Claremont Avenue
The stretch of land along the Hudson River in what is now Riverside Park was for many years the site of summer homes for wealthy Manhattanites. In 1806, Michael Hogan, a navigator and successful...
View ArticleHamilton Street
Hamilton Street ran roughly parallel to the present Monroe Street, beginning at Catherine Street and bending northerly to meet Market Street near its intersection with Monroe. Prior to 1827, it was...
View ArticleCherry Street
Cherry Street once extended along its present path from Franklin Square, at the intersection of Pearl and Dover Streets, through to the waterfront at East Street. The section between Franklin Square...
View ArticleMarketfield Street
The first public market in the city was established on the “strand,” the stretch of land along the waterfront to the east of the old Battery. Director-general Peter Stuyvesant formally established the...
View ArticleOld Number Streets
Some time prior to 1767, three streets were laid out east of the Bowery and called First, Second and Third Streets. Fourth and Sixth Streets followed, with the already established Orchard Street in...
View ArticleHogs of New York
Since the first days of New Amsterdam, hogs were a persistent problem. Following the tradition of the Fatherland, the Dutch settlers did not bother to pen their animals, and they regularly ran loose,...
View ArticleStreet Sign Controversy – 1899
The office of the New York street commissioner created considerable controversy in 1899 when it ordered that the illuminated street signs along some of Manhattan’s busiest thoroughfares be...
View ArticleManhattan Evacuation Plan Reveals Island’s Old Contours
As Hurricane Sandy bears down on the Atlantic Coast in October, 2012, many residents are becoming familiar with the emergency evacuation map, a part of which is shown above (taken from Google and the...
View ArticleBirmingham Street
Birmingham Street, sometimes also called Birmingham Alley, was a narrow one-block street that connected Henry and Madison Streets between Market and Pike Streets. The origin of the name is not clear,...
View ArticleManhattan’s First Experiments with Wooden Streets
Wood block pavement is thought to have been used first in 14th-century Russia, however it enjoyed something of a revival in the 1820s and 1830s as cities in Europe and America sought alternatives to...
View ArticleCoogan Avenue
New Avenue East in 1885 James J. Coogan was a furniture man. Furniture men were not held in high esteem among the working class of 19th-Century New York City but were viewed as a necessary evil....
View ArticleShoemakers Land
James Evetts’ 1696 chart of the Shoemakers Land In 1675 four New Yorkers purchased a tract of land outside the city wall that had earlier been part of the farm of Cornelis van Tienhoven, the Dutch...
View ArticleBowery Number 3
When New Amsterdam was under the control of the Dutch East India Company, the company laid out several large farms, or boweries, in the countryside northeast of the city for the use of company...
View ArticleManhattan’s Memorial Street Names
Manhattan is not unique in having several streets named for famous war figures and local veterans. Where it differs from other American places, however, is that the veterans honored with Manhattan...
View ArticleNew York: Stockade City
Part of the reconstruction of the World Trade Center area in lower Manhattan includes reopening several of the streets that were closed for the initial construction. On the map, these reopenings appear...
View ArticleEdgar Allan Poe Street
West 84th Street between Riverside Drive and Broadway has been given the honorific name of Edgar Allan Poe Street after the well-known American author who briefly lived in a farmhouse in the area when...
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