYCL No.0029
Significant dates
Added to NRHPOctober 15, 1966[2]
Designated NMONAugust 12, 1946
Designated NYCLNovember 23, 1965

Fort Clinton was originally known as the West Battery or the Southwest Battery, occupying an artificial island off the shore of Lower Manhattan. Designed by John McComb Jr., with Jonathan Williams as consulting engineer, the fort was garrisoned in 1812 but was never used for warfare. In 1824, the New York City government converted Fort Clinton into a 6,000-seat entertainment venue known as Castle Garden, which operated until 1855. Castle Garden then served as an immigrant processing depot for 35 years. When the processing facilities were moved to Ellis Island in 1892, Castle Garden was converted into the first home of the New York Aquarium, which opened in 1896 and continued operating until 1941. The fort was expanded and renovated several times during this period.

In the 1940s, New York City parks commissioner Robert Moses proposed demolishing Fort Clinton as part of the construction of the nearby Brooklyn–Battery Tunnel. This led to a prolonged debate over the fort's preservation, as well as the creation of the Castle Clinton National Monument in 1946. The National Park Service took over the fort in 1950. After several unsuccessful attempts to restore the fort, Castle Clinton reopened in 1975 following an extensive renovation. Since 1986, it has served as a visitor center and a departure point for ferries to the Statue of Liberty National Monument.

Original use edit

Castle Clinton stands slightly west of where Fort Amsterdam was built in 1626, when New York City was known by the Dutch name New Amsterdam.[3] Fort Amsterdam was demolished by 1790 after the American Revolutionary War.[4][5][6] Proposals for a new fort were made after two separate war scares involving Britain and France in the 1790s, but neither plan was ultimately carried out.[7] By 1805, there were growing tensions between Britain and the U.S., marking the run-up to the War of 1812. Late that year, Lieutenant Colonel Jonathan Williams of the United States Army Engineers began planning a series of fortifications in New York Harbor.[8] Williams was part of a group of three commissioners who, in 1807, submitted a report that recommended the construction of such fortifications.[8][9]

Fort Clinton, originally known as West Battery and sometimes as Southwest Battery,[10][11][12] was built on an artificial island, created just off shore when the fort was built.[11] Construction began in 1808, and the fort was completed in 1811,[4][10][13][14] although modifications continued through the 1820s.[15] Designed by John McComb Jr. with Jonathan Williams as consulting engineer,[16][17] West Battery was roughly circular with a radius of approximately 92 feet (28 m). About one-eighth of the circle had a straight wall instead of a curved wall.[11][15] The walls were made of red sandstone quarried in New Jersey.[18] The fort had 28 thirty-two-pounder cannons.[11][15] A wooden bridge led from the fort to the rest of Manhattan.[19] West Battery was intended to complement the three-tiered Castle Williams, the East Battery, on Governors Island.[20]

The fort was completed in late 1811, and it was garrisoned in 1812.[21] However, the fort was never used for warfare,[20] and British and American forces signed a peace treaty in February 1815.[22] By then, West Battery was renamed Fort Clinton in honor of New York City Mayor DeWitt Clinton (who eventually became Governor of New York).[11][4][20] The castle itself was converted to administrative headquarters for the Army. Simultaneously, at the end of the war, there was a public movement to build a park in the Battery area.[20] A 1816 proposal to construct two small office buildings at Fort Clinton was canceled due to public opposition, and the castle lay dormant for three years.[23][20] The Common Council of New York proposed in May 1820 that the United States government transfer ownership of the castle to the city government, but the United States Congress declined to pass legislation to that effect.[20]

By 1820, Fort Clinton was being used as a paymaster's quarters and storage area.[22] The United States Army stopped using the fort in 1821, and it was ceded to the city by an act of Congress in March 1822.[22][24][25] By then, the bridge leading to Fort Clinton was frequently used by fishermen who were catching fish from the bridge,[11] which was connected to the shore at the foot of Broadway.[19]

Entertainment venue edit

 
The Bay and Harbor of New York by Samuel Waugh (1814–1885), depicting the castle in 1848
 
First appearance of Jenny Lind in the U.S. at Castle Garden, September 11, 1850 (lithograph by Currier and Ives)

The fort was leased to the New York City government as an entertainment venue in June 1824;[24] the city originally paid $1,400 a year for five years.[26] The city government subleased the fort to Francis Fitch, Arthur Roorbach, and J. Rathbone.[12] Fort Clinton became Castle Garden, which served as a beer garden, exhibition hall, and theater. The venue contained 50 boxes, each with a table and eight seats. Atop Castle Garden was a circular promenade with a canopy above it.[12] Castle Garden was surrounded by a gravel promenade and shrubbery atop a seawall.[26] The New-York Daily Tribune wrote that the fort "afterward became associated with scenes of peace and popular amusement".[27] One critic described Castle Garden in 1828 as "a favored place of public resort".[26]

The fort reopened as Castle Garden on July 3, 1824.[12][24] One of the fort's first events was in September 1824, when 6,000 people attended an event honoring General Lafayette.[12][28] Over the years, the fort hosted other political figures such as U.S. presidents Andrew Jackson,[29] John Tyler,[28] and James K. Polk,[28] as well as Hungarian governor-president Lajos Kossuth.[28][29] Inventor Samuel Morse hosted a demonstration of a telegraph machine at Castle Garden in 1835.[29][30] Around 1845, Castle Garden was converted into a theater when a roof was built above the fort's interior.[31][32][33] The structure contained 6,000 seats.[31] Officials were planning to expand the nearby Battery Park by 1848, adding landfill around Castle Garden to bring the park to 24 acres (9.7 ha).[34][35]

In 1850, Swedish soprano Jenny Lind gave her first performances in the United States with two concerts at Castle Gardens;[36][37] tickets for these concerts cost up to $225 (equivalent to $7,915 in 2022).[38] A year later, Castle Garden started selling concert tickets at "popular prices" of up to 50 cents (equivalent to $18 in 2022).[39] In the early 1850s, European dancing star Lola Montez performed her "tarantula dance",[40] and Louis-Antoine Jullien gave dozens of successful concerts mixing classical and light music.[40] The Max Maretzek Italian Opera Company staged the New York premieres of two operas at Castle Garden: Gaetano Donizetti's Marino Faliero on June 17, 1851, and Giuseppe Verdi's Luisa Miller on July 20, 1854.[41][42][43]

The fort was leased to Theodore J. Allen for five years on May 1, 1854. Under the terms of the lease, Allen could expand the island around Castle Garden, but he could not infill the channel between Castle Garden and Battery Park.[44]

Immigrant landing and registration depot edit

 
Aerial view illustration of Manhattan, showing Castle Garden at its tip, c. 1880

Castle Garden served as the first immigration depot in the U.S. from 1855 to 1890.[30][45] Most of the fort, except for the section along the shoreline, was surrounded by a 1,000-foot-long (300 m) wooden fence.[46][47] The fence, measuring 12 or 13 feet (3.7 or 4.0 m) high, was intended to keep out unauthorized immigrants.[48][49] At the center of the fort was the waiting area, known as the rotunda.[50] The immigrant registration depot included a quadrangle of desks arranged around this waiting area, as well as restrooms flanking the main entrance.[51][52] The waiting area also had wooden benches. Although there are no precise figures for the capacity of the waiting area, various sources give a capacity of between 2,000 and 4,000.[53] An enclosed balcony was installed around the waiting area circa 1869.[54] The residential outbuildings around the fort became offices.[46][55]

Before being processed at Castle Garden, immigrants underwent medical inspections at the Marine Hospital on Staten Island, where ill immigrants were quarantined.[56][57] Those who passed their medical inspection boarded a steamship, which traveled to a dock along the northern side of Castle Garden; the dock faced away from Battery Park, preventing immigrants from entering Manhattan before they had been processed. Immigrants were inspected a second time before entering the fort. Inside the depot, a New York state emigration clerk registered each immigrant and directed them to another desk, where a second clerk advised each immigrant about their destination. Each of the immigrants then received a bottle of bathwater and returned to the dock, where their baggage was collected.[56] The New York Central Railroad and the New York and Erie Railroad sold train tickets at Castle Garden as well.[57][58]

Many of Castle Garden's original immigrant passenger records were stored at Ellis Island, where they were destroyed in a fire in 1897.[59] Sources cite 7.5 million[60] or 8 million immigrants as having been processed at Castle Garden.[48][61] These account for the vast majority of the nearly 10 million immigrants who passed through the Port of New York between 1847 and 1890.[62][63][a] The majority of immigrants processed at Castle Garden were from European countries, namely Denmark, England, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Russia, Scotland, and Sweden.[65][66] The facility's name was pronounced Kesselgarten by German immigrants and by Yiddish-speaking Eastern European Jews. The word kesselgarten became a generic term for any situation that was noisy, confusing or chaotic, or where a "babel" of languages was spoken (a reference to the multitude of languages heard spoken by the immigrants from many countries at the site).[67] In 2005, The New York Times estimated that one-sixth of all Americans were descended from an immigrant who had passed through Castle Garden.[48]

Conversion and operation edit

1850s and 1860s edit

 
Interior view of the State Emigrant Landing Depot

The New York state government's Board of Emigration Commissioners had been established in 1847 to operate medical facilities and a registration center for immigrants. Although the board had acquired the Marine Hospital on Staten Island soon after its establishment, their efforts to open a registration center were unsuccessful for several years.[68] Prior to the establishment of the registration center, unethical ticket-booking agents for transport lines frequently approached newly arrived immigrants, only to abscond with the immigrants' savings.[48] The board took over Allen's lease of Castle Garden in May 1855 and made some modifications,[35] leasing the fort for $8,000 annually (equivalent to $251,257 in 2022).[69] Several local residents attempted to prevent the fort from being converted into an immigrant registration depot, claiming that the state government's lease was illegal and that the newly arrived immigrants would spread disease.[49][70] A judge for the state's Superior Court ruled in June 1855 that work on the immigrant-processing depot could proceed.[47][71]

The Emigrant Landing Depot opened within the fort on August 1, 1855,[72] and the depot began processing immigrants two days later.[73][74] The identity of the first migrant processed at the fort is unknown. Of the first five ships to arrive at Castle Garden, English laborer Richard Richards was the first person on the manifest of the largest ship.[48] Although the New York state government endorsed Castle Garden's conversion to an immigrant-processing depot, the New York City government opposed the move and accused the Emigration Commissioners of violating the terms of their lease.[75][76] Many complaints about Castle Garden came from "runners" representing booking agents and boarding house operators, who could not intercept unwitting immigrants because of Castle Garden's strict policies.[77] The New York state government's initial four-year lease of Castle Garden expired in 1859, and state officials renewed their lease annually for the next ten years. By then, state and city officials could not agree on who owned the depot.[78] The city, state, and federal governments continued to fight over the depot's ownership through the 1870s.[79]

Although Castle Garden staff often mistreated immigrants, historian George J. Svejda wrote that the depot "was still the best place for immigrants upon their landing on America's shores".[58] In 1864, to convince immigrants to enlist in the United States Armed Forces during the American Civil War, the County Bounty Committee erected a recruitment center next to Castle Garden.[80][81] Two years later, the Board of Emigration Commissioners constructed a one-story labor exchange building, a waiting room, and an information office, and they made repairs to Castle Garden.[82] The fort's exterior remained largely unchanged over the years, but the interior and many of the fort's wooden outbuildings were frequently renovated.[50] Battery Park was expanded circa 1869 using landfill,[83] at which point the island containing Castle Garden was incorporated into the rest of Manhattan Island.[11][26] The rotunda was extensively restored at this time, and a wooden balcony was installed.[54] By then, The New York Times wrote that the surrounding Battery Park was "a haven for the 'runners' who approached innocent Irish and German newcomers, offering them nonexistent lodgings for their money".[84]

1870s and 1880s edit

 
Castle Garden ferry landing and barge office

By the early 1870s, Castle Garden's information bureau employed staff members who could speak over a dozen languages.[85] The New York state government encouraged immigrants to use other ports of entry to reduce overcrowding, so it issued a head tax on every immigrant who passed through Castle Garden.[86] This measure was largely ineffective, as The New York Times wrote in 1874: "Castle Garden is so well known in Europe that few emigrants can be induced to sail to any other destination."[86][87] By then, the immigration depot was in poor condition, with rotting floors and "tottering" offices and benches.[88] The Board of Emigration Commissioners lost a significant source of income in 1875, when the Supreme Court of the United States invalidated a New York state law that required steamship companies to pay a head tax or put up a bond for each immigrant. Afterward, the commissioners sought funding from the state legislature.[89][90] Due to budgetary shortfalls, the Emigration Commissioners disbanded the labor bureau in 1875,[91][92] although the German and Irish Emigrant Societies took over the labor bureau's operation.[91] Congress passed the Page Act of 1875, the first restrictive federal immigration law in the United States, during this time.[48][93]

The structure was severely damaged in a fire on July 30, 1876.[94][95][96] Castle Garden's exterior remained intact, as did the outbuildings to the north of the fort, but the interior was completely destroyed.[46][96] In the aftermath of the fire, several city officials proposed shuttering the Castle Garden immigration center and restoring the fort as a venue for "public enjoyment".[97] Nonetheless, the New York state government awarded a contract for Castle Garden's reconstruction in September 1876,[98][99] and it reopened on November 27, 1876.[98][100] As part of the $30,000 project (equivalent to $824,438 in 2022),[39] officials installed windows in the embrasures along the facade, and they added two doorways.[46][100] After the nearby Barge Office was completed in 1879, immigrants disembarked at the Barge Office, where officers examined immigrants' baggage. The baggage-collection duties soon returned to Castle Garden, and the Barge Office became a storage area.[91]

New York state officials unsuccessfully attempted to reinstate a head tax at Castle Garden in 1881.[101] The following year, Congress passed the Immigration Act of 1882, which imposed a head tax on non-U.S. citizens who passed through American ports, as well as restricted certain classes of people from immigrating to America.[48][102] Under the 1882 act, the Emigration Commissioners earned 50 cents for each immigrant who passed through Castle Garden.[102] Later that year, the Emigration Commissioners began collecting rent from the various companies and agents with offices at Castle Garden, and it started collecting taxes from boardinghouse operators.[103] The Immigration Act of 1882 also prompted a jurisdictional dispute between the city, state, and federal governments.[104] For example, in 1885, the state government refused to allocate $10,000 for repairs to the depot's ferry dock because the city technically owned Castle Garden.[104] The state government finally provided money for repairs in 1887.[105][106]

Closure edit

By the late 1880s, Castle Garden had become overcrowded and unhygienic, and there were numerous reports that Castle Garden officials were mistreating immigrants.[107] Robert Chesebrough, a businessman who owned several structures around Battery Park, had also advocated for the closure of the Castle Garden processing depot.[108] The Chicago Daily Tribune wrote that the structure was "a dilapidated rotunda surrounded by equally ramshackle structures for the housing of the strangers on these shores".[63] The Emigration Commissioners had dismissed many of Castle Garden's employees in September 1889 because of declining income, further compounding the facility's issues.[109][110] Federal and state officials also had difficulty sharing jurisdiction of Castle Garden; state officials reportedly did not enforce federal laws, as it was not part of their duties.[109]

The federal government notified New York state officials in February 1890 that it would take over immigrant-processing duties at Castle Garden within sixty days.[111][112] Federal officials planned to construct a new immigrant-processing center at another location, ultimately selecting a site on Ellis Island.[113] Castle Garden closed on April 18, 1890,[113][114][115] The immigrant-processing center was temporarily relocated to the Barge Office.[116][117][118] The state's Commissioners of Emigration had forbidden the federal government to continue to use Castle Garden until the Ellis Island immigrant depot was completed.[118] The new registration office on Ellis Island was completed in 1892.[33] In its last year of operation, Castle Garden processed 450,394 travelers, 364,086 of whom were immigrants.[48] When the immigrant-registration depot closed, city officials contemplated converting Castle Garden into an "amusement resort."[69]

The New York state government formally transferred Castle Garden to the city government on December 31, 1890.[119] By the next year, city officials had removed the wooden fence around Castle Garden, and they were planning to demolish the various outbuildings around the fort.[120] The New York Naval Reserve's First Battalion considered relocating to Castle Garden at that time,[121][122] and it subsequently used Castle Garden as a drill hall during the early 1890s.[123][124]

Aquarium edit

 
The New York Aquarium was once housed at Castle Garden (image before 1923).

Castle Garden was the site of the New York City Aquarium from 1896 to 1941.[60][45] The structure was extensively altered and roofed over to a height of several stories, though the original masonry fort remained.[4][125] When the fort was converted into an aquarium, the adjacent section of Battery Park was extended into the Hudson River.[46] The interior of Castle Garden contained two circular colonnades, which supported a roof with skylights. Above the center of the fort was a green-and-yellow dome, with a verse of Scripture (Habakkuk 1:15) inscribed into the dome's base.[126]

The aquarium could accommodate 10,000 fish and other species.[46] At the center of the ground story was a large circular pool surrounded by six smaller elliptical pools.[127][128] Fish and other marine species were loaded into the aquarium through a doorway at one end of the fort.[129] The perimeter of the aquarium was originally surrounded by about 100 tanks of varying sizes, placed on two levels.[127][130] The tanks were up to 6 feet (1.8 m) deep, with 1-inch-thick (2.5 cm) plate-glass panes and white-tiled surfaces.[127][131] By 1907, there were seven large tanks at the center of the ground story, 94 large tanks and 26 smaller tanks on the walls, and 30 reserve tanks.[132] The tanks were supplied by fresh water from the New York City water supply system and salt water from the Hudson River.[133] Salt water passed through two bronze filters, while fresh water passed through two copper filters; the four filters could collectively process over 200,000 U.S. gallons (760,000 L) per day.[128][134]

Conversion and opening edit

The New York City government had proposed converting Castle Garden into an aquarium in 1891.[135] The following February, the New York State Legislature passed a bill allowing the city government to create an aquarium within Castle Garden.[136][137] Julius F. Munckwitz Jr. drew up preliminary plans for an aquarium, which he presented to New York City's board of park commissioners in mid-1892.[138] The state government voted to allocate $150,000 for the construction of an aquarium within Castle Garden.[123][139] The aquarium's architect of record, H. T. Woodman, reported in April 1894 that several of the tanks were ready for use.[140][141] During the renovation process, the architect alleged that the tiles in the tanks had not been installed properly,[142] which led to a protracted dispute.[143] The city government allocated another $25,000 for the aquarium's completion at the end of 1894 (equivalent to $846,000 in 2022).[144]

The aquarium was supposed to have been completed by mid-1894,[140][141] but it did not open for another two years.[145] By mid-1895, the aquarium was delayed by what the New-York Tribune characterized as "gross stupidity".[146] For instance, the skylights on the roof acted as a greenhouse that raised the temperature of the water in the tanks, and the saltwater fish in the aquarium were dying off because of the low salinity of the Hudson River. The Tribune estimated that these mistakes had increased the project's cost by $35,000 (equivalent to $1,231,000 in 2022).[146] Local media reported in September 1896 that the aquarium was largely completed.[130][147] At the time, the tanks contained 45 species, some of which had been in the aquarium for two years.[147] Ultimately, it cost $175,000 to renovate Castle Garden into an aquarium (equivalent to $6,156,000 in 2022).[139]

The aquarium opened on December 10, 1896,[145][148] following a soft opening the previous day.[149][150] The aquarium attracted thousands of visitors on its opening day,[133][148] and it averaged over 10,000 visitors per day during its first several months.[139] Visitors were not charged admission, which may have contributed to the aquarium's popularity.[151] The aquarium had two million guests within a year,[151] and it had 5.5 million total guests by May 1900.[152]

1900s to 1930s edit

 
Interior of Castle Clinton

In March 1902, New York state legislators proposed transferring operation of the New York Aquarium to the New York Zoological Society.[153] City officials had suggested the idea to remove political interference from the aquarium's operation.[154] The New York City Board of Estimate authorized mayor Seth Low to lease the aquarium to the Zoological Society in July 1902,[155] and the Zoological Society took over on October 31, 1902, with Charles Haskins Townsend as the aquarium's director.[156][154] Townsend soon made several modifications to Castle Garden's facilities. He covered the tanks' tiled surfaces with rocks,[157][158] as well as reconfiguring each of the tanks' pipes to reduce energy usage.[159] The Zoological Society added a classroom next to the fort,[158] and it installed a 100,000-U.S.-gallon (380,000 L) tank underneath the fort to store saltwater.[160] The organization also repainted the interior for the first time in Castle Garden's history.[126][158] These modifications cost over $30,000 (equivalent to $1,015,000 in 2022).[158] The fort's design continued to pose issues; for example, aquarium officials discovered in 1905 that the roof skylights were causing some of the fish to become blind.[161] The Zoological Society installed new pipes at Castle Garden in 1908.[162]

Meanwhile, by the early 20th century, city officials were planning to rebuild Battery Park,[163] and they considered replacing Castle Garden with a skyscraper.[164] By January 1911, officials instead planned to expand Castle Garden,[165][166] adding semicircular wings to the west and east for over $1 million.[166][167] Each wing was to contain three tiers of tanks[167] and classroom space.[168] The Zoological Society asked the Board of Estimate to allocate $1.75 million to the renovation,[169][170] but the board still had not funded the renovation of Castle Garden by 1916.[171] Townsend said the aquarium's mechanical facilities needed major upgrades;[171][172] according to Townsend, the mechanical equipment under the fort was flooded at high tide, and power was provided by coal bunkers, which had to be manually replenished every four days.[171] In addition, the fort had never been properly renovated for the aquarium's use, and the second story's wooden frame was flammable. Townsend said the annexes would not only provide additional exhibition space but also allow the mechanical facilities to be upgraded.[172]

In 1921, Townsend announced that the Zoological Society would spend $75,000 (equivalent to $1,231,000 in 2022) to construct an electric plant in the basement, replacing a steam plant on the south side of the fort, and then install two tanks in the space formerly occupied by the steam plant.[173] This work was funded by a bequest from Mrs. Russell Sage.[174] The same year, a bust of Jenny Lind was dedicated and installed at the center of the fort.[175] The Board of Estimate voted in December 1921 to provide $105,000 for the construction of an additional story atop the fort.[176] By early 1923, the Zoological Society was carrying out the renovations at a cost of $86,000 (equivalent to $1,477,000 in 2022).[177] In June 1923, the board voted to give $76,500 for the construction of an additional story above the fort.[178][179] The Zoological Society planned to add deeper tanks on the second floor, expanding exhibition space by 20 percent. By then, the aquarium had two million annual visitors.[174] The expansion was largely completed by early 1924.[180]

Townsend announced in 1926 that Castle Garden would undergo further modifications at a cost of $225,000 (equivalent to $3,719,000 in 2022). The plans included constructing a third story for workrooms and laboratory space, installing tanks behind the fort, adding a new mechanical plant in the basement, and covering the facade with a gray cement finish.[181] Several local residents expressed opposition to these modifications and created the Battery Park Association to advocate against the plans.[182][183] By the late 1920s, there were plans to reconstruct Battery Park into a formal vista. As part of this plan, an amphitheater would have been constructed in the southern end of Battery Park, complementing Castle Garden at the northern end.[184] The Castle Garden Aquarium remained popular in the 1930s, with two million visitors per year.[185] Two laboratories were built on the structure's third story in 1940,[186] and a new metal dome was installed above the fort the same year.[187] By then, the aquarium's acting director Charles M. Breder Jr. wished to develop a new building nearby, as he believed the aquarium had outgrown Castle Garden.[188][189]

Demolition attempts and preservation edit

Initial plans edit

In February 1941, Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority Commissioner Robert Moses announced that he would demolish Castle Garden when the park was rebuilt during the Brooklyn–Battery Tunnel's construction.[190][191] He justified the demolition by saying that the fort had poor lighting and ventilation and that it required extensive repairs.[191] In response, the New-York Historical Society proposed restoring the fort and turning it into a maritime museum.[192] George McAneny, a former mayor and the chairman of the Regional Plan Association's board, proposed restoring Castle Garden;[193][194] he continued to advocate the fort's preservation for nine years.[195] Moses opposed efforts to preserve Castle Garden, saying that the old fort "never fired a shot".[196] The city government closed the New York Aquarium and moved some fish and turtles to other aquariums in late 1941;[197][198] other fish were released into the Atlantic Ocean.[199] A new aquarium was ultimately built on Coney Island in 1957.[200]

 
Castle Clinton was partially demolished in the 1940s.

Moses presented plans for a reconstruction of Battery Park to the Board of Estimate in March 1942, in which the fort was to be replaced by a landscaped promenade.[201][202] The board voted in favor of removing the fort from Battery Park that June.[196][203] City officials quickly placed the fort for sale, allowing potential buyers to preserve the fort by relocating it,[204] but the officials rejected the sole bid from a Brooklyn junkyard operator who offered $1,120 (equivalent to $20,060 in 2022).[205] The Fine Arts Federation of New York held an architectural design competition in August 1942, soliciting plans for a renovation of Castle Garden.[206][207] Despite ongoing disputes over the fort's fate,[207] workers began removing metal from Castle Garden on September 25, while the rest of the building remained in place for the time being.[208][209] The fort's original door, attached to the wall using 768 iron bolts, was also removed.[210]

An engineer hired by Moses to conduct a structural survey of Fort Clinton reported a "pronounced vertical crack" on the fort's walls.[211] Preservationists asked a New York state judge to grant an injunction to prevent demolition,[212][213] but a judge declined the request in April 1943.[214] Preservationists again petitioned the Board of Estimate to preserve the building, but the board voted in October 1945 to demolish the fort.[215][216]

Preservation as national monument edit

Albert S. Bard, Walter D. Binger, and other civic reformers continued to advocate in favor of preserving the fort. In July 1946, U.S. representative Sol Bloom introduced a bill to designate Castle Garden as a U.S. national monument.[217][218] Both the House and the Senate approved the legislation,[219][220] and president Harry S. Truman signed the bill into law on August 12, 1946, enabling the United States Department of the Interior to determine whether to take over the fort.[29][221] At the time, the city government still owned the property, and the fort could not become a national monument unless the federal government took ownership.[222] Engineers estimated that it would cost between $40,000 and $100,000 to preserve the fort while the Brooklyn–Battery Tunnel was being constructed.[223] The city government would only retain the fort if the federal government agreed to pay for its restoration, though Moses did suggest constructing a monument on the site.[224] After the United States Congress declined to allocate funding for Fort Clinton's renovation, the Board of Estimate voted yet again to demolish the fort in July 1947.[225][226] Some demolition work did take place,[227] but the structure was not totally demolished due to a lack of funding.[228]

After Interior undersecretary Oscar L. Chapman indicated in August 1947 that Congress would allocate money to the project in 1948, the board voted to delay further action for one year. In the meantime, the city allocated $50,000 (equivalent to $655,000 in 2022) to shore up the fort's southeastern corner while the tunnel was being built.[229][230] In March 1948, a New York State Assembly committee refused to vote on a bill that would have allowed the federal government to take over Fort Clinton.[231][232] Two months later, the Board of Estimate voted to demolish the castle for the sixth time.[233] The American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society continued to advocate for the fort's preservation, asking the New York Supreme Court to restrict the city from demolishing Fort Clinton in July 1948.[234][235] The state Supreme Court issued an injunction that December, requiring the New York City Art Commission to approve any proposal to demolish the fort,[236][237] but the Supreme Court's Appellate Division struck down this injunction in March 1949.[238][239]

By early 1949, U.S. president Harry S. Truman had also expressed support for preserving Fort Clinton.[240][241] The Assembly voted in March 1949 to cede the fort to the federal government,[242][243] and the New York State Senate passed an identical bill.[244] New York governor Thomas E. Dewey signed the bill the next month, allowing the city to transfer the fort to the federal government.[245] Separately, the New York City Council voted to allow the New York state government to take over Fort Clinton if the federal government did not want to take over ownership.[246] The U.S. House voted in October to allocate $165,750 for the fort's restoration (equivalent to $2,039,000 in 2022),[247][248] allowing the National Park Service (NPS) to start restoring the fort after the federal government gained ownership.[249] The city's mayor William O'Dwyer supported the fort's preservation, but, due to legal technicalities, the city government did not transfer ownership of the fort for several months.[228] On July 18, 1950, the city deeded the land and castle to the federal government.[250][251]

Federal government ownership edit

The modern-day Castle Clinton is a one-story structure with a radius of 92 feet (28 m). The roof above the fort's interior has largely been removed, and there is a nearly circular, open-air parade ground at the center of the fort.[46] It is surrounded by a wall measuring 8 feet (2.4 m) thick.[32][46] The stucco on the facade was removed under the National Park Service's ownership, and the brownstone-and-ashlar exterior walls were restored to their original condition. Underneath the walls is a rough stone foundation. The circumference of the fort contains a portico with wooden columns surrounding a canopy. There is also a gravel courtyard, brick powder magazines, and two subterranean water tanks covered by wooden trapdoors.[46] The SeaGlass Carousel is just southeast of the modern-day fort.[252]

Since 1986, the fort's interior has housed an information kiosk and ticket booths for the Statue of Liberty National Monument, which comprises the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island;[253] the fort continues to sell tickets for the Statue of Liberty National Monument as of 2023.[254] Statue Cruises, which operates the only ferry line to Liberty Island and Ellis Island, sells ferry tickets inside the fort.[255] Admission to Castle Clinton itself is free, and the National Park Service gives guided tours when the monument is open to the public.[254] The fort also contains a small history exhibit and occasionally hosts concerts.[254] The nonprofit Battery Conservancy is also housed within Castle Clinton.[256][257] According to the NPS, Castle Clinton typically has over three million visitors a year, making it one of the most visited national monuments in the United States.[61]

Restoration edit

 
View of Castle Clinton in 2008

The Castle Clinton National Monument was formally dedicated on October 24, 1950.[258][259] Battery Park reopened to the public two years later, although Castle Clinton had not yet been restored at the time.[260][261] The NPS announced in early 1952 that it would begin restoring the fort's exterior; the project was expected to cost $117,000 (equivalent to $1,289,000 in 2022) and take two years.[262] As part of this project, the NPS reconstructed the fort's original door.[210] Following the partial demolition of Fort Clinton in the 1940s, only the exterior wall remained intact. The interior of the fort was so dilapidated that, according to The New York Times, "not even grass grew in the desolate, cratered parade ground".[30]

In 1954, the New York City Council passed a resolution asking Congress to establish a committee to provide suggestions for restoring Castle Clinton, the Federal Hall National Memorial, and the Statue of Liberty National Monument.[263] The next year, the federal government created the New York City National Shrines Advisory Board.[264][265] The board first convened in February 1956,[266][267] and the federal government allocated $498,500 that July for a renovation of Castle Clinton (equivalent to $5,366,000 in 2022).[268] In February 1957, the board recommended allocating $3 million for the restoration of the three sites.[269] The United States Department of the Interior subsequently postponed the repair project to 1966. This led architect Frederick G. Frost Jr. to propose in 1958 that the fort be renovated for use as a maritime museum and a restaurant.[227] In 1962, New York City parks commissioner Newbold Morris proposed relocating 18 columns from the soon-to-be-demolished Pennsylvania Station to a promenade outside Castle Clinton.[270][271] This never happened, and the columns were instead dumped in a landfill in New Jersey.[272]

Castle Clinton was one of the earliest buildings that the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) considered protecting as a New York City landmark.[273] The LPC designated the fort as a city landmark in November 1965,[274] seven months after the city's landmarks law was signed.[275] Subsequently, Castle Clinton was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on October 15, 1966,[276] the day the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 went into effect.[277]

A restoration of Castle Clinton commenced in August 1968.[278] The work included restoring the exterior and interior walls; adding a shingle roof; removing a moat and other facilities related to the fort's use as an aquarium; and repairing officers' quarters, parade ground, and ammunition storage areas.[278][279] This renovation was supposed to last one year.[279] The federal government postponed funding for further restoration because of the Vietnam War.[280] The NPS commenced a wider-ranging restoration project c. 1972, which cost about $750,000 (equivalent to $5,247,000 in 2022). As part of this project, the officers' quarters were restored, and an exhibit was placed inside a former powder magazine.[30] Preservationists were advocating for Castle Clinton to be used as a performing-arts center by late 1972.[281] The following June, the fort hosted its first concert since the 1850s, a performance commemorating Jenny Lind.[280][282] Castle Clinton reopened on May 25, 1975, with a performance of Beethoven's 9th by the American Symphony Orchestra.[280][283] City and federal officials rededicated the monument the next month.[284]

Use as national monument edit

1970s to 1990s edit

 
Entrance to Castle Clinton

When it reopened, Castle Clinton hosted concerts for the public during summer weekends,[280] and it also hosted exhibits and guided tours.[285] The fort contained dioramas depicting Manhattan at various points in the 19th and 20th centuries.[286] In 1979, the NPS and the Manhattan Cultural Council commissioned four sculptures, which were installed within Castle Clinton's central courtyard.[287] Following a series of thefts and break-ins at Castle Clinton in the early 1980s, the NPS stationed several armed guards outside the fort.[288] In the decade after it was rededicated, the fort was open nine months a year, operating five days per week. NPS officials estimated that the fort had no more than 100,000 annual visitors.[253]

The NPS closed Castle Clinton for renovations in December 1985.[31] It announced plans to install two ticket booths and a waiting area for ferries to the Statue of Liberty National Monument.[31][253] The NPS planned to spend $1.5 million to replace two structures, add exhibitions, restore the roof and parade ground, and reconstruct a doorway that had been sealed in 1974. The fort was to operate every day of the week, year-round,[253] though the NPS subsequently decided to close all national monuments in Manhattan on Sundays.[289] The NPS expected that the fort would attract up to five million visitors a year.[290] A ferry pier was also installed behind Castle Clinton.[291][292] The fort reopened the weekend of July 4, 1986, as a visitor center and ticket office for the Statue of Liberty National Monument.[290][292] Castle Clinton also began selling ferry tickets to Ellis Island in 1990, when that island's main building was converted into a museum.[293][294]

By 1996, the Conservancy for Historic Battery Park was raising $350,000 (equivalent to $653,000 in 2022) for a seasonal tensile structure, to be placed above the fort between April and October of each year. The conservancy wished to raise another $25 million to $30 million and convert Castle Clinton into an educational and cultural center.[295] This was part of a $5.5 million renovation of the adjacent waterfront promenade within Battery Park, which was completed in November 2001, although the tensile structure was not installed.[296] The Battery Park Conservancy had selected Thomas Phifer in 2001 to redesign Castle Clinton as a performing-arts center,[297] but the redesign was stalled for several years.[298]

2000s to present edit

The National Guard occupied Castle Clinton for six weeks after the September 11 attacks in 2001. Castle Clinton reopened to the public on October 22, 2001, though the ferries to the Statue of Liberty National Monument were not operating at the time.[299] That December, the NPS erected a tent with seven body scanners at Castle Clinton, where visitors to the Statue of Liberty National Monument underwent a security screening. The facility could not handle large crowds, often resulting in waits of more than one hour.[300] The NPS considered relocating the security-screening facilities to the nearby City Pier A in 2003 but decided against it.[301] Although the security tent in front of Castle Clinton had been intended as a temporary measure, it remained in place for more than a decade.[300] The security screening facilities were relocated to Ellis Island in 2013.[300][302]

During excavations for the nearby South Ferry station in late 2005, builders found the remains of a stone wall dating from the late 17th or 18th centuries.[303] Workers subsequently found another wall under the site,[304] and the NPS exhibited part of one of the walls inside Castle Clinton.[305][306] As of 2023, Castle Clinton remains a visitor center and ticket office for the Statue of Liberty National Monument.[254]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The New York state government's Board of Commissioners of Emigration processed 9,639,635 total immigrants passed through the Port of New York between 1847 (when the board was established) and 1890. Castle Garden processed 8,280,917 immigrants between 1855 and 1889; during that period, the United States had 10,956,910 total immigrants.[62] The Commissioners of Emigration processed an additional two million immigrants between 1847 and 1855, but they did not pass through Castle Garden.[64]

Citations edit

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  5. ^ Jackson 2010, p. 472.
  6. ^ Gilder 1936, p. 113.
  7. ^ National Park Service 1960, p. 8 (PDF p. 13).
  8. ^ a b Gilder 1936, p. 129.
  9. ^ National Park Service 1960, p. 9 (PDF p. 14).
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Sources edit

  • Brodsky Lawrence, Vera (1995). Strong on Music: The New York Music Scene in the Days of George Templeton. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226470115.
  • Castle Clinton (Report). National Register of Historic Places, National Park Service. October 15, 1966.
  • Gilder, Rodman (1936). The Battery: the story of the adventurers, artists, statesmen, grafters, songsters, mariners, pirates, guzzlers, Indians, thieves, stuffed-shirts, turn-coats, millionaires, inventors, poets, heroes, soldiers, harlots, bootlicks, nobles, nonentities, burghers, martyrs, and murderers who played their parts during full four centuries on Manhattan Island's tip. Houghton Mifflin.
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  • Martin, George Whitney (2011). Verdi in America: Oberto Through Rigoletto. Eastman studies in music. University of Rochester Press. ISBN 978-1-58046-388-1.
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  • Svejda, George J. (1968). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on July 2, 2007.

Further reading edit

External links edit

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  •   Media related to Castle Clinton National Monument at Wikimedia Commons
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  • , searchable database of 13.3 million immigrants arriving in New York before 1892 (90% complete)

castle, clinton, also, known, fort, clinton, castle, garden, restored, circular, sandstone, fort, within, battery, park, southern, manhattan, york, city, built, from, 1808, 1811, first, american, immigration, station, predating, ellis, island, more, than, mill. Castle Clinton also known as Fort Clinton and Castle Garden is a restored circular sandstone fort within Battery Park at the southern end of Manhattan in New York City Built from 1808 to 1811 it was the first American immigration station predating Ellis Island More than 7 5 million people arrived in the United States at Fort Clinton between 1855 and 1890 Over its active life it has also functioned as a beer garden exhibition hall theater and public aquarium The structure is a New York City designated landmark and a United States national monument and it is listed on the National Register of Historic Places Castle Clinton National MonumentCastle GardenU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S National MonumentNew York City Landmark No 0029Photo from Historic American Buildings SurveyLocationBattery Park Manhattan New York CityCoordinates40 42 13 N 74 01 00 W 40 7035 N 74 0168 W 40 7035 74 0168Area1 acre 0 40 ha Built1808ArchitectJohn McComb Jr Jonathan Williams U S War DepartmentVisitation3 471 661 2022 1 WebsiteCastle Clinton National MonumentNRHP reference No 66000537NYCL No 0029Significant datesAdded to NRHPOctober 15 1966 2 Designated NMONAugust 12 1946Designated NYCLNovember 23 1965Fort Clinton was originally known as the West Battery or the Southwest Battery occupying an artificial island off the shore of Lower Manhattan Designed by John McComb Jr with Jonathan Williams as consulting engineer the fort was garrisoned in 1812 but was never used for warfare In 1824 the New York City government converted Fort Clinton into a 6 000 seat entertainment venue known as Castle Garden which operated until 1855 Castle Garden then served as an immigrant processing depot for 35 years When the processing facilities were moved to Ellis Island in 1892 Castle Garden was converted into the first home of the New York Aquarium which opened in 1896 and continued operating until 1941 The fort was expanded and renovated several times during this period In the 1940s New York City parks commissioner Robert Moses proposed demolishing Fort Clinton as part of the construction of the nearby Brooklyn Battery Tunnel This led to a prolonged debate over the fort s preservation as well as the creation of the Castle Clinton National Monument in 1946 The National Park Service took over the fort in 1950 After several unsuccessful attempts to restore the fort Castle Clinton reopened in 1975 following an extensive renovation Since 1986 it has served as a visitor center and a departure point for ferries to the Statue of Liberty National Monument Contents 1 Original use 2 Entertainment venue 3 Immigrant landing and registration depot 3 1 Conversion and operation 3 1 1 1850s and 1860s 3 1 2 1870s and 1880s 3 2 Closure 4 Aquarium 4 1 Conversion and opening 4 2 1900s to 1930s 5 Demolition attempts and preservation 5 1 Initial plans 5 2 Preservation as national monument 6 Federal government ownership 6 1 Restoration 6 2 Use as national monument 6 2 1 1970s to 1990s 6 2 2 2000s to present 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 8 3 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksOriginal use editCastle Clinton stands slightly west of where Fort Amsterdam was built in 1626 when New York City was known by the Dutch name New Amsterdam 3 Fort Amsterdam was demolished by 1790 after the American Revolutionary War 4 5 6 Proposals for a new fort were made after two separate war scares involving Britain and France in the 1790s but neither plan was ultimately carried out 7 By 1805 there were growing tensions between Britain and the U S marking the run up to the War of 1812 Late that year Lieutenant Colonel Jonathan Williams of the United States Army Engineers began planning a series of fortifications in New York Harbor 8 Williams was part of a group of three commissioners who in 1807 submitted a report that recommended the construction of such fortifications 8 9 Fort Clinton originally known as West Battery and sometimes as Southwest Battery 10 11 12 was built on an artificial island created just off shore when the fort was built 11 Construction began in 1808 and the fort was completed in 1811 4 10 13 14 although modifications continued through the 1820s 15 Designed by John McComb Jr with Jonathan Williams as consulting engineer 16 17 West Battery was roughly circular with a radius of approximately 92 feet 28 m About one eighth of the circle had a straight wall instead of a curved wall 11 15 The walls were made of red sandstone quarried in New Jersey 18 The fort had 28 thirty two pounder cannons 11 15 A wooden bridge led from the fort to the rest of Manhattan 19 West Battery was intended to complement the three tiered Castle Williams the East Battery on Governors Island 20 The fort was completed in late 1811 and it was garrisoned in 1812 21 However the fort was never used for warfare 20 and British and American forces signed a peace treaty in February 1815 22 By then West Battery was renamed Fort Clinton in honor of New York City Mayor DeWitt Clinton who eventually became Governor of New York 11 4 20 The castle itself was converted to administrative headquarters for the Army Simultaneously at the end of the war there was a public movement to build a park in the Battery area 20 A 1816 proposal to construct two small office buildings at Fort Clinton was canceled due to public opposition and the castle lay dormant for three years 23 20 The Common Council of New York proposed in May 1820 that the United States government transfer ownership of the castle to the city government but the United States Congress declined to pass legislation to that effect 20 By 1820 Fort Clinton was being used as a paymaster s quarters and storage area 22 The United States Army stopped using the fort in 1821 and it was ceded to the city by an act of Congress in March 1822 22 24 25 By then the bridge leading to Fort Clinton was frequently used by fishermen who were catching fish from the bridge 11 which was connected to the shore at the foot of Broadway 19 Entertainment venue edit nbsp The Bay and Harbor of New York by Samuel Waugh 1814 1885 depicting the castle in 1848 nbsp First appearance of Jenny Lind in the U S at Castle Garden September 11 1850 lithograph by Currier and Ives The fort was leased to the New York City government as an entertainment venue in June 1824 24 the city originally paid 1 400 a year for five years 26 The city government subleased the fort to Francis Fitch Arthur Roorbach and J Rathbone 12 Fort Clinton became Castle Garden which served as a beer garden exhibition hall and theater The venue contained 50 boxes each with a table and eight seats Atop Castle Garden was a circular promenade with a canopy above it 12 Castle Garden was surrounded by a gravel promenade and shrubbery atop a seawall 26 The New York Daily Tribune wrote that the fort afterward became associated with scenes of peace and popular amusement 27 One critic described Castle Garden in 1828 as a favored place of public resort 26 The fort reopened as Castle Garden on July 3 1824 12 24 One of the fort s first events was in September 1824 when 6 000 people attended an event honoring General Lafayette 12 28 Over the years the fort hosted other political figures such as U S presidents Andrew Jackson 29 John Tyler 28 and James K Polk 28 as well as Hungarian governor president Lajos Kossuth 28 29 Inventor Samuel Morse hosted a demonstration of a telegraph machine at Castle Garden in 1835 29 30 Around 1845 Castle Garden was converted into a theater when a roof was built above the fort s interior 31 32 33 The structure contained 6 000 seats 31 Officials were planning to expand the nearby Battery Park by 1848 adding landfill around Castle Garden to bring the park to 24 acres 9 7 ha 34 35 In 1850 Swedish soprano Jenny Lind gave her first performances in the United States with two concerts at Castle Gardens 36 37 tickets for these concerts cost up to 225 equivalent to 7 915 in 2022 38 A year later Castle Garden started selling concert tickets at popular prices of up to 50 cents equivalent to 18 in 2022 39 In the early 1850s European dancing star Lola Montez performed her tarantula dance 40 and Louis Antoine Jullien gave dozens of successful concerts mixing classical and light music 40 The Max Maretzek Italian Opera Company staged the New York premieres of two operas at Castle Garden Gaetano Donizetti s Marino Faliero on June 17 1851 and Giuseppe Verdi s Luisa Miller on July 20 1854 41 42 43 The fort was leased to Theodore J Allen for five years on May 1 1854 Under the terms of the lease Allen could expand the island around Castle Garden but he could not infill the channel between Castle Garden and Battery Park 44 Immigrant landing and registration depot edit nbsp Aerial view illustration of Manhattan showing Castle Garden at its tip c 1880Castle Garden served as the first immigration depot in the U S from 1855 to 1890 30 45 Most of the fort except for the section along the shoreline was surrounded by a 1 000 foot long 300 m wooden fence 46 47 The fence measuring 12 or 13 feet 3 7 or 4 0 m high was intended to keep out unauthorized immigrants 48 49 At the center of the fort was the waiting area known as the rotunda 50 The immigrant registration depot included a quadrangle of desks arranged around this waiting area as well as restrooms flanking the main entrance 51 52 The waiting area also had wooden benches Although there are no precise figures for the capacity of the waiting area various sources give a capacity of between 2 000 and 4 000 53 An enclosed balcony was installed around the waiting area circa 1869 54 The residential outbuildings around the fort became offices 46 55 Before being processed at Castle Garden immigrants underwent medical inspections at the Marine Hospital on Staten Island where ill immigrants were quarantined 56 57 Those who passed their medical inspection boarded a steamship which traveled to a dock along the northern side of Castle Garden the dock faced away from Battery Park preventing immigrants from entering Manhattan before they had been processed Immigrants were inspected a second time before entering the fort Inside the depot a New York state emigration clerk registered each immigrant and directed them to another desk where a second clerk advised each immigrant about their destination Each of the immigrants then received a bottle of bathwater and returned to the dock where their baggage was collected 56 The New York Central Railroad and the New York and Erie Railroad sold train tickets at Castle Garden as well 57 58 Many of Castle Garden s original immigrant passenger records were stored at Ellis Island where they were destroyed in a fire in 1897 59 Sources cite 7 5 million 60 or 8 million immigrants as having been processed at Castle Garden 48 61 These account for the vast majority of the nearly 10 million immigrants who passed through the Port of New York between 1847 and 1890 62 63 a The majority of immigrants processed at Castle Garden were from European countries namely Denmark England Germany Ireland Italy Russia Scotland and Sweden 65 66 The facility s name was pronounced Kesselgarten by German immigrants and by Yiddish speaking Eastern European Jews The word kesselgarten became a generic term for any situation that was noisy confusing or chaotic or where a babel of languages was spoken a reference to the multitude of languages heard spoken by the immigrants from many countries at the site 67 In 2005 The New York Times estimated that one sixth of all Americans were descended from an immigrant who had passed through Castle Garden 48 Conversion and operation edit 1850s and 1860s edit nbsp Interior view of the State Emigrant Landing DepotThe New York state government s Board of Emigration Commissioners had been established in 1847 to operate medical facilities and a registration center for immigrants Although the board had acquired the Marine Hospital on Staten Island soon after its establishment their efforts to open a registration center were unsuccessful for several years 68 Prior to the establishment of the registration center unethical ticket booking agents for transport lines frequently approached newly arrived immigrants only to abscond with the immigrants savings 48 The board took over Allen s lease of Castle Garden in May 1855 and made some modifications 35 leasing the fort for 8 000 annually equivalent to 251 257 in 2022 69 Several local residents attempted to prevent the fort from being converted into an immigrant registration depot claiming that the state government s lease was illegal and that the newly arrived immigrants would spread disease 49 70 A judge for the state s Superior Court ruled in June 1855 that work on the immigrant processing depot could proceed 47 71 The Emigrant Landing Depot opened within the fort on August 1 1855 72 and the depot began processing immigrants two days later 73 74 The identity of the first migrant processed at the fort is unknown Of the first five ships to arrive at Castle Garden English laborer Richard Richards was the first person on the manifest of the largest ship 48 Although the New York state government endorsed Castle Garden s conversion to an immigrant processing depot the New York City government opposed the move and accused the Emigration Commissioners of violating the terms of their lease 75 76 Many complaints about Castle Garden came from runners representing booking agents and boarding house operators who could not intercept unwitting immigrants because of Castle Garden s strict policies 77 The New York state government s initial four year lease of Castle Garden expired in 1859 and state officials renewed their lease annually for the next ten years By then state and city officials could not agree on who owned the depot 78 The city state and federal governments continued to fight over the depot s ownership through the 1870s 79 Although Castle Garden staff often mistreated immigrants historian George J Svejda wrote that the depot was still the best place for immigrants upon their landing on America s shores 58 In 1864 to convince immigrants to enlist in the United States Armed Forces during the American Civil War the County Bounty Committee erected a recruitment center next to Castle Garden 80 81 Two years later the Board of Emigration Commissioners constructed a one story labor exchange building a waiting room and an information office and they made repairs to Castle Garden 82 The fort s exterior remained largely unchanged over the years but the interior and many of the fort s wooden outbuildings were frequently renovated 50 Battery Park was expanded circa 1869 using landfill 83 at which point the island containing Castle Garden was incorporated into the rest of Manhattan Island 11 26 The rotunda was extensively restored at this time and a wooden balcony was installed 54 By then The New York Times wrote that the surrounding Battery Park was a haven for the runners who approached innocent Irish and German newcomers offering them nonexistent lodgings for their money 84 1870s and 1880s edit nbsp Castle Garden ferry landing and barge officeBy the early 1870s Castle Garden s information bureau employed staff members who could speak over a dozen languages 85 The New York state government encouraged immigrants to use other ports of entry to reduce overcrowding so it issued a head tax on every immigrant who passed through Castle Garden 86 This measure was largely ineffective as The New York Times wrote in 1874 Castle Garden is so well known in Europe that few emigrants can be induced to sail to any other destination 86 87 By then the immigration depot was in poor condition with rotting floors and tottering offices and benches 88 The Board of Emigration Commissioners lost a significant source of income in 1875 when the Supreme Court of the United States invalidated a New York state law that required steamship companies to pay a head tax or put up a bond for each immigrant Afterward the commissioners sought funding from the state legislature 89 90 Due to budgetary shortfalls the Emigration Commissioners disbanded the labor bureau in 1875 91 92 although the German and Irish Emigrant Societies took over the labor bureau s operation 91 Congress passed the Page Act of 1875 the first restrictive federal immigration law in the United States during this time 48 93 The structure was severely damaged in a fire on July 30 1876 94 95 96 Castle Garden s exterior remained intact as did the outbuildings to the north of the fort but the interior was completely destroyed 46 96 In the aftermath of the fire several city officials proposed shuttering the Castle Garden immigration center and restoring the fort as a venue for public enjoyment 97 Nonetheless the New York state government awarded a contract for Castle Garden s reconstruction in September 1876 98 99 and it reopened on November 27 1876 98 100 As part of the 30 000 project equivalent to 824 438 in 2022 39 officials installed windows in the embrasures along the facade and they added two doorways 46 100 After the nearby Barge Office was completed in 1879 immigrants disembarked at the Barge Office where officers examined immigrants baggage The baggage collection duties soon returned to Castle Garden and the Barge Office became a storage area 91 New York state officials unsuccessfully attempted to reinstate a head tax at Castle Garden in 1881 101 The following year Congress passed the Immigration Act of 1882 which imposed a head tax on non U S citizens who passed through American ports as well as restricted certain classes of people from immigrating to America 48 102 Under the 1882 act the Emigration Commissioners earned 50 cents for each immigrant who passed through Castle Garden 102 Later that year the Emigration Commissioners began collecting rent from the various companies and agents with offices at Castle Garden and it started collecting taxes from boardinghouse operators 103 The Immigration Act of 1882 also prompted a jurisdictional dispute between the city state and federal governments 104 For example in 1885 the state government refused to allocate 10 000 for repairs to the depot s ferry dock because the city technically owned Castle Garden 104 The state government finally provided money for repairs in 1887 105 106 Closure edit By the late 1880s Castle Garden had become overcrowded and unhygienic and there were numerous reports that Castle Garden officials were mistreating immigrants 107 Robert Chesebrough a businessman who owned several structures around Battery Park had also advocated for the closure of the Castle Garden processing depot 108 The Chicago Daily Tribune wrote that the structure was a dilapidated rotunda surrounded by equally ramshackle structures for the housing of the strangers on these shores 63 The Emigration Commissioners had dismissed many of Castle Garden s employees in September 1889 because of declining income further compounding the facility s issues 109 110 Federal and state officials also had difficulty sharing jurisdiction of Castle Garden state officials reportedly did not enforce federal laws as it was not part of their duties 109 The federal government notified New York state officials in February 1890 that it would take over immigrant processing duties at Castle Garden within sixty days 111 112 Federal officials planned to construct a new immigrant processing center at another location ultimately selecting a site on Ellis Island 113 Castle Garden closed on April 18 1890 113 114 115 The immigrant processing center was temporarily relocated to the Barge Office 116 117 118 The state s Commissioners of Emigration had forbidden the federal government to continue to use Castle Garden until the Ellis Island immigrant depot was completed 118 The new registration office on Ellis Island was completed in 1892 33 In its last year of operation Castle Garden processed 450 394 travelers 364 086 of whom were immigrants 48 When the immigrant registration depot closed city officials contemplated converting Castle Garden into an amusement resort 69 The New York state government formally transferred Castle Garden to the city government on December 31 1890 119 By the next year city officials had removed the wooden fence around Castle Garden and they were planning to demolish the various outbuildings around the fort 120 The New York Naval Reserve s First Battalion considered relocating to Castle Garden at that time 121 122 and it subsequently used Castle Garden as a drill hall during the early 1890s 123 124 Aquarium edit nbsp The New York Aquarium was once housed at Castle Garden image before 1923 See also New York Aquarium History Castle Garden was the site of the New York City Aquarium from 1896 to 1941 60 45 The structure was extensively altered and roofed over to a height of several stories though the original masonry fort remained 4 125 When the fort was converted into an aquarium the adjacent section of Battery Park was extended into the Hudson River 46 The interior of Castle Garden contained two circular colonnades which supported a roof with skylights Above the center of the fort was a green and yellow dome with a verse of Scripture Habakkuk 1 15 inscribed into the dome s base 126 The aquarium could accommodate 10 000 fish and other species 46 At the center of the ground story was a large circular pool surrounded by six smaller elliptical pools 127 128 Fish and other marine species were loaded into the aquarium through a doorway at one end of the fort 129 The perimeter of the aquarium was originally surrounded by about 100 tanks of varying sizes placed on two levels 127 130 The tanks were up to 6 feet 1 8 m deep with 1 inch thick 2 5 cm plate glass panes and white tiled surfaces 127 131 By 1907 there were seven large tanks at the center of the ground story 94 large tanks and 26 smaller tanks on the walls and 30 reserve tanks 132 The tanks were supplied by fresh water from the New York City water supply system and salt water from the Hudson River 133 Salt water passed through two bronze filters while fresh water passed through two copper filters the four filters could collectively process over 200 000 U S gallons 760 000 L per day 128 134 Conversion and opening edit The New York City government had proposed converting Castle Garden into an aquarium in 1891 135 The following February the New York State Legislature passed a bill allowing the city government to create an aquarium within Castle Garden 136 137 Julius F Munckwitz Jr drew up preliminary plans for an aquarium which he presented to New York City s board of park commissioners in mid 1892 138 The state government voted to allocate 150 000 for the construction of an aquarium within Castle Garden 123 139 The aquarium s architect of record H T Woodman reported in April 1894 that several of the tanks were ready for use 140 141 During the renovation process the architect alleged that the tiles in the tanks had not been installed properly 142 which led to a protracted dispute 143 The city government allocated another 25 000 for the aquarium s completion at the end of 1894 equivalent to 846 000 in 2022 144 The aquarium was supposed to have been completed by mid 1894 140 141 but it did not open for another two years 145 By mid 1895 the aquarium was delayed by what the New York Tribune characterized as gross stupidity 146 For instance the skylights on the roof acted as a greenhouse that raised the temperature of the water in the tanks and the saltwater fish in the aquarium were dying off because of the low salinity of the Hudson River The Tribune estimated that these mistakes had increased the project s cost by 35 000 equivalent to 1 231 000 in 2022 146 Local media reported in September 1896 that the aquarium was largely completed 130 147 At the time the tanks contained 45 species some of which had been in the aquarium for two years 147 Ultimately it cost 175 000 to renovate Castle Garden into an aquarium equivalent to 6 156 000 in 2022 139 The aquarium opened on December 10 1896 145 148 following a soft opening the previous day 149 150 The aquarium attracted thousands of visitors on its opening day 133 148 and it averaged over 10 000 visitors per day during its first several months 139 Visitors were not charged admission which may have contributed to the aquarium s popularity 151 The aquarium had two million guests within a year 151 and it had 5 5 million total guests by May 1900 152 1900s to 1930s edit nbsp Interior of Castle ClintonIn March 1902 New York state legislators proposed transferring operation of the New York Aquarium to the New York Zoological Society 153 City officials had suggested the idea to remove political interference from the aquarium s operation 154 The New York City Board of Estimate authorized mayor Seth Low to lease the aquarium to the Zoological Society in July 1902 155 and the Zoological Society took over on October 31 1902 with Charles Haskins Townsend as the aquarium s director 156 154 Townsend soon made several modifications to Castle Garden s facilities He covered the tanks tiled surfaces with rocks 157 158 as well as reconfiguring each of the tanks pipes to reduce energy usage 159 The Zoological Society added a classroom next to the fort 158 and it installed a 100 000 U S gallon 380 000 L tank underneath the fort to store saltwater 160 The organization also repainted the interior for the first time in Castle Garden s history 126 158 These modifications cost over 30 000 equivalent to 1 015 000 in 2022 158 The fort s design continued to pose issues for example aquarium officials discovered in 1905 that the roof skylights were causing some of the fish to become blind 161 The Zoological Society installed new pipes at Castle Garden in 1908 162 Meanwhile by the early 20th century city officials were planning to rebuild Battery Park 163 and they considered replacing Castle Garden with a skyscraper 164 By January 1911 officials instead planned to expand Castle Garden 165 166 adding semicircular wings to the west and east for over 1 million 166 167 Each wing was to contain three tiers of tanks 167 and classroom space 168 The Zoological Society asked the Board of Estimate to allocate 1 75 million to the renovation 169 170 but the board still had not funded the renovation of Castle Garden by 1916 171 Townsend said the aquarium s mechanical facilities needed major upgrades 171 172 according to Townsend the mechanical equipment under the fort was flooded at high tide and power was provided by coal bunkers which had to be manually replenished every four days 171 In addition the fort had never been properly renovated for the aquarium s use and the second story s wooden frame was flammable Townsend said the annexes would not only provide additional exhibition space but also allow the mechanical facilities to be upgraded 172 In 1921 Townsend announced that the Zoological Society would spend 75 000 equivalent to 1 231 000 in 2022 to construct an electric plant in the basement replacing a steam plant on the south side of the fort and then install two tanks in the space formerly occupied by the steam plant 173 This work was funded by a bequest from Mrs Russell Sage 174 The same year a bust of Jenny Lind was dedicated and installed at the center of the fort 175 The Board of Estimate voted in December 1921 to provide 105 000 for the construction of an additional story atop the fort 176 By early 1923 the Zoological Society was carrying out the renovations at a cost of 86 000 equivalent to 1 477 000 in 2022 177 In June 1923 the board voted to give 76 500 for the construction of an additional story above the fort 178 179 The Zoological Society planned to add deeper tanks on the second floor expanding exhibition space by 20 percent By then the aquarium had two million annual visitors 174 The expansion was largely completed by early 1924 180 Townsend announced in 1926 that Castle Garden would undergo further modifications at a cost of 225 000 equivalent to 3 719 000 in 2022 The plans included constructing a third story for workrooms and laboratory space installing tanks behind the fort adding a new mechanical plant in the basement and covering the facade with a gray cement finish 181 Several local residents expressed opposition to these modifications and created the Battery Park Association to advocate against the plans 182 183 By the late 1920s there were plans to reconstruct Battery Park into a formal vista As part of this plan an amphitheater would have been constructed in the southern end of Battery Park complementing Castle Garden at the northern end 184 The Castle Garden Aquarium remained popular in the 1930s with two million visitors per year 185 Two laboratories were built on the structure s third story in 1940 186 and a new metal dome was installed above the fort the same year 187 By then the aquarium s acting director Charles M Breder Jr wished to develop a new building nearby as he believed the aquarium had outgrown Castle Garden 188 189 Demolition attempts and preservation editInitial plans edit In February 1941 Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority Commissioner Robert Moses announced that he would demolish Castle Garden when the park was rebuilt during the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel s construction 190 191 He justified the demolition by saying that the fort had poor lighting and ventilation and that it required extensive repairs 191 In response the New York Historical Society proposed restoring the fort and turning it into a maritime museum 192 George McAneny a former mayor and the chairman of the Regional Plan Association s board proposed restoring Castle Garden 193 194 he continued to advocate the fort s preservation for nine years 195 Moses opposed efforts to preserve Castle Garden saying that the old fort never fired a shot 196 The city government closed the New York Aquarium and moved some fish and turtles to other aquariums in late 1941 197 198 other fish were released into the Atlantic Ocean 199 A new aquarium was ultimately built on Coney Island in 1957 200 nbsp Castle Clinton was partially demolished in the 1940s Moses presented plans for a reconstruction of Battery Park to the Board of Estimate in March 1942 in which the fort was to be replaced by a landscaped promenade 201 202 The board voted in favor of removing the fort from Battery Park that June 196 203 City officials quickly placed the fort for sale allowing potential buyers to preserve the fort by relocating it 204 but the officials rejected the sole bid from a Brooklyn junkyard operator who offered 1 120 equivalent to 20 060 in 2022 205 The Fine Arts Federation of New York held an architectural design competition in August 1942 soliciting plans for a renovation of Castle Garden 206 207 Despite ongoing disputes over the fort s fate 207 workers began removing metal from Castle Garden on September 25 while the rest of the building remained in place for the time being 208 209 The fort s original door attached to the wall using 768 iron bolts was also removed 210 An engineer hired by Moses to conduct a structural survey of Fort Clinton reported a pronounced vertical crack on the fort s walls 211 Preservationists asked a New York state judge to grant an injunction to prevent demolition 212 213 but a judge declined the request in April 1943 214 Preservationists again petitioned the Board of Estimate to preserve the building but the board voted in October 1945 to demolish the fort 215 216 Preservation as national monument edit Albert S Bard Walter D Binger and other civic reformers continued to advocate in favor of preserving the fort In July 1946 U S representative Sol Bloom introduced a bill to designate Castle Garden as a U S national monument 217 218 Both the House and the Senate approved the legislation 219 220 and president Harry S Truman signed the bill into law on August 12 1946 enabling the United States Department of the Interior to determine whether to take over the fort 29 221 At the time the city government still owned the property and the fort could not become a national monument unless the federal government took ownership 222 Engineers estimated that it would cost between 40 000 and 100 000 to preserve the fort while the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel was being constructed 223 The city government would only retain the fort if the federal government agreed to pay for its restoration though Moses did suggest constructing a monument on the site 224 After the United States Congress declined to allocate funding for Fort Clinton s renovation the Board of Estimate voted yet again to demolish the fort in July 1947 225 226 Some demolition work did take place 227 but the structure was not totally demolished due to a lack of funding 228 After Interior undersecretary Oscar L Chapman indicated in August 1947 that Congress would allocate money to the project in 1948 the board voted to delay further action for one year In the meantime the city allocated 50 000 equivalent to 655 000 in 2022 to shore up the fort s southeastern corner while the tunnel was being built 229 230 In March 1948 a New York State Assembly committee refused to vote on a bill that would have allowed the federal government to take over Fort Clinton 231 232 Two months later the Board of Estimate voted to demolish the castle for the sixth time 233 The American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society continued to advocate for the fort s preservation asking the New York Supreme Court to restrict the city from demolishing Fort Clinton in July 1948 234 235 The state Supreme Court issued an injunction that December requiring the New York City Art Commission to approve any proposal to demolish the fort 236 237 but the Supreme Court s Appellate Division struck down this injunction in March 1949 238 239 By early 1949 U S president Harry S Truman had also expressed support for preserving Fort Clinton 240 241 The Assembly voted in March 1949 to cede the fort to the federal government 242 243 and the New York State Senate passed an identical bill 244 New York governor Thomas E Dewey signed the bill the next month allowing the city to transfer the fort to the federal government 245 Separately the New York City Council voted to allow the New York state government to take over Fort Clinton if the federal government did not want to take over ownership 246 The U S House voted in October to allocate 165 750 for the fort s restoration equivalent to 2 039 000 in 2022 247 248 allowing the National Park Service NPS to start restoring the fort after the federal government gained ownership 249 The city s mayor William O Dwyer supported the fort s preservation but due to legal technicalities the city government did not transfer ownership of the fort for several months 228 On July 18 1950 the city deeded the land and castle to the federal government 250 251 Federal government ownership editThe modern day Castle Clinton is a one story structure with a radius of 92 feet 28 m The roof above the fort s interior has largely been removed and there is a nearly circular open air parade ground at the center of the fort 46 It is surrounded by a wall measuring 8 feet 2 4 m thick 32 46 The stucco on the facade was removed under the National Park Service s ownership and the brownstone and ashlar exterior walls were restored to their original condition Underneath the walls is a rough stone foundation The circumference of the fort contains a portico with wooden columns surrounding a canopy There is also a gravel courtyard brick powder magazines and two subterranean water tanks covered by wooden trapdoors 46 The SeaGlass Carousel is just southeast of the modern day fort 252 Since 1986 the fort s interior has housed an information kiosk and ticket booths for the Statue of Liberty National Monument which comprises the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island 253 the fort continues to sell tickets for the Statue of Liberty National Monument as of 2023 update 254 Statue Cruises which operates the only ferry line to Liberty Island and Ellis Island sells ferry tickets inside the fort 255 Admission to Castle Clinton itself is free and the National Park Service gives guided tours when the monument is open to the public 254 The fort also contains a small history exhibit and occasionally hosts concerts 254 The nonprofit Battery Conservancy is also housed within Castle Clinton 256 257 According to the NPS Castle Clinton typically has over three million visitors a year making it one of the most visited national monuments in the United States 61 Restoration edit nbsp View of Castle Clinton in 2008The Castle Clinton National Monument was formally dedicated on October 24 1950 258 259 Battery Park reopened to the public two years later although Castle Clinton had not yet been restored at the time 260 261 The NPS announced in early 1952 that it would begin restoring the fort s exterior the project was expected to cost 117 000 equivalent to 1 289 000 in 2022 and take two years 262 As part of this project the NPS reconstructed the fort s original door 210 Following the partial demolition of Fort Clinton in the 1940s only the exterior wall remained intact The interior of the fort was so dilapidated that according to The New York Times not even grass grew in the desolate cratered parade ground 30 In 1954 the New York City Council passed a resolution asking Congress to establish a committee to provide suggestions for restoring Castle Clinton the Federal Hall National Memorial and the Statue of Liberty National Monument 263 The next year the federal government created the New York City National Shrines Advisory Board 264 265 The board first convened in February 1956 266 267 and the federal government allocated 498 500 that July for a renovation of Castle Clinton equivalent to 5 366 000 in 2022 268 In February 1957 the board recommended allocating 3 million for the restoration of the three sites 269 The United States Department of the Interior subsequently postponed the repair project to 1966 This led architect Frederick G Frost Jr to propose in 1958 that the fort be renovated for use as a maritime museum and a restaurant 227 In 1962 New York City parks commissioner Newbold Morris proposed relocating 18 columns from the soon to be demolished Pennsylvania Station to a promenade outside Castle Clinton 270 271 This never happened and the columns were instead dumped in a landfill in New Jersey 272 Castle Clinton was one of the earliest buildings that the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission LPC considered protecting as a New York City landmark 273 The LPC designated the fort as a city landmark in November 1965 274 seven months after the city s landmarks law was signed 275 Subsequently Castle Clinton was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on October 15 1966 276 the day the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 went into effect 277 A restoration of Castle Clinton commenced in August 1968 278 The work included restoring the exterior and interior walls adding a shingle roof removing a moat and other facilities related to the fort s use as an aquarium and repairing officers quarters parade ground and ammunition storage areas 278 279 This renovation was supposed to last one year 279 The federal government postponed funding for further restoration because of the Vietnam War 280 The NPS commenced a wider ranging restoration project c 1972 which cost about 750 000 equivalent to 5 247 000 in 2022 As part of this project the officers quarters were restored and an exhibit was placed inside a former powder magazine 30 Preservationists were advocating for Castle Clinton to be used as a performing arts center by late 1972 281 The following June the fort hosted its first concert since the 1850s a performance commemorating Jenny Lind 280 282 Castle Clinton reopened on May 25 1975 with a performance of Beethoven s 9th by the American Symphony Orchestra 280 283 City and federal officials rededicated the monument the next month 284 Use as national monument edit 1970s to 1990s edit nbsp Entrance to Castle ClintonWhen it reopened Castle Clinton hosted concerts for the public during summer weekends 280 and it also hosted exhibits and guided tours 285 The fort contained dioramas depicting Manhattan at various points in the 19th and 20th centuries 286 In 1979 the NPS and the Manhattan Cultural Council commissioned four sculptures which were installed within Castle Clinton s central courtyard 287 Following a series of thefts and break ins at Castle Clinton in the early 1980s the NPS stationed several armed guards outside the fort 288 In the decade after it was rededicated the fort was open nine months a year operating five days per week NPS officials estimated that the fort had no more than 100 000 annual visitors 253 The NPS closed Castle Clinton for renovations in December 1985 31 It announced plans to install two ticket booths and a waiting area for ferries to the Statue of Liberty National Monument 31 253 The NPS planned to spend 1 5 million to replace two structures add exhibitions restore the roof and parade ground and reconstruct a doorway that had been sealed in 1974 The fort was to operate every day of the week year round 253 though the NPS subsequently decided to close all national monuments in Manhattan on Sundays 289 The NPS expected that the fort would attract up to five million visitors a year 290 A ferry pier was also installed behind Castle Clinton 291 292 The fort reopened the weekend of July 4 1986 as a visitor center and ticket office for the Statue of Liberty National Monument 290 292 Castle Clinton also began selling ferry tickets to Ellis Island in 1990 when that island s main building was converted into a museum 293 294 By 1996 the Conservancy for Historic Battery Park was raising 350 000 equivalent to 653 000 in 2022 for a seasonal tensile structure to be placed above the fort between April and October of each year The conservancy wished to raise another 25 million to 30 million and convert Castle Clinton into an educational and cultural center 295 This was part of a 5 5 million renovation of the adjacent waterfront promenade within Battery Park which was completed in November 2001 although the tensile structure was not installed 296 The Battery Park Conservancy had selected Thomas Phifer in 2001 to redesign Castle Clinton as a performing arts center 297 but the redesign was stalled for several years 298 2000s to present edit The National Guard occupied Castle Clinton for six weeks after the September 11 attacks in 2001 Castle Clinton reopened to the public on October 22 2001 though the ferries to the Statue of Liberty National Monument were not operating at the time 299 That December the NPS erected a tent with seven body scanners at Castle Clinton where visitors to the Statue of Liberty National Monument underwent a security screening The facility could not handle large crowds often resulting in waits of more than one hour 300 The NPS considered relocating the security screening facilities to the nearby City Pier A in 2003 but decided against it 301 Although the security tent in front of Castle Clinton had been intended as a temporary measure it remained in place for more than a decade 300 The security screening facilities were relocated to Ellis Island in 2013 300 302 During excavations for the nearby South Ferry station in late 2005 builders found the remains of a stone wall dating from the late 17th or 18th centuries 303 Workers subsequently found another wall under the site 304 and the NPS exhibited part of one of the walls inside Castle Clinton 305 306 As of 2023 update Castle Clinton remains a visitor center and ticket office for the Statue of Liberty National Monument 254 See also edit nbsp Architecture portal nbsp New York City portal nbsp NRHP portalList of national monuments of the United States List of New York City Designated Landmarks in Manhattan below 14th Street National Register of Historic Places listings in Manhattan below 14th StreetReferences editNotes edit The New York state government s Board of Commissioners of Emigration processed 9 639 635 total immigrants passed through the Port of New York between 1847 when the board was established and 1890 Castle Garden processed 8 280 917 immigrants between 1855 and 1889 during that period the United States had 10 956 910 total immigrants 62 The Commissioners of Emigration processed an additional two million immigrants between 1847 and 1855 but they did not pass through Castle Garden 64 Citations edit Annual Park Ranking Report for Recreation Visits in 2022 National Park Service Retrieved July 23 2023 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service March 13 2009 National Park Service 1960 p 5 PDF p 10 a b c d The Battery Highlights NYC Parks New York City Department of Parks amp Recreation June 26 1939 Archived from the original on November 29 2009 Retrieved May 7 2019 Jackson 2010 p 472 Gilder 1936 p 113 National Park Service 1960 p 8 PDF p 13 a b Gilder 1936 p 129 National Park Service 1960 p 9 PDF p 14 a b Jackson 2010 p 102 a b c d e f g Gilder 1936 p 130 a b c d e Gross Alexander S February 23 1947 Aquarium Gets Six Week Stay of Execution Old Castle Garden Built in 1808 Has Been in Turn a Fort Cafe Jenny Lind s Concert Hall Immigration Station New York Herald Tribune p A9 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1268009616 Dunlap David May 27 2015 A Transformation at the Battery 21 Years in the Making The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 8 2015 Retrieved August 14 2015 Steinberg Ted 2015 Gotham Unbound The Ecological History of Greater New York Simon amp Schuster pp 90 91 ISBN 978 1 4767 4128 4 Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 7 2019 a b c National Park Service 1960 p 15 PDF p 28 National Park Service 1960 p 14 PDF p 21 White Norval Willensky Elliot Leadon Fran 2010 AIA Guide to New York City 5th ed New York Oxford University Press p 6 ISBN 978 0 19538 386 7 Blair Raymond J May 7 1950 Castle Clinton Restoration Job Will Start Soon U S May Begin This Month Turning Aquarium Into 1812 War Memorial Fort New York Herald Tribune p 9 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1325145021 a b Klawonn Marion J 1977 Cradle of the Corps A History of the New York District U S Army Corps of Engineers 1775 1975 Department of Defense Department of the Army Corps of Engineers New York District Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved July 12 2021 a b c d e f National Park Service 1960 p 12 PDF p 19 National Park Service 1960 p 10 PDF p 17 a b c National Park Service 1960 p 13 PDF p 20 Gilder 1936 p 143 a b c Gilder 1936 p 146 United States Congress 1860 American State Papers Documents Legislative and Executive of the Congress of the United States Gales and Seaton p 6 Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved May 7 2019 a b c d Loring Andrews William May 1 1901 The Iconography of the Battery and Castle Garden The Book Buyer Vol 22 no 4 p 304 ProQuest 88406229 The Battery Its Past and Present New York Daily Tribune July 26 1865 p 1 ProQuest 570701501 a b c d Svejda 1968 p 34 a b c d Aquarium Moves Step Closer to Becoming National Shring Landmark Which May Be Restored as National Shrine New York Herald Tribune August 13 1946 p 1 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1284595994 a b c d Shepard Richard F May 24 1975 Castle Clinton Opening Again to Beethoven 9th The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on May 18 2022 Retrieved October 9 2022 a b c d Landsberg Mitchell June 22 1986 First immigration site to reopen July 6 The Central New Jersey Home News p 6 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 10 2022 via newspapers com a b Castle Clinton PDF New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission November 23 1965 Archived PDF from the original on September 21 2020 Retrieved January 1 2021 a b National Park Service 1966 p 3 Gilder 1936 p 187 a b Svejda 1968 p 35 Gilder 1936 p 188 Svejda 1968 pp 34 35 Strausbaugh John November 9 2007 When Barnum Took Manhattan The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on August 1 2021 Retrieved October 10 2022 a b Historic Castle Garden The Sun February 23 1890 p 3 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 10 2022 via newspapers com a b Gilder 1936 p 194 Brodsky Lawrence 1995 p 314 Martin 2011 p 184 Gilder 1936 p 195 Svejda 1968 pp 31 32 a b Dodd Ora September 2 1958 Luxurious Ocean Liners Steam Past Front Door First Battery Described Fort Ceded to City Street Names Give Clue The Christian Science Monitor p 11 ProQuest 509812274 a b c d e f g h i National Park Service 1966 p 2 a b Svejda 1968 p 42 a b c d e f g h Roberts Sam July 29 2005 The Fort That Let Outsiders In The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on June 9 2021 Retrieved October 10 2022 a b Castle Garden What it Was What it is and What it is Proposed to The New York Herald May 29 1855 p 1 ProQuest 505320563 a b Svejda 1968 pp 91 92 Svejda 1968 pp 42 43 New York City Progress at Castle Garden Workingmen against Contracts Tired of Life Another Suicide The Body of John W Parker Fonnd Forged Checks The United States Steam Frigate Niagara Fall from a Roof Extension of Chambers street Fires New York Daily Times July 14 1855 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 13 2022 Retrieved October 12 2022 Svejda 1968 pp 92 93 a b Svejda 1968 p 91 Svejda 1968 p 43 a b Svejda 1968 pp 46 47 a b Emigration Great Increase in Emigration Castle Garden the Modus Operandi With Newly Arrived Emigrants Their First Impressions Boarding house Burners the Bureau of Employment Great Mortality Among Emigrant Children Thirty Deaths on One Ship New York Daily Tribune June 19 1865 p 7 ProQuest 570749141 a b Svejda 1968 p 65 Fire on Ellis Island It Broke Out Shortly After Midnight in the Furnace of the Main Building The New York Times June 15 1897 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 22 2018 Retrieved March 22 2018 a b Yarrow Andrew L May 26 1989 Out of New York s Military Past The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 15 2021 Retrieved October 10 2022 a b History amp Culture Castle Clinton National Monument U S National Park Service April 26 2021 Archived from the original on August 15 2022 Retrieved October 10 2022 a b Svejda 1968 p 144 a b Castle Garden to Go Where All the Immigrants Come From and Their Destination Chicago Daily Tribune April 1 1890 p 9 ProQuest 174379629 Svejda 1968 pp 143 144 Bleyer Jennifer September 18 2005 Immigrants Ships Sailing Across the Web The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on May 29 2015 Retrieved October 10 2022 Grates Julie October November 2005 The First U S Immigrant Gateway Irish America Vol XXI p 22 ProQuest 211200134 O Malley Brendan P May 2015 Protecting the Stranger The Origins of US Immigration Regulation in Nineteenth Century New York PhD City University of New York p 262 American Yiddish commemorated this era of poor management with the term kessel garten meaning a crowded and disorderly place Svejda 1968 p 32 a b Castle Garden s Future Plans Under Way to Restore Its Glories as an Amusement Resort The New York Times April 17 1890 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 10 2022 Svejda 1968 pp 35 37 Interesting History of Castle Garden and the Battery Judge Hoffman s Opinion in Full Superior Court Special Term The New York Herald June 25 1855 p 2 ProQuest 505348438 Svejda 1968 pp 44 45 Svejda 1968 p 44 Castle Garden How Emigrants are created on Landing New York Daily Times August 4 1855 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 13 2022 Retrieved October 12 2022 Svejda 1968 pp 48 50 Castle Garden Affairs Are There Frauds Examination of the Cashier Emigrants and Othersp Protest of Mr Garrigue New York Daily Times March 12 1856 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 13 2022 Retrieved October 12 2022 Svejda 1968 p 50 Svejda 1968 p 66 The Emigrant Landing Depot Disputed Title to Castle Garden The New York Times July 5 1873 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 13 2022 Retrieved October 12 2022 Svejda 1968 pp 68 69 New Recruiting Headquarters The New York Times July 20 1864 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 13 2022 Retrieved October 12 2022 Svejda 1968 pp 82 83 Miller Jerry December 8 1963 Manhattan May Take More Land From Sea The New York Times p 459 ISSN 0362 4331 ProQuest 116671402 Dunning Jennifer November 26 1982 A Walk Around Battery as the Sun is Setting The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on May 24 2015 Retrieved October 10 2022 Svejda 1968 pp 94 95 a b Svejda 1968 pp 97 98 Steamships amp Immigration How Steamers Are Drawn to New york Castle Garden as a Magnet the Erie Canal and the Great Railroads Wonderful Increase of Steam ships They Are Built From Emigrant The New York Times February 28 1874 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 13 2022 Retrieved October 12 2022 Improvements at Castle Garden The New York Times January 5 1874 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 13 2022 Retrieved October 12 2022 Svejda 1968 pp 98 99 Local Miscellany Anxiety at Castle Garden Effect of the Decision Regarding Emigrant Head Money by the Supreme Court of the United States The New York Times March 22 1876 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 13 2022 Retrieved October 12 2022 a b c Svejda 1968 p 105 The Emigration Commissioners Retrenchment Measures Abolition of the Labor Bureau at Castle Garden Employes to Be Discharged The New York Times May 26 1875 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 13 2022 Retrieved October 12 2022 Svejda 1968 p 97 The Castle Garden Fire The New York Times July 12 1876 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 13 2022 Retrieved October 12 2022 Castle Garden Destroyed Burning of a Historic Building Swift Progress of the Flames in the Dry Wood work New York Tribune July 10 1876 p 5 ProQuest 572699892 a b Svejda 1968 pp 99 100 Svejda 1968 pp 101 103 a b Svejda 1968 pp 103 104 Rebuilding Castle Garden The New York Times September 8 1876 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 13 2022 Retrieved October 12 2022 a b Castle Garden Again Occupied New York Tribune November 28 1876 p 2 ProQuest 572719567 Svejda 1968 p 106 a b Svejda 1968 p 107 Svejda 1968 pp 113 114 a b Svejda 1968 p 121 Svejda 1968 p 122 New Dock for Castle Garden The New York Times March 1 1887 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 13 2022 Retrieved October 12 2022 Svejda 1968 pp 134 135 Gray Christopher October 12 2003 Streetscapes The Chesebrough House 71st Street and Madison Avenue 1911 Home Built by the Man Who Invented Vaseline The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on December 28 2017 Retrieved October 10 2022 a b Svejda 1968 p 138 Forces Cut Down Many Castle Garden and Ward s Island Employes Discharged The New York Times September 20 1889 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 13 2022 Retrieved October 12 2022 Svejda 1968 p 139 Anxiety at Castle Garden New York Tribune February 17 1890 p 5 ProQuest 573579541 a b Svejda 1968 p 143 Farewell Castle Garden Superintendent Weber to Take Hold to day The State Board of Emigration at Its Last Meeting Gives Secretary Windom a Little Dig The New York Times April 19 1890 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 13 2022 Retrieved October 12 2022 No Tears Sued for Castle Garden It is Officially Dead the Federal Government Now Receives Immigrants New York Tribune April 19 1890 p 3 ProQuest 573536623 Barge Office Doors Open Poor Old Castle Garden Deserted at Last A Gold Piece for the First Foreigner Registered the Ward s Island Matter Settled The New York Times April 20 1890 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 10 2022 Belle Beyer Blinder Finegold Anderson Notter 1988 Historic Structure Report The Main Building Ellis Island Statue of Liberty National Monument p 12 a b Svejda 1968 p 145 Castle Garden Transferred The Evening World December 31 1890 p 4 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 10 2022 via newspapers com Historic Battery Park Its Traditions Cherished by Every Loyal New Yorker What It Was in Former Days and May Be Again When the Squatter Shall Be Ousted Fort Clinton s Walls and Gate The New York Times August 2 1891 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 10 2022 A Use for Castle Garden the Naval Reserve Needs It No More Admirable Site in New york its Many Advantages New York Tribune December 13 1891 p 23 ProQuest 573687055 Naval Reserve Artillery Suggestions Which if Carried Out Will Tend to Its Efficiency The New York Times December 13 1891 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 10 2022 a b New York s Aquarium It is to Cost 150 000 and Permanently Occupy Castle Garden Los Angeles Times September 11 1893 p 6 ProQuest 163672499 Naval Militia 20 Years Old The Sun June 18 1911 p 23 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 via newspapers com History of The Battery Archived December 1 2014 at the Wayback Machine The Battery Conservancy Retrieved December 1 2014 a b Pale Green Interior Now Historic Building Once Castle Garden Repainted for First Time The Washington Post April 10 1904 p E4 ISSN 0190 8286 ProQuest 144486193 a b c A Hotel for Fish New York Tribune August 5 1894 p 15 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 via newspapers com a b The Aquarium at Castle Garden The Manufacturer and Builder A Practical Journal of Industrial Progress Vol 27 no 2 February 1 1895 p 30 ProQuest 88900721 Work on the New Aquarium to Be Opened at Castle Garden in the Fall The New York Times August 2 1894 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 a b The New York Aquarium The New York Times September 20 1896 p SM4 ISSN 0362 4331 ProQuest 1016134163 New Aquarium for New York Scientific American Vol LXXI no 24 December 15 1894 p 377 ProQuest 126815820 Fine Fish Collection Rare Specimens at Aquarium Seen by 2 000 000 Persons a Year New York Tribune October 6 1907 p C3 ProQuest 571983901 a b The Castle Garden Aquarium The Buffalo Commercial December 12 1896 p 7 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 via newspapers com The Carter Pressure Water Filter Scientific American Vol LXXIII no 16 October 19 1895 p 245 ProQuest 126773453 Planning a Great Aquarium for New York City Scientific American Vol LXIV no 11 March 14 1891 p 164 ProQuest 126786059 Castle Garden Aquarium Text of the Legislative Act Providing for Its Establishment The New York Times February 13 1892 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 10 2022 Proceedings in Both Branches Grade crossing Bills in the Senate assembly Bills Affecting New york and Brooklyn for Lengthening the Canal Locks an Irate Mayor Attacks the Governor the Castle Garden Aquarium Bill Signed New York Tribune February 12 1892 p 5 ProQuest 573660076 Proposed Aquarium in New York Scientific American Vol LXVI no 24 June 11 1892 p 372 ProQuest 126673842 a b c Mather Fred November 13 1897 The New York Aquarium Forest and Stream a Journal of Outdoor Life Travel Nature Study Shooting Fishing Yachting Vol XLIX no 20 p 389 ProQuest 125057580 a b Discussed Castle Garden Aquarium Park Commissioners Interested in New York City s Great Fish Display The New York Times April 12 1894 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 a b To Stock Castle Garden Aquarium New York Tribune April 12 1894 p 4 ProQuest 573912163 Complain of the Aquarium Tiling The New York Times February 8 1894 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 Squabble Over Aquarium Tanks Question Before the Park Board The Surplus from Big Appropriation The New York Times August 2 1894 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 The Budget for 1895 Almost Completed by the Board of Estimate The New York Times December 28 1894 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 a b Opening of the Aquarium The Brooklyn Daily Eagle December 10 1896 p 2 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 via newspapers com a b Defects in the Aquarium Why It is Not Opened to the Public Gross Stupidity Shown in Its Construction Which It Will Cost Thousands of Dollars to Repair New York Tribune May 12 1895 p 17 ProQuest 574043572 a b Aquarium Nearly Ready Old Castle Garden s Doors to Open Again in Three Months Queer Varieties of Sea Life for the Public to Gaze Upon looking for a White Whale a High and Airy Structure Many Fish in the Pools Already Came Along Uninvited New York Tribune September 20 1896 p B10 ProQuest 574225004 a b The Aquarium Now Open It is Estimated That 30 000 Persons Saw the Exhibit Yesterday The New York Times December 11 1896 p 7 ISSN 0362 4331 ProQuest 1016144427 Aquarium Opens to day It Was Informally Opened Yesterday to Park Board s Guests The New York Times December 10 1896 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 Reception at the Aquarium Luncheon Served to Invited Guests in the Laboratory to Be Opened to day New York Tribune December 10 1896 p 10 ProQuest 574253878 a b Martin Douglas December 12 1996 Aquarium Turns 100 With Renewed Popularity The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on May 26 2015 Retrieved October 10 2022 Bristol Charles L August 1900 Treasures of the New York Aquarium Century Illustrated Magazine Vol LX no 4 p 553 ProQuest 125508815 Change for Aquarium Bill Introduced Placing It Under Management of Zoological Society The New York Times March 18 1902 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 a b City Cedes the Aquarium New York Tribune October 25 1902 p 1 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 via newspapers com Sites for Libraries Times Union July 28 1902 p 4 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 via newspapers com Aquarium Transferred New York Tribune November 1 1902 p 9 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 via newspapers com Many Improvements at Aquarium Exhibition Tanks to Be Lined With Rock Much Interest in Hatchery New York Tribune April 19 1903 p 4 ProQuest 571374122 a b c d Overhauling the Aquarium Director Townsend Spending 30 000 to Make It a More Attractive and Valuable Resort The New York Times December 20 1903 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 11 2022 Many Changes Made Improvements at Aquarium Under New Director New York Tribune April 24 1903 p 9 ProQuest 571377515 Comforts of Home for Aquarium Fishes The New York Times June 5 1904 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 Fish Blind From Glare in Tile lined Tanks Aquarium Officials Disturbed Over Unusual Conditions The New York Times March 19 1905 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 Bermuda Sea Water for Aquarium Fish 100 000 Gallons to be Brought Here on a Steamer and Kept Pure by a New System The New York Times June 7 1908 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 Gilder 1936 p 240 Erhard Ursinus July 30 1911 To Demolish Castle Garden Skyscraper for Site of Old Landmark Fight to Save Historic Structure Items of Local Interest San Francisco Chronicle p 34 ProQuest 573952460 New Aquarium is Planned The Sun January 11 1911 p 2 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 via newspapers com a b Famous Aquarium to Be Enlarged The New York Times January 15 1911 p 41 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 via newspapers com a b New Barge Office and Aquarium to Embellish Manhattan s Free Resort Yclept the Battery Historic Structures Will Be Replaced by Notable and Expensive Landmarks New York Tribune August 20 1911 p A3 ProQuest 574801218 Enlarge Castle Garden New York Tribune August 8 1912 p 6 ProQuest 574963941 New York Aquarium Forest and Stream a Journal of Outdoor Life Travel Nature Study Shooting Fishing Yachting 1873 1930 Vol LXXVI no 22 June 3 1911 p 16 ProQuest 124959825 Urges Castle Garden Wing The New York Times May 28 1912 p 6 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 via newspapers com a b c City Asked to Help Improve Aquarium Park Commissioner Ward Gives Approval to Plan Now Before Estimate Board The New York Times November 26 1916 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 a b Classic Greek Temple Planned to Enclose Aquarium The Sun August 22 1915 p 47 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 via newspapers com Aquarium to Be Enlarged Monsters of Sea to Be Shown in New Tanks at Battery Park The New York Times April 19 1921 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on May 13 2019 Retrieved October 11 2022 a b Changes at the Aquarium to Make It World Model Old Building Which Houses Collection of Fish Has Had Eventful Past Once a Fort Then Jenny Laid Sang There Used for Immigrant Station and Finally for Present Exhibit The New York Times August 12 1923 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 Place Bust of Jenny Lind In the Aquarium Once Castle Garden Where She Made Her Debut The New York Times January 18 1921 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 Aquarium to Be Enlarged Second Story is to Be Added to 114 year old Building Cincinnati Enquirer December 30 1921 p 2 ProQuest 866645648 Flash Animal Life Upon the Screen Films Shown at Zoological Society Meeting Depict Work at Tropical Station The New York Times January 10 1923 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 76 500 Voted to Add second Story to Historic Aquarium Growth in Fish Family Supported by Gty Makes More Room Necessary at Venerable Structure on Battery Sea Wall Formerly Castle Garden New York Tribune June 9 1923 p 8 ProQuest 1237274035 Man Breaks Rule for Art Institute Votes to Spend 1 050 000 for Two Wings to the Building in Brooklyn The New York Times June 5 1923 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 Aquarium Will Soon Have All Modern Improvements The New York Times March 16 1924 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 Aquarium Changes to Cost 225 000 Historic Building s Appearance Will Be Greatly Improved by the Alterations Third Floor to Be Added City s Share of Expense 130 000 Balance Contributed by Private Donors The New York Times July 11 1926 p E1 ISSN 0362 4331 ProQuest 103673794 Battery Park Group To Restore Beauty And Fight Smoke Association Incorporates to Preserve Park Rich in History Aquarium Addition Attacked as Unsightly The New York Herald New York Tribune April 28 1926 p 4 ProQuest 1112767276 Aquarium Eyesore Peanut Stands Art The New York Times April 29 1926 p 25 ISSN 0362 4331 ProQuest 103899658 Wilson P W February 3 1929 A New Battery Park as Designers See It the Immigrants Monument The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on May 10 2019 Retrieved May 10 2019 5 Million Mark Passed at Zoo And Aquarium Attendance Increased in 1934 Zoological Society Hears at Yearly Meeting Conservation Work Aided Grant Gets Funds to Create Bear Sanctuary in Alaska New York Herald Tribune January 9 1935 p 15 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1237343832 City Improves Zoo in Bronx And Aquarium Park Adds 100 000 African Plains Group to Exhibits Pool for Blind Cave Fish The African Plains Begin to Take Form at the New York Zoological Park New York Herald Tribune August 18 1940 p A5 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1243048889 Aquarium Gets Metal Dome to Stop 158 Leaks Fish Object to Tarry Rain Lighting Also Improved New Director Takes Hold New York Herald Tribune July 21 1940 p A2 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1243028704 New Aquarium Is Proposed of Radical Design Dr Breder Acting Head of Institution Writes Plan for Building Which Would Co ordinate Aquatic Life New York Herald Tribune December 9 1938 p 25 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1244629911 Modern Aquarium for the City Is Proposed Would Give Wider Knowledge of Exhibits The New York Times December 9 1938 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 12 2022 Battery Aquarium to Be Demolished Doomed by Brooklyn Tunnel It Will Be Replaced by a Modern One in Bronx The New York Times February 8 1941 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 22 2018 Retrieved March 21 2018 a b Moses Says Historic Battery Building That Began as Fort in 1807 Will Be Demolished During Construction of Tunnel to Brooklyn New York Herald Tribune February 7 1941 p 1 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1258860043 Aquarium Barrage Turned on Moses New York Historical Society Would Preserve Landmark That He Would Raze The New York Times March 24 1941 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved October 8 2022 Aquarium May Be Restored as Castle Clinton McAneny Discusses Plan to Remove Outer Shell of Old Federal Fort New York Herald Tribune April 24 1941 p 37 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1260683745 Sees a Boom Area on Rim of Wall St McAneny Says El Removals Assure Rehabilitation of Shoddy District The New York Times April 24 1941 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved October 8 2022 Barron James March 7 2022 This Price Surge Really Hits New Yorkers Hard The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 27 2022 Retrieved October 10 2022 a b Aquarium Doomed by Estimate Board Moses Scoffs at Proposal to Restore Old Fort Saying It Never Fired a Shot The New York Times June 26 1942 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 22 2018 Retrieved March 22 2018 Fish to Leave Old Home Aquarium to Start Dispersing Thousands of Specimens The New York Times September 23 1941 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 22 2018 Retrieved March 21 2018 Aquarium Bids Fond au Revoir To Its Turtles Sends Them to Philadelphia Building s Past Recalled in Nostalgic Broadcast New York Herald Tribune September 22 1941 p 6 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1320057626 Last 200 Aquarium Fish Dumped Back Into Ocean Five Tagged Sand Sharks and a Sting Ray Among Them New York Herald Tribune October 2 1941 p 47 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1256111214 Caro Robert 1974 The Power Broker Robert Moses and the Fall of New York New York Knopf ISBN 978 0 394 48076 3 OCLC 834874 Moses Outlines Reconstruction Of Battery Park Plan Submitted to Mayor Asks Aquarium Demolition and New Vista of Harbor Battery Park as It Would Appear After Reconstruction Planned by Moses New York Herald Tribune March 23 1942 p 13 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1267817403 Moses Plans a New Battery Park Minus the Old Aquarium Building Proposes Broad Avenue With Vista of Statue of Liberty Decision on the Project Is Necessary He Tells Estimate Board The New York Times March 23 1942 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved October 8 2022 Aquarium Fight Is Won by Moses It Will Be Razed Board of Estimate Spurns Sentimentalists and Acts for a New Battery Park New York Herald Tribune June 26 1942 p 1A ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1266855602 Aquarium Put Up for Sale to Highest Bidder City Will Open Offers Next Friday Buyer Must Clear Sile Will Get No Fish Cedar Shore Guests Smith Thru Their Camp Motto New York Herald Tribune July 10 1942 p 13 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1266914657 Junk Man Files Lone 1 120 Bid For Aquarium Even He s Not Very Sorry Offer Is Rejected Moses May Demolish Landmark New York Herald Tribune July 18 1942 p 7 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1320060859 Aquarium Designs Win Awards All Provide Saving Structure Architects Works in Contrast to Demolition Plan Are Selected Moses at Board Meeting Defends His Proposal The New York Times August 26 1942 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 13 2018 Retrieved October 8 2022 a b Aquarium Row Is Back to Haunt Estimate Board Moses Renews Feud With Demolition Opponents as Ratification Is Requested New York Herald Tribune August 26 1942 p 15 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1320066814 City Acts to Rush Building Razings Moses Will Submit a List of Useless Structures to U S for Scrap Pile The New York Times September 26 1942 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved October 8 2022 Wrecker Crew Beats Dirge on Aquarium Roof Quaint Cupola Yields Its Scrap Metal First and Landmark s End Is Near New York Herald Tribune September 26 1942 p 13 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1324147126 a b O Reilly John April 8 1953 Old Lock Goes Back to New Castle Clinton New York Herald Tribune p 42 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1319989227 Foundation Flaws Found in Aquarium Pronounced Vertical Crack in Wall Reported by Engineer on Behalf of Moses The New York Times September 19 1942 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved October 8 2022 Injunction Sought to Save Aquarium Suit Today Will Ask Court to Restrain Moses From Razing Fort Clinton The New York Times August 20 1942 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 22 2018 Retrieved March 22 2018 Foes of Moses Institute Suit to Save Aquarium Injunction Sought in Final Effort to Balk Razing of Battery Park Landmark New York Herald Tribune August 20 1942 p 13 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1341665665 Moses Wins Fight to Raze Aquarium Court of Appeals Has Denied Injunction Sought by Civic Groups Opposing Him The New York Times April 25 1943 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 22 2018 Retrieved March 22 2018 Moses Wins Battery Park Fight Aquarium Will Be Torn Down New York Herald Tribune October 12 1945 p 1 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1287102702 Board Acts to Get Land for Center Sets Aside 980 000 to Buy the Site in Brooklyn for New 50 000 000 Project Moses Cashmore Approve The New York Times October 12 1945 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved October 9 2022 Committee Approves Congressional Bill To Save Old Aquarium as National Shrine The New York Times July 24 1946 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved October 9 2022 Congress Move Begun to Save Old Aquarium Bloom Acts to Preserve Battery Park Landmark Now Facing Destruction New York Herald Tribune July 24 1946 p 1 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1291153974 Senate Approves the Aquarium Bill Measure to Set Up the Castle Clinton National Monument Is Sent to Truman The New York Times July 31 1946 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 22 2018 Retrieved March 22 2018 Congress Puts Aquarium Fate Up to Truman Senate Passes Bill to Let U S Take Over Building as a National Monument New York Herald Tribune July 31 1946 p 1 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1287123168 Aquarium Block Made a Monument Truman Signs Bill Designating Castle Clinton Battery Park a National Shrine The New York Times August 13 1946 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 22 2018 Retrieved March 22 2018 Aquarium To Be National Shrine On Title Change Federal Government Must Take Over Restoration Awaits Work on Tunnel New York Herald Tribune August 18 1946 p 19 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1267974541 Aquarium Project Surveyed by City 40 000 to 100 000 Needed to Keep Shell Intact While Tunnel Link Is Built The New York Times August 16 1946 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved October 9 2022 A Proposed Improvement for the City s Battery Park The New York Times April 10 1947 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on May 13 2019 Retrieved May 13 2019 Crowelx Paul July 25 1947 City Votes Death of Old Aquarium 5 Year Controversy Is Ended as Board of Estimate Allots 50 000 for Demolition The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 23 2018 Retrieved March 22 2018 Aquarium Razing Voted by City As U S Bars Rehabiliation Now New York Herald Tribune July 25 1947 p 1 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1323856498 a b Horne George September 21 1958 Museum and Restaurant Urged For Aquarium Site at Battery Architect Sends Proposal and Plans to National Park Service Moses Long Foe of Old Fort Scoffs at Idea The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved October 8 2022 a b Lister Walter Jr April 6 1950 Castle Clinton May Open Soon As Monument U S to Start Restoration of Former Aquarium After O Dwyer Signs Over Deed New York Herald Tribune p 16 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1326824359 City to Give Government Chance To Prevent Aquarium Demolition Board of Estimate Agrees to Delay Razing of Castle Clinton to Permit Congress to Vote Funds for Restoration The New York Times August 28 1947 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 23 2018 Retrieved March 22 2018 City to Give Government Chance To Prevent Aquarium Demolition Board of Estimate Agrees to Delay Razing of Castle Clinton to Permit Congress to Vote Funds for Restoration The New York Times August 28 1947 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 23 2018 Retrieved October 9 2022 Dales Douglas March 5 1948 State Jobless Aid Raised by Senate Democrats Hit 900 000 000 Ceiling on Reserve Doubling Refunds to Employers The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved October 9 2022 In the State Legislature Senate Votes to Raise Unemployment Aid to 26 a Week Fort Clinton Transfer to U S Barred New York Herald Tribune March 5 1948 p 12 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1326790973 Estimate Board Votes to Complete Demolition of Old Aquarium Here The New York Times May 28 1948 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 23 2018 Retrieved March 22 2018 Court Weighs Plea to Save Aquarium Historic Preservation Society Seeks to Restrain Wrecking of Battery Structure The New York Times July 14 1948 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved October 9 2022 Reprieve Won In Attempt to Save Aquarium Judge May Rule Within 2 Weeks in Suit Brought by Alexander Hamilton New York Herald Tribune July 14 1948 p 16 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1327393573 Ancient Aquarium Wins New Chance Court Bars Its Demolition Unless Act Is Approved by City Art Commission The New York Times December 14 1948 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 13 2018 Retrieved October 9 2022 Aquarium Gets A New Chance By Injunction Null Says Art Board Must Rule on Razing Plans Appeal To Be Taken New York Herald Tribune December 14 1948 p 29 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1327204511 Moses Wins Plea on Castle Clinton Court Rules Former Aquarium Is No Monument and May Be Demolished The New York Times March 30 1949 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 8 2018 Retrieved October 9 2022 Aquarium Razing Is Upheld by Court Appellate Division Decides Against Art Commission New York Herald Tribune March 30 1949 p 18 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1326815511 Fort Clinton as a National Monument Discussed by Truman in Letter to Delano The New York Times February 24 1949 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved October 9 2022 Truman Enters Dispute Over Old Aquarium Letter to Art Commission Head Explains Possibility of Making It a Shrine New York Herald Tribune February 24 1949 p 21 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1327138904 Restoration Voted for Castle Clinton Assembly Committee Clears Bill Making Possible a U S Monument at the Battery The New York Times March 16 1949 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 23 2018 Retrieved March 22 2018 Bates Edward W March 23 1949 Assembly Bars Delay in Ending N Y Guard Bias Amends Senate Bill Holding Up Move Until the Army Adopts Non Segregation New York Herald Tribune p 2 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1327141748 Fort Clinton Bill Sent to Governor Measure Allowing City to Cede Site to U S for a Monument Is Unopposed in Senate The New York Times March 23 1949 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 8 2018 Retrieved October 9 2022 Fort Clinton Bill Signed by Dewey Restoration in Battery Park Now Up to City He Says in Recognizing Split on Idea The New York Times April 29 1949 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 9 2022 State Gets Aquarium Site If U S Doesn t Want It New York Herald Tribune March 9 1949 p 21 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1325751995 Fort Clinton Restoration Budget Of 165 750 Approved by House The New York Times October 7 1949 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 5 2018 Retrieved October 9 2022 Fort Clinton Bill Passed by Senate Provides 165 750 Fund to Restore Landmark New York Herald Tribune October 8 1949 p 2 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1327374424 Work Will Start Soon On Castle Clinton Park The New York Times October 14 1949 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 9 2022 Aquarium Becomes a U S Monument Action on Castle Clinton at Battery Taken After City Deeds Site to Government The New York Times July 19 1950 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 23 2018 Retrieved March 22 2018 Aquarium Building To Be Monument Nine Year Controversy Is Ended by U S Decision New York Herald Tribune July 19 1949 p 11 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1327381298 Dunlap David W August 13 2015 New York s New Carousel Puts You in a Whirling School of Mechanized Fish The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on August 14 2015 Retrieved October 10 2022 a b c d Dunlap David W March 18 1986 A Quiet Old Fort Facing Bustle of Ferry Crowds The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on May 24 2015 Retrieved October 10 2022 a b c d Basic Information Castle Clinton National Monument U S National Park Service March 7 2016 Archived from the original on June 17 2019 Retrieved June 17 2019 Plagianos Irene July 6 2019 Lady Liberty Sparks Battle of the Boat Tours Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Archived from the original on April 10 2021 Retrieved October 10 2022 About Us The Battery July 7 2021 Retrieved October 13 2022 Castle Clinton NYPAP February 6 1941 Retrieved October 13 2022 World Hails U N s 5th Birthday 3 000 Here in Parade to City Hall The New York Times October 25 1950 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved October 9 2022 Rogers John G October 24 1950 Truman to Talk On Peace at U N Session Today Flushing Meadow Meeting to Lead World Tributes on Charter s Anniversary New York Herald Tribune p 1 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1336751331 Battery Park Restored The New York Times July 17 1952 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on May 10 2019 Retrieved May 10 2019 Historic Battery Park Reopens After 12 Yrs 8 00 at Ceremony New York Herald Tribune July 16 1962 p 3 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1322254213 U S Speeds Work on Old Aquarium Restoration as Museum Will Begin Next Month Parley of Historians Is Told The New York Times January 27 1952 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved October 9 2022 Education Sparks City Council Fight Isaacs Mild Resolution on State Aid Hit as Typical Republican Insult The New York Times February 24 1954 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 9 2022 Monuments Get Help Eisenhower Signs Bill Urging Support for Historic Sites The New York Times August 13 1955 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on May 4 2022 Retrieved May 4 2022 Board Aims to Preserve 3 Historic Sites in City New York Herald Tribune August 29 1955 p 7 ProQuest 1328082846 Museum Projects Urged To Save 3 Shrines Here New York Herald Tribune February 4 1956 p A10 ProQuest 1327597493 Board Considers Historic Shrines Advisory Group to Seek Aid of Public in Preserving Three in This City The New York Times February 4 1956 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on May 4 2022 Retrieved May 4 2022 Bennett Charles G Jr July 3 1956 Old Battery Fort Will Be Restored Through the Centuries With Castle Clinton Whose Future Is Bright once More The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on February 5 2018 Retrieved May 15 2019 3 089 400 Outlay on Shrines Asked City Board to Submit to U S Cost of Restoring 3 Drive to Raise Half Planned The New York Times February 1 1957 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on May 4 2022 Retrieved May 4 2022 Morris Approves Plan to Move Penn Station Columns to Battery The New York Times September 10 1962 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 9 2022 Transfer of 18 Penn Station Columns Asked The Washington Post Times Herald September 10 1962 p A10 ISSN 0190 8286 ProQuest 141752067 Penn Station Columns Dumped in Jersey Doric Splendor Has an Ignoble Ending in the Meadows The New York Times October 9 1964 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on June 12 2018 Retrieved June 12 2018 Hanson Kitty October 18 1965 Help Landmarks Group Issues Civic SOC New York Daily News p 257 Retrieved October 13 2022 via newspapers com Brooklyn Heights Now a Landmark The New York Times December 2 1965 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 13 2022 New York City Landmarks Law The New York Preservation Archive Project Archived from the original on April 21 2020 Retrieved April 14 2020 Federal Register 44 Fed Reg 7107 Feb 6 1979 PDF Library of Congress February 6 1979 p 7539 Archived PDF from the original on December 30 2016 Retrieved March 8 2020 United States National Park Service Preservation Press 1991 The National Register of Historic Places National Park Service p 9 ISBN 978 0 942063 21 9 a b A Fort of Unfired Cannons Being Rebuilt Here by U S The New York Times August 24 1968 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 9 2022 a b Historic Fort Still Serving The Journal News September 19 1968 p 27 Retrieved October 9 2022 via newspapers com a b c d Zakariasen Bill June 19 1975 The sound castle New York Daily News p 235 Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved October 9 2022 via newspapers com Wider Use Urged for Historic Sites The New York Times November 21 1972 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved October 9 2022 Going Out Guide The New York Times June 27 1973 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 9 2022 American Symphony at Castle Clinton The New York Times May 26 1975 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved October 9 2022 Castle Clinton Reopens As National Monument The New York Times June 21 1975 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on April 10 2022 Retrieved May 15 2019 Kleiman Dena August 19 1977 Metropolitan Baedeker The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on February 20 2020 Retrieved October 9 2022 Shepard Richard F May 19 1989 A Guided Ramble Around the Landfill Exploring Battery Park City A Guided Ramble The New York Times p C1 ISSN 0362 4331 ProQuest 110319579 New Sculpture at Fort Clinton Blends With the Shape of Its Surroundings The New York Times August 25 1979 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 9 2022 Basler Barbara October 21 1982 U S Historic Sites in City Guarding Against Thefts The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 11 2022 Retrieved October 9 2022 Boorstin Robert O April 6 1986 Budget Law Imposing Cuts at National Parks The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on February 3 2018 Retrieved October 10 2022 a b Birnbaum Steven July 6 1986 Castle rich in history Asbury Park Press p 48 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 10 2022 via newspapers com Connelly Sheryl June 29 1986 But Why Can t We Climb to the Top New York Daily News p 309 Retrieved October 10 2022 via newspapers com a b Strauch Barbara July 6 1986 Miss Liberty s Open House Newsday p 3 ProQuest 1645388927 Golden Tim September 10 1990 Ellis Island Doors Reopening This Time as Haven to Tourists The New York Times Archived from the original on June 8 2019 Retrieved June 8 2019 Hosmer Philip September 9 1990 Ellis Island 1892 1900 The Courier News pp 21 25 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 7 2022 via newspapers com Postings Concert to Mark Start of 5 5 Million Restoration Recharging Battery Park s Seawall and Promenade The New York Times June 2 1996 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 29 2018 Retrieved October 10 2022 Stewart Barbara December 9 2001 The Battery Is Up for Once With a Remade Park The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on May 14 2019 Retrieved May 14 2019 Battery Park s Coming Attractions Tribeca Trib Online April 1 2013 Archived from the original on January 28 2022 Retrieved October 10 2022 Raver Anne January 16 2003 Nature Replanting Nieuw Amsterdam The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on December 26 2017 Retrieved October 10 2022 Metro Briefing New York Manhattan Castle Clinton To Reopen The New York Times October 22 2001 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on May 27 2015 Retrieved October 10 2022 a b c Fickenscher Lisa February 25 2013 Ellis Island regains its status as a gateway for millions Crain s New York Business Vol 29 no 8 p 4 ProQuest 1314817234 Eisenpress Cara June 21 2021 Future of Historic Pier a is Up for Grabs Newly Renovated Space Could Go From a Dockside Watering Hole to a Federal Screening Area Crain s New York Business Vol 37 no 24 p 4 ProQuest 2544525890 Plagianos Irene February 25 2013 Battery Park Security Tents Moving to Ellis Island in March Report Says DNAinfo New York Archived from the original on December 12 2017 Retrieved October 10 2022 McGeehan Patrick December 8 2005 Found Old Wall in New York and It s Blocking the Subway The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on May 14 2019 Retrieved May 14 2019 McGeehan Patrick January 23 2006 Digging for a Subway but Hitting a Wall Again The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 26 2021 Retrieved October 10 2022 Haddon Heather February 24 2010 Unearthing colonial New York South Ferry project yields 65K artifacts Newsday Archived from the original on February 19 2018 Retrieved February 18 2018 McGeehan Patrick June 7 2006 Part of Early N Y Wall Displayed in Battery Park The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on April 10 2015 Retrieved October 10 2022 Sources edit Brodsky Lawrence Vera 1995 Strong on Music The New York Music Scene in the Days of George Templeton University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226470115 Castle Clinton Report National Register of Historic Places National Park Service October 15 1966 Gilder Rodman 1936 The Battery the story of the adventurers artists statesmen grafters songsters mariners pirates guzzlers Indians thieves stuffed shirts turn coats millionaires inventors poets heroes soldiers harlots bootlicks nobles nonentities burghers martyrs and murderers who played their parts during full four centuries on Manhattan Island s tip Houghton Mifflin Jackson Kenneth T ed 2010 The Encyclopedia of New York City 2nd ed New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11465 2 Martin George Whitney 2011 Verdi in America Oberto Through Rigoletto Eastman studies in music University of Rochester Press ISBN 978 1 58046 388 1 Historic Structures Report Part I Castle Clinton PDF National Park Service May 10 1960 Svejda George J 1968 Castle Garden as an Immigrant Depot 1855 1890 PDF Archived from the original PDF on July 2 2007 Further reading editMoreno Barry 2007 Castle Garden and Battery Park Images of America Arcadia Publishing Incorporated ISBN 978 1 4396 1855 4 New York Aquarium Townsend Charles H 1919 Guide to the New York Aquarium New York Zoological Society External links editListen to this article 7 minutes source source source nbsp This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 29 October 2018 2018 10 29 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles nbsp Media related to Castle Clinton National Monument at Wikimedia Commons Official website Castle Clinton from GORP The Battery Conservancy CastleGarden org searchable database of 13 3 million immigrants arriving in New York before 1892 90 complete Portals nbsp Architecture nbsp National Register of Historic Places nbsp New York City Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Castle Clinton amp oldid 1184966364, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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