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Ny times tiles
Ny times tiles





ny times tiles

In honor of the new building the city renamed the neighborhood to “Times Square.” The new subway station came about in 1917 and this history, as well as Ochs’ leanings would not have been lost on him. In 1904, Ochs completed the New York Times building in Long Acre Square complete with a subway station in its basement. Later in his life he was honored by the New York Southern Society for “unu­sual achievements in the perpetuation of the history and traditions of the South” and for being “striven on the side of the angels for supporting with unique zeal and power the highest ideals and traditions of the Southern States.” Lee was her idol.” Ochs was well known for his desire to honor the Confederacy through funding cemeteries and veterans’ reunions. Ochs’ mother was a smuggler for the Confederacy, his younger brother was the historian of the New York Chapter of the Sons of Confed­erate Veterans, and in 1924 Adolph donated $1,000 to Stone Mountain Confederate Memorial in his mother’s name stating, “Robert E. Ochs, who was the owner of the Times in the early 20th Century, had strong ties to the Confederate Cause. He explained that when Times Square was built it was largely at the hands of the New York Times, which built its headquarters there. Adolph S. Jackowe wrote an article in Civil War Times magazine arguing the designs were an explicit homage. The MTA maintains that the design never was Confederate in nature, with Kevin Ortiz, an MTA spokesperson, saying, “These are not Confederate flags, it is a design based on geometric forms that represent the ‘Crossroads of the World’ and to avoid absolutely any confusion we will modify them to make that absolutely crystal clear.” Others are not so sure.Īt the same time the MTA was denying the designs were Confederate in nature, David J. The question remains, why this design in Times Square? Vickers frequently included design elements in stations that related to their surroundings, such as bridge motifs at Canal Street Station referencing the former canal there. During a 1998 renovation, more of these blue crosses on red backgrounds were added throughout the station.

ny times tiles

A band of quilt-like designs decorated the top of the walls in the original Interborough Rapid Transit station. Vickers for the station as a decorative element. These original Arts and Crafts influenced designs were created by Squire J. These vinyl stickers printed with a mosaic design were slapped onto the walls of Times Square Station to cover actual tile designs that closely resembled the Confederate flag. In August 2017, in the wake of a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, New York City had a reckoning with the Confederate memorials scattered across the city.

ny times tiles

As if ripped from the draft of a lost National Treasure sequel, Times Square Station has a number of fake subway tiles that hide a more sinister design.







Ny times tiles