New York Stock Exchange, 1889.
The origins of the New York Stock Exchange date to 1792 when 24 brokers signed the Buttonwood Agreement, which set a set a floor commission rate. The exchange was housed in a rented space at 40 Wall Street (until it burned down in the fire of 1835) and a few temporary locations. The New York Stock Exchange, officially named in 1863, moved into its first permanent home at 10-12 Broad Street in 1865. Stock trading increased sixfold between 1896 and 1901, necessitating a large venue. The building at nos. 10-12 was demolished in 1901, along with its immediate neighbors, for the construction of a new Stock Exchange. Designed by George B. Post, the Classical Revival structure opened for trading in April of 1903.