(iii) 



York. Among the charts will be original prints of New Netherlands and 

 New Amsterdam by Nicholas J. Vischer, about 1650; N. Visscher, 1690; 

 Lotter's "New Jorck," 1720; contemporary plans and views of the Revolu- 

 tionary period showing the movements of Washington and Howe in this 

 vicinity during the Campaign of 1776; Revolutionary battle relics; portraits, 

 residences and letters of old New Yorkers; bronze busts of Washington, 

 Lincoln and Fulton by Houdon and Volk; and other material suggested by 

 the celebration. 



Take Sixth Avenue Elevated Railway to 140th Street, or Broadway Subway 

 to One Hundred and Thirty-seventh Street. 



DEPARTMENT OF PARKS, BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN. 



Through the courtesy of Commissioner Michael J. Kennedy and his assistant 

 arboriculturist, J. J. Levison, the different species of trees have been labeled 

 in Prospect Park, from the Plaza to the Willink Entrance; in Bedford Park; 

 in Highland Park, and in Tompkins Park. An additional small enameled 

 sign has been hung on those labeled trees that were indigenous to the 

 Hudson River Valley in 1609. The special label reads: "This species 

 is a native of the Hudson River Valley." 



FRAUNCES TAVERN, 54 Pearl Street, near Broad Street. Historic 

 Revolutionary Building. Built in 1719. Scene of Washington's farewell to 

 his officers on December 4, 1783. Restored December 4, 1907, by the New 

 York Society of the Sons of the Revolution. Open daily, except Sundays, from 

 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Special Exhibition of Revolutionary Relics by the New 

 York State Society of the Sons of the Revolution, who are the own- 

 ers of that historical building, September 15th to November 1st. 



Take Subway to Bowling Green Station, or Third Avenue Elevated Rail- 

 way to Hanover Square Station, or Broadway surface cars. 



LONG ISLAND HISTORICAL SOCIETY, corner of Pierrepont and 

 Clinton Streets, Brooklyn, between Brooklyn Bridge and Borough Hall. Open 

 daily, except Sundays, from 8.30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Reference library of 70,000 

 volumes; manuscripts, relics, etc. Autograph receipt of Robert Fulton 

 and original manuscript volume of Danker's and Sluyter's " Journal 

 of a Voyage to New York in 1679-80." 



Take Subway to Borough Hall, Brooklyn ; Third Avenue Elevated Railway 

 to Brooklyn Bridge, connecting with Bridge cars; or surface cars to Bridge. 



METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART, Central Park East. Main 

 entrance on Fifth Avenue at Eighty-second Street. Open daily, except Sun- 

 days, from 10.00 a.m. to 6.00 p.m.; in winter to 5.00 p. m. ; Saturdays to 10.00 

 p.m.; Sundays from 1.00 to 6.00 p.m. On Mondays and Fridays an admis- 

 sion fee of 25 cents is charged, except to members and copyists. Collections 

 illustrating all departments of Art and Archeology. Special Exhibition of a 

 magnificent Collection of over 130 of the works of Old Dutch Masters, 

 constituting the finest Exhibition of this kind ever made. Products 

 of Colonial Art: Industrial Art, Furniture, Pewter of the 17th and 

 18th centuries, etc. (Two illustrated catalogues for sale, one of Dutch 

 Exhibit and one of Colonial Arts ; price 10 cents each. Also finely illustrated 

 edition de luxe.) 



Take Fifth Avenue stages or Madison Avenue surface cars to Eighty-second 

 Street, one block east of Museum; connection with Subway at Forty-second 

 Street, and with Elevated Railway and West Side surface cars at Fifty-ninth 

 Street. 



NATIONAL ARTS CLUB, Twentieth Street near Irving Place 

 (Gramercy Park). This house was formerly the residence of Samuel J. 

 Tilden, and is situated one block east of the birth-place of Ex-President Roose- 



