Mapping Mobility: Spatial and Class Change in the Gilded Age Wall Street WorkforceMain MenuWomen Attached and Men AdriftResearch StrategyHistory of Brown Brothers & Co.Women's LivesMen's LivesConclusion: Digital and Digitized Histories of GenderMethodology and ProductionBibliographyAcknowledgmentsAtiba Pertilla49e1cef3634460a9a4563de96681500e3121d311
2509 7th Ave., home of Meredith Waterbury (with her son Chester) in 1910.
12018-05-22T01:52:39+00:00Atiba Pertilla49e1cef3634460a9a4563de96681500e3121d311Bromley atlas of Manhattan (1911), plate 422Depiction of area bounded by W. 147th Street, the Harlem River, 136th Street, and St. Nicholas Avenue.media/nypl.digitalcollections.510d47e2-0981-a3d9-e040-e00a18064a99.001.v.jpgplain2018-05-22T01:55:20+00:00Atiba Pertilla49e1cef3634460a9a4563de96681500e3121d311
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12018-02-17T15:02:27+00:00Atiba Pertilla49e1cef3634460a9a4563de96681500e3121d311Meredith WaterburyAtiba Pertilla7Biography page for Meredith Waterburyplain2018-05-22T01:51:00+00:0040.821879, -73.938466Atiba Pertilla49e1cef3634460a9a4563de96681500e3121d311