'Lost NYC' wins Guides Association Award for 'Outstanding Achievement in Radio / Podcast'

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The Gotham Center is thrilled to announce that “Lost NYC,” its special edition of the yearly podcast series “Sites and Sounds,” has won the Guides Association of New York City (GANYC)’s Apple Award for ‘Outstanding Achievement in NYC Radio / Podcast (Audio / Spoken Word).’ This is the second nomination in three years. Past winners include WNYC’s “Brian Lehrer Show,” “The Bowery Boys,” and WFUV’s “Cityscape.” This year’s edition was also featured in the New York Post.

Lost NYC featured places in New York that are gone, but were nonetheless of great importance to the city's history — reflecting the fact that COVID-19 robbed the city of the many spaces Open House New York makes accessible to the public each fall, and so much else last year. The Gotham Center commissioned eleven independent and professional scholars to discuss just a few of these lost treasures, from the military headquarters that served as the nucleus of the Dutch (and later British) colony to some of New York City's great (and not-so-great) 19th century social institutions, to icons of 20th century popular culture that still endure in local (and national) imagination. You can download or listen to all the episodes here, and find the entire list below.

Special thanks to Garrett Tiedemann and David Hoffman of CitizenRacecar, for their expert help in post-production; to Deena Ecker and Jessica Georges of the Gotham Center, for their excellent work on the series; to Greg Wessner and Elis Shin of Open House New York, for their crucial support in making the podcast possible; and to the wonderful Guides Association of New York City, for this delightful honor.

Russell Shorto, author of the national bestseller The Island at the Center of the World [russellshorto.com], on Fort Amsterdam and the Dutch colony it protected

Christopher F. Minty, author of “American Demagogues”: The Origins of Loyalism in New York City [cfminty.com](forthcoming), on James Rivington and his controversial printshop in Hanover Square

Leslie Alexander, author of African or American? Black Identity and Political Activism in New York City, 1784-1861 [press.uillinois.edu], on the African meetinghouse, headquarters of the secret society that created the state’s first incorporated black organization; for a century, NYC’s most prominent black mutual aid group

Alexander Manevitz, author of The Rise and Fall of Seneca Village: Remaking Race and Space in Nineteenth-Century New York City [alexandermanevitz.com] (forthcoming), on the free black community destroyed to build Central Park

Russell Gao Hodges, author of David Ruggles: A Radical Black Abolitionist and the Underground Railroad in New York City [uncpress.org], on Mother Zion A.M.E. Church and its nationally influential antislavery leaders

Stacy Horn, author of Damnation Island: Poor, Sick, Mad, and Criminal in 19th-Century New York [nytimes.com], on the notorious ‘lunatic asylum,’ prison, workhouses, and hospitals that once stood on Roosevelt Island

Shane White, author of Prince of Darkness [us.macmillan.com] and Stories of Freedom in Black New York [hup.harvard.edu], on the African Grove, a theater company which played with an entirely black cast and crew to mostly black audiences in the last days of slavery in NYC

Bob McGee, author of The Greatest Ballpark Ever: Ebbets Field and the Story of the Brooklyn Dodgers [rutgersuniversitypress.org], on the iconic stadium, formerly in Crown Heights, and its still-bemoaned departure

Randall Mason, co-author of North Brother Island: The Last Unknown Place in New York City [chrispaynephoto.com], on this now-abandoned, once-feared part of Gotham’s archipelago, which served for decades as (often forced) quarantine for the ill during various epidemics​

Sharon Zukin, author of Point of Purchase: How Shopping Changed American Culture [routledge.com], on ‘B. Altman’s,’ the famous Midtown department, store and the new world of consumption it helped make

Brendan Cooper, author of The Domino Effect: Politics, Policy, and the Consolidation of the Sugar Refining Industry in the United States, 1789–1895,” on the rise and fall of the enormous Williamsburg, Brooklyn factory