LIST OF 



INSTITUTIONS HOLDING EXHIBITIONS 



UNDER THE AUSPICES OF OR IN COOPERATION WITH SCIENTIFIC, HISTORICAL AND 

 ART COMMITTEES OF THE HUDSON-FULTON CELEBRATION COMMISSION 



AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS, Engineering Building, 29 

 West Thirty-ninth Street. Robert Fulton Exhibition. Consists of paintings, drawings, books, 

 decorations and furniture, and working models of John Fitch's steamboat, the first boat operated 

 and propelled by steam; Robert Fulton's "Clermont," the first successful application of steam 

 to navigation, and John Stevens' "Phoenix," the first steamboat to sail on the ocean. 



The exhibition will be shown in the Council Room of the Society, on the eleventh floor, and 

 will be open from 9-00 a. m. until 5.30 p. m. during the entire period of the Hudson-Fulton 

 Celebration, and from 9-00 a. m. until 5.00 p. m. daily until December 6th. 



CITY HISTORY CLUB OF NEW YORK, 21 West Forty-fourth Street. Special Exhi- 

 bition of Illustrations, Photographs, Maps and Plans, relating to the history of the City of New 

 York, and all of the originals used in the City History Club Historical Guide Book of the City 

 of New York. 



COLLEGE OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK, St. Nicholas Avenue and 139th Street. 

 Hudson-Fulton Exhibit. During the Hudson-Fulton Celebration and for some weeks thereafter, 

 the College of the City of New York will have on exhibition in its historical museum a collection 

 of charts, views, manuscripts and relics representing old New 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 Cam- 

 paign of 1776; Revolutionary battle relics; portraits, residences and letters of old New York- 

 ers; 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 Hun- 

 dred and Thirty-seventh Street; also Amsterdam Avenue surface cars to college entrance. 



