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1800s NYC Watercolor Captures Life On Greenwich Street arrow To contemporary viewers more familiar with the intersection of Greenwich and Dey Streets as the site of today’s 9/11 Memorial and Museum, the view pictured in this early nineteenth-century drawing may seem virtually unrecognizable. Created in January 1810 by Anne-Marguérite-Henriette Rouillé de Marigny, Baroness Hyde de Neuville, the drawing offers a lively view of the streets’ low brick buildings against which the quotidian experiences of nameless New Yorkers unfold, including the couple we glimpse above a half-swinging Dutch door way attending to their child at play. Married to royalist Jean Guillaume, Baron Hyde de Neuville, the Baroness fled France with her husband after the French Revolution, settling in the United States from 1807 through 1820 where they lived variously in New York City, New Jersey and Washington D.C. Largely self-taught, the Baroness produced a singular body of draw ....