The United States Custom House, sometimes referred to as the New York Custom House, was the place where the United States Customs Service collected federal customs duties on imported goods within New York City.

1. Locations

The Custom House existed at several locations over the years. From 1790 to 1799, it was at South William Street, opposite Mill Lane, known as 5 Mill Street. From 1799 to 1815, it was in the Government House, roughly on the former site of Fort Amsterdam. From 1817 to 1834, it was in a converted bookstore and reading room on Wall Street at the east side of Nassau Street. That building was demolished for construction of a new Custom House at the same location, completed in 1842, which was designed by John Frazee, and is today designated Federal Hall National Memorial. From 1862 it was in the Merchant's Exchange Building at 55 Wall Street. In 1907 it moved into a new building, now called the Alexander Hamilton U.S. Custom House, built on the site where Government House sat earlier, on the south side of Bowling Green. The Customs Service signed a long-term lease with the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey at Six World Trade Center in 1970, and moved the custom house there in 1973. After the World Trade Center was destroyed during the September 11 attacks in 2001, employees were moved to various places in Manhattan, Queens, and Elizabeth in New Jersey. The Customs Service was split into several agencies in 2003. One of its successors, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, planned to return to the new World Trade Center, moving into One World Trade Center.

1. Importance

In the 19th century, the Port of New York was the primary port of entry for goods reaching the United States, and as such the Custom House in New York was the most important in the country. In 1853, for instance, it collected almost 75% of the custom revenue in the country. Until the passage of the 16th Amendment in 1913, which instituted a national income tax, the New York Custom House supplied two-thirds of the federal government's revenue. The amount of money passing through the Custom House made working there a prime position, and corruption was widespread. At one point, 27,000 people applied for 700 open positions in the Custom House.

1. Patronage

Until the civil service reforms of the late nineteenth century, all Custom House employees were political appointees. The President appointed the four principal officers: Collector of Customs, Naval Officer, Surveyor of Customs, and Appraiser of Customs. The Customs House patronage was the subject of great debate during the Rutherford B. Hayes administration, as Hayes attempted to establish a merit-based system of appointments, while Senator Roscoe Conkling wished to retain the spoils system, under which he controlled the patronage there. One Collector of Customs, Chester A. Arthur (1871–1878), later became President of the United States following an assassination. Arthur was said to have made several times more income as a collector than he did as a lawyer, about $50,000 a year in his first three years in office.

1. References


1. Bibliography

Stokes, Isaac Newton Phelps (1915–1928). The Iconography of Manhattan Island, 1498–1909. Robert H. Dodd.

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3 m

Federal Hall National Memorial

Conçu par Pierre-Charles L'Enfant, le Federal Hall, situé au 26, Wall Street a été l'emplacement du premier hôtel-de-ville de New York et du premier Capitole des États-Unis. Le bâtiment d'origine a été détruit en 1812 et remplacé par la structure actuelle, le premier bureau des douanes de New York. Le bâtiment appartient maintenant au National Park Service sous le nom de Federal Hall National Memorial, un musée qui célèbre le souvenir du bâtiment précédent. Il est inscrit sur le Registre national des lieux historiques. Federal Hall est, avec le National City Bank Building, le plus ancien immeuble de Wall Street. Une statue de George Washington de 1882 du sculpteur John Quincy Adams Ward devant l'entrée rappelle que c'est là que le premier président américain prononça son serment d'investiture en 1789. Son architecture de style Greek Revival contraste avec les gratte-ciel environnants.
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25 m

Attentat de Wall Street

L'attentat de Wall Street a lieu le 16 septembre 1920, quelques mois après l'arrestation de Nicola Sacco et Bartolomeo Vanzetti. Un chariot garé au carrefour de Wall Street et Broad Street explose devant le siège de la banque J.P. Morgan & Co. situé au 23 Wall Street.
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34 m

Grand Incendie de New York de 1835

Le Grand Incendie de New York de 1835 est un sinistre ayant détruit la Bourse de New York et la plupart des bâtiments de la pointe sud de Manhattan près de Wall Street les 16 et 17 décembre 1835.
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43 m

23 Wall Street

23 Wall Street ou The Corner-(Le Coin) est un édifice de bureaux qui appartient à J.P. Morgan & Co. (plus tard le Morgan Guaranty Trust Company). La bâtisse est située au sud-est au coin de Wall Street et Broad Street, en plein cœur du quartier financier de New York.
56 m

14 Wall Street

14 Wall Street, appelé aussi Bankers Trust Company Building, est un gratte-ciel de bureaux de 165 mètres de hauteur construit à New York en 1912 pour abriter certains des locaux de la Bankers Trust. La pyramide coiffant l'immeuble devint célèbre et fut un symbole de la Bankers Trust. L'immeuble est de style néoclassique, et s'inspire du Mausolée d'Halicarnasse et du Campanile de Saint-Marc de Venise. Les architectes sont l'agence Trowbridge & Livingston et l'agence Shreve, Lamb and Harmon pour l'addition de 25 étages au nord et à l'ouest de l'édifice principal.