• Albany Bicentennial Tablet No. 32 – Washington Avenue

    Albany Bicentennial Tablet No. 32 – Washington Avenue

    The last several tablets placed by the Albany Bi-centennial Committee in 1886 were simple commemorations of several streets – and not always major ones. Some still exist, but this one has disappeared. Tablet No. 32—Washington AvenueBronze tablet, 7×16 inches, placed on corner of Capitol building. Inscription: “Washington Avenue, formerly King, then Lion Street.” The…

  • Albany Bicentennial Tablet No. 31 – Academy Park

    Albany Bicentennial Tablet No. 31 – Academy Park

    The Albany Bicentennial Committee chose to honor Academy Park with a bicentennial plaque – interesting in that it is the only one that celebrates a public space (not counting particular streets that were commemorated, which we’ll get to). Washington Park didn’t get such a mention, and Lincoln Park didn’t exist yet. But news accounts…

  • Albany Bicentennial Tablet No. 30 – First Methodist Church

    Albany Bicentennial Tablet No. 30 – First Methodist Church

    Another Albany bicentennial marker, and another one that long ago disappeared without a trace. So did whatever building it was originally installed on, probably another building after that, and, eventually, any evidence that any buildings had ever been there. Bronze tablet, 16×22 inches, placed in wall of building south-east corner of North Pearl and…

  • Albany Bicentennial Tablet No. 29 – The South-East Gate

    Albany Bicentennial Tablet No. 29 – The South-East Gate

    Today we have another Albany Bicentennial tablet that survived despite major construction at the area of its original placement more than a century ago. The Bicentennial Committee titled it “The South-East Gate,” but it covers much more than that: Bronze tablet, 11×23 inches, in a granite block, similar to No. 7, in the walk,…

  • Albany Bicentennial Tablet No. 28: North-West Gate

    Albany Bicentennial Tablet No. 28: North-West Gate

    Continuing our series on the tablets installed at important sites around the city of Albany in honor of the bicentennial of its charter, in 1886: Tablet No. 28 — North-West Gate.Bronze tablet, 9×13 inches, set in building occupied by Johnston & Reilly, North Pearl street. Inscription :“Here Stood the Northwest Gate of the city.…

  • Albany Bicentennial Tablet No. 27: Joel Munsell

    Albany Bicentennial Tablet No. 27: Joel Munsell

    Of all the Albany Bicentennial Tablets that have disappeared, perhaps the most ironic and unjust is the tablet celebrating printer and publisher Joel Munsell – no one has done more to record and preserve the history of the city of Albany, and in thanks, we commemorate him with: exactly nothing. Without his work, particularly…

  • Albany Bicentennial Tablet No. 26 – Crailo

    Albany Bicentennial Tablet No. 26 – Crailo

    Once again, one of Albany’s Bicentennial markers is missing – and this one wasn’t even in Albany. The Bicentennial Committee listed the following text on Tablet No. 26: Tablet No. 26 —Johannes Van RensselaerIn bronze, 7×16 inches, set in the wall of the original mansion on the Greenbush banks. Inscription: “This Manor House, Built…

  • Albany Bicentennial Tablet No. 25 – Manor House

    Albany Bicentennial Tablet No. 25 – Manor House

    Continuing our slow march through the tablets placed in honor of the bicentennial of Albany’s charter as a city, we have a marker that denoted the site of what was for many years the most important house in Rensselaerswyck – the manor house of the patroon. Tablet No. 25 — Manor House, Albany Bronze tablet,…

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