985 resultados para New-York City Temperance Society.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Title from caption.
Resumo:
Bound with the author's The adolescent offender. New York, [1923]
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
An account of the celebration by the New York historical society of the 50th anniversary of Washington's inauguration: p. [121]-136.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
I. Hopkins, W. R. Beginnings of the New England society of New York, 1884. Spring, G. A tribute to New England, 1820. Remarks on the charges made by the Rev. Gardiner Spring, D. D., against the religion and morals of the people of Boston and its vicinity, 1821. Romeyn, J. B. The duty and reward of honouring God, 1821. Whelpley, P. M. "The memory of the just is blessed." 1822. Knapp, S. L. Address, 1829. Bacon, L. Address, 1838. Winthrop, R. C. Address, 1839. Hadduck, C. R. The elements of national greatness, 1841. Cheever, G. B. The elements of national greatness, 1842. Choate, R. The age of the Pilgrims the heroic period of our history, 1843. Webster, D. The landing at Plymouth. 1843. Marsh, G. P. Address, 1844. Upham, C. W. The spirit of the day and its lessons, 1846.--II. Hall, J. P. Discourse, 1847. Bushnell, H. The founders, great in their unconsciousness, 1949. Webster, D. The Constitution and the union, 1850. Hillard, G. S. The past and the futur
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
The city is a collection of built structures and infrastructure embedded in socio-cultural processes: any investigation into a city’s transformations involves considerations on the degree to which its composite elements respond to socio-economical changes. The main purpose of this research is to investigate how transformations in the functional requirements of New York’s society have spurred, since the 1970s, changes in both the city’s urban structure and physical form. The present work examines the rise of Amenity Zones in New York, and investigates the transformations that have occurred in New York’s built environment since the 1970s. By applying qualitative measures and analyzing the relationship between urban amenities and the creative class, the present work has investigated changes in the urban structure and detected a hierarchical series of amenity zones classes, namely, Super Amenity Zones (SAZs), Nodal Amenity Zones (NAZs) and Peripheral Amenity Zones (PAZs). This series allows for a more comprehensive reading of the urban structure in a complex city like New York, bringing advancements to the amenity zone’s methodology. In order to examine the manner in which the other component of the city, the physical form, has changed or adapted to the new socio-economic condition, the present research has applied Conzenian analysis to a select study area, Atlantic Avenue. The results of this analysis reveal that, contrary to the urban structure, which changes rapidly, the physical form of New York is hard to modify completely, due to the resilience of the town plan and its elements, and to preservation laws; the city rather adapts to socio-economical changes through process of adaptive reuses or conversion. Concluding, this research has examined the dialectic between the ever-changing needs of society and the complexity of the built environment and urban structure, showing the different degrees to which the urban landscape modifies, reacts and sometimes adapts to the population’s functional requirements.
Resumo:
Published by order of the Executive Committee.
Resumo:
Vol. 1 includes the Constitution, by-laws, list of members and annual report.
Resumo:
"This discourse was delivered to the Historical Society, in the Hall of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, at the opening of the winter session, upon which occasion the students of medicine were also assembled." (Cf. footnote, page 10)
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.