Stoneall's Bar Room: Difference between revisions
DaleSheldon (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
DaleSheldon (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
<b>[[Case File: Mary Cecilia Rogers]]</b> | <b>[[Case File: Mary Cecilia Rogers]]</b> | ||
Likely owned and operated by a lawyer named James C. Stoneall, "Stoneall's Bar" was located on the ground floor of 29 Ann St, Manhattan. On the evening 11 Aug 1841 a meeting of citizens was had here to organize a committee for the purpose of gathering funds for a reward toward information leading to the apprehension of [[Mary Cecilia Rogers|Mary Rogers]] killer. | Likely owned and operated by a lawyer named James C. Stoneall, "Stoneall's Bar" was located on the ground floor of 29 Ann St, Manhattan. On the evening 11 Aug 1841 a meeting of citizens was had here to organize a committee for the purpose of gathering funds for a reward toward information leading to the apprehension of [[Mary Cecilia Rogers|Mary Rogers]] killer. Also interesting to note, the offices of the New York Tribune were located at 30 Ann Street, across the street from Stoneall's Bar Room. | ||
==Documentation== | ==Documentation== |
Revision as of 02:36, 26 April 2024
Case File: Mary Cecilia Rogers
Likely owned and operated by a lawyer named James C. Stoneall, "Stoneall's Bar" was located on the ground floor of 29 Ann St, Manhattan. On the evening 11 Aug 1841 a meeting of citizens was had here to organize a committee for the purpose of gathering funds for a reward toward information leading to the apprehension of Mary Rogers killer. Also interesting to note, the offices of the New York Tribune were located at 30 Ann Street, across the street from Stoneall's Bar Room.
Documentation
Newspaper Transcriptions
- 11 Aug 1841 - Brooklyn Evening Star (Brooklyn, New York): Notice of meeting.
- 15 Sep 1841 - New York Tribune (New York City, New York): Ad for room above Stoneall's bar room, including address