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New York City used to have political designations called wards, which were the smallest political units in NYC. Each ward elected an alderman and an assistant alderman to the City Council. According to The Encyclopedia Of New York City (1995, Yale University Press) the system goes all the way back to 1686, when Governor Thomas Dongan divided the city, then entirely in Manhattan, into six wards. In 1791, wards were given numerical designations. The First Ward was the tip of Manhattan, and districts were given consecutive numbers the further north you went in Manhattan. New wards were added as the city expanded northward, and increasing population of the older wards required subdivision.

The "ward boss", the local provider of patronage and vote gatherer, was a most important element in the power of Tammany Hall, the pre-eminent political machine in the latter half of the 19th Century. Ward politics diminished in stature beginning with the 20th Century, and wards were formally abolished in 1938.

Brooklyn was also composed of wards. When it became a city in 1837, it was divided into nine wards, and by the time of consolidation with NYC in 1898 it had 32 wards.

Not many traces remain extant of the old ward system. There's an abandoned building in Brooklyn, though, that shows it clearly...

This defunct bank, on Atlantic and Georgia Avenues in East New York, was built before consolidation in 1898, and so reflected that this was the local bank of the 26th Ward.

A view of the side entrance.

This building was drastically remodeled in 2002.

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A look at the sign reveals it was built in 1891. It awaits either renovation or demolition.