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Posts in Manhattan
Community Struggles for a New Gouverneur: Tackling the Deeper Roots of the City’s Unequal Hospital Care

Community Struggles for a New Gouverneur: Tackling the Deeper Roots of the City’s Unequal Hospital Care

By Hongdeng Gao

The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed deep inequalities in New York City’s hospitals. The decisions made by officials in power to direct money to private hospitals and close safety-net medical institutions in the past thirty years bear many similarities to another large-scale hospital closure effort in the city nearly six decades ago: the hospital affiliation plan authorized by Mayor Robert Wagner.

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Pets, Stowaways, Souvenirs, and Snakes: The Living Gifts New Yorkers Donated to the Bronx Zoo in the Early 20th Century

Pets, Stowaways, Souvenirs, and Snakes

By Katherine McLeod

From 1899 to 1914, people around the world gave over 12,000 animals to the New York Zoological Park in the Bronx (almost 5,000 of them were snakes). Donations to the zoo fulfilled two purposes: they supplied the zoological park with more animals, and, perhaps more importantly, helped the zoo form a relationship with certain communities around them. This project is a focused look at a section of these animal donors, the people of New York City.

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“My Colored House is on Fire”: Children, Housing, and the Architecture of Black Charity in San Juan Hill

“My Colored House is on Fire”: Children, Housing, and the Architecture of Black Charity in San Juan Hill

By Jessica Larson

Following their displacement from the Tenderloin in the early 1900s, Manhattan’s largest Black population moved northward and sought to rebuild their community’s infrastructure in San Juan Hill, an area bounded by 59th Street to the south, 65th Street to the north, Amsterdam Avenue to east, and West End Avenue to the west. Black reformers — the majority of whom were women — worked to construct a neighborhood that offered to its residents missing social welfare services.

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Prehistoric and Ahead of Her Time: Sapphasaura at the Museum of Natural History

Prehistoric and Ahead of Her Time: Sapphasaura at the Museum of Natural History

By Rachel Pitkin

In the summer of 1973, members of the newly formed Lesbian Feminist Liberation (LFL) group were engaged in a unique construction project in the Upper West Side backyard of one of its members, Robin Lutsky. A physically onerous labor of love, the project unfolded over ten days of round-the-clock attention, a last-ditch protest effort to gain the attention of one of New York’s most celebrated yet controversial institutions: the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH).

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Prohibition New York City: An Interview with David Rosen

Prohibition New York City: An Interview with David Rosen

Interviewed by David Huyssen

Today on the blog, editor David Huyssen speaks with David Rosen, independent writer and historian, about his new book Prohibition New York City: Speakeasy Queen Texas Guinan, Blind Pigs, Drag Balls and More (Charleston, SC: The History Press, 2020), his third book on transgression in American life, and second focusing on New York City.

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Review: Thomas J. Shelley's Upper West Side Catholics: Liberal Catholicism in a Conservative Archdiocese: The Church of the Ascension, New York City, 1895-2020

Parish History on New York City's Upper West Side

Reviewed by Susie Pak

Thomas J. Shelley has added to his already substantial oeuvre of New York Catholic history with the publication of Upper West Side Catholics: Liberal Catholicism in a Conservative Archdiocese: The Church of the Ascension, New York City, 1895-2020 (New York: Empire State Editions, 2020).[1] His deep and broad understanding of New York’s Catholic institutions provides the context for his study of the Church of the Ascension, which was founded in 1895 on the Upper West Side. While his history of Ascension starts from its founding, Shelley’s book offers an extended view of the neighborhood during the 1960s and 1970s, a period when demographic transition overlapped with economic decline and produced immense political conflicts that destabilized New York’s institutions, including the Catholic Church.

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Monuments of Colonial New York: George III and Liberty Poles

Monuments of Colonial New York: George III and Liberty Poles

Wendy Bellion and Shira Lurie

For the last installment in our six-part series on monuments in / about colonial Gotham, Wendy Bellion and Shira Lurie discuss NYC’s rebellion against British rule during the volatile decade before the War for Independence. Bellion begins with a story of destruction — the tearing down of the statue of George III in Bowling Green. Lurie tells of construction — the raising of five liberty poles on the Common (present day City Hall Park).

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Monuments of Colonial New York: Stuyvesant and Hudson

Monuments of Colonial New York: Stuyvesant and Hudson

Douglas Hunter and Nicole Maskiell

Today’s installments in Gotham’s ongoing series on monuments in / about colonial NYC, takes us back to Nieuw Amsterdam. Douglas Hunter and Nicole Maskiell ask us to reconsider the memorials of two dominant figures of the Dutch period: Henry Hudson and Petrus Stuyvesant. Uniting their pieces is a call to think more about the men — and in Maskiell’s case, the women, too — who toiled under these leaders.

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Monuments of Colonial New York: The Tulip Tree and 'Signal'

Monuments of Colonial New York: The Tulip Tree and 'Signal'

Lisa Blee and John C. Winters

This week Gotham presents a six-part series on monuments, statues, and commemorations in / about colonial New York City. Recognizing that one of the more recent debates over public memory has been the conflict over Columbus / Indigenous People’s Day, we begin with Lisa Blee and John C. Winters, who examine monuments of and by Native peoples in Manhattan.

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“Traitors In Our Midst”: Race, Corrections, and the 1970 Tombs Uprising

“Traitors In Our Midst”:
Race, Corrections, and the 1970 Tombs Uprising

By Willie Mack

In 1966, newly elected New York City Republican Mayor John V. Lindsay appointed George F. McGrath as Commissioner of Correction. McGrath was previously the commissioner of the Massachusetts Department of Correction and was widely known as a respected and progressive liberal penologist. But by 1969, the New York City jails were in worse condition than ever before.

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