The 1831 City Bank of New York theft took place on March 19, 1831, in New York City, New York, United States, when burglars stole $245,000 (1831 values) from the City Bank (now Citibank) on Wall Street, using a set of copied keys. The theft is regarded as one of the first bank heists in U.S. history. The amount stolen would come to over $52 million in 2013 currency. Initial reports variously reported the names of the culprits as Edward Smith, Edward Jones, James Honeyman and James Murray. A modern source, drawing on period newspapers, identifies the thieves as James Honeyman and William J. Murray. Murray and Honeyman, who used both "Smith" and "Jones" as aliases, spent $60,000 before their arrest. Murray fled to Philadelphia, while Honeyman remained in New York under an alias. Both were captured, convicted, and sentenced to five years in Sing Sing Prison. The Connecticut Courant reported that the suspect, Smith (Honeyman), was apprehended "due to the acuteness and indefatigable vigilance of High Constable Hays." Honeyman had been apprehended in the previous year for robbing "Mr. Schenck's store" in Brooklyn. He was a "Morocco (leather) dresser" by trade who kept a small shoe store on the Bowery where he allowed "dissipated profligates" to gather. Constable Hays found nothing during his first search of the Division Street rooms where Honeyman lived with his wife and two children. Tipped off by the keeper of the lodging house, who saw Honeyman carrying a trunk out of his rooms, the "acute" Constable Hays returned later in the week, and he decided to search the trunks remaining in the apartment. This time, he found most of the stolen money hidden under clothing in one of the trunks. The suspect was seized and taken to New York's colonial-era Bridewell prison. Authorities recovered: $57,328 in City Bank notes; $501,118 in "various city notes;" $44,000 in Lansingburgh Bank Notes (a bank in Lansingburgh, New York); $20,000 in notes issued by the "Morris Canal"; $8,272 recorded as "uncurrent - belonging to S. & M. Allen"; and $40 worth of counterfeit notes. $63,000 of stolen money was never recovered, a sum that included 398 doubloons.

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9 m

70 Pine Street

L'American International Building est un gratte-ciel de Manhattan, à New York, situé au 70 Pine Street, Financial District, New York. Il mesure 290 mètres avec son antenne (259 mètres si on ne compte que le toit) et compte 66 étages, séparés de 3,75 mètres.
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19 m

60 Wall Street

Le 60 Wall Street est un gratte-ciel du Financial District de Manhattan, à New York. Il a été conçu par le cabinet d'architectes John Dinkeloo and Associates, Kevin Roche et l'agence Kohn Pedersen Fox. La construction, qui a duré de 1987 à 1989, a nécessité la destruction de l'ancien 60 Wall Street. Construit dans un style post-moderne (verre, acier, pierre), le bâtiment mesure 227 mètres, et compte cinquante six étages. Il offre 160 000 m² de bureaux à son principal locataire, la Deutsche Bank. Le bâtiment avait été initialement construit pour abriter le quartier général de JP Morgan Chase & Co, qui y resta entre 1987 et 1989 avant de migrer dans un nouveau bâtiment.[pas clair]
20 m

60 Wall Street (ancien bâtiment)

Le 60 Wall Street était un gratte-ciel situé à Manhattan, à New York, construit en 1905. Il s'élevait à 107 mètres et possédait 26 étages. Il a été démoli en 1977 pour laisser place à l'actuel 60 Wall Street.
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43 m

Wall Street

Wall Street est une rue de New York (États-Unis).
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49 m

48 Wall Street

48 Wall Street aussi connu sous le nom de Bank of New York Bulding est un bâtiment construit en 1928 sur le terrain de la banque qui y était depuis 1797, sur le coin de Wall Street et William Street dans le quartier financier de New York. Elle a été inscrite au Registre national des lieux historiques en 2003.