Hall of Records, ca. 1935.
Built as the Hall of Records (to replace the old and decrepit Hall of Records in City Hall Park), the ornate Beaux Arts building was constructed between 1899 and 1907. Architect John R. Thomas had actually won the commission for a new City Hall building in 1896. When the state legislature decided that the city was not permitted to replace the old City Hall, Thomas adapted his design for a new Hall of Records. He would, unfortunately, not live to see the completed building. Thomas died in 1901 and the firm of Horgan & Slattery took over the project.
The completed building was an impressive civic structure, very much in line with the in vogue "city beautiful" movement. Entered through a triple arched entrance with eight, thirty-six foot high granite Corinthian columns above, the building is also topped with a grand mansard roof. Though the Surrogate's Court was one of the original tenants of the building, it wasn't until 1962 that the structure was renamed the Surrogate's Courthouse (though the Department of Records is still housed there as well). Both the interior and the exterior of the building have been designated New York City landmarks.