Former prison in New York City
40°44′04″N 73°59′59″W / 40.7345°N 73.9996°W / 40.7345; -73.9996 (Jefferson Market Garden )
The now-demolished prison on the left next to the extant courthouse on the right with the Sixth Avenue El in front
The Jefferson Market Prison was a prison in New York City at 10 Greenwich Avenue that opened in 1877, together with the adjacent Third Judicial District Courthouse . Frederick Clarke Withers designed these twin buildings in an ornate American Gothic style.[ 1] The landmark courthouse survived Jefferson Market's 1927 demolition and today serves as a New York Public Library branch .
Originally a jailhouse was built at this site alongside a police court and volunteer firehouse in the 1833 Jefferson food market, named for the former president . The jail was torn down in 1873.[ 2]
A third building—the only Art Deco jail ever built—operated here from 1931 to 1971 as New York Women's House of Detention .[ 3]
The site is now a small park known as Jefferson Market Garden , with a historical marker recognizing the site's history.[ 4]
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