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.
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.
March 5: The “Mad Poet,” McDonald Clarke, died in his jail cell on this date in 1842 by drinking water until he drowned.
March 4: On this date in 1841, engineer David Bates Douglass‘s brilliant plan for the design of Green-Wood Cemetery was adopted by its board of trustees.
March 3: “Boss” Tweed, who in a long career made his name synonymous with corruption and theft from the public coffers on a massive scale, was born on this date in 1823.
March 2: John Eberhard Faber, pencil manufacturer in Greenpoint who put the eraser on the pencil, died on this date in 1879.
March 1: Civil War Colonel Leopold Von Gilsa, a Prussian soldier who came to America and fought for the Union, then sold pianos after the war, died on this date in 1870.
February 28: Simon Boerum, a Brooklyn farmer who represented New York in the Continental Congresses of 1774 and 1775, was born on February 29, 1724.
February 27: Notorious prisoner of war camp Andersonville, run by the Confederates, opened on this date in 1864; 18 soldiers who are interred at Green-Wood would be released alive from there; one, Michael Wallace, would die from disease in 1865, just months after his release.
February 26: Born on this date in 1902 in Italy as Umberto Anastasio, he would come to America and become famous as Albert Anastasia, “The Lord High Executioner” of Organized Crime; in 1957, he would be murdered while getting his hair cut at the Park Sheraton Hotel.
Henry Slocum (1827-1894) led quite a life. He was quite prominent during the Civil War. He wasn’t a Union general megastar like Grant, Sherman, Sheridan, or Meade. But he was a general who played an important role. Early on, he fought at the Battles of First and Second Bull Run, Virginia; South Mountain and Antietam, … Read more