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- Title
- Horizontorium
- Description
- Morphed view of the Gothic-style bank building, erected in 1808 after the designs of Benjamin Henry Latrobe at the southwest corner of Fourth and Chestnut streets. Shows the building projecting upward from the plane of the paper causing a cathedral like effect to the architecture. A gate, lawn, and trees surround the building. An outbuilding is visible on the property. Couples and a lady with a parasol stroll on the sidewalk. The Philadelphia Bank or Bank of Philadelphia (predecessor of the Philadelphia National Bank), formed in 1803, and was incorporated in 1804 as the unofficial bank of the commonwealth. The building was razed in 1836. Print is the only recognized American "Horizontorium" image and one of two known views of the bank., Given the publisher, Wainwright suggests that the probable printer was Childs & Inman., Manuscript note on recto: Fourth Street. Chestnut Street., Semi-circle legend printed on recto lower center edge. Legend used for a paper tab with pinhole to be pasted onto print in order to view the subject in the proper perspective., Philadelphia on Stone, POS 360, Mason, a Philadelphia engraver and artist, specialized in scenes of Philadelphia architecture., LCP exhibit catalogue: Made in America #47., Wainwright retrospective conversion project, edited., Historical Society of Pennsylvania: Bc19 H811.
- Creator
- Barker, J. J. (John Jesse), artist
- Date
- c1832
- Location
- Library Company of Philadelphia | Print Department **W178 [P.2070]
- Title
- [Lockwood & Smith, importers and dealers china, glass and Queensware, 7 South Fourth Street, Philadelphia]
- Description
- Advertisement showing the five-story storefront for the importer and dealer at 7 South Fourth Street between Market and Chestnut streets. A clerk greets a male patron at one of the open entryways. Shelves of plates, bowls, and pitchers line the walls of the store. In the display windows, more china, glass, and queensware, including tureens and pitchers are on view. On the sidewalk, clerks handle a large hamper lying between large marked barrels and a second large hamper. Marked barrels read "China Withers & Stowers Cynthiana. KY." and "F. Cornog Phoenixville, Pa." Also shows partial views of adjacent buildings. Lockwood & Smith partnered at the address 1845-1846., Date from Poulson inscription on recto: South Fourth Street Oct. 1846., Philadelphia on Stone, POS 441, Wainwright retrospective conversion project., Trimmed and lacking title.
- Creator
- Rease, W. H., artist
- Date
- [October 1846]
- Location
- Library Company of Philadelphia | Print Department *W221 [P.2111]
- Title
- Philadelphia Bank in Fourth Street Philadelphia
- Description
- View of the Gothic-style bank building, erected in 1808 after the designs of Benjamin Henry Latrobe at the southwest corner of Fourth and Chestnut streets. The Philadelphia Bank or Bank of Philadelphia (predecessor of the Philadelphia National Bank), formed in 1803, and was incorporated in 1804 as the unofficial bank of the commonwealth. The building was razed in 1836., Retrospective conversion record: original entry, with edited., Described in Snyder's "Birch's Philadelphia Views: New Discoveries," p. 170.
- Creator
- Birch, William Russell, 1755-1834
- Date
- [1809]
- Location
- Library Company of Philadelphia | Print Department Birch's views [Sn 38a/P.8719]
- Title
- Lippincott & Co. south west corner of Fourth & Market St Philadelphia
- Description
- Advertisement showing the red, two-bay, six-story building tenanted by Barclay and Isaac Lippincott's clothing store at the southwest corner of Fourth and Market Streets, marked with pre-consolidation addressed buildings. An advertisement painted in white on the east side of the building reads, "Lippincotts one price clothing warehouse cheap for cash." The same phrase is displayed on the front facade, along with the address, "4th & Market Sts., 130" A large flag reading, "Clothing Lippincott & Co.," flies at the top of the building. Two men stand near a display of shirts, pants, vests, and other articles of clothing under the corner awning. Patrons speak with sales clerks who stand behind counters, in front of shelves that extend to the ceiling. The store's wares cover the shop windows. A man walks with a woman holding a parasol near boxes piled outside of the adjacent, four-story property occupied by Lippincott's Clothing Warehouse (132 Market Street, ie. 402 Market Street). Next to the clothing warehouse, framed engravings are displayed in the partially visible shop window of Thomas, importer of engravings (404 Market Street). A large framed print is prominently advertised on the outside of the shop. A person stands in the front doorway of the building immediately south of Lippincott & Co. on Fourth Street. A woman in a red dress rides a white horse along Market Street, and two dogs stand together in the middle of the street in the foreground., The clothing store operated at this address as Lippincott, Taylor & Co., until 1851 when it became Lippincott & Co. under the ownership of Barclay and Isaac Lippincott. The named changed again in 1860 to Lippincott, Hunter & Scott, with an additional store at 424 Market Street. Purportedly the store where John Wanamaker worked and was introduced to the clothing business., Date from Poulson inscription on recto: Decemr. 1858., Philadelphia on Stone, POS 439, Wainwright retrospective conversion project, edited.
- Creator
- Reynolds, Robert F., artist
- Date
- [December 1858]
- Location
- Library Company of Philadelphia | Print Department **W219 [P.2136]