The Ripley Collective
Gothic teardrop arch cornice fragment with scrolling foliate accents; 1920s Harlem, New York, Gothic Style Architectural Limestone Facade Carving 27 1/2"H x 42"W
Gothic teardrop arch cornice fragment with scrolling foliate accents; 1920s Harlem, New York, Gothic Style Architectural Limestone Facade Carving 27 1/2"H x 42"W
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Gothic teardrop arch cornice fragment with scrolling foliate accents; 1920s Harlem, New York, Gothic Style Architectural Limestone Facade Carving Carved 1924-1926 by William Bradley & Son Cut Stone Contractors. In 2020, each limestone sculpture was removed by hand from the The A. Philip Randolph Campus High School, Harlem, NYC, to be precisely reproduced/replaced for the effort of historic preservation of the building. APRCHS occupies a building designed in the Collegiate Gothic style by William H. Gompert, Architect & Superintendent of School Buildings for the New York City Board of Education. Constructed from 1924 to 1926, the building opened as the first built for the New York Training School for Teachers, established in 1898 to provide elementary school teachers for the Board of Education. The Training School became the New York Teachers Training College in 1931, but a surplus of teachers during the Depression led to the abolishment of the school in 1933. The A. Philip Randolph Campus High School is a four-year public high school in New York City. It is located in Harlem, adjacent to the City College of New York. It occupies a landmark building formerly occupied by The High School of Music & Art. Asa Philip Randolph was a labor leader and civil rights activist who founded the nation’s first major Black labor union, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters (BSCP) in 1925. In the 1930s, his organizing efforts helped end both racial discrimination in defense industries and segregation in the U.S. armed forces. Randolph was also a principal organizer of the March on Washington in 1963, which paved the way for passage of the Civil Rights Act the following year. Photos of school: "NYC School Construction Authority" 27 1/2"H x 42"W
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