File:Federal Hall National Monument, New York (89e95313-7d19-418b-b01f-f588707b1e9a).jpg
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Structured data
Captions
Camera location | 40° 42′ 25.92″ N, 74° 00′ 36.01″ W | View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMap | 40.707199; -74.010002 |
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Summary
[edit]English: Federal Hall National Monument, New York | |||||
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Photographer |
English: NPS staff |
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Title |
English: Federal Hall National Monument, New York |
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Publisher |
English: National Park Service |
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Description |
English: 26 Wall Street was the site of New York City's 18th century City Hall. Here John Peter Zenger was jailed, tried, and acquitted of libel for exposing government corruption in his newspaper, an early victory for freedom of the press. City Hall hosted the Stamp Act Congress, which assembled in October 1765, to protest "taxation without representation." After the American Revolution, the Continental Congress met at City Hall, and in 1787 adopted the Northwest Ordinance establishing procedures for creating new states. The First Congress met in the new Federal Hall, and wrote the Bill of Rights, and George Washington was inaugurated here as President on April 30, 1789. The current structure on the site was built as the Customs House, opening in 1842.
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Depicted place |
English: Federal Hall National Memorial, New York County, New York |
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Date |
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Accession number | |||||
Source |
English: NPGallery |
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Permission (Reusing this file) |
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Sponsor InfoField | English: Federal Hall National Monument |
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NPS Unit Code InfoField | FEHA | ||||
Legacy NPS Focus Record ID InfoField | 231433 |
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Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
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current | 11:06, 3 July 2019 | 3,072 × 2,048 (575 KB) | BMacZeroBot (talk | contribs) | Batch upload (Commons:Batch uploading/NPGallery) |
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Metadata
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Image title | 26 Wall Street was the site of New York City's 18th century City Hall. Here John Peter Zenger was jailed, tried, and acquitted of libel for exposing government corruption in his newspaper, an early victory for freedom of the press. City Hall hosted the Stamp Act Congress, which assembled in October 1765, to protest "taxation without representation." After the American Revolution, the Continental Congress met at City Hall, and in 1787 adopted the Northwest Ordinance establishing procedures for creating new states. The First Congress met in the new Federal Hall, and wrote the Bill of Rights, and George Washington was inaugurated here as President on April 30, 1789. The current structure on the site was built as the Customs House, opening in 1842. |
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Date and time of data generation | 19800101 - 19991231 |
Latitude | 40° 42′ 25.92″ N |
Longitude | 74° 0′ 36.01″ W |
Altitude | 0 meters above sea level |
GPS tag version | 2.2.0.0 |