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Chickering Hall (New York City, 1875)

Chickering Hall (1875 - 1893) was a concert and music hall in Manhattan, New York City, New York, located on Fifth Avenue.

History

Chickering Hall, commissioned by Chickering & Sons, was situated at the northwest corner of Fifth Avenue and 18th Street in the New York City borough of Manhattan. It was designed by the American architect George B. Post and F.C. Murray. The building housed a music store, piano warehouse, and concert hall. Above the ground-level salesroom, its 1,450-seat auditorium, located on the second and third floors, hosted concerts, lectures, and conferences.

At the inauguration of the new music hall on November 15, 1875, German pianist Hans von Bülow gave his first New York City performance.

The concert hall was managed by Edward H. Colell in 1891 and was still under the ownership of Chickering and Sons. In 1893, the building was entirely repurposed into a retail space for John Wanamaker's department store, taking over city piano sales.

The original Chickering Hall building in New York City was sold and demolished in the early 1900s. Chickering & Sons merged with the American Piano Company who later established a new building in the borough of Manhattan on 57th Street under the same name in 1924.

Events & Performances

Gallery

See also

References