March 12: William M. Tweed

March 12: William M. Tweed, the “Boss,” died in this date in 1878 at the Ludlow Street Jail, where he was being held on a civil judgment arising from his massive theft of public funds.

Will Ellis: Photographing Green-Wood

I recently was contacted by Will Ellis, a photographer who was interested in doing a photo essay on Green-Wood. Here’s how Will describes himself on his website: Will Ellis is a Brooklyn-based photographer, videographer, and editor, and the founder of Abandoned NYC.  His photographic work has taken him across the five boroughs to document a … Read more

March 11: Henry Bergh

March 11: The Great Blizzard of 1888 hit New York City on this date; Henry Bergh, the founder of the ASPCA, the first humane organization in the Americas, was already ill, but when a doctor was summoned he could not reach Bergh because the roads were impassable; Bergh died the next day.

March 10: Charles Schieren

March 10: On this date in 1915, Charles Schieren, who had served as mayor of the City of Brooklyn, died. On the next day, his wife Mary, who had been nursing him, also died. A bronze sculpture, by Solon Borglum, “The Angel of Death,” was erected at their graves.

March 9: Do-Hum-Me

March 9: Do-Hum-Me, daughter of a chief of the Sac tribe, became the toast of New York City but was soon struck down by disease and died on this date in 1843. P.T. Barnum paid for her gravestone.

March 8: Henry Ward Beecher

March 8: “The Great Divine,” Rev. Henry Ward Beecher of Plymouth Church in Brooklyn Heights, who, according the the Pulitizer Prize-winning biography had been “The Most Famous Man in America” only to be diminished by scandal, died on this date in 1887.

March 6: Louis Comfort Tiffany

March 6: On this date in 1957, fire destroyed Louis Comfort Tiffany‘s magnificent mansion, Laurelton Hall, in Oyster Bay on Long Island; much of his art there was destroyed, but a good deal of it was salvaged.