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Posts in Politics
The Great New York Fire of 1776: A Lost Story of the American Revolution

The Great New York Fire of 1776

Reviewed by Donald F. Johnson

The fire, which came on the heels of the British conquest of lower Manhattan island, killed hundreds, burned about a fifth of the buildings in the city, and created long-lasting housing and food crises for thousands of civilians and soldiers. In the aftermath, British, Continental, and New York authorities blamed one another for the conflagration as ordinary people sought to recoup their losses, rebuild their lives, and take advantage of opportunities opened by the destruction. . . The Great New York Fire of 1776 makes us rethink many of our assumptions about the American Revolution and New York City’s role in it.

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David Grim’s Fairy Tale: The New York City Fire in Myth

David Grim’s Fairy Tale: The New York City Fire in Myth

 By Benjamin L. Carp

On September 21, 1776, a fifth of New York City burned to the ground... But for almost 250 years, most New York City historians either ignored the Great Fire… or argued for its unimportance. They assumed that the fire was caused either by accident or by apolitical miscreants, and they chose to diminish the reports of outraged eyewitnesses who believed the fire was deliberate… most Americans never heard this story, then or since…

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Dutch-American Stories: On the First Dutch Translation of the U.S. Constitution

Dutch-American Stories: On the First Dutch Translation of the U.S. Constitution

By Michael Douma

There are a few topics that guarantee a historian an audience. Write a decent biography of Abraham Lincoln or James Madison, for example, and you are bound to have readers. Or, write something new and interesting about the Constitution and you might attract some attention.

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“Fellow Citizens Too”: Puerto Ricans and Migration Politics in the New York Amsterdam News, 1954

“Fellow Citizens Too”: Puerto Ricans and Migration Politics in the New York Amsterdam News, 1954

By Daniel Acosta Elkan

On March 1, 1954, four Puerto Rican nationalists opened fire on the members of the House of Representatives from the gallery of the body’s chamber in Washington DC. This was but the most dramatic event in an important year for the Puerto Rican diaspora, and its effects were felt in profoundly local ways. In East Harlem, the most prominent stateside Boricua community, the FBI conducted a number of raids on bars, restaurants, and other community spaces. The New York Amsterdam News, the city’s leading Black newspaper, reported that “Negroes and Puerto Ricans are reportedly being rounded up, searched, and subjected to other indignities.”

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New Ways to Understand  Robert Moses: An Interview with Katie Uva and Kara Murphy Schlichting

New Ways to Understand Robert Moses: An Interview with Katie Uva and Kara Murphy Schlichting

By Robert W. Snyder

If you teach courses on New York City’s history, or just have a passing interest in its past, you are sure to come across Robert A. Caro’s biography The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York. Published in 1974, it remains influential and informs an exhibit at the New-York Historical Society, echoes into David Hare’s new play Straight Line Crazy, and appears conspicuously in Zoom conversations on the bookshelves of politicians and journalists.

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Late Colonial-Era New York City Lawyers and the Building of a Provincial Legal Community

Late Colonial-Era New York City Lawyers and the Building of a Provincial Legal Community

By Sung Yup Kim

From the early 1760s to the eve of the Revolution, Albany lawyer Peter Silvester and Attorney General John Tabor Kempe collaborated on at least a dozen cases in the colony of New York. On many occasions, Silvester acted as a de facto agent for the New York City-based Kempe, sometimes assisting the latter in his public duties as attorney general of the colony. When Kempe needed information about an Albany resident charged with assaulting a neighbor, for example, Silvester examined the local court minutes to check if the person had any criminal record, or if there were outstanding charges against him in any of the local courts.

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Review: Keneshia N. Grant's The Great Migration and the Democratic Party

Review: The Great Migration and the Democratic Party

Reviewed by Christopher Shell

The migration of roughly six million Black Americans to the North between 1915-1965 is the subject of Keneshia N. Grant’s book, The Great Migration and the Democratic Party: Black Voters and the Realignment of American Politics in the 20th Century. In the United States popular imagination, when we think about the Great Migration, we may think about its cultural implications such as the Harlem Renaissance, the New Negro movement, or Motown. Perhaps we think about its impact on Black radical activity such as the Universal Negro Improvement Association, Nation of Islam, or the Black Panther Party. Grant’s study, rather, urges readers to reconceptualize the Great Migration as an event that critically transformed the northern political system.

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Transatlantic Radicalism in Early National New York

Transatlantic Radicalism in Early National New York

By Sean Griffin

New York City has long been considered a hotbed of radical political ideas, as well as a cosmopolitan center of culture and commerce. But while the roots of the latter have been traced back to the city’s origins as a Dutch trading post with a decidedly commercial outlook and a polyglot population, fewer historians have explored the origins of the city’s radical political culture.

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Anti-Asian Violence and Acts of Community Care from the 1980s to the Present: An Interview with Vivian Truong

Anti-Asian Violence and Acts of Community Care from the 1980s to the Present

Vivian Truong Interviewed by Hongdeng Gao

Today on the Blog, Gotham’s editor Hongdeng Gao speaks with Vivian Truong, author of “From State-Sanctioned Removal to the Right to the City” and a core committee member of the A/P/A Voices: A COVID-19 Public Memory Project. Truong discusses segregationist and police violence against Asian American, Black and Latinx residents in southern Brooklyn in the 1980s and 1990s and the cross-group, cross-issue movements that developed in response to such violence.

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