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A Block in Time
A Block in Time: A New York City History at the Corner of Fifth Avenue and Twenty-Third Street | Christiane Bird
7 posts | 1 read | 2 to read
Gotham meets The Island at the Center of the World in this dazzling history of a single square block in Manhattan from the Age of Exploration to the present. This is the story of New York City, told through the prism of one block, bordered by Twenty-Third Street to the south, Twenty-Fourth Street to the north, Fifth Avenue to the east, and Sixth Avenue to the west. It's a story of forest and cement, bird cries and taxi horns, gambling dens and gourmet foods. It's also the story of high life and low life, immigrants and tourists, laborers and aristocrats, toy stores and tech giants--from Solomon Pieters, a former slave who was the first owner of the block, to John Randel Jr., the surveyor who laid out Manhattan's famous grid plan, to Alexander “Clubber” Williams, the notorious police officer of the 1870s who accepted bribes and wielded his club with equal impunity, to Marietta Stevens, whose Sunday night socials and scheming became the stuff of legend. Greed and generosity, guilt and innocence, extravagance and degradation--all have flourished in this one Manhattan block, emblematic of the city as a whole. Welcome to New York, past and present, and hear all the sordid and edifying stories this small patch of land has to tell. Venturing from the opulent halls of the Fifth Avenue Hotel to grimy Sixth Avenue brothels, from the era of the Lenape to that of the Dutch, from the Gilded Age to the twentieth century, when the block and the city were transformed into something closely resembling the Manhattan we know today-within the confines of this single block resides the panoramic story of the city as a whole.
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keithmalek
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Mehso-so
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keithmalek
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New York did not abolish slavery until 1827, long after most other northern states.

Itchyfeetreader I have a history degree and embarrassed to say I did not know this. 4w
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keithmalek
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If the New York Knicks are going to have this name, I think that they should at least dress like this.

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keithmalek
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...difficult to calculate. Items such as hatchets were invaluable to the Lenape, and the Europeans purchased other tracts of North American wilderness--then viewed as inexhaustible--for similar prices.)

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keithmalek
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keithmalek
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...and more bird species than the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

Rome753 Strange thinking about Manhattan having more ecological diversity than Yellowstone. 1mo
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keithmalek
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...times.