Manhattan Company Building, 1930.
40 Wall Street, a 71-story neo-Gothic skyscraper now called the Trump Building, was built in 1930 by Craig Severance for the Manhattan Company, a bank founded by Aaron Burr in 1799. The building was also known as the Manhattan Trust Company building.
During construction, Severance's ex-business partner, William Van Alen was designing the Chrysler Building. The two architects were racing for the tallest building in the world. When completed, Severance's tower measured 927 feet, a figure soon surpassed by the Chrysler Building and its famous 125-foot spire. There was debate at the time because the highest usable floor in 40 Wall Street was higher than Chrysler’s, and the spire the Chrysler building was said to be cosmetic, not functional. The debate was short-lived: less than a year later, the 1,250-foot Empire State Building was completed, robbing both architects of the coveted "tallest building" title.