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| Philadelphia
Neighborhoods: Jewelers' Row |
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you can find various information about the Jewelers' Row neighborhood
in Philadelphia! |
Jewelers'
Row is in the Center City section of Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania. It is the oldest diamond district in America,
and only second in size to the row in New York City. It also
features the longest continuously operating shop, wholesaler
I. Gansky and Co., which dates back to 1851. There are more
than 300 retailers, wholesalers, and craftsmen on Sansom Street,
between Seventh and Eighth streets, and on Eighth Street between
Chestnut and Walnut streets. Many of the retailers, craftsmen
and appraisers have been owned by the same families for five
generations.
History
Jeweler’s Row (Carstairs Row) was designed by builder
and architect Thomas Carstairs circa 1799 through 1820, for
developer William Sansom, as part of the first speculative
housing developments in the United States, and introduction
of the Row house in the United States. Carstairs Row was built
on the southern part of the site occupied by "Morris'
Folly" – Robert Morris’ unfinished mansion
designed by L'Enfant.
Sansom
bought (at sheriff's sale) the property and unfinished house
of Robert Morris, on Walnut St. between 7th and 8th Sts. Sansom
bi-sected the land with a new east-west eponymous street.
Carstairs purchased the south side of Sansom St. and erected
22 look-alike dwellings. Prior to this time houses had been
built not in rows, but individually. It can be contrasted
with Elfreth's Alley where all the house are of varying heights
and widths, with different street lines, doorways and brickwork.
The grid
pattern laid down by William Penn, and continued by subsequent
planners and surveyors heavily influenced the row house form
of architecture. The block-long row house is an important
example of Philadelphia’s architectural and developmental
history.
Sansom
erected the buildings on what was then the outskirts of Philadelphia.
To attract tenants he paved Sansom Street at his own expense.
He then hired Benjamin Latrobe to design another row on the
700 block of Walnut Street. A prominent feature of the street
is the repetitive flat expanse of the buildings, which made
it ideal for commercial conversion.
Changes
Throughout the Years
Alterations
in the late 19th and early 20th centuries changed most of
the row – only 700, 730 and 732 Sansom retained their
original experience. 710 Sansom, built in 1870, is a three-story
commercial building with stone lintels. Its Victorian style
is typical of the buildings that became the center for jewelry
and diamond merchants who developed Jewelers’ Row in
the mid-19th century (1860 – 1879).
722 Sansom
was originally built in the 1860s and was redesigned in the
early 1900s when steel became available. 724 Sansom, built
in 1875, has a cast iron first floor.
Source
of Article:
Wikipedia.
(2008). Jewelers' Row, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Retrieved May 30, 2008 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewelers%27_Row%2C_Philadelphia |
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you can find various external links about the Jewelers' Row
neighborhood in Philadelphia! To view their website, just click
on the link. |
Jewelers'
Row Merchant Association
Center
City District and Central Philadelphia Development Corporation
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Philadelphia
Neighborhoods |
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neighborhoods in the Philadelphia real estate market! These
neighborhoods include: Avenue of the Arts, Bella Vista, Center
City Philadelphia, Chinatown, Fitler Square, Girard Estate,
Graduate Hospital, Grays Ferry, Hawthorne, Italian Market, Jewelers'
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Street, Southwark, University City, Washington Square West,
and Whitman. To view a page on a Philly neighborhood, just click
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