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No. 45 and The Manor are the first two units completed, construction having begun in early 1927. They're faced with red brick, part of a record-breaking order ‒ 10,000,000 bricks in all ‒ shipped in by barge and offloaded at the foot of 42nd Street.
The apartments are small but efficiently designed, and come equipped with name-brand products of the era like Frigidaires and Murphy beds. They are quickly rented out and remain so thereafter.
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The Manor and Prospect Tower under construction, 1927 |
New York Times, Oct. 1, 1927 |
The French Company celebrates the opening with a luncheon in Prospect Tower's restaurant, where self-congratulatory speeches are delivered by various company executives. There are 150 guests in attendance.
The final speaker, Fred French, concludes his remarks by producing a rusty sword that was unearthed during the excavation of the site. Waving it in the air, French explains it has been identified by arms experts at the Metropolitan Museum as a Revolutionary War Hessian cavalry sword.
And so, with a flash of a blade, Tudor City is off and running. French keeps the sword displayed in his office for years after. Today it is in the collection of the New-York Historical Society.
More about Prospect Tower here and The Manor here.
See them rise here.
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