Bordering the Green are municipal, commercial and university structures. On the northwest side of the Green, across College Street, stand Phelps Gate and the
Yale University buildings bordering
Old Campus. Before the Old Campus was built, the buildings of Yale's Old Brick Row bordered the Green here. On the southwest side along Chapel Street are stores, bars, and such popular restaurants as
Claire's Corner Copia. On the southeast side of the green, across Church Street is The Exchange Building (1832, restored in 1990) and the
Richard C. Lee United States Courthouse (
James Gamble Rogers, 1913). This was once the site of the Tontine Hotel, built by David Hoadley. New Haven's Victorian
City Hall (by
Henry Austin in 1861; restored and added to by Herbert S. Newman and Partners) and the
Amistad Memorial are also at this end of the Green. The memorial stands on the site of the jail that held the Amistad captives during their time in New Haven. Spectators came to see them when they were brought out to exercise on the Green and paid 12 and a half cents to view them in the jail. Opposite the eastern corner of the lower green is the
Union and New Haven Trust Building (now Wells Fargo and The Union apartments) designed by
Cross and Cross in
Colonial Revival style in 1927. The design is a tribute to the federal churches on the green and even borrows the cupola from the United Church. On the northeast side along Elm Street by the lower Green is the
New Haven Free Public Library (
Cass Gilbert, 1908). The library was once the site of the Bristol House, also designed by David Hoadley, whose doorway is now at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art. is the building with six pillars left of center, and
City Hall is to the right. Next to the library is the
Beaux-Arts,
neoclassical New Haven County Courthouse. The courthouse was designed by New Haven architects William Allen and Richard Williams, modeled after
St. George's Hall in
Liverpool, England. The statuary in front of the courthouse is by the sculptor
J. Massey Rhind and murals and lunettes inside the courthouse are by the painter T. Thomas Gilbert. The upper Green on Elm is bordered by "Quality Row", containing some of the oldest structures in New Haven: the
federal style white clapboard Nicholas Callahan house, once a tavern (now the
Yale Elihu Senior Society), the federal Eli W. Blake House (now the Graduate Club), the federal John Pierpont house (now the
Yale University Koerner Center) built in 1767 and the brick
Greek Revival Governor Ralph Isaacs Ingersoll House, designed in 1829 by
Town and Davis. ==See also==