New York City History

New York City History is essential reading not only for fans of regional history, but for readers who wish to understand the American experience through the heartbeat of one of our greatest cities.

With a focus on the stories that built the city, historian Bob Swacker explores the growth and development of the metropolis from its Dutch and English colonial past, beginning in 1625, to today's modern Gotham.

In 125 chapters the author weaves a narrative that presents the unique historical developments of New York City including: architecture, infrastructure, industry, consumer businesses, public spaces, pestilence, cemeteries, housing, religion, education, literature, immigration, and harbor and river activities.

The book features six chapters focused on the Civil War covering a wide range of topics such as slave revolts, abolitionists and reformers, raising battalions, and the Draft Riot of 1863.

Immigration has been fundamental to the development of New York City and is a key topic, with discussions of the first European settlers on Governors Island, the Irish Potato Famine, orphanages and orphan trains, Kleindeutschland, Abraham Cahan and the Jewish Daily Forward, kosher and halal ritual slaughtering, Chinatown, and refugee settlement after the Second World War.

Biographical chapters explore the lives of such memorable historical characters as: Peter Stuyvesant, Washington Irving, John Jacob Astor, Peter Cooper, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, P.T. Barnum, Archbishop John Hughes, Walt Whitman, Elizabeth Blackwell, Samuel Gompers, Dorothy Day, Paul Robeson, Robert Moses, Jane Jacobs, and Jackie Robinson.

New York City History brings to life the boroughs, people, and events that founded and continue to influence this great American city.

1127956803
New York City History

New York City History is essential reading not only for fans of regional history, but for readers who wish to understand the American experience through the heartbeat of one of our greatest cities.

With a focus on the stories that built the city, historian Bob Swacker explores the growth and development of the metropolis from its Dutch and English colonial past, beginning in 1625, to today's modern Gotham.

In 125 chapters the author weaves a narrative that presents the unique historical developments of New York City including: architecture, infrastructure, industry, consumer businesses, public spaces, pestilence, cemeteries, housing, religion, education, literature, immigration, and harbor and river activities.

The book features six chapters focused on the Civil War covering a wide range of topics such as slave revolts, abolitionists and reformers, raising battalions, and the Draft Riot of 1863.

Immigration has been fundamental to the development of New York City and is a key topic, with discussions of the first European settlers on Governors Island, the Irish Potato Famine, orphanages and orphan trains, Kleindeutschland, Abraham Cahan and the Jewish Daily Forward, kosher and halal ritual slaughtering, Chinatown, and refugee settlement after the Second World War.

Biographical chapters explore the lives of such memorable historical characters as: Peter Stuyvesant, Washington Irving, John Jacob Astor, Peter Cooper, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, P.T. Barnum, Archbishop John Hughes, Walt Whitman, Elizabeth Blackwell, Samuel Gompers, Dorothy Day, Paul Robeson, Robert Moses, Jane Jacobs, and Jackie Robinson.

New York City History brings to life the boroughs, people, and events that founded and continue to influence this great American city.

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New York City History

New York City History

by Bob Swacker
New York City History

New York City History

by Bob Swacker

eBook

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Overview

New York City History is essential reading not only for fans of regional history, but for readers who wish to understand the American experience through the heartbeat of one of our greatest cities.

With a focus on the stories that built the city, historian Bob Swacker explores the growth and development of the metropolis from its Dutch and English colonial past, beginning in 1625, to today's modern Gotham.

In 125 chapters the author weaves a narrative that presents the unique historical developments of New York City including: architecture, infrastructure, industry, consumer businesses, public spaces, pestilence, cemeteries, housing, religion, education, literature, immigration, and harbor and river activities.

The book features six chapters focused on the Civil War covering a wide range of topics such as slave revolts, abolitionists and reformers, raising battalions, and the Draft Riot of 1863.

Immigration has been fundamental to the development of New York City and is a key topic, with discussions of the first European settlers on Governors Island, the Irish Potato Famine, orphanages and orphan trains, Kleindeutschland, Abraham Cahan and the Jewish Daily Forward, kosher and halal ritual slaughtering, Chinatown, and refugee settlement after the Second World War.

Biographical chapters explore the lives of such memorable historical characters as: Peter Stuyvesant, Washington Irving, John Jacob Astor, Peter Cooper, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, P.T. Barnum, Archbishop John Hughes, Walt Whitman, Elizabeth Blackwell, Samuel Gompers, Dorothy Day, Paul Robeson, Robert Moses, Jane Jacobs, and Jackie Robinson.

New York City History brings to life the boroughs, people, and events that founded and continue to influence this great American city.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781633310230
Publisher: Disruption Books
Publication date: 03/13/2018
Sold by: INDEPENDENT PUB GROUP - EPUB - EBKS
Format: eBook
Pages: 747
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Bob Swacker has led tours through the neighborhoods of New York City for five decades. His tours combine decades of historical research in libraries, cemeteries, and historical societies; interviews with borough residents; and many miles traveled on foot in the field. He has taught at Saint Ann's School in Brooklyn since 1970 and for many years he has taught courses on New York City at Saint Ann's and at New York University. Dr. Swacker is the author of New York City History, Out From Midtown, and the co-author, with Leslie Jenkins, of Irish New York. He lives in Stuyvesant Town.

Table of Contents

DUTCH COLONIAL PERIOD 1625-1664 Chapter 1: Henry Hudson 15 Chapter 2: Original Inhabitants: Sorting Out the Lenape, Munsee, Delaware, Algonquian 19 Chapter 3: Dutch West India Company 25 Chapter 4: First European Settlers on Governors Island 28 Chapter 5: Buying Manhattan: Two Concepts of Property 32 Chapter 6: Fur Trade 37 Chapter 7: Fate of the Indians: The Effect of Disease Pools 40 Chapter 8: Forest Products & City Trees 43 Chapter 9: Climate & Weather 47 Chapter 10: New Amsterdam's Defenses: Wall, Fort, & Battery 51 Chapter 11: Schools 55 Chapter 12: Children's Games 64 Chapter 13: Public Spaces in New Amsterdam: Town Common & Bowling Green 68 Chapter 14: Rivers: East & West 71 Chapter 15: Canals & Docking Facilities 76 Chapter 16: Peter Stuyvesant & the Earlier Dutch Governors 80 Chapter 17: Flushing Remonstrance 90 Chapter 18: Colonel Richard Nicolls Takes New Amsterdam for England 93 Chapter 19: New Orange Interregnum 96 Chapter 20: Architecture of the Dutch Period 99 ENGLISH COLONIAL PERIOD (1664-1783) Chapter 21: Fraunces Tavern 103 Chapter 22: Trans-Atlantic Shipping and the Slave Trade 107 Chapter 23: Farming 117 Chapter 24: Slavery in New York & Slave Revolts 122 Chapter 25: Fish Market 130 Chapter 26: Pushcart Peddlers 133 Chapter 27: Governor Cornbury: A Case of Political Dirty Tricks? 138 Chapter 28: Naming Streets 140 Chapter 29: Market Squares 150 Chapter 30: Cemeteries, Tombstone Designs, & Potter's Fields 157 Chapter 31: Buttonwood Agreement & the Stock Exchange 163 Chapter 32: John Peter Zenger's Trial 168 Chapter 33: Surfacing the Streets 171 Chapter 34: Brickmaking 174 Chapter 35: Theater & Music 177 Chapter 36:Early Immigration & Religious Pluralism 183 Chapter 37: Staten Island's Conference House & the American Revolution 187 Chapter 38: Battle of Long Island (in Brooklyn) 192 Chapter 39: American Revolution in New York City 196 Chapter 40: Nathan Hale 205 Chapter 41: Architecture of the English Period 207 19TH CENTURY NEW YORK CITY Chapter 42: New York City: National Capital for One Year 213 Chapter 43: Castle Clinton 218 Chapter 44: Washington Irving 220 Chapter 45: Fires 223 Chapter 46: Pestilence 230 Chapter 47: Benjamin H. Day & the Penny Press 241 Chapter 48: Department Stores & Shopping 251 Chapter 49: Street Grids in Manhattan & Queens 257 Chapter 50: John Jacob Astor 261 Chapter 51: Peter Cooper 270 Chapter 52: Santa Claus & Christmas Get Makeovers in New York and Become Americanized 275 Chapter 53: Weeksville, Brooklyn 279 Chapter 54: Robert Fulton 282 Chapter 55: Erie Canal 287 Chapter 56: Irish Famine 293 Chapter 57: Seneca Falls Reverberates in New York City: Women's Suffrage 299 Chapter 58: Industries 307 Chapter 59: Row Houses: Brick, Brownstone, & Limestone 315 Chapter 60: Tenements & Apartments 324 Chapter 61: Abolitionists & Other Reformers 329 Chapter 62: P.T.
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