'New York City Hall' is the seat of the
government of New York City. The building houses the office of the
Mayor of New York City and the chambers of the
New York City Council.
The building is the oldest City Hall in the
United States that still houses its original governmental functions. Constructed from 1803 to 1812, New York City Hall is a
National Historic Landmark and is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places. Its rotunda is a designated interior New York City landmark.
City Hall is located within the small City Hall Park in
Lower Manhattan between
Broadway,
Park Row and
Chambers Street.
Functions
Official receptions are held in the Governor's room, which has hosted many dignitaries including the
Marquis de Lafayette and
Albert Einstein. The historic Blue Room is where New York City mayors have been giving official press conferences for decades and is often used for bill-signing ceremonies. Room 9 is the legendary press room at City Hall where reporters file stories in cramped quarters. While the Mayor's Office is in the building, the staff of thirteen municipal agencies under mayoral control are located in the nearby
Manhattan Municipal Building, one of the largest government buildings in the world.
The steps of City Hall are the frequent backdrop for political demonstrations and press conferences concerning city politics. Live, unedited coverage of all events at City Hall is broadcast by
NYCTV channel 74, one of the City government's official television stations.
Fencing surrounds the building's perimeter, with strong security presence by the
New York City Police Department. Public access to the building is restricted to tours and to those with specific business appointments.
History
New York's first City Hall was built by the Dutch in the 17th century on Pearl Street. The city's second City Hall, built in 1700, stood on Wall and Nassau Streets. That building was renamed
Federal Hall after New York became the first official capital of the United States after the
Revolutionary War. Plans for building a new City Hall were discussed by the New York City Council as early as 1776, but the financial strains of the war delayed progress. The Council chose a site at the old
Common at the northern limits of the City, now City Hall Park.
In 1802 the City held a competition for a new City Hall. The first prize of $350 was awarded to John McComb Junior and Joseph Francois Mangin. McComb, whose father had worked on the old City Hall, was a New Yorker and designed
Castle Clinton in Battery Park. Mangin studied architecture in his native France before becoming a New York City surveyor in 1795 and publishing an official map of the city in 1803. Mangin was also the architect of the landmark
St. Patrick's Old Cathedral on Mulberry Street.
Construction of the new City Hall was delayed after the City Council objected that the design was too extravagant. In response, McComb and Mangin reduced the size of the building and used
brownstone at the rear of the building to lower costs (the brownstone, along with the original deteriorated Massachusetts marble facade, was replaced with Alabama limestone in 1954 to 1956). Labor disputes and an outbreak of yellow fever further slowed construction. The building was not dedicated until 1811. It officially opened in 1812.
The building's Governor's Room hosted President-elect
Abraham Lincoln in 1861, while his coffin was placed on the staircase landing across the rotunda when he lay in state in 1865 after his assassination.
Ulysses S. Grant also lay in state beneath the soaring rotunda dome. The Governor's Room, which continues to be used for official receptions, also houses one of the most important collections of 19th century American portraiture and notable artifacts such as
George Washington’s desk.
On
July 23,
2003 at 2:08 p.m., City Hall was the scene of a rare political assassination.
Othniel Askew, a political rival of City Councilman
James E. Davis, opened fire with a pistol from the balcony of the City Council chamber. Askew shot Davis twice, fatally wounding him. A police officer on the floor of the chamber then fatally shot Askew. Askew and Davis had entered the building together without passing through a metal detector, a courtesy extended to elected officials and their guests. As a result of the security breach Mayor
Michael Bloomberg revised security policy to require that everyone entering the building pass through metal detectors without exception.
[2]
Architecture

The Governor's Room is used for official receptions.

The building's front facade.
The City Hall building epitomizes the American
Federal style of architecture.
The building's front facade was formerly of white marble, while the back was brown sandstone. In 1954, the decay of the original material led to a replacement of the stonework of the entire facade with limestone above a pink granite basement level carved according to the original designs, and for the first time since its construction City Hall had four matching sides. The building's distinctive
cupola has served as a model for spires on other buildings, notably
Eliot House at
Harvard University.
On the inside, the rotunda is a soaring space with a grand marble double stairway rising up to the second floor, where ten fluted Corinthian columns support the coffered dome.
City Hall was formerly served by the
City Hall subway station, a now-defunct station of the
New York City Subway. The City Hall station was the southern terminus of the first tracks for the subway, which ran to
the Bronx.
[3] The current
City Hall Station is partly underneath the park.
Portrait collection
City Hall has a significant historical portrait collection. There are 108 paintings from the late 18th century through the 20th. ''
The New York Times'' declared it "almost unrivaled as an ensemble, with several masterpieces."
[4] Among the collection is
John Trumbull’s 1805 portrait of
Alexander Hamilton, the source of the face on the
U.S. $10 bill. There were significant efforts to restore the paintings in the 1920s and 1940s. In 2006 a new restoration campaign began for 47 paintings identified by the Art Commission as highest in priority.
City Hall in popular culture
New York City Hall has played a central role in several films and television series. ''
Spin City'' (1996-2002), set in City Hall, starred
Michael J. Fox as a Deputy Mayor making efforts to stop the dim-witted Mayor from embarrassing himself in front of the media and voters. ''
City Hall'' (1996) starred
Al Pacino as an idealistic Mayor and
John Cusack as his Deputy Mayor, who leads an investigation with unexpectedly far-reaching consequences into the accidental shooting of a boy in New York.
City Hall is also referenced in the folk song
The Irish Rover as performed by
The Pogues and
The Dubliners:
:In the year of our Lord, eighteen hundred and six,
:We set sail from the Coal Quay of Cork
:We were sailing away with a cargo of bricks
:For the grand City Hall in New York
Although the dates match those of City Hall, there is no recorded usage of Irish bricks in the building's construction.
See also
★
Brooklyn Borough Hall
★
Gracie Mansion
★
Manhattan Municipal Building
References
1. National Register Information System
2. Killer Competition: Activist and councilman James Davis played his own brand of Brooklyn-style political hardball. But Othniel Askew threw out the rule book., ''New York Magazine'', August 4, 2003
3. New York City Transit - History and Chronology, accessed December 13, 2006
4. "In New York, Taking Years Off the Old, Famous Faces Adorning City Hall.", The New York Times, December 6, 2006.
External links
★
New York Architecture Images- City Hall (and City Hall Subway Station)
★
New York City Council Chambers
★
CityMayors.com feature
★
New York Map Society history of City Hall Park
★ Archaeological Institute of America
The City Hall Park Project ''Archaeology'', February 12, 2007.