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History of New York City (1855–1897)

The history of New York City (1855–1897) started with the inauguration in 1855 of Fernando Wood as the first mayor from Tammany Hall, an institution that dominated the city throughout this period. Reforms led to the New York City Police Riot of June 1857. There was chaos during the American Civil War, with major rioting in the New York Draft Riots. The Gilded Age brought about prosperity for the city's upper classes amid the further growth of a poor immigrant working class, as well as an increasing consolidation, both economic and municipal, of what would become the five boroughs in 1898.

Ocean-going steamships and steam railroads, developed in earlier decades, grew to take over most long-distance transport, bringing an ever-increasing stream of immigration and industrialization.[1]

Conservatory WaterConservatory GardenHarlem MeerJacqueline Kennedy Onassis ReservoirGreat Lawn and Turtle PondBethesda TerraceThe Ramble and LakeSheep MeadowThe Pond and Hallett Nature SanctuarySolomon R. Guggenheim MuseumMetropolitan Museum of ArtMetropolitan Museum of ArtAmerican Museum of Natural HistoryCentral Park ZooTavern on the Green
Map of Central Park. Clicking on a feature in the picture causes the browser to load the appropriate article.

Pre-Civil War

 
Second Avenue facing north from 42nd Street in 1861

Police, gangs and violence

The new Republican Party in the late 1850s attempted to cut the power of Mayor Fernando Wood and other pro-South Democrats by abolishing the New York City Municipal Police Department in favor of a Metropolitan Police District.[2] Resistance resulted in the New York City Police Riot of 1857. While the police were busy with their feud, the Dead Rabbits Riot between two gangs in Five Points occurred in July, lasting two days, and was stopped only by intervention of the state militia. It was the worst riot in New York City up to that time.[3][4] Historian Tyler Anbinder says the "Dead Rabbit" name "so captured the imagination of New Yorkers that the press continued to use it despite the abundant evidence that no such club or gang existed." Andbinder notes that, "for more than a decade, 'Dead Rabbit' became the standard phrase by which city residents described any scandalously riotous individual or group."[5]

Historians such as Michael Kaplan and Elliott Gorn have argued that an intensifying highly masculine working-class male identity fostered gangs, brawling, and even homicide and rape, which was fueled by New York City taverns. The emerging male code emphasized physical courage, defiance of authority, and class pride. Irish and German immigrants brought European influences. Sexual harassment of women increased because women were more visible outside the home, as many worked in factories and shops. Women were regarded as depersonalized objects of lewd talk, and gang rapes became an opportunity for male bonding.[6][7][8]

Staten Island Quarantine War

From 1800 to 1858, Staten Island was the location of the largest quarantine facility in the United States. Angry residents burned down the hospital compound in 1858 in a series of attacks known as the Staten Island Quarantine War. Although there were no deaths as a result of the attack, the arsonists completely destroyed the hospital compound.[9]

Central Park

As the population grew explosively in Lower Manhattan after 1820, middle-class residents were drawn to the few existing open spaces, mainly cemeteries, to get away from the noises, smells, and chaotic life in the city. Landscape painter Asher B. Durand and writer William Cullen Bryant, recalling their rural upbringing and the great parks of Europe, advocated the therapeutic value of nature in the overcrowded city.[10] Along with architect Andrew Jackson Downing, they envisioned a great park. The state government in 1853 provided $5 million and eminent domain powers to buy out the land owners of what became Central Park. Egbert L. Viele drew the original plans, but Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux made the final Greensward Plan design and have received the main credit.[11]

 
"Angel of the Waters", in Bethesda Fountain (sculpted 1873)

Several American influences came together in the design. Landscaped rural cemeteries, such as Mount Auburn in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, provided examples of idyllic, naturalistic landscapes. The most influential innovations in the Central Park design were the multiple circulation plans for pedestrians, horseback riders, and pleasure vehicles. The crossing routes for commercial traffic were concealed in sunken roadways screened with densely planted shrub belts so as to maintain a natural setting.[12] It was the nation's first great urban park; Olmsted taught Americans a new sensibility in park environments and urban planning as an applied science with his radically naturalistic park design.[13][14]

Civil War

 
1860 map of New York City

Prior to the Civil War, in 1861, Mayor Wood proposed New York City secession from the United States as a neutral sovereign city-state to be called Tri-Insula as a way to avoid the ravages of war. Despite strong local Copperhead sympathies, the proposal was not well received.

The city provided a major source of troops, supplies, equipment, and financing for the Union Army. Powerful New York politicians and newspaper editors helped shape public opinion toward the war effort and the policies of President Abraham Lincoln. The port of New York, a major entry point for immigrants, served as recruiting grounds for the Army.[15] In July 1863, Irish Catholic protestors of conscription began five days of rioting. The "Draft Riots", the worst in American history, targeted blacks and wealthy Republicans. It was suppressed by artillery units of the United States Army firing grapeshot that killed and wounded hundreds of rioters.[16] Meanwhile, the upscale membership of the New York Union League Club recruited over 2,000 black men for the 20th United States Colored Infantry to help fill the quotas and to make a major contribution to African American civil rights.[17][18] The neighboring city of Brooklyn in contrast was more pro-war.[19]

In 1865 the Metropolitan Fire District united the fire departments of New York and Brooklyn, and was more successful than the earlier Metropolitan Police District, eventually developing into the New York City Fire Department.[20]

Tourism and entertainment

New York increasingly became the national capital for tourism and entertainment. Grand hotels were built for the upscale visitors[21] New York's theater district gradually moved northward during this half century, from The Bowery up Broadway through Union Square and Madison Square, settling around Times Square at the end of the 19th century. Edwin Booth and Lillian Russell were among the Broadway stars.[22] Prostitutes served a wide variety of clientele, from sailors on leave to playboys.[23]

The first nightclubs appeared in New York City in the 1840s and 1850s, including McGlory's, and the Haymarket. They enjoyed a national reputation for live music, dance, and vaudeville acts. They tolerated unlicensed liquor, commercial sex, and gambling cards, chiefly Faro. Practically all gambling was illegal in the city (except upscale horseracing tracks), and regular payoffs to political and police leadership was necessary. Prices were high and they were patronized by an upscale audience. Timothy Gilfoyle calls him "the first nightclubs."[24][25] By contrast, Owney Geoghegan ran the toughest nightclub in New York, 1880–83. It catered to a downscale clientele and besides the usual illegal liquor, gambling and prostitution, it featured nighly fistfights, and occasional shootings, stabbings, and police raids.[26][27] Webster Hall is credited as the first modern nightclub. It opened in 1886 as a "social hall", originally functioning as a home for dance and political activism events.[28]

Gilded Age

 
The Great East River Bridge To connect the cities of New York and Brooklyn, Currier & Ives, 1872

The post-war period was noted for the corruption and graft for which Tammany Hall has become proverbial, but equally for the foundation of New York's pre-eminent cultural institutions, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Metropolitan Opera, and the American Museum of Natural History. The Brooklyn Museum was a major institution of New York's independent sister city.

New York newspapers were read across the nation, particularly, the New York Tribune, edited by Horace Greeley, the voice of the new Republican Party.[29]

As immigration increased in cities, poverty rose as well. The poorest crowded into low-cost housing such as the Five Points and Hell's Kitchen neighborhoods in Manhattan. These areas were quickly overridden with notorious criminal gangs such as the Five Points Gang and the Bowery Boys.[30] Overcrowding spread germs; the death rates in big city tenements vastly exceeded those in the countryside.[31]

Rapid outward expansion required longer journeys to work and shopping for the middle class office workers and housewives. The working class generally did not own automobiles until after 1945; they typically walked to nearby factories and patronized small neighborhood stores. The middle class demanded a better transportation system. Slow horse-drawn streetcars and faster electric trolleys were the rage in the 1880s.[32]

In the horse-drawn era, streets were unpaved and covered with dirt or gravel. However, this produced uneven wear, opened new hazards for pedestrians, and made for dangerous potholes for bicycles and for motor vehicles. Manhattan alone had 130,000 horses in 1900, pulling streetcars, delivery wagons, and private carriages, and leaving their waste behind. They were not fast, and pedestrians could dodge and scramble their way across the crowded streets.

In small towns people mostly walked to their destination, so they continued to rely on dirt and gravel into the 1920s. Larger cities had much more complex transportation needs. They wanted better streets, so they paved them with wood or granite blocks.[33]

By the end of the century, American cities boasted 30 million square yards of asphalt paving, followed by brick construction.[34] Street-level electric trolleys moved at 12 miles per hour, and became the main transportation service for middle class shoppers and office workers. Big-city streets became paths for faster and larger and more dangerous vehicles, the pedestrians beware. In the largest cities, street railways were elevated, which increased their speed and lessened their dangers. Boston built the first subway in the 1890s followed by New York a decade later.[35]

Immigration

The flood of immigration from Europe passed first through Castle Clinton (opened 1855) and then through Ellis Island (opened 1892) in New York Harbor, with the nearby Statue of Liberty opening in 1886. Most of the new arrivals headed to destinations across the north and west, but many made New York City their destination.

European immigration brought further social upheaval, and old world criminal societies rapidly exploited the already corrupt municipal machine politics of Tammany Hall. Housing, especially in the southern tip of Manhattan, became crowded with newly built tenements and flimsy shacks in the back. Italians settled around Mulberry Street between the East Village and Lower Manhattan, in an area later to be known as "Little Italy." Many Yiddish-speaking East European Jews came to the Lower East Side.

In the Orange Riots of July 1871 and 1872, Catholic Irish attempted to stop Protestant Irish from celebrating the anniversary of the Battle of the Boyne. These resulted in more than 33 deaths and many wounded.[36][37] Pioneering photojournalist Jacob Riis documented the poor conditions of immigrant tenement dwellers in his 1890 How the Other Half Lives; he was befriended by Republican reformer Theodore Roosevelt. Roosevelt lost his mayoral race in 1886. Reformers did win in 1894, and Roosevelt undertook a major reform of the New York City Police Department in 1895–97 during his term as President of the Police Commissioners.[38]

Public health

Epidemics (typhus, cholera, diphtheria, and tuberculosis) were rampant in the city's slums. Horse manure covered the streets. In winter, when all the grime froze, walking on the sidewalks was a challenge. Dead pigs and other carcasses remained on the street for weeks.[39] In 1894, Colonel George E. Waring Jr. introduced sanitary reforms using a large street cleaning force.[40][41]

Politics

Tammany Hall

William Tweed, better known as Boss Tweed, had become the sole leader of Tammany Hall by 1867. From April 1870, with the passage of a city charter consolidating power in the hands of his political allies, Tweed and his cronies were able to defraud the city of some tens of millions of dollars over the next two years and eight months, most famously with the construction bill for a lavish courthouse. The efforts of reform-oriented Democratic politicians, especially Samuel J. Tilden, as well as aggressive newspaper editors aided by the biting cartoons of Thomas Nast, helped elect opposition candidates in 1871. Tweed was convicted of forgery and larceny in 1873. Tweed's fall put an end to the immunity of corrupt local political leaders and was a precursor to Progressive Era reforms in the city.[42]

 
In this 1899 Udo Keppler cartoon from Puck, all of New York City politics revolves around boss Richard Croker.

Tammany did not take long to rebound from Tweed's fall. Reforms demanded a general housecleaning, and former county sheriff "Honest John" Kelly was selected as the new leader. Kelly was not implicated in the Tweed scandals and was a religious Catholic related by marriage to Archbishop John McCloskey. He cleared Tammany of Tweed's people and tightened the Grand Sachem's control over the hierarchy. His success at revitalizing the machine was such that in the election of 1874, the Tammany candidate, William H. Wickham, unseated the unpopular reformist incumbent, William F. Havemeyer, and Democrats generally won their races, delivering control of the city back to Tammany Hall.[43]

Theodore Roosevelt, before he became president in 1901, was deeply involved in New York City politics. He explains how the machine worked:

The organization of a party in our city is really much like that of an army. There is one great central boss, assisted by some trusted and able lieutenants; these communicate with the different district bosses, whom they alternately bully and assist. The district boss in turn has a number of half-subordinates, half-allies, under him; these latter choose the captains of the election districts, etc., and come into contact with the common healers.[44]

Reformers

Middle-class moral sensibilities were deeply opposed to prostitution and all forms of gambling. The reform movement was strongest in the 1890s.[45] Reform was led by men such as the Reverend Charles H. Parkhurst, the leading Presbyterian pastor and president of the New York Society for the Prevention of Crime;[46] reform mayor William L. Strong, and his police commissioner Theodore Roosevelt. Reformers passed laws in the state legislature against any emerging gambling venue. Such laws were enforced in most small towns and rural areas, but not in New York's larger cities, where political machines controlled the police and the courts.[47]

Economy

 
Street beggar, 1888

In 1874, nearly 61% of all U.S. exports passed through New York harbor. In 1884, nearly 70% of U.S. imports came through New York. The eventual rise of ports on the Gulf of Mexico and on the Pacific coast reduced New York's share of imports and exports to about 47% in 1910. The city's banking resources grew 250% between 1888 and 1908, compared to the national increase of 26%. Between 1860 and 1907, the assessed value of the land and buildings on Manhattan rose from $1.7 billion to $6.7 billion.

The city and its suburbs, mainly Brooklyn and Long Island City, also became important in light industry. Its factories dominated the garment industry and some high technology industries of the second industrial revolution such as sewing machines and pianos. It was an important center for other hi-tech items such as hard rubber products and electrical goods. Petroleum and chemical works sprang up along Newtown Creek, Bayonne, New Jersey, and other industrial suburbs.

Department stores

In modern major cities, the department store made a dramatic appearance in the middle of the 19th century and permanently reshaped shopping habits and the definition of service and luxury. Similar developments were underway in Paris and London.[48] New York became a regional and national destination for upscale shoppers, thanks to its development of the modern department store. London and Paris were developing department stores around the same time, and the leaders quickly adopted innovations. In 1846, Alexander Turney Stewart established his "Marble Palace" on Broadway, between Chambers and Reade Streets.[49] He offered upscale retail merchandise at fixed prices. Though it was clad in white marble to look like a Renaissance palazzo, the building's cast iron construction had large plate glass windows that permitted major seasonal displays, especially in the Christmas shopping season. Increasingly, the clientele were women from wealthy or upper-middle-class families.[50]

In 1862, Stewart built a new store on a full city block with eight floors and nineteen departments of dress goods and furnishing materials, carpets, glass and china, toys and sports equipment, ranged around a central glass-covered court. His innovations included buying from manufacturers for cash and in large quantities, keeping his markup small and prices low, truthful presentation of merchandise, the one-price policy (so there was no haggling), simple merchandise returns and cash refund policy, selling for cash and not credit, buyers who searched worldwide for quality merchandise, departmentalization, vertical and horizontal integration, volume sales, and free services for customers such as waiting rooms and free delivery of purchases. His innovations were quickly copied by other department stores.[51]

In 1858, Rowland Hussey Macy founded Macy's as a dry goods store. Benjamin Altman and Lord & Taylor soon competed with Stewart as New York's earliest department stores.

By the 1880s New York's retail center had moved uptown, forming a stretch of retail shopping from "Marble Palace" that was called the "Ladies' Mile". By 1894 the major stores competed in the Christmas season with elaborate Christmas window displays; in 1895 Macy's featured 13 tableaux, including scenes from Jack and the Beanstalk, Gulliver's Travels and other children's favorites.[52]

The department store was especially important for women; in middle-class families women took control of the purchasing, and the department stores catered to their tastes. Furthermore, ambitious young women from the middle class who wanted a career were welcomed into the clerical ranks, where they developed social skills to work with their upscale customers.[53][54]

Skyscrapers and apartment buildings

New inventions facilitated the emergence of the skyscraper in the 1880s—it was a characteristic American style that was not widely copied around the world until the late 20th century. Construction required several major innovations, including the elevator and structural steel. The steel skeleton, developed in the 1880s, replaced the heavy brick walls that were limited to 15 or so stories in height. The skyscraper also required a complex internal structure to solve issues of ventilation, steam heat, gas lighting (and later electricity), and plumbing.[55]

 
The Dakota luxury apartment building, view from Central Park, 1890

The city's housing involved a wide variety of styles, but most of the attention focused on the tenement house for the working class and the apartment building for the middle class. The apartment building came first, as middle-class professionals, businessmen, and white-collar workers realized they did not need and could scarcely afford single-family dwellings in the high-cost real estate districts of the city. Boarding houses were inappropriate for family; hotel suites were too expensive. In outlying neighborhoods there were many apartments over stores and shops, usually occupied by proprietors of small local businesses. Apartment dwellers paid rent and did not own their apartments until the emergence of cooperatives in the 20th century. Turnover was very high, and there was seldom was a sense of neighborhood community.[56][57]

Starting with the luxurious Stuyvesant Apartments that opened in 1869, and the even more lavish The Dakota in 1884, affluent tenants hired full-time staff to handle the upkeep and maintenance, as well as security.[58][59]

The less-lavish middle-class apartment buildings provided gas lighting, elevators, good plumbing, central heating, and maintenance men on call. Apartment buildings were built along the paths of the street railways since the middle-class tenants rode the streetcar to work, while the working class saved a nickel each way and walked.[60]

The working class crowded into tenement houses, with far fewer features and amenities.[61] Novelist Stephen Crane in Maggie: A Girl of the Streets (1893) wrote of an Irish tenement neighborhood characterized by poverty and violence:

"Eventually they entered into a dark region where, from a careening building, a dozen gruesome doorways gave up loads of babies to the street and the gutter. A wind of early autumn raised yellow dust from cobble and swirled it against an hundred windows. Long streamers of garments fluttered from fire escapes. In all unhandy places there were buckets, brooms, rags, and bottles. In the street infants played or fought with other infants or sat stupidly in the way of vehicles. Formidable women, with uncombed hair and disordered dress, gossiped while leaning on railings, or screamed in frantic quarrels. Withered persons, in curious postures of submission to something, sat smoking pipes in obscure corners. A thousand odors of cooking food came forth to the street. The building quivered and creaked from the weight of humanity stamping about in its bowels."[62]

Tenements were cheap and easy to build, and filled up almost the entire lot. There were typically five story walk-ups, with four separate apartments on each floor. There was minimal air circulation and sunlight. Until the Tenement House Act of 1879, newly built tenements lacked running water or indoor toilets. A law in 1901 required indoor plumbing be retrofitted to older tenements. Garbage pickup was erratic until late in the 19th century. Rent was cheap for those who could endure the dust, clutter, smells and noises; the only cheaper alternatives were squalid basement rooms in older buildings. Most of the tenements survived until the urban renewal movement of the 1950s.[63][64]

Neighborhoods

Pre-war steam ferries had already made Brooklyn Heights into a bedroom community for affluent professionals on Wall Street and other urban areas. Elevated railroads, operated by the Manhattan Railway Company, and other new public transport expanded the commuter area of New York, allowing development of suburbs for commuters of more modest means in Upper West Side and other distant areas. Plans were made for subways to still more remote exurbs such as Harlem and the West Bronx.

In the late 19th century, the island's schist bedrock encouraged the early skyscrapers whose successors characterize its skyline today. The Great Blizzard of 1888 exposed the vulnerability of the urban infrastructure connecting those buildings, encouraging the undergrounding of electric and telephone lines, and plans were made for a subway line.

Consolidation

 
This 1877 Currier & Ives print of an unfinished Brooklyn Bridge showed a vision of greater urban integration.

In 1855, the City of Brooklyn annexed Williamsburg and Bushwick, forming the third most-populous city in America. In 1870, Long Island City was formed in Queens. In 1874, New York City annexed the West Bronx, west of the Bronx River. The Brooklyn Bridge, completed in 1883, epitomized the heroic confidence of a generation and drew the two cities of Brooklyn and New York inexorably together. As Brooklyn annexed the remainder of Kings County in the decade from 1886 to 1896, the issue of consolidation grew more pressing.

The modern city of Greater New York — the five boroughs — was created in 1898, with the consolidation of the cities of New York (then Manhattan and the Bronx) and Brooklyn with the largely rural areas of Queens and Staten Island.

See also

References

  1. ^ For a visual overview of the era, see Eric Homberger, The historical atlas of New York City: A visual celebration of 400 years of New York City's history (Macmillan, 2005), pp 84-111
  2. ^ James F. Richardson, The New York Police, Colonial Times to 1901 (1970).
  3. ^ Christopher Adamson, "Tribute, turf, honor and the American street gang: patterns of continuity and change since 1820." Theoretical Criminology (1998) 2#1 pp: 57-84.
  4. ^ Nate Hendley, ed. (2009). American Gangsters, Then and Now: An Encyclopedia: An Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. pp. 65–66. ISBN 9780313354526.
  5. ^ Tyler Anbinder, Five Points: the 19th-century New York City neighborhood that invented tap dance, stole elections, and became the world's most notorious slum (2001) pp 285-86.
  6. ^ Kaplan, Michael (1995). "New York City Tavern Violence and the Creation of a Working-Class Male Identity". Journal of the Early Republic. 15 (4): 591–617. doi:10.2307/3124015. ISSN 0275-1275. JSTOR 3124015.
  7. ^ Peter Adams, The Bowery Boys: Street Corner Radicals and the Politics of Rebellion (2005).
  8. ^ Gorn, Elliott J. (1987). ""Good-Bye Boys, I Die a True American": Homicide, Nativism, and Working-Class Culture in Antebellum New York City". The Journal of American History. 74 (2): 388–410. doi:10.2307/1900028. ISSN 0021-8723. JSTOR 1900028.
  9. ^ Stephenson, Kathryn (January 1, 2004). "The Quarantine War: the Burning of the New York Marine Hospital in 1858". Public Health Reports. 119 (1): 79–92. doi:10.1177/003335490411900114. PMC 1502261. PMID 15147652.
  10. ^ Linda Fischer and Harrison Hunt, "Asher B. Durand, William Cullen Bryant, and the Origins of Central Park," New York Journal of American History (2007) 66#4 pp 93-100.
  11. ^ Burrows and Wallace, Gotham pp 790-95
  12. ^ Rosenzweig, Roy & Blackmar, Elizabeth (1992). The Park and the People: A History of Central Park. Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-9751-5.
  13. ^ MENARD, ANDREW (2010). "The Enlarged Freedom of Frederick Law Olmsted". The New England Quarterly. 83 (3): 508–538. doi:10.1162/TNEQ_a_00039. ISSN 0028-4866. JSTOR 20752715. S2CID 57567923.
  14. ^ Eugene P. Moehring, "Frederick Law Olmsted and the Central Park 'Revolution'" Halcyon: A Journal of the Humanities (1985) 7#1 pp 59-75.
  15. ^ Edward K. Spann, Gotham at War: New York City, 1860-1865 (2002)
  16. ^ Iver Bernstein, The New York City Draft Riots: Their Significance for American Society and Politics in the Age of the Civil War (1990); Barnet Schecter, The Devil's Own Work: The Civil War Draft Riots and the Fight to Reconstruct America (2007); Adrian Cook, The Armies of the Streets: The New York City Draft Riots of 1863 (1982)
  17. ^ Thomas L. Jones, "The Union League Club and New York's First Black Regiments in the Civil War," New York History (2006) 87#3 pp 313-343
  18. ^ William Seraile, New York's Black Regiments During the Civil War (2015)
  19. ^ E. H. Livingston, President Lincoln's Third Largest City: Brooklyn and The Civil War (1994)
  20. ^ Jackson, Encyclopedia of New Your City (2010) p 452
  21. ^ Justin Kaplan, When the Astors Owned New York: Blue Bloods and Grand Hotels in a Gilded Age (2006).
  22. ^ Lewis A. Erenberg, Steppin'Out: New York Nightlife and the Transformation of American Culture (1984)
  23. ^ Timothy J. Gilfoyle, City of eros: New York City, prostitution, and the commercialization of sex, 1790–1920 (1994).
  24. ^ Timothy J. Gilfoyle, "Scorsese's Gangs of New York: Why Myth Matters." Journal of Urban History 29.5 (2003): 620–630 at p. 624.
  25. ^ Burrows and Wallace, Gotham (1999) 1148
  26. ^ Eric Ferrara (2009). A Guide to Gangsters, Murderers and Weirdos of New York City's Lower East Side. pp. 79–80. ISBN 9781614233039.
  27. ^ Lewis A. Erenberg, Steppin' Out: New York Nightlife and the Transformation of American Culture, 1890–1930 (1981).
  28. ^ "Webster Hall Landmark Status Certification" (PDF). Greenwich Village Society for History Preservation. The intact, elegantly detailed façade of Webster Hall has sheltered some of the Village's most infamous moments, and this first modern night club deserves to be an individual landmark
  29. ^ Jeter Allen Isely, Horace Greeley and the Republican Party, 1853-1861: A Study of the New York Tribune (1947)
  30. ^ Anbinder, Tyler (2001). Five Points: The 19th-century New York City Neighborhood that Invented Tap Dance, Stole Elections, and Became the World's Most Notorious Slum. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0684859958.
  31. ^ Tindall, George Brown and Shi, David E. America: A Narrative History (Brief 9th ed. 2012) vol 2 p. 590
  32. ^ Fogelson, Robert M. (2003). Downtown: Its Rise and Fall, 1880–1950. Yale U.P. ISBN 978-0300098273.
  33. ^ David O. Whitten, "A Century of Parquet Pavements: Wood as a Paving Material in the United States And Abroad, 1840–1940." Essays in Economic and Business History 15 (1997): 209–26.
  34. ^ Arthur Maier Schlesinger, The Rise of the City: 1878–1898 (1933) pp. 88–93.[ISBN missing]
  35. ^ Fairfield, John D. (1995). McShane, Clay (ed.). "Rapid Transit: Automobility and Settlement in Urban America". Reviews in American History. 23 (1): 80–85. doi:10.1353/rah.1995.0006. ISSN 0048-7511. JSTOR 2703240. S2CID 144312718.
  36. ^ Michael Gordon, The Orange riots: Irish political violence in New York City, 1870 and 1871 (1993)
  37. ^ "Orange Riots of 1870 and 1871 | Access Genealogy". 2011-07-13. Retrieved 2023-01-21.
  38. ^ Jay Stuart Berman, Police administration and progressive reform: Theodore Roosevelt as police commissioner of New York (1987).
  39. ^ Farland, Maria (2007). "Decomposing City: Walt Whitman's New York and the Science of Life and Death". ELH. 74 (4): 799–827. doi:10.1353/elh.2007.0038. ISSN 0013-8304. JSTOR 30029599. S2CID 162294790.
  40. ^ John Duffy, History of public health in New York City (2 vol. 1968, 1974)
  41. ^ Leavitt, Judith Walzer (1976). Duffy, John; Galishoff, Stuart (eds.). "Writing Public Health History: The Need for a Social Scaffolding". Reviews in American History. 4 (2): 150–157. doi:10.2307/2701546. ISSN 0048-7511. JSTOR 2701546. PMID 11610796.
  42. ^ Oliver E. Allen, The Tiger: The Rise and Fall of Tammany Hall (1993) online edition
  43. ^ Burrows & Wallace, Gotham p. 1027
  44. ^ Theodore Roosevelt (1897). The Works of Theodore Roosevelt: American ideals. Collier. pp. 132–33.
  45. ^ Edwin G. Burrows; Mike Wallace (1999). Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898. pp. 1162–65, 1192–94, 1200–1203. ISBN 9780199729104.
  46. ^ academic.oup.com https://academic.oup.com/ahr/article-abstract/109/4/1246/26410. Retrieved 2023-01-21. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  47. ^ Mike Wallace, Greater Gotham: A history of New York City from 1898 to 1919 (2017), pp 615-618
  48. ^ Gunther Barth, "The Department Store," in City People: The Rise of Modern City Culture in Nineteenth-Century America. (Oxford University Press, 1980) pp 110-47,
  49. ^ Harry E. Resseguie, "A.T. Stewart's Marble Palace—The Cradle of the Department Store." New York Historical Society Quarterly (1964) 48#2: 131-162.
  50. ^ Gunther Barth, City People: The Rise of Modern City Culture in Nineteenth-Century America (1982) pp 110-147
  51. ^ Resseguie, Harry E. (1965). "Alexander Turney Stewart and the Development of the Department Store, 1823-1876". The Business History Review. 39 (3): 301–322. doi:10.2307/3112143. ISSN 0007-6805. JSTOR 3112143. S2CID 154704872.
  52. ^ Laura Byrne Paquet (2003). The Urge to Splurge: A Social History of Shopping. ECW Press. p. 191. ISBN 9781550225839.
  53. ^ Leach, William R. (1984). "Transformations in a Culture of Consumption: Women and Department Stores, 1890-1925". The Journal of American History. 71 (2): 319–342. doi:10.2307/1901758. ISSN 0021-8723. JSTOR 1901758.
  54. ^ Susan Benson, Counter cultures: Saleswomen, managers, and customers in American department stores, 1890-1940 (1987).
  55. ^ George H. Douglas, Skyscrapers: A social history of the very tall building in America (2004)
  56. ^ Amy Kallman Epstein, "Multifamily Dwellings and the Search for Respectability: Origins of the New York Apartment House," Urbanism Past & Present (1980) Issue 2, pp 29-39
  57. ^ Elizabeth Collins Cromley, Alone Together: A History of New York's Early Apartments (1990)
  58. ^ Stephen Birmingham, Life at the Dakota (1979)
  59. ^ Andrew Alpern, New York's Fabulous Luxury Apartments: With Original Floor Plans from the Dakota, River House, Olympic Tower and Other Great Buildings (1987) covers 75 famous buildings starting in 1869.
  60. ^ Elizabeth Blackmar, Manhattan for Rent, 1785-1850 (1989)
  61. ^ Andrew S. Dolkart, Biography of a Tenement House in New York City: An Architectural History of 97 Orchard Street (2006). Dolkart's Jewish tenement, while equally dark, airless, filthy, and crowded, appears far less threatening than those of Stephen Crane.
  62. ^ Stephen Crane (2009). Great Short Works of Stephen Crane. HarperCollins. p. 130. ISBN 9780060726485.
  63. ^ Richard Plunz, A History of Housing in New York City: Dwelling Type and Social Change in the American Metropolis (1990).
  64. ^ Raymond A. Mohl, The New City: Urban America in the Industrial Age, 1860-1920 (1985) pp 47-52

Further reading

  • Anbinder, Tyler. "From Famine to Five Points: Lord Lansdowne's Irish Tenants Encounter North America's Most Notorious Slum." American Historical Review 107.2 (2002): 351–387. in JSTOR
  • Anbinder, Tyler. Five Points: the 19th-century New York City neighborhood that invented tap dance, stole elections, and became the world's most notorious slum (Simon and Schuster, 2001).
  • Beckert, Sven. The Monied Metropolis: New York City and the Consolidation of the American Bourgeoisie, 1850–1896 (2001)
  • Broxmeyer, Jeffrey D. Electoral Capitalism: The Party System in New York's Gilded Age . (U of Pennsylvania Press, 2020) covers city and state.
  • Burns, Ric, and James Sanders. New York: An Illustrated History (2003), large-scale book version of Burns PBS documentary, New York: A Documentary Film an eight part, 17½ hour documentary film directed by Ric Burns for PBS. It originally aired in 1999 with additional episodes airing in 2001 and 2003.
  • Burrows, Edwin G., and Mike Wallace. Gotham: a history of New York City to 1898 (Oxford University Press, 1998), The standard scholarly survey; 1390 pages onlibe review
  • Bernstein, Iver. The New York City Draft Riots: Their Significance for American Society and Politics in the Age of the Civil War (1990)
  • Callow, Alexander B. The Tweed Ring (1966).
  • Chernow, Ron. The house of Morgan: an American banking dynasty and the rise of modern finance (2001)
  • Chernow, Ron. Titan: The Life of John D. Rockefeller, Sr.(2007)
  • Ernst, Robert. Immigrant Life in New York City, 1825-1863 (Syracuse University Press, 1994)
  • Fitzgerald, Maureen. Habits of Compassion: Irish Catholic Nuns and the Origins of New York's Welfare System, 1830-1920 (University of Illinois Press, 2006)
  • Hershkowitz, Leo. Tweed's New York: Another Look. (New York: Anchor Press, 1977); scholarly study that argues Tweed was mostly innocent. online review
  • Homberger, Eric. Mrs. Astor's New York: Money and Social Power in a Gilded Age (Yale University Press, 2004)
  • Homberger, Eric. The historical atlas of New York City: A visual celebration of 400 years of New York City's history (Macmillan, 2005)
  • Jackson, Kenneth D. Encyclopedia of New York City (2nd ed. 2010); a massive compendium of authoritative short articles
  • Laster, Margaret R., and Chelsea Bruner, eds. New York: Art and Cultural Capital of the Gilded Age (2018)
  • Livingston, E. H. President Lincoln's Third Largest City: Brooklyn and The Civil War (1994)
  • McKay, Ernest A. The Civil War and New York City (Syracuse University Press, 1990)
  • Quigley, David. Second Founding: New York City, Reconstruction, and the Making of American Democracy (Hill and Wang, 2004) excerpt
  • Scherzer. Kenneth A. The unbounded community: Neighborhood life and social structure in New York City, 1830-1875 (Duke University Press, 1992)
  • Spann, Edward K. Gotham at War: New York City, 1860-1865 (2002)
  • Stern, Robert A. M.; Mellins, Thomas; Fishman, David (1999). New York 1880: Architecture and Urbanism in the Gilded Age. Monacelli Press. ISBN 978-1-58093-027-7. OCLC 40698653.
  • Voorsanger, Catherine Hoover, & Howat, John K., eds. (2000). Art and the empire city: New York, 1825-1861. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 9780870999574. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

Primary sources

  • Gellman, David N. and David Quigley, eds. Jim Crow New York: A Documentary History of Race and Citizenship, 1777-1877 (2003)
  • Jackson, Kenneth T. and David S. Dunbar, eds. Empire City: New York Through the Centuries (2005), 1015 pages of excerpts excerpt
  • Still, Bayrd, ed. Mirror for Gotham: New York as Seen by Contemporaries from Dutch Days to the Present (New York University Press, 1956) online edition
  • Stokes, I.N. Phelps. The Iconography of Manhattan Island, 1498-1909 compiled from original sources and illustrated by photo-intaglio reproductions of important maps plans views and documents in public and private collections (6 vols., 1915–28). A highly detailed, heavily illustrated chronology of Manhattan and New York City. see The Iconography of Manhattan Island All volumes are on line free at:
    • I.N. Phelps Stokes; The Iconography of Manhattan Island Vol 1. 1915 v. 1. The period of discovery (1524-1609); the Dutch period (1609-1664). The English period (1664-1763). The Revolutionary period (1763-1783). Period of adjustment and reconstruction; New York as the state and federal capital (1783-1811)
    • I.N. Phelps Stokes; The Iconography of Manhattan Island Vol 2. 1916 v. 2. Cartography: an essay on the development of knowledge regarding the geography of the east coast of North America; Manhattan Island and its environs on early maps and charts / by F.C. Wieder and I.N. Phelps Stokes. The Manatus maps. The Castello plan. The Dutch grants. Early New York newspapers (1725-1811). Plan of Manhattan Island in 1908
    • I.N. Phelps Stokes; The Iconography of Manhattan Island Vol 3. 1918 v. 3. The War of 1812 (1812-1815). Period of invention, prosperity, and progress (1815-1841). Period of industrial and educational development (1842-1860). The Civil War (1861-1865); period of political and social development (1865-1876). The modern city and island (1876-1909)
    • I.N. Phelps Stokes; The Iconography of Manhattan Island Vol 4. 1922; v. 4. The period of discovery (565-1626); the Dutch period (1626-1664). The English period (1664-1763). The Revolutionary period, part I (1763-1776)
    • I.N. Phelps Stokes; The Iconography of Manhattan Island Vol 5. 1926; v. 5. The Revolutionary period, part II (1776-1783). Period of adjustment and reconstruction New York as the state and federal capital (1783-1811). The War of 1812 (1812-1815) ; period of invention, prosperity, and progress (1815-1841). Period of industrial and educational development (1842-1860). The Civil War (1861-1865) ; Period of political and social development (1865-1876). The modern city and island (1876-1909)
    • I.N. Phelps Stokes; The Iconography of Manhattan Island Vol 6. 1928; v. 6. Chronology: addenda. Original grants and farms. Bibliography. Index.

Older books

  • Trow's New York City Directory. John F. Trow. 1857.
  • Charles Knight, ed. (1867). "City of New York". Geography. English Cyclopaedia. Vol. 3. London: Bradbury, Evans. hdl:2027/nyp.33433000064802.
  • Redfield's Traveler's Guide to the City of New York, New York: J. S. Redfield, 1871, OL 23744341M
  • Richard Edwards, ed. (1884), New York's Great Industries, New York: Historical Publishing Co., OCLC 3574247, OL 24579141M
  • Pictorial New York and Brooklyn. New York: Smith, Bleakley & Co. 1892. OL 23720975M.
  • King's Handbook of New York City (2nd ed.). Moses King. 1893.
  • "New York City". Columbian Cyclopedia. Vol. 21. Buffalo, NY: Garretson, Cox & Company. 1897. hdl:2027/nyp.33433000967483.
  • "Check List of Directories of the City of New York", Bulletin of the New York Public Library, vol. 5, pp. 80 v, 1901, hdl:2027/nyp.33433081923769, Part 2: Chronological List
  • JAMES D. MCCABE, JR.: LIGHTS AND SHADOWS OF NEW YORK LIFE; OR, THE SIGHTS AND SENSATIONS OF A GREAT CITY. illustrated with numerous fine engravings of noted places, life and scenes in New York. NATIONAL PUBLISHING COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA, Pa.; CINCINNATI, Ohio; CHICAGO, Ill.; ST. LOUIS, Mo. 1872 - A Project Gutenberg e-book

Chronology

Preceded by History of New York City
(1855–1897)
Succeeded by

history, york, city, 1855, 1897, history, york, city, 1855, 1897, started, with, inauguration, 1855, fernando, wood, first, mayor, from, tammany, hall, institution, that, dominated, city, throughout, this, period, reforms, york, city, police, riot, june, 1857,. The history of New York City 1855 1897 started with the inauguration in 1855 of Fernando Wood as the first mayor from Tammany Hall an institution that dominated the city throughout this period Reforms led to the New York City Police Riot of June 1857 There was chaos during the American Civil War with major rioting in the New York Draft Riots The Gilded Age brought about prosperity for the city s upper classes amid the further growth of a poor immigrant working class as well as an increasing consolidation both economic and municipal of what would become the five boroughs in 1898 Ocean going steamships and steam railroads developed in earlier decades grew to take over most long distance transport bringing an ever increasing stream of immigration and industrialization 1 Map of Central Park Clicking on a feature in the picture causes the browser to load the appropriate article Contents 1 Pre Civil War 1 1 Police gangs and violence 1 2 Staten Island Quarantine War 2 Central Park 3 Civil War 4 Tourism and entertainment 5 Gilded Age 6 Immigration 6 1 Public health 7 Politics 7 1 Tammany Hall 7 2 Reformers 8 Economy 8 1 Department stores 9 Skyscrapers and apartment buildings 10 Neighborhoods 11 Consolidation 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 14 1 Primary sources 14 2 Older books 15 ChronologyPre Civil War Edit Second Avenue facing north from 42nd Street in 1861 Police gangs and violence Edit The new Republican Party in the late 1850s attempted to cut the power of Mayor Fernando Wood and other pro South Democrats by abolishing the New York City Municipal Police Department in favor of a Metropolitan Police District 2 Resistance resulted in the New York City Police Riot of 1857 While the police were busy with their feud the Dead Rabbits Riot between two gangs in Five Points occurred in July lasting two days and was stopped only by intervention of the state militia It was the worst riot in New York City up to that time 3 4 Historian Tyler Anbinder says the Dead Rabbit name so captured the imagination of New Yorkers that the press continued to use it despite the abundant evidence that no such club or gang existed Andbinder notes that for more than a decade Dead Rabbit became the standard phrase by which city residents described any scandalously riotous individual or group 5 Historians such as Michael Kaplan and Elliott Gorn have argued that an intensifying highly masculine working class male identity fostered gangs brawling and even homicide and rape which was fueled by New York City taverns The emerging male code emphasized physical courage defiance of authority and class pride Irish and German immigrants brought European influences Sexual harassment of women increased because women were more visible outside the home as many worked in factories and shops Women were regarded as depersonalized objects of lewd talk and gang rapes became an opportunity for male bonding 6 7 8 Staten Island Quarantine War Edit From 1800 to 1858 Staten Island was the location of the largest quarantine facility in the United States Angry residents burned down the hospital compound in 1858 in a series of attacks known as the Staten Island Quarantine War Although there were no deaths as a result of the attack the arsonists completely destroyed the hospital compound 9 Central Park EditMain article Central Park John Singer Sargent Frederick Law Olmsted 1822 1903 1895 As the population grew explosively in Lower Manhattan after 1820 middle class residents were drawn to the few existing open spaces mainly cemeteries to get away from the noises smells and chaotic life in the city Landscape painter Asher B Durand and writer William Cullen Bryant recalling their rural upbringing and the great parks of Europe advocated the therapeutic value of nature in the overcrowded city 10 Along with architect Andrew Jackson Downing they envisioned a great park The state government in 1853 provided 5 million and eminent domain powers to buy out the land owners of what became Central Park Egbert L Viele drew the original plans but Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux made the final Greensward Plan design and have received the main credit 11 Angel of the Waters in Bethesda Fountain sculpted 1873 Several American influences came together in the design Landscaped rural cemeteries such as Mount Auburn in Cambridge Massachusetts and Green Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn provided examples of idyllic naturalistic landscapes The most influential innovations in the Central Park design were the multiple circulation plans for pedestrians horseback riders and pleasure vehicles The crossing routes for commercial traffic were concealed in sunken roadways screened with densely planted shrub belts so as to maintain a natural setting 12 It was the nation s first great urban park Olmsted taught Americans a new sensibility in park environments and urban planning as an applied science with his radically naturalistic park design 13 14 Civil War Edit 1860 map of New York City Main article New York City in the American Civil War See also Union American Civil War and New York in the American Civil War Prior to the Civil War in 1861 Mayor Wood proposed New York City secession from the United States as a neutral sovereign city state to be called Tri Insula as a way to avoid the ravages of war Despite strong local Copperhead sympathies the proposal was not well received The city provided a major source of troops supplies equipment and financing for the Union Army Powerful New York politicians and newspaper editors helped shape public opinion toward the war effort and the policies of President Abraham Lincoln The port of New York a major entry point for immigrants served as recruiting grounds for the Army 15 In July 1863 Irish Catholic protestors of conscription began five days of rioting The Draft Riots the worst in American history targeted blacks and wealthy Republicans It was suppressed by artillery units of the United States Army firing grapeshot that killed and wounded hundreds of rioters 16 Meanwhile the upscale membership of the New York Union League Club recruited over 2 000 black men for the 20th United States Colored Infantry to help fill the quotas and to make a major contribution to African American civil rights 17 18 The neighboring city of Brooklyn in contrast was more pro war 19 In 1865 the Metropolitan Fire District united the fire departments of New York and Brooklyn and was more successful than the earlier Metropolitan Police District eventually developing into the New York City Fire Department 20 Tourism and entertainment EditNew York increasingly became the national capital for tourism and entertainment Grand hotels were built for the upscale visitors 21 New York s theater district gradually moved northward during this half century from The Bowery up Broadway through Union Square and Madison Square settling around Times Square at the end of the 19th century Edwin Booth and Lillian Russell were among the Broadway stars 22 Prostitutes served a wide variety of clientele from sailors on leave to playboys 23 The first nightclubs appeared in New York City in the 1840s and 1850s including McGlory s and the Haymarket They enjoyed a national reputation for live music dance and vaudeville acts They tolerated unlicensed liquor commercial sex and gambling cards chiefly Faro Practically all gambling was illegal in the city except upscale horseracing tracks and regular payoffs to political and police leadership was necessary Prices were high and they were patronized by an upscale audience Timothy Gilfoyle calls him the first nightclubs 24 25 By contrast Owney Geoghegan ran the toughest nightclub in New York 1880 83 It catered to a downscale clientele and besides the usual illegal liquor gambling and prostitution it featured nighly fistfights and occasional shootings stabbings and police raids 26 27 Webster Hall is credited as the first modern nightclub It opened in 1886 as a social hall originally functioning as a home for dance and political activism events 28 Gilded Age Edit The Great East River Bridge To connect the cities of New York and Brooklyn Currier amp Ives 1872 The Taylor Map of New York 1879 The post war period was noted for the corruption and graft for which Tammany Hall has become proverbial but equally for the foundation of New York s pre eminent cultural institutions the Metropolitan Museum of Art the Metropolitan Opera and the American Museum of Natural History The Brooklyn Museum was a major institution of New York s independent sister city New York newspapers were read across the nation particularly the New York Tribune edited by Horace Greeley the voice of the new Republican Party 29 As immigration increased in cities poverty rose as well The poorest crowded into low cost housing such as the Five Points and Hell s Kitchen neighborhoods in Manhattan These areas were quickly overridden with notorious criminal gangs such as the Five Points Gang and the Bowery Boys 30 Overcrowding spread germs the death rates in big city tenements vastly exceeded those in the countryside 31 Rapid outward expansion required longer journeys to work and shopping for the middle class office workers and housewives The working class generally did not own automobiles until after 1945 they typically walked to nearby factories and patronized small neighborhood stores The middle class demanded a better transportation system Slow horse drawn streetcars and faster electric trolleys were the rage in the 1880s 32 In the horse drawn era streets were unpaved and covered with dirt or gravel However this produced uneven wear opened new hazards for pedestrians and made for dangerous potholes for bicycles and for motor vehicles Manhattan alone had 130 000 horses in 1900 pulling streetcars delivery wagons and private carriages and leaving their waste behind They were not fast and pedestrians could dodge and scramble their way across the crowded streets In small towns people mostly walked to their destination so they continued to rely on dirt and gravel into the 1920s Larger cities had much more complex transportation needs They wanted better streets so they paved them with wood or granite blocks 33 By the end of the century American cities boasted 30 million square yards of asphalt paving followed by brick construction 34 Street level electric trolleys moved at 12 miles per hour and became the main transportation service for middle class shoppers and office workers Big city streets became paths for faster and larger and more dangerous vehicles the pedestrians beware In the largest cities street railways were elevated which increased their speed and lessened their dangers Boston built the first subway in the 1890s followed by New York a decade later 35 Immigration EditThe flood of immigration from Europe passed first through Castle Clinton opened 1855 and then through Ellis Island opened 1892 in New York Harbor with the nearby Statue of Liberty opening in 1886 Most of the new arrivals headed to destinations across the north and west but many made New York City their destination European immigration brought further social upheaval and old world criminal societies rapidly exploited the already corrupt municipal machine politics of Tammany Hall Housing especially in the southern tip of Manhattan became crowded with newly built tenements and flimsy shacks in the back Italians settled around Mulberry Street between the East Village and Lower Manhattan in an area later to be known as Little Italy Many Yiddish speaking East European Jews came to the Lower East Side In the Orange Riots of July 1871 and 1872 Catholic Irish attempted to stop Protestant Irish from celebrating the anniversary of the Battle of the Boyne These resulted in more than 33 deaths and many wounded 36 37 Pioneering photojournalist Jacob Riis documented the poor conditions of immigrant tenement dwellers in his 1890 How the Other Half Lives he was befriended by Republican reformer Theodore Roosevelt Roosevelt lost his mayoral race in 1886 Reformers did win in 1894 and Roosevelt undertook a major reform of the New York City Police Department in 1895 97 during his term as President of the Police Commissioners 38 Public health Edit Epidemics typhus cholera diphtheria and tuberculosis were rampant in the city s slums Horse manure covered the streets In winter when all the grime froze walking on the sidewalks was a challenge Dead pigs and other carcasses remained on the street for weeks 39 In 1894 Colonel George E Waring Jr introduced sanitary reforms using a large street cleaning force 40 41 Politics EditTammany Hall Edit William Tweed better known as Boss Tweed had become the sole leader of Tammany Hall by 1867 From April 1870 with the passage of a city charter consolidating power in the hands of his political allies Tweed and his cronies were able to defraud the city of some tens of millions of dollars over the next two years and eight months most famously with the construction bill for a lavish courthouse The efforts of reform oriented Democratic politicians especially Samuel J Tilden as well as aggressive newspaper editors aided by the biting cartoons of Thomas Nast helped elect opposition candidates in 1871 Tweed was convicted of forgery and larceny in 1873 Tweed s fall put an end to the immunity of corrupt local political leaders and was a precursor to Progressive Era reforms in the city 42 In this 1899 Udo Keppler cartoon from Puck all of New York City politics revolves around boss Richard Croker Tammany did not take long to rebound from Tweed s fall Reforms demanded a general housecleaning and former county sheriff Honest John Kelly was selected as the new leader Kelly was not implicated in the Tweed scandals and was a religious Catholic related by marriage to Archbishop John McCloskey He cleared Tammany of Tweed s people and tightened the Grand Sachem s control over the hierarchy His success at revitalizing the machine was such that in the election of 1874 the Tammany candidate William H Wickham unseated the unpopular reformist incumbent William F Havemeyer and Democrats generally won their races delivering control of the city back to Tammany Hall 43 Theodore Roosevelt before he became president in 1901 was deeply involved in New York City politics He explains how the machine worked The organization of a party in our city is really much like that of an army There is one great central boss assisted by some trusted and able lieutenants these communicate with the different district bosses whom they alternately bully and assist The district boss in turn has a number of half subordinates half allies under him these latter choose the captains of the election districts etc and come into contact with the common healers 44 Reformers Edit Middle class moral sensibilities were deeply opposed to prostitution and all forms of gambling The reform movement was strongest in the 1890s 45 Reform was led by men such as the Reverend Charles H Parkhurst the leading Presbyterian pastor and president of the New York Society for the Prevention of Crime 46 reform mayor William L Strong and his police commissioner Theodore Roosevelt Reformers passed laws in the state legislature against any emerging gambling venue Such laws were enforced in most small towns and rural areas but not in New York s larger cities where political machines controlled the police and the courts 47 Economy Edit Street beggar 1888 In 1874 nearly 61 of all U S exports passed through New York harbor In 1884 nearly 70 of U S imports came through New York The eventual rise of ports on the Gulf of Mexico and on the Pacific coast reduced New York s share of imports and exports to about 47 in 1910 The city s banking resources grew 250 between 1888 and 1908 compared to the national increase of 26 Between 1860 and 1907 the assessed value of the land and buildings on Manhattan rose from 1 7 billion to 6 7 billion The city and its suburbs mainly Brooklyn and Long Island City also became important in light industry Its factories dominated the garment industry and some high technology industries of the second industrial revolution such as sewing machines and pianos It was an important center for other hi tech items such as hard rubber products and electrical goods Petroleum and chemical works sprang up along Newtown Creek Bayonne New Jersey and other industrial suburbs Department stores Edit In modern major cities the department store made a dramatic appearance in the middle of the 19th century and permanently reshaped shopping habits and the definition of service and luxury Similar developments were underway in Paris and London 48 New York became a regional and national destination for upscale shoppers thanks to its development of the modern department store London and Paris were developing department stores around the same time and the leaders quickly adopted innovations In 1846 Alexander Turney Stewart established his Marble Palace on Broadway between Chambers and Reade Streets 49 He offered upscale retail merchandise at fixed prices Though it was clad in white marble to look like a Renaissance palazzo the building s cast iron construction had large plate glass windows that permitted major seasonal displays especially in the Christmas shopping season Increasingly the clientele were women from wealthy or upper middle class families 50 In 1862 Stewart built a new store on a full city block with eight floors and nineteen departments of dress goods and furnishing materials carpets glass and china toys and sports equipment ranged around a central glass covered court His innovations included buying from manufacturers for cash and in large quantities keeping his markup small and prices low truthful presentation of merchandise the one price policy so there was no haggling simple merchandise returns and cash refund policy selling for cash and not credit buyers who searched worldwide for quality merchandise departmentalization vertical and horizontal integration volume sales and free services for customers such as waiting rooms and free delivery of purchases His innovations were quickly copied by other department stores 51 In 1858 Rowland Hussey Macy founded Macy s as a dry goods store Benjamin Altman and Lord amp Taylor soon competed with Stewart as New York s earliest department stores By the 1880s New York s retail center had moved uptown forming a stretch of retail shopping from Marble Palace that was called the Ladies Mile By 1894 the major stores competed in the Christmas season with elaborate Christmas window displays in 1895 Macy s featured 13 tableaux including scenes from Jack and the Beanstalk Gulliver s Travels and other children s favorites 52 The department store was especially important for women in middle class families women took control of the purchasing and the department stores catered to their tastes Furthermore ambitious young women from the middle class who wanted a career were welcomed into the clerical ranks where they developed social skills to work with their upscale customers 53 54 Skyscrapers and apartment buildings EditMain articles skyscraper apartment and tenement New inventions facilitated the emergence of the skyscraper in the 1880s it was a characteristic American style that was not widely copied around the world until the late 20th century Construction required several major innovations including the elevator and structural steel The steel skeleton developed in the 1880s replaced the heavy brick walls that were limited to 15 or so stories in height The skyscraper also required a complex internal structure to solve issues of ventilation steam heat gas lighting and later electricity and plumbing 55 The Dakota luxury apartment building view from Central Park 1890 The city s housing involved a wide variety of styles but most of the attention focused on the tenement house for the working class and the apartment building for the middle class The apartment building came first as middle class professionals businessmen and white collar workers realized they did not need and could scarcely afford single family dwellings in the high cost real estate districts of the city Boarding houses were inappropriate for family hotel suites were too expensive In outlying neighborhoods there were many apartments over stores and shops usually occupied by proprietors of small local businesses Apartment dwellers paid rent and did not own their apartments until the emergence of cooperatives in the 20th century Turnover was very high and there was seldom was a sense of neighborhood community 56 57 Starting with the luxurious Stuyvesant Apartments that opened in 1869 and the even more lavish The Dakota in 1884 affluent tenants hired full time staff to handle the upkeep and maintenance as well as security 58 59 The less lavish middle class apartment buildings provided gas lighting elevators good plumbing central heating and maintenance men on call Apartment buildings were built along the paths of the street railways since the middle class tenants rode the streetcar to work while the working class saved a nickel each way and walked 60 The working class crowded into tenement houses with far fewer features and amenities 61 Novelist Stephen Crane in Maggie A Girl of the Streets 1893 wrote of an Irish tenement neighborhood characterized by poverty and violence Eventually they entered into a dark region where from a careening building a dozen gruesome doorways gave up loads of babies to the street and the gutter A wind of early autumn raised yellow dust from cobble and swirled it against an hundred windows Long streamers of garments fluttered from fire escapes In all unhandy places there were buckets brooms rags and bottles In the street infants played or fought with other infants or sat stupidly in the way of vehicles Formidable women with uncombed hair and disordered dress gossiped while leaning on railings or screamed in frantic quarrels Withered persons in curious postures of submission to something sat smoking pipes in obscure corners A thousand odors of cooking food came forth to the street The building quivered and creaked from the weight of humanity stamping about in its bowels 62 Tenements were cheap and easy to build and filled up almost the entire lot There were typically five story walk ups with four separate apartments on each floor There was minimal air circulation and sunlight Until the Tenement House Act of 1879 newly built tenements lacked running water or indoor toilets A law in 1901 required indoor plumbing be retrofitted to older tenements Garbage pickup was erratic until late in the 19th century Rent was cheap for those who could endure the dust clutter smells and noises the only cheaper alternatives were squalid basement rooms in older buildings Most of the tenements survived until the urban renewal movement of the 1950s 63 64 Neighborhoods EditPre war steam ferries had already made Brooklyn Heights into a bedroom community for affluent professionals on Wall Street and other urban areas Elevated railroads operated by the Manhattan Railway Company and other new public transport expanded the commuter area of New York allowing development of suburbs for commuters of more modest means in Upper West Side and other distant areas Plans were made for subways to still more remote exurbs such as Harlem and the West Bronx In the late 19th century the island s schist bedrock encouraged the early skyscrapers whose successors characterize its skyline today The Great Blizzard of 1888 exposed the vulnerability of the urban infrastructure connecting those buildings encouraging the undergrounding of electric and telephone lines and plans were made for a subway line Consolidation EditSee also List of former municipalities in New York City This 1877 Currier amp Ives print of an unfinished Brooklyn Bridge showed a vision of greater urban integration In 1855 the City of Brooklyn annexed Williamsburg and Bushwick forming the third most populous city in America In 1870 Long Island City was formed in Queens In 1874 New York City annexed the West Bronx west of the Bronx River The Brooklyn Bridge completed in 1883 epitomized the heroic confidence of a generation and drew the two cities of Brooklyn and New York inexorably together As Brooklyn annexed the remainder of Kings County in the decade from 1886 to 1896 the issue of consolidation grew more pressing The modern city of Greater New York the five boroughs was created in 1898 with the consolidation of the cities of New York then Manhattan and the Bronx and Brooklyn with the largely rural areas of Queens and Staten Island See also Edit New York City portalTimeline of New York City 1850s 1890s New York City Police Riot of 1857 1886 New York City mayoral electionReferences Edit For a visual overview of the era see Eric Homberger The historical atlas of New York City A visual celebration of 400 years of New York City s history Macmillan 2005 pp 84 111 James F Richardson The New York Police Colonial Times to 1901 1970 Christopher Adamson Tribute turf honor and the American street gang patterns of continuity and change since 1820 Theoretical Criminology 1998 2 1 pp 57 84 Nate Hendley ed 2009 American Gangsters Then and Now An Encyclopedia An Encyclopedia ABC CLIO pp 65 66 ISBN 9780313354526 Tyler Anbinder Five Points the 19th century New York City neighborhood that invented tap dance stole elections and became the world s most notorious slum 2001 pp 285 86 Kaplan Michael 1995 New York City Tavern Violence and the Creation of a Working Class Male Identity Journal of the Early Republic 15 4 591 617 doi 10 2307 3124015 ISSN 0275 1275 JSTOR 3124015 Peter Adams The Bowery Boys Street Corner Radicals and the Politics of Rebellion 2005 Gorn Elliott J 1987 Good Bye Boys I Die a True American Homicide Nativism and Working Class Culture in Antebellum New York City The Journal of American History 74 2 388 410 doi 10 2307 1900028 ISSN 0021 8723 JSTOR 1900028 Stephenson Kathryn January 1 2004 The Quarantine War the Burning of the New York Marine Hospital in 1858 Public Health Reports 119 1 79 92 doi 10 1177 003335490411900114 PMC 1502261 PMID 15147652 Linda Fischer and Harrison Hunt Asher B Durand William Cullen Bryant and the Origins of Central Park New York Journal of American History 2007 66 4 pp 93 100 Burrows and Wallace Gotham pp 790 95 Rosenzweig Roy amp Blackmar Elizabeth 1992 The Park and the People A History of Central Park Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 9751 5 MENARD ANDREW 2010 The Enlarged Freedom of Frederick Law Olmsted The New England Quarterly 83 3 508 538 doi 10 1162 TNEQ a 00039 ISSN 0028 4866 JSTOR 20752715 S2CID 57567923 Eugene P Moehring Frederick Law Olmsted and the Central Park Revolution Halcyon A Journal of the Humanities 1985 7 1 pp 59 75 Edward K Spann Gotham at War New York City 1860 1865 2002 Iver Bernstein The New York City Draft Riots Their Significance for American Society and Politics in the Age of the Civil War 1990 Barnet Schecter The Devil s Own Work The Civil War Draft Riots and the Fight to Reconstruct America 2007 Adrian Cook The Armies of the Streets The New York City Draft Riots of 1863 1982 Thomas L Jones The Union League Club and New York s First Black Regiments in the Civil War New York History 2006 87 3 pp 313 343 William Seraile New York s Black Regiments During the Civil War 2015 E H Livingston President Lincoln s Third Largest City Brooklyn and The Civil War 1994 Jackson Encyclopedia of New Your City 2010 p 452 Justin Kaplan When the Astors Owned New York Blue Bloods and Grand Hotels in a Gilded Age 2006 Lewis A Erenberg Steppin Out New York Nightlife and the Transformation of American Culture 1984 Timothy J Gilfoyle City of eros New York City prostitution and the commercialization of sex 1790 1920 1994 Timothy J Gilfoyle Scorsese s Gangs of New York Why Myth Matters Journal of Urban History 29 5 2003 620 630 at p 624 Burrows and Wallace Gotham 1999 1148 Eric Ferrara 2009 A Guide to Gangsters Murderers and Weirdos of New York City s Lower East Side pp 79 80 ISBN 9781614233039 Lewis A Erenberg Steppin Out New York Nightlife and the Transformation of American Culture 1890 1930 1981 Webster Hall Landmark Status Certification PDF Greenwich Village Society for History Preservation The intact elegantly detailed facade of Webster Hall has sheltered some of the Village s most infamous moments and this first modern night club deserves to be an individual landmark Jeter Allen Isely Horace Greeley and the Republican Party 1853 1861 A Study of the New York Tribune 1947 Anbinder Tyler 2001 Five Points The 19th century New York City Neighborhood that Invented Tap Dance Stole Elections and Became the World s Most Notorious Slum Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0684859958 Tindall George Brown and Shi David E America A Narrative History Brief 9th ed 2012 vol 2 p 590 Fogelson Robert M 2003 Downtown Its Rise and Fall 1880 1950 Yale U P ISBN 978 0300098273 David O Whitten A Century of Parquet Pavements Wood as a Paving Material in the United States And Abroad 1840 1940 Essays in Economic and Business History 15 1997 209 26 Arthur Maier Schlesinger The Rise of the City 1878 1898 1933 pp 88 93 ISBN missing Fairfield John D 1995 McShane Clay ed Rapid Transit Automobility and Settlement in Urban America Reviews in American History 23 1 80 85 doi 10 1353 rah 1995 0006 ISSN 0048 7511 JSTOR 2703240 S2CID 144312718 Michael Gordon The Orange riots Irish political violence in New York City 1870 and 1871 1993 Orange Riots of 1870 and 1871 Access Genealogy 2011 07 13 Retrieved 2023 01 21 Jay Stuart Berman Police administration and progressive reform Theodore Roosevelt as police commissioner of New York 1987 Farland Maria 2007 Decomposing City Walt Whitman s New York and the Science of Life and Death ELH 74 4 799 827 doi 10 1353 elh 2007 0038 ISSN 0013 8304 JSTOR 30029599 S2CID 162294790 John Duffy History of public health in New York City 2 vol 1968 1974 Leavitt Judith Walzer 1976 Duffy John Galishoff Stuart eds Writing Public Health History The Need for a Social Scaffolding Reviews in American History 4 2 150 157 doi 10 2307 2701546 ISSN 0048 7511 JSTOR 2701546 PMID 11610796 Oliver E Allen The Tiger The Rise and Fall of Tammany Hall 1993 online edition Burrows amp Wallace Gotham p 1027 Theodore Roosevelt 1897 The Works of Theodore Roosevelt American ideals Collier pp 132 33 Edwin G Burrows Mike Wallace 1999 Gotham A History of New York City to 1898 pp 1162 65 1192 94 1200 1203 ISBN 9780199729104 academic oup com https academic oup com ahr article abstract 109 4 1246 26410 Retrieved 2023 01 21 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Mike Wallace Greater Gotham A history of New York City from 1898 to 1919 2017 pp 615 618 Gunther Barth The Department Store in City People The Rise of Modern City Culture in Nineteenth Century America Oxford University Press 1980 pp 110 47 Harry E Resseguie A T Stewart s Marble Palace The Cradle of the Department Store New York Historical Society Quarterly 1964 48 2 131 162 Gunther Barth City People The Rise of Modern City Culture in Nineteenth Century America 1982 pp 110 147 Resseguie Harry E 1965 Alexander Turney Stewart and the Development of the Department Store 1823 1876 The Business History Review 39 3 301 322 doi 10 2307 3112143 ISSN 0007 6805 JSTOR 3112143 S2CID 154704872 Laura Byrne Paquet 2003 The Urge to Splurge A Social History of Shopping ECW Press p 191 ISBN 9781550225839 Leach William R 1984 Transformations in a Culture of Consumption Women and Department Stores 1890 1925 The Journal of American History 71 2 319 342 doi 10 2307 1901758 ISSN 0021 8723 JSTOR 1901758 Susan Benson Counter cultures Saleswomen managers and customers in American department stores 1890 1940 1987 George H Douglas Skyscrapers A social history of the very tall building in America 2004 Amy Kallman Epstein Multifamily Dwellings and the Search for Respectability Origins of the New York Apartment House Urbanism Past amp Present 1980 Issue 2 pp 29 39 Elizabeth Collins Cromley Alone Together A History of New York s Early Apartments 1990 Stephen Birmingham Life at the Dakota 1979 Andrew Alpern New York s Fabulous Luxury Apartments With Original Floor Plans from the Dakota River House Olympic Tower and Other Great Buildings 1987 covers 75 famous buildings starting in 1869 Elizabeth Blackmar Manhattan for Rent 1785 1850 1989 Andrew S Dolkart Biography of a Tenement House in New York City An Architectural History of 97 Orchard Street 2006 Dolkart s Jewish tenement while equally dark airless filthy and crowded appears far less threatening than those of Stephen Crane Stephen Crane 2009 Great Short Works of Stephen Crane HarperCollins p 130 ISBN 9780060726485 Richard Plunz A History of Housing in New York City Dwelling Type and Social Change in the American Metropolis 1990 Raymond A Mohl The New City Urban America in the Industrial Age 1860 1920 1985 pp 47 52Further reading EditAnbinder Tyler From Famine to Five Points Lord Lansdowne s Irish Tenants Encounter North America s Most Notorious Slum American Historical Review 107 2 2002 351 387 in JSTOR Anbinder Tyler Five Points the 19th century New York City neighborhood that invented tap dance stole elections and became the world s most notorious slum Simon and Schuster 2001 Beckert Sven The Monied Metropolis New York City and the Consolidation of the American Bourgeoisie 1850 1896 2001 Broxmeyer Jeffrey D Electoral Capitalism The Party System in New York s Gilded Age U of Pennsylvania Press 2020 covers city and state Burns Ric and James Sanders New York An Illustrated History 2003 large scale book version of Burns PBS documentary New York A Documentary Film an eight part 17 hour documentary film directed by Ric Burns for PBS It originally aired in 1999 with additional episodes airing in 2001 and 2003 Burrows Edwin G and Mike Wallace Gotham a history of New York City to 1898 Oxford University Press 1998 The standard scholarly survey 1390 pages onlibe review Bernstein Iver The New York City Draft Riots Their Significance for American Society and Politics in the Age of the Civil War 1990 Callow Alexander B The Tweed Ring 1966 Chernow Ron The house of Morgan an American banking dynasty and the rise of modern finance 2001 Chernow Ron Titan The Life of John D Rockefeller Sr 2007 Ernst Robert Immigrant Life in New York City 1825 1863 Syracuse University Press 1994 Fitzgerald Maureen Habits of Compassion Irish Catholic Nuns and the Origins of New York s Welfare System 1830 1920 University of Illinois Press 2006 Hershkowitz Leo Tweed s New York Another Look New York Anchor Press 1977 scholarly study that argues Tweed was mostly innocent online reviewHomberger Eric Mrs Astor s New York Money and Social Power in a Gilded Age Yale University Press 2004 Homberger Eric The historical atlas of New York City A visual celebration of 400 years of New York City s history Macmillan 2005 Jackson Kenneth D Encyclopedia of New York City 2nd ed 2010 a massive compendium of authoritative short articles Laster Margaret R and Chelsea Bruner eds New York Art and Cultural Capital of the Gilded Age 2018 Livingston E H President Lincoln s Third Largest City Brooklyn and The Civil War 1994 McKay Ernest A The Civil War and New York City Syracuse University Press 1990 Quigley David Second Founding New York City Reconstruction and the Making of American Democracy Hill and Wang 2004 excerptScherzer Kenneth A The unbounded community Neighborhood life and social structure in New York City 1830 1875 Duke University Press 1992 Spann Edward K Gotham at War New York City 1860 1865 2002 Stern Robert A M Mellins Thomas Fishman David 1999 New York 1880 Architecture and Urbanism in the Gilded Age Monacelli Press ISBN 978 1 58093 027 7 OCLC 40698653 Voorsanger Catherine Hoover amp Howat John K eds 2000 Art and the empire city New York 1825 1861 New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 9780870999574 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Primary sources Edit Gellman David N and David Quigley eds Jim Crow New York A Documentary History of Race and Citizenship 1777 1877 2003 Jackson Kenneth T and David S Dunbar eds Empire City New York Through the Centuries 2005 1015 pages of excerpts excerpt Still Bayrd ed Mirror for Gotham New York as Seen by Contemporaries from Dutch Days to the Present New York University Press 1956 online edition Stokes I N Phelps The Iconography of Manhattan Island 1498 1909 compiled from original sources and illustrated by photo intaglio reproductions of important maps plans views and documents in public and private collections 6 vols 1915 28 A highly detailed heavily illustrated chronology of Manhattan and New York City see The Iconography of Manhattan Island All volumes are on line free at I N Phelps Stokes The Iconography of Manhattan Island Vol 1 1915 v 1 The period of discovery 1524 1609 the Dutch period 1609 1664 The English period 1664 1763 The Revolutionary period 1763 1783 Period of adjustment and reconstruction New York as the state and federal capital 1783 1811 I N Phelps Stokes The Iconography of Manhattan Island Vol 2 1916 v 2 Cartography an essay on the development of knowledge regarding the geography of the east coast of North America Manhattan Island and its environs on early maps and charts by F C Wieder and I N Phelps Stokes The Manatus maps The Castello plan The Dutch grants Early New York newspapers 1725 1811 Plan of Manhattan Island in 1908 I N Phelps Stokes The Iconography of Manhattan Island Vol 3 1918 v 3 The War of 1812 1812 1815 Period of invention prosperity and progress 1815 1841 Period of industrial and educational development 1842 1860 The Civil War 1861 1865 period of political and social development 1865 1876 The modern city and island 1876 1909 I N Phelps Stokes The Iconography of Manhattan Island Vol 4 1922 v 4 The period of discovery 565 1626 the Dutch period 1626 1664 The English period 1664 1763 The Revolutionary period part I 1763 1776 I N Phelps Stokes The Iconography of Manhattan Island Vol 5 1926 v 5 The Revolutionary period part II 1776 1783 Period of adjustment and reconstruction New York as the state and federal capital 1783 1811 The War of 1812 1812 1815 period of invention prosperity and progress 1815 1841 Period of industrial and educational development 1842 1860 The Civil War 1861 1865 Period of political and social development 1865 1876 The modern city and island 1876 1909 I N Phelps Stokes The Iconography of Manhattan Island Vol 6 1928 v 6 Chronology addenda Original grants and farms Bibliography Index Older books Edit Trow s New York City Directory John F Trow 1857 Charles Knight ed 1867 City of New York Geography English Cyclopaedia Vol 3 London Bradbury Evans hdl 2027 nyp 33433000064802 Redfield s Traveler s Guide to the City of New York New York J S Redfield 1871 OL 23744341M Richard Edwards ed 1884 New York s Great Industries New York Historical Publishing Co OCLC 3574247 OL 24579141M Pictorial New York and Brooklyn New York Smith Bleakley amp Co 1892 OL 23720975M King s Handbook of New York City 2nd ed Moses King 1893 New York City Columbian Cyclopedia Vol 21 Buffalo NY Garretson Cox amp Company 1897 hdl 2027 nyp 33433000967483 Check List of Directories of the City of New York Bulletin of the New York Public Library vol 5 pp 80 v 1901 hdl 2027 nyp 33433081923769 Part 2 Chronological List JAMES D MCCABE JR LIGHTS AND SHADOWS OF NEW YORK LIFE OR THE SIGHTS AND SENSATIONS OF A GREAT CITY illustrated with numerous fine engravings of noted places life and scenes in New York NATIONAL PUBLISHING COMPANY PHILADELPHIA Pa CINCINNATI Ohio CHICAGO Ill ST LOUIS Mo 1872 A Project Gutenberg e bookChronology EditPreceded byHistory of New York City 1784 1854 History of New York City 1855 1897 Succeeded byHistory of New York City 1898 1945 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of New York City 1855 1897 amp oldid 1134930744, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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