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Gotham

A History of New York in 27 Buildings: The 400-Year Untold Story of an American Metropolis

A History of New York in 27 Buildings: The 400-Year Untold Story of an American Metropolis

Sam Roberts Interviewed by David O. Monda

David O. Monda, guest host of CUNY's Gotham Center for New York City History, speaks with longtime New York Times reporter Sa​m Roberts, host of CUNY-TV's The New York Times Close Up, about his new book A History of New York in 27 Buildings: The 400-Year Untold Story of an American Metropolis.

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Whose City? Fueling the Gentrification Machine through BID Urbanism

Whose City? Fueling the Gentrification Machine through BID Urbanism

By Susanna Schaller

On September 16, 2016 Crains’ New York Business ran an article titled, “Shaping a Neighborhood's Destiny from the Shadows.” The article highlighted the work of business improvement districts (BIDs) in New York City. In the context of federal policies that had systematically drawn the life out of central cities followed by federal retrenchment, urban visionaries and the downtown BIDs they led were framed by bipartisan consensus as savior organizations.

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The Remarkable Life of Teuntje Straetmans, a Woman in New Amsterdam

The Remarkable Life of Teuntje Straetmans, a Woman in New Amsterdam

By Annette M. Cramer van den Bogaart

Today, when you look at the impressive facade of the neoclassical building at 55 Wall Street in Manhattan, known as the National City Bank Building, you would never guess that somewhere buried deep below its foundation lie the remnants of a house owned by a woman with a storied past in the Dutch Atlantic world. On a map of Manhattan in 1660, we find at the intersection of Wall Street and Williams Street the entry, “two small houses under one roof” listed as owned by “Teuntje Straetmans and her fourth husband.”

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Last Subway: The Long Wait for the Next Train in New York City

Last Subway: The Long Wait for the Next Train in New York City

Philip Mark Plotch Interviewed by Robert W. Snyder

Ever since New York City built one of the world’s great subway systems, no promise has been more tantalizing than the proposal to build a new subway line under Second Avenue in Manhattan. Yet the Second Avenue subway — although first envisioned in the 1920s, did not open until 2017 — and even then in a truncated form.

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The Show that Saved the Amphitheatre

The Show that Saved the Amphitheatre

By Daniela Sheinin

On a summer evening in June 1945, 200 performers took to the aquatic stage at the former New York State Pavilion at Flushing Meadow Park. Spread throughout the 8,500 seats at the northern tip of Meadow Lake, spectators watched swimmers and a choreographed “water ballet” fill the pool, while divers sprung from the diving towers at each end.

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Mapping the Suffrage Metropolis

Mapping the Suffrage Metropolis

By Lauren C. Santangelo

Last summer, Oxford University Press published my book, Suffrage and the City: New York Women Battle for the Ballot. The book examines how leaders in such suffrage organizations as the New York City Woman Suffrage League and the Woman Suffrage Party perceived New York City, how those perceptions changed over the course of five decades, and how they informed campaign strategies.

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Magdalena Dircx’s New Amsterdam: Speech, Sex, and the Foundations of a City

Magdalena Dircx’s New Amsterdam:
Speech, Sex, and the Foundations of a City

By Deborah Hamer

There is a curious passage in the correspondence of the directors of the Dutch West India Company and Peter Stuyvesant. Commenting in May 1658 on one Magdalena Dircx, who had been banished from New Amsterdam on Stuyvesant’s orders for her “dissolute life,” the directors wrote she would “not again receive our permission to return to New Netherland.” If she returned through “deceitful practices or under a false name,” the directors authorized Stuyvesant to punish her with a yet harsher sentence than banishment.

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