Isaac T. Hooper House
![一般的なランドマーク: 上記以外のアイコンで該当しない、人々に注目される場所。中にアイコンを入れて使う。 一般的なランドマーク](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/landmark.gif)
![福祉/サービス: 福祉、就労支援、食料、健康管理、寄付などを提供する所。 福祉/サービス](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/social_service.gif)
![学校: 小学校、中学校、高等学校、大学、専門学校など。 学校](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/school.gif)
![フリースピーチ: 抗議など演説が自由にできる場所。 フリースピーチ](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/free_speech.gif)
![地域の歴史/文化財: 地域にとって特に記されていない歴史的な所。石碑や彫刻。 地域の歴史/文化財](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/historical_feature.gif)
![コミュニティ・センター: 地域の交流を深めるための活動に使われる集会所など。 コミュニティ・センター](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/community_center.gif)
![難民保護地域: 災害や紛争など、惨事に見舞われた人たちの避難地区。 難民保護地域](https://www.opengreenmap.org/sites/default/files/taxonomy_image/refugee_area.gif)
このサイトについて
The grand three-story (plus attic and basement) Greek Revival
style rowhouse at No. 110 Second Avenue, in today’s East Village
neighborhood of Manhattan, is the only survivor of a row of four houses
that functioned as an enclave for the extended family of the very wealthy
wholesale grocery and commission merchant Ralph Mead (1789-1866).
Constructed c. 1837-38 by the Mead family, No. 110 -
was purchased in 1874 by the Women’s Prison Association, which
had been established in 1845 as the Female Department of the Prison
Association of New York by Isaac Tatem Hopper and his daughter,
Abigail Hopper Gibbons, noted Quaker abolitionists and leading
advocates of prison reform, and chartered in 1854 under the new name.
The Isaac T. Hopper Home, opened here in 1874, is considered the
world’s oldest halfway house for girls and women released from prison.
The Home’s original mission was to rehabilitate these women by providing short-term shelter, religious
counseling, domestic training in sewing and laundry work, and job placement. A rare extant house of the
period when this section of Second Avenue was one of the most elite addresses in Manhattan in the early 19th
century, it is also a fine example of a grand Greek Revival style rowhouse. The house is characterized by its
machine-pressed red brickwork laid in stretcher bond; high stoop and areaway with wrought-iron fence;
entrance with Italianate style paneled double doors and transom; long parlor-level windows and cast-iron
balcony; and denticulated cornice; and is made particularly distinctive by its brownstone portico with Ionic
fluted columns supporting an entablature. The Isaac T. Hopper Home, which has continuously served the
mission of the Women’s Prison Association here since 1874, is a rare surviving 19th-century institutional
presence in this ever-changing neighborhood.
(Source:www.gvshp.org/gvshp/resources/his)
Location:
コメント
コネクション
- New York
- New York
- New York
- New York
- New York
- New York
- New York
- New York
- New York
- New York
- AustinUnited States
- AkronUnited States
- DenverUnited States
- Aruba
- MiamiUnited States
- Crows Nestオーストラリア
- Long Island CityUnited States
- United States
- Aarauスイス
- BrentwoodUnited States
- ConwayUnited States
- HenricoUnited States
- Canada
- taoyuan county台湾
- TruckeeUnited States
- New York City
- EspooFinland
- Canada
- ClackmannanUnited Kingdom
- EspooFinland
- San DiegoUnited States
- WallingtonUnited Kingdom
- United States
- Las VegasUnited States
- New York City
マルチメディア
![](https://opengreenmap.org./ja/sites/default/files/imagecache/320max/user_upload/039.jpg)
Isaac T. Hooper House
インパクト
まだ誰からもインパクトは報告されていません!一番目になりませんか?