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Museum of the City of New York - Search Result. Walkabout With Montrose: Automobile Row. The 20th century was a time of extraordinary invention and innovation, and the popularity of the automobile changed the world.

Walkabout With Montrose: Automobile Row

As we know today, Brooklynites have always loved their cars. By 1910, Bedford Avenue, which now stretched from Williamsburg to Brooklyn College, was a major north-south transportation corridor. At the early decades of the century, much of the area between what is now called Empire Blvd up to Fulton Street was undeveloped, with large tracts of available land. Because of its proximity to affluent Crown Heights, Bedford, and Park Slope, as well as the attractions of nearby Ebbetts Field, Prospect Park, the Brooklyn Museum, the Botanic Garden and Children’s Museum, Bedford Avenue became a logical location for the growing number of automobile showrooms, gas stations, parking garages and repair shops.

As early as 1912, Trow’s Business Directory lists 25 automobile establishments on this stretch of Bedford Ave. Before Woolworth: The early towers of lower Broadway at the birth of the skyscraper boom. Next week is the 100th birthday of the opening of the Woolworth Building.

Before Woolworth: The early towers of lower Broadway at the birth of the skyscraper boom

The classic skyscraper designed by Cass Gilbert changed everything about perceptions of tall buildings in Manhattan -- for good and ill. Suddenly, towers could be as graceful and important as monuments, and as playful and enigmatic as castles. New Yorkers were anxious to fill their downtown with glorious towers for business, to best their rivals in Chicago (where many of the finest architects worked) and to prove the city's grandeur to the world.

To that end, the New York Sun on April 13, 1913, ran this curious map in their real estate section, under the header "Rebuilding of Lower Manhattan Progressing Slowly. " The point of the section is clear; lower Manhattan was filled with useless old, rundown buildings that needed to be replaced at once! It was this push at the start of the 20th century that gives lower Manhattan its unusual character, with few buildings before 1890 still standing. Love Letter to New York: Classic LIFE Photos of the Big Apple. Lower Manhattan: Where New York Was Born. Architecture & Design What can anyone say about New York City that has not already been expressed by Hart Crane, Woody Allen, Elizabeth Bishop, Federico García Lorca, Walt Whitman, Lou Reed, Langston Hughes, Martin Scorsese, Patti Smith, Kurtis Blow and a thousand other writers, musicians, filmmakers, painters and, yes, photographers?

Lower Manhattan: Where New York Was Born

Like London, Paris, Rome and a handful of other great cities, Gotham seems to consciously challenge artists of every stripe to somehow convey even a sliver of the ceaseless, panoramic multiverse it contains — while confronting the poet, painter, filmmaker and photographer with a living tableau that, by its very nature, defies encapsulation. The Bowery Boys: New York City History. Mad Men. WARNING The article contains a few spoilers about last night's 'Mad Men' on AMC, so if you're a fan of the show, come back once you're watched the episode.

Mad Men

Lusty groupies, ample drug intake, smoky hallways and deafening rock music. One might have thought last night's 'Mad Men' -- partially centered around the backstage antics of a Rolling Stones concert -- was taking place at Shea Stadium, where the Beatles famously performed to their largest audience in 1965.

Or maybe that was Madison Square Garden, the one on Eighth Avenue and 50nd Street, where Marilyn Monroe sang happy birthday to John F. Kennedy in 1962? No, that mad, bacchanalian event took place at an esteemed tennis club -- the West Side Tennis Club in Forest Hills, Queens. Organized in New York in the 1890s, the tennis organization and social club quickly outgrew various venues in Manhattan and made their way to Queens. Below: A vigorous match between Maurice McLoughlin and Norman Brookes in 1914. *Mr.

New York City. New York illustrated. New York and its institutions, 1609-1871. A library of information, pertaining to the great metropolis, past and present ... By Rev. J. F. Richmond ... New York; the American cosmopolis, the foremost city of the world. New York,. New York City: Classic Pictures From the Archives of LIFE Magazine. New York: A Documentary Film Online. Lost Museum - Home Page. A History of New York in 50 Objects.