The woman would often drive past a large statue just outside Queens Borough Hall, and her face would tighten and her voice would go cold.
Queens Borough Hall is the seat of government and is located in Kew Gardens.
Queens Borough Hall stands, but Donald R. Manes is history.
The statue was moved in 1941 to distant Queens Borough Hall.
After some years in warehouses and the basement of Queens Borough Hall, it was reinstalled on its base.
Last night at the public hearing at Queens Borough Hall, the majority of those who came to testify spoke out against nonpartisan elections.
Public hearings on the the proposals last week at Queens Borough Hall and City Hall were sparsely attended.
A previous Queens Borough Hall, built around 1910, had been located in the Long Island City neighborhood.
Queens Borough Hall was designed to serve as the center of civic life, and had other functions, such as a post office, when first built.
But when officials at Queens Borough Hall had it moved without telling anybody last month, some local historians were furious.
The woman would often drive past a large statue just outside Queens Borough Hall, and her face would tighten and her voice would go cold.
Queens Borough Hall is the seat of government and is located in Kew Gardens.
Queens Borough Hall stands, but Donald R. Manes is history.
The statue was moved in 1941 to distant Queens Borough Hall.
After some years in warehouses and the basement of Queens Borough Hall, it was reinstalled on its base.
Last night at the public hearing at Queens Borough Hall, the majority of those who came to testify spoke out against nonpartisan elections.
Public hearings on the the proposals last week at Queens Borough Hall and City Hall were sparsely attended.
A previous Queens Borough Hall, built around 1910, had been located in the Long Island City neighborhood.
Queens Borough Hall was designed to serve as the center of civic life, and had other functions, such as a post office, when first built.
But when officials at Queens Borough Hall had it moved without telling anybody last month, some local historians were furious.
The woman would often drive past a large statue just outside Queens Borough Hall, and her face would tighten and her voice would go cold.
Queens Borough Hall is the seat of government and is located in Kew Gardens.
Queens Borough Hall stands, but Donald R. Manes is history.
The statue was moved in 1941 to distant Queens Borough Hall.
After some years in warehouses and the basement of Queens Borough Hall, it was reinstalled on its base.
Last night at the public hearing at Queens Borough Hall, the majority of those who came to testify spoke out against nonpartisan elections.
Public hearings on the the proposals last week at Queens Borough Hall and City Hall were sparsely attended.
A previous Queens Borough Hall, built around 1910, had been located in the Long Island City neighborhood.
Queens Borough Hall was designed to serve as the center of civic life, and had other functions, such as a post office, when first built.
But when officials at Queens Borough Hall had it moved without telling anybody last month, some local historians were furious.