Incredible photos of New York City when it was covered in farmland
Most New Yorkers today are living on what was once farmland.
As early as the 17th century, before Manhattan formed its famous 1811 street grid, the island contained farms in neighborhoods from Midtown to the Upper West Side.
The Museum of the City of New York's online collection reveals what the city looked like at the time. The series, "The Greatest Grid," features illustrations and photos of New York City's former rolling hills, which were later demolished to create a flat streetscape.
Take a look at the city's transformation:
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The Bowery is the oldest thoroughfare on the island of Manhattan. When the Dutch settled there in 1654, they named the path Bouwerij — an old Dutch word for "farm" — because it connected cattle farms and estates on the outskirts to (what is today) Wall Street.
Source: The Encyclopedia of New York City
At the time, New York City (then known as New Amsterdam) featured rolling hills, forests, boulders, farms, and spaced-out homes. This 1776 illustration is of present-day University Heights in the Bronx.
Source: New York Public Library
Between 1818 and 1820, American surveyor John Randel Jr. prepared an atlas of 92 watercolor maps that illustrates the farm properties and old roads of pre-grid Manhattan (planned in 1811) as well as the future location of the new streets and avenues. The Museum of the City of New York stitched them together to create a map, pictured below:
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Incredible photos of New York City when it was covered in farmland
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Wednesday, October 04, 2017
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