Events

  • 1964 World’s Fair

    Brief description to show in index pages.

  • 9th District Marshall Provost’s Office 1863- The Civil War Draft Riots

    9th District Marshall Provost's Office 1863- The Civil War Draft Riots

  • Breadlines in Depression-Era New York City

    Whether it was suffering from unemployment, a wage cut, or from not having enough money left over after paying their bills, many New Yorkers found themselves so poor they could not afford to eat on their own expense, and often resulted to waiting on bread-lines for food. The term breadline refers to the lines that ...

  • Brooklyn Navy Yard

    Brief description to show in index pages.

  • Castellammarese War
    Castellammarese War

    Prohibition was a landmark era in the history of American crime- it is not only where we get our romanticized image of the pinstripe clad Depression-era mobster, but also where household names such as Capone gained notoriety. As bootlegging and alcohol-smuggling became the business of organized crime, New York City became one of the key ...

  • Dutch New Amsterdam

    The diversity and vibrant history of one of the greatest cites in the world, New York City, can be traced to its ancestral roots. Before the inhabitance of incoming European explorers, the island of Manhatan (Dutch for the present-day Manhattan) was inhabited by the Lenape tribe. The island was traded for 60 guilders or $24 ...

  • Harlem Renaissance

    During the 1920s, the Harlem Renaissance greatly impacted and diversified New York City. The Harlem Renaissance was a movement during which African American culture drastically flourished, as it developed artistically, socially, and intellectually. Throughout this era, which was also known as the dawn of the “New Negro”, black New Yorkers decided to step against the ...

  • Harlem Riots, March 19, 1935

    Although poverty, hunger, and the need for shelter affected New Yorkers all over the city, there was no place in the city of New York that struggled with these problems more than those who lived in Harlem, New York. Residents of Harlem found themselves not only having to deal with an unemployment rate of over ...

  • Hip-Hop

    New York City has always been a melting pot of different cultures, becoming a home for people all over the world who brought their culture with them into the city. These existing cultures are the reason for New York City’s diversity, but the city not only was a home for culture, it also gave birth ...

  • New Year’s Eve

    Brief description to show in index pages.

  • Newspaper Strike of 1899

      The Newspaper strike of 1900 was a powerful movement from young children against the major newspaper bosses, Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst. Newsies were a group a street children who would purchase a set number of papers each morning from the different publishing companies. This number would have to be sold for each newspaper ...

  • Thanksgiving Day Parade
    Thanksgiving Day Parade

    Descriptive Narrative: For over 100 Years millions have viewed the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade from the heart of Manhattan. It has evolved and adapted since its inception in 1924 and has become a staple in American tradition. History: Every year in America on the fourth Thursday of November, the country celebrates the federal holiday of Thanksgiving. This ...

  • The 9/11 Attacks

    On September 11, 2001, a group of al-Qaeda terrorists carried out multiple attacks by crashing planes into the Pentagon in Washington D.C. and the Twin Towers in New York City. These attacks killed 2,997 people including 2,753 people alone in New York. The events and attacks that took place during the day shook Americans to ...

  • The Astor Place Riot
    The Astor Place Riot

    History: TEXT HERE   Descriptive Narrative: TEXT HERE   Significance: TEXT HERE

  • Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire

    With the overpopulation of immigrants and the rise of industrialization in New York City in the nineteenth century, the number of factories and sweatshops was rising. The new technologies of production that enabled the mechanization of clothing production in the 1860s also accelerated the process of sweated work. These technologies, including the band-saw cutting machine ...

  • World’s Fair of 1939/1940

      The 1939/1940 World’s Fair             The 1930’s proved to be a difficult time in American history. The stock market crash of 1929 signified the end of the carefree “Roaring Twenties” and propelled the nation into the Great Depression and a decade of nationwide despair. With daunting levels of unemployment and homelessness, American progress seemed to be ...