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Macy's 1 Department Stores Tenderloin Garment District Chelsea

This iconic brand and hundred-year-old building will forever bring me happy memories of Thanksgiving Day Parades - my family went every single year for my entire childhood (and then again with my own children) braving freezing temperatures, high winds, growing crowds, and more to experience one of New York's greatest spectacles. My 90-year-old father even tells a heart-warming story of being a little boy in the 1920's: While sitting patiently in the lobby of a nearby hospital waiting for the arrival of his new baby cousin, a Macy's truck drove by. As a five-year-old, he told his parents he knew how the baby must have been delivered - by a Macy's truck, of course!

I am certain that with the storied past of the now-national Macy's chain that spans three centuries, I am not the only one with stories to share and memories to cherish.

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More places on 34th Street

Lost Gem
St. Vartan Armenian Cathedral 1 Churches undefined

St. Vartan Armenian Apostolic Cathedral

With construction starting in 1958 and finishing ten years later, Saint Vartan Cathedral represents the first Armenian Apostolic cathedral built in North America. Named after a saint who was martyred a millennium and a half ago defending Armenian Christianity, Saint Vartan Cathedral had a memorable beginning. During its construction and immediately following its completion, the building was visited by the highest authority within the Church, His Holiness Vasken I, marking the first such visit by a Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians in the United States. For a people so persecuted throughout history, and especially by the recent Armenian genocide, the building and consecration of this holy house was a monumental event in the community. His Holiness Vasken I, looking out at an assembled audience soon after Saint Vartan's completion, spoke of "an admirable picture of spiritual grace - a rare moment of spiritual bliss - to which we are all witnesses. " But far from being a relic, the church continues to thrive with the energy of the community it houses. I encourage any visitors to the church to walk through the intricately decorated doors and take some time to absorb the sheer size and depth of the church. Narrow strips of stained glass depicting biblical scenes and significant events in the history of the Armenian Church rise up to the impressive dome, which depicts Christian symbols in paint and stained glass, such as a human eye within a triangle (representing the omniscient Triune God), the wooden ship (representing the Church), and the white dove (representing the Holy Spirit). Closer to the altar, the “Head of Christ” is chiseled on a slate of stone in high relief. Silver and gold crosses decorate the distinctly Armenian altar. On the sides of the altar are paintings of St. Sahag and St. Mesrob, the two men credited with inventing the Armenian Alphabet, and a painting that seeks to honor the victims of the dreadful Armenian genocide.