Caption:
Interior view of the Great Hall of the Ellis Island Immigration Museum. The building is one of New York's few grand-scale brick buildings. The vaulted ceiling is the work of the Gustavinos, a family of tile makers from Spain. It was installed in 1918. The room itself is 338 feet long by 168 feet wide. This was the room into which immigrants were first brought into to be examined and processed. It was restored in 1991 and is now part of the Ellis Island Statue of Liberty National Monument. The island is located at the mouth of New York Harbor on the New Jersey side of the Hudson River. The ownership of the island is shared by the two states.