A memorial to the Holocaust.

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Museum of Jewish Heritage: Auschwitz Exhibition Ticket

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 2 hour

$25

Visit the most comprehensive exhibition dedicated to the history of Auschwitz and its role in the Ho...

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Museum of Jewish Heritage, New York

A memorial to the Holocaust..

A memorial to the Holocaust.


Hours

Sun

10:00

17:45

Mon

10:00

17:45

Tue

10:00

17:45

Wed

10:00

20:00

Thu

10:00

17:45

Fri

10:00

17:00

Sat

Closed

About Museum of Jewish Heritage

 36 Battery Pl

 +1 646 437-420

 www.mjhnyc.org

Museum of Jewish Heritage and Nearby Sights on Map

Skyscraper Museum

Exhibits on the history of highrise and skyscraper construction

Ellis Island

Ellis Island was the gateway for 12 million immigrants to the United States until 1954

Battery Park

Battery Park is a green space along the New York Harbor at the southern tip of Manhattan, from where ferries to the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island depart

Bowling Green

A small park at the foot of Broadway which is the oldest public park in the city and is the site of the Charging Bull sculpture created after the 1987 stock market crash

National Museum of the American Indian

Housed in the Alexander Hamilton US Custom House, this Smithsonian museum is the New York branch of the National Museum of the American Indian (the other branches are in Washington, D

Trinity Church

An Episcopalian (Anglican) church and parish was first established on this site in 1697 under charter by King William III

New York Stock Exchange

A historic site, not least because of the Black Thursday crash of the Exchange on 24 October 1929 and the subsequent sell-off panic which started on Black Tuesday, 29 October, precipitating the worldwide Great Depression of the early 1930s

23 Wall Street

Located across from the Stock Exchange is this imposing office building which was constructed in 1914 and served as the headquarters of JP Morgan

Trump Building

A very impressive skyscraper which was completed in 1930 and surpassed the height of the nearby Woolworth Building, making it the tallest building in the world until the Chrysler Building was completed just a month later (which in turn lost that title to the Empire State Building less than a year later)

Federal Hall

On this site on April 30, 1789, George Washington stood on a balcony overlooking Wall Street and was inaugurated as the first president of the United States