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Herald Square
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==Description== [[File:Naked Pictures of Bea Arthur 0124.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.2|Greeley Square]] Herald Square proper is the north end of the square between West 34th and 35th streets. The old ''[[New York Herald]]'' Building was located on the square. The square contains a huge mechanical clock whose mechanical structures were constructed in 1895 by the sculptor [[Antonin Carlès|Antonin Jean Carles]].<ref name="AIA"/> The monument, known as the [[James Gordon Bennett, Sr.|James Gordon Bennett]] Monument, consists of the Goddess of Wisdom, [[Minerva]] with her owls in front of a bell, flanked by two bell ringers mounted on a Milford pink granite pedestal. The monument's bell was designed to chime on the hour. The two seven-foot-tall bronze laborers, nicknamed Stuff and Guff give the appearance of ringing the bell with their mallets, while in actuality is rung by mallets located behind the bell. The figures and the clock were originally part of the 1894 New York Herald Building that was located at the square. Prior to the demolition of the building in 1921, the figures were removed and reinstalled in the Square in 1940. Greeley Square lies between West 32nd and 33rd streets between Broadway and Sixth Avenue, and is taken up almost entirely by a triangular park.<ref name="AIA">{{cite AIA4|page=225}}</ref> It is named after [[Horace Greeley]], who was the publisher of the ''[[New York Tribune]]'', the ''Herald's'' rival newspaper. (The two papers later merged to form the ''[[New York Herald Tribune]]''.)<ref>{{cite enc-nyc|page=540}}</ref><ref>{{cite streetbook|page=60}}</ref> There is a [[Statue of Horace Greeley (Herald Square)|statue of Greeley]] inside the park, created in 1890 by [[Alexander Doyle]].<ref name="AIA"/> The small park is planted with trees and shrubbery, enclosed by a wrought-iron fence, and provided with inviting chairs, tables and a restaurant kiosk. Herald and Greeley squares stand today as rest areas for the thousands of shoppers that flood the neighborhood, as a lunchroom for thousands of midtown office workers, and as a stage for product launches, musical performances, and photo and film shoots.
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