With an estimated population in 2023 of 8,258,035 distributed over 300.46 square miles (778.2 km2), the city is the
most densely populated major city in the United States. New York has more than double the population of
Los Angeles, the nation's second-most populous city. New York is the geographical and demographic center of both the
Northeast megalopolis and the
New York metropolitan area, the largest metropolitan area in the U.S. by both population and
urban area. With more than 20.1 million people in its
metropolitan statistical area and 23.5 million in its
combined statistical area as of 2020, New York City is one of the world's most populous
megacities. The city and its metropolitan area are the premier gateway for legal
immigration to the United States. As many as 800 languages are spoken in New York City, making it the most linguistically diverse city in the world. In 2021, the city was home to nearly 3.1 million residents born outside the U.S., the largest foreign-born population of any city in the world. (Full article...)
The buildings were jointly designed by German-born architect
William Schickel in the
neo-Italian Renaissance style. Both structures are three stories tall with a
facade of Philadelphia pressed brick facades ornamented in
terracotta. The hospital building features terracotta busts of several notable medical professionals.
The structures were erected in 1883–84 following a donation by philanthropists
Oswald Ottendorfer and
Anna Ottendorfer. The library was the second branch of the
New York Free Circulating Library, while the hospital was affiliated with the German Hospital uptown, now
Lenox Hill Hospital. Both structures served the
Little Germany enclave of Lower Manhattan. The hospital was sold in 1906 to another medical charity, the German Polyklinik; the name was changed to Stuyvesant Polyclinic in the 1910s. The buildings were restored numerous times in their history. The structures received three separate
New York City landmark designations in 1976, 1977, and 1981, and were added to the
National Register of Historic Places in 1979. (Full article...)
Image 2
The Home Life Building includes the original Home Life structure at 256 Broadway (right) and the Postal Telegraph Building at 253 Broadway (left).
The Home Life Building is made of two adjacent structures at 251–257
Broadway, erected between 1892 and 1894 as separate buildings. The original 16-story Home Life Insurance Company Building at 256 Broadway was designed by
Napoleon LeBrun & Sons in the
Renaissance Revival style. The 13-story Postal Telegraph Building, immediately to the south at 253 Broadway, was designed by
George Edward Harding & Gooch in the
neoclassical style. The original Home Life Building is clad with marble, while the Postal Telegraph Building's facade consists of limestone at its base and brick on its upper stories. Ornamental details are used on both structures.
256 Broadway was erected for the
Home Life Insurance Company, while 253 Broadway was erected for the
Postal Telegraph Company. Both buildings were constructed simultaneously between 1892 and 1894. Although 256 Broadway was intended as a 12-story building, it was expanded to 16 stories mid-construction, making it one of the
tallest buildings in the city when it was completed. After the Home Life Company bought 253 Broadway in 1947, the two buildings were joined internally to form a single structure, and became collectively known as the Home Life Building. The Home Life Company occupied the building until 1985. It was made a
New York City designated landmark in 1991. (Full article...)
Image 3
The abandoned North Shore Branch. The
Bayonne Bridge can be seen in the background.
The line started construction in 1884, and rapid transit service on the line started on February 23, 1886. Passenger service on the North Shore Branch ended on March 31, 1953, although freight service continued to run along part of the North Shore Branch until 1989. In 2005, freight service on the western portion of the line was reactivated, and there are proposals to reactivate the former passenger line for rail or bus service. (Full article...)
Image 4
The western elevation of the facade, including the rose window
The cathedral is an
unfinished building, with only two-thirds of the proposed building completed, due to several major stylistic changes, work interruptions, and unstable ground on the site. The original design, in the
Byzantine Revival and
Romanesque Revival styles, began construction in 1892. After the opening of the
crossing in 1909, the overall plan was changed to a
Gothic Revival design. The completion of the
nave was delayed until 1941 due to various funding shortfalls, and little progress has occurred since then, except for an addition to the tower at the nave's southwest corner. After a large fire damaged part of the cathedral in 2001, it was renovated and rededicated in 2008. The towers above the western
elevation of the facade, as well as the southern
transept and a proposed steeple above the crossing, have not been completed.
Despite being incomplete, the Cathedral of St. John the Divine is the world's
sixth-largest church by area and either the largest or second-largest Anglican cathedral. The floor area of St. John's is 121,000 sq ft (11,200 m2), spanning a length of 601 feet (183 m), while the roof height of the nave is 177 feet (54 m). Since the cathedral's interior is so large, it has been used for hundreds of events and art exhibitions. In addition, the Cathedral of St. John the Divine has been involved in various advocacy initiatives throughout its history. (Full article...)
Born to a working-class
Italian American family in
Dudley, Massachusetts, he was raised
Roman Catholic although became interested in esotericism as a teenager. He later claimed that when he was 21, relatives initiated him into a tradition of witchcraft inherited from their
Sicilian ancestors; this conflicts with other statements that he made, and there is no independent evidence to corroborate his claim. During the 1950s, he was based in New York City, where he worked as a
graphologist and
hypnotist. After beginning to publish books on paranormal topics in the early 1960s, he publicly began identifying as Wiccan in 1969, and stated that he was involved in a New York coven.
After the
Stonewall riots of 1969, Martello – himself a gay man – involved himself in gay rights activism, becoming a member of the
Gay Liberation Front (GLF). Leaving the GLF following an internal schism, he became a founding member of the
Gay Activist Alliance (GAA) and authored a regular column, "The Gay Witch", for its newspaper. In 1970 he founded the Witches International Craft Associates (WICA) as a networking organization for Wiccans, and under its auspices organized a "Witch In" that took place in
Central Park at
Halloween 1970, despite opposition from the
New York City Parks Department. To campaign for the civil rights of Wiccans, he founded the Witches Anti-Defamation League, which was later renamed the Alternative Religions Education Network. In 1973, he visited England, there being initiated into
Gardnerian Wicca by the Gardnerian High Priestess
Patricia Crowther. He continued practicing Wicca into the 1990s, when he retreated from public life, eventually succumbing to cancer in 2000. (Full article...)
Image 6
Dumile performing in July 2011
Daniel Dumile (/ˈduːməleɪ/DOO-mə-lay; July 13, 1971 – October 31, 2020), also known by his stage name MF Doom or simply Doom (both stylized in
all caps), was a British-American rapper and record producer. Noted for his intricate wordplay, signature metal mask, and "
supervillain" stage persona, Dumile became a major figure of
underground hip hop and
alternative hip hop in the 2000s. After his death, Variety described him as one of the scene's "most celebrated, unpredictable and enigmatic figures".
Dumile was born in London and moved to
Long Island, New York, at a young age. He began his career in 1988 as a member of the trio
KMD, performing as Zev Love X. The group disbanded in 1993 after the death of member
DJ Subroc, Dumile's brother. After a hiatus, Dumile reemerged in the late 1990s. He began performing at
open mic events while wearing a metal mask resembling that of the
Marvel Comics supervillain
Doctor Doom, who is depicted on the cover of his 1999 debut solo album Operation: Doomsday. He adopted the MF Doom persona and rarely made unmasked public appearances thereafter.
During Dumile's most prolific period, the early to mid-2000s, he released the acclaimed Mm..Food (2004) as MF Doom, as well as albums released under the pseudonyms King Geedorah and Viktor Vaughn. Madvillainy (2004), recorded with the producer
Madlib under the name
Madvillain, is often cited as Dumile's magnum opus and is regarded as a landmark album in hip hop. Madvillainy was followed by another acclaimed collaboration, The Mouse and the Mask (2005), with the producer
Danger Mouse, released under the name
Danger Doom. (Full article...)
The complex comprises two stations, Brooklyn Bridge–City Hall and Chambers Street. The Brooklyn Bridge–City Hall station was built for the
Interborough Rapid Transit Company (IRT), and was an express station on the
city's first subway line. The station opened on October 27, 1904, as one of the original 28 stations of the New York City Subway. The Chambers Street station was built for the
Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company (later the
Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation, or BMT) as part of the
Dual Contracts. The Nassau Street Line station opened on August 4, 1913. Over the years, several modifications have been made to both stations, which were connected within a single
fare control area in 1948.
The Lexington Avenue Line's Brooklyn Bridge–City Hall station, under
Centre Street, has two
island platforms, two
side platforms, and four tracks; the side platforms are not in use. The Nassau Street Line's Chambers Street station, under the
Manhattan Municipal Building, has three island platforms, one side platform, and four tracks; only the outer tracks and two of the island platforms are in use. The complex contains elevators that make it compliant with the
Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. (Full article...)
Image 8
"He was a tall slight man, with a stoop, quick in his movements...his mobility of expression was so extreme that the very shape of his features actually changed with his emotions."
Jacob Little (March 17, 1794 – March 28, 1865) was an early 19th-century
Wall Streetinvestor and the first and one of the greatest
speculators in the history of the
stock market, known at the time as the "Great Bear of Wall Street". Little was born in
Newburyport, Massachusetts, and moved to
New York City in 1817, first
clerking for
Jacob Barker; he then opened his own establishment in 1822, and finally his own brokerage in 1834. A market pessimist, Little made his wealth "bearing stocks", at turns
short selling various companies and at others
cornering markets to extract profits from other short sellers. Through his great financial foresight Little amassed an enormous fortune, becoming one of the richest men in America and one of the leading financiers on Wall Street in the 1830s and 1840s, but his speculative activities irritated his peers and earned him few admirers. Little lost and remade his legendary fortune multiple times before losing it for good in 1857; although a great many owed him enormous debts, he was a generous creditor and never collected them, and at his deathbed in 1865 Little was penniless. Although well-known on the stock market in his time, he was quickly forgotten after his death, and today has been relegated to relative obscurity. (Full article...)
Image 9
Seen at sunset in 2019
The Rockaway Beach and Boardwalk is a
public park in
Rockaway, Queens, New York, composed of the 170-acre (69 ha) Rockaway Beach and the adjacent 5.5-mile (8.9 km) Rockaway Boardwalk. The
beach runs from Beach 9th Street in
Far Rockaway to Beach 149th Street in
Neponsit, a distance of 7 miles (11 km). The
boardwalk, a concrete deck, runs from Beach 9th Street to Beach 126th Street in
Rockaway Park, at the edge of
Belle Harbor. There are also numerous recreational facilities within the park, parallel to the beach and boardwalk.
The beach became a popular resort area in the late 19th century, and several disconnected sections of the boardwalk were constructed by the end of the century. The first section of city-owned boardwalk between Beach 109th and 126th Street was completed in 1923, and the city announced plans for a massive boardwalk two years later, stretching across most of the Rockaway peninsula's southern shore. The city government completed the sections between Beach 19th and 109th Streets in three phases between 1928 and 1930. The concrete boardwalk from Beach 9th Street to Beach 19th Street was completed in 1963. After
Hurricane Sandy destroyed much of the boardwalk in 2012, it was rebuilt in several phases through 2017.
The building originally functioned as a 1,000-spot garage, with a gas station at the corner of Columbus Avenue and 61st Street. The ground level contains multiple entrances, surrounded by multicolored pieces of
terracotta. There was a vehicular entrance on Columbus Avenue and an exit on 61st Street. On the upper floors, the facade is made largely of orange brick, interspersed with bands of black brick, and there are several
setbacks with terracotta
parapets. The building contains an extremely strong steel
superstructure inside. Originally, the building had large vehicular elevators, as well as electric trolleys on each floor, which automatically transported vehicles to parking spots. Since the 1980s, the building has contained 94 apartments, ranging from
studio apartments to three-bedroom units.
Kent Automatic Garages bought the site from automobile company
Packard in 1928, and the garage opened on July 30, 1930. Kent obtained various loans to finance the building's construction but lost the building to foreclosure within a year. The building was then acquired by the
Central Savings Bank in 1936 and by the Sofia Brothers Warehousing Company in 1944. The Sofia family converted the building into a warehouse, though the structure also housed offices and studios. Aaron Green and Growth Realty Companies bought the building for $9.3 million in August 1983 and converted it into a residential and commercial condominium over the next year.
College Board occupied the commercial portion of the building from the 1980s until 2015, when
Fordham University acquired the commercial space. (Full article...)
The original structure consists of an eighteen-story tower above a base of five stories, while the western annex only rises five stories. The American Radiator Building's
facade is made predominantly of black brick. Gold-colored decorations are used on the building's
setbacks and pinnacles. Hood had intended for the original structure to be a standalone shaft, requiring the building to be set back from the lot line and reducing the maximum amount of space available. Inside, the basement, first, and second floors were originally designed as exhibition showrooms, while the upper stories served as office space.
The facade, made of limestone and granite, was intended to complement the neighboring
University Club of New York building. It is divided horizontally into a base, shaft, and
capital. A three-story glass penthouse, completed in the 1980s to designs by Stephen B. Jacobs, rises above the original roof and contains the hotel's pool and fitness center. The lower stories contain two restaurants, a lobby, and various other rooms across multiple levels. The hotel originally had 400 guestrooms, although this was downsized in the 1980s to 250 rooms, including a multi-room presidential suite near the roof.
The 55th Street Company acquired the site in April 1902 and developed the Gotham Hotel, which opened on October 1, 1905. The hotel was sold in 1908 after several failed attempts to procure a liquor license, and it was resold several times over the next three decades. The Gotham was acquired in 1932 by the
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, which added ground-level storefronts in 1938 and continued to own the hotel until 1944. The Gotham was resold several more times in the 1950s and 1960s before
Sol Goldman and Alex DiLorenzo acquired it in 1965. Rene Hatt leased the Gotham in 1979 and attempted to renovate it into the Nova Park Gotham, but he gave up his lease in 1984 following several lawsuits and financial issues. A joint venture of several companies completed the renovation and reopened the hotel in November 1987 as the Hotel Maxim's de Paris, an outpost of Parisian restaurant
Maxim's. HSH acquired the hotel's lease in 1989, renaming it the Peninsula New York, and renovated the hotel again in 1998. (Full article...)
Alley Pond Park was mostly acquired and cleared by the city in 1929, as authorized by a resolution of the
New York City Board of Estimate in 1927. The park contains the Queens Giant, a
tulip poplar (Liriodendron tulipifera) that is the tallest carefully measured tree in New York City and possibly the oldest living thing in the
New York metropolitan area. The Alley Pond Environmental Center (APEC), with a library, museum and animal exhibits, is located in the northern part of the park, on the south side of
Northern Boulevard. (Full article...)
Image 14
Passing (1929) is a novel by American author
Nella Larsen. Set primarily in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City in the 1920s, the story centers on the reunion of two childhood friends—Clare Kendry and Irene Redfield—and their increasing fascination with each other's lives. The title refers to the practice of "
racial passing", which is a key element of the novel. Clare Kendry's attempt to pass as white for her husband, John (Jack) Bellew, is significant and is a catalyst for the tragic events.
Larsen's exploration of race was informed by her own mixed racial heritage and the increasingly common practice of racial passing in the 1920s. Praised upon publication, the novel has since been celebrated in modern scholarship for its complex depiction of race, gender, and sexuality, and the book is the subject of considerable scholarly criticism. As one of only two novels that Larsen wrote, the novel has been significant in placing its author at the forefront of several
literary canons.
The main facade of 219 East 49th Street, seen in April 2021
219 East 49th Street, also known as the Morris B. Sanders Studio & Apartment, is a building in the
East Midtown and
Turtle Bay neighborhoods of
Manhattan in
New York City, along the northern sidewalk of 49th Street between
Second Avenue and
Third Avenue. The house, designed by Arkansas architect Morris B. Sanders Jr. and constructed in 1935, replaced a 19th-century brownstone
townhouse. It contained Sanders's studio, as well as a residence for him and his wife Barbara Castleton Davis.
The five-and-a-half-story building contains a
facade of dark blue bricks as well as
glass block windows. The glass blocks were installed to provide insulation and privacy while also allowing illumination. The house was designed with two residential units: Sanders's seven-room apartment on the fourth, fifth, and partial sixth floors, as well as a six-room unit on the second and third floors that was rented to others. The ground story, with a white marble facade and a slightly angled entrance doorway, was used for Sanders's studios. Upon completion, 219 East 49th Street was largely praised for its design.
Davis bought the previous structure in mid-1934 and originally intended to remodel it. Ultimately, the old brownstone was removed and replaced with the current building, which was completed in December 1935. Sanders lived in the house until his death in 1948, and it was sold the year afterward. Since 1980, the house has been owned by Donald Wise. The
New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission designated the building as an official landmark in 2008. (Full article...)
Image 16
View of the over-water span from the south; the Bronx approach viaduct can be seen at right
The Macombs Dam Bridge connects the intersection of
155th Street and
Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. Boulevard (Seventh Avenue), located in Manhattan, with the intersection of
Jerome Avenue and
161st Street, located near
Yankee Stadium in the Bronx. The 155th Street Viaduct, one of the bridge's approaches in Manhattan, carries traffic on 155th Street from Seventh Avenue to the intersection with Edgecombe Avenue and St. Nicholas Place. The bridge is 2,540 feet (770 m) long in total, with four vehicular lanes and two sidewalks.
The first bridge at the site was constructed in 1814 as a true
dam called
Macombs Dam. Because of complaints about the dam's impact on the Harlem River's navigability, the dam was demolished in 1858 and replaced three years later with a wooden swing bridge called the Central Bridge, which required frequent maintenance. The current steel span was built between 1892 and 1895, while the 155th Street Viaduct was built from 1890 to 1893; both were designed by
Alfred Pancoast Boller. The Macombs Dam Bridge is the third-oldest major bridge still operating in New York City, and along with the 155th Street Viaduct, was designated a
New York City Landmark in 1992. (Full article...)
Image 17
Seen from Surf Avenue in 2013
The Cyclone, also called the Coney Island Cyclone, is a
wooden roller coaster at
Luna Park in
Coney Island,
Brooklyn,
New York City. Designed by
Vernon Keenan, it opened to the public on June 26, 1927. The roller coaster is on a plot of land at the intersection of Surf Avenue and West 10th Street. The Cyclone reaches a maximum speed of 60 miles per hour (97 km/h) and has a total track length of 2,640 feet (800 m), with a maximum height of 85 feet (26 m).
The roller coaster operated for more than four decades before it began to deteriorate, and by the early 1970s the city planned to scrap the ride. On June 18, 1975, Dewey and Jerome Albert, owners of the adjacent
Astroland amusement park, entered an agreement with New York City to operate the ride. The roller coaster was refurbished in the 1974 off-season and reopened on July 3, 1975. Astroland Park continued to invest millions of dollars in the Cyclone's upkeep. The roller coaster was declared a
New York City designated landmark in 1988 and was placed on the
National Register of Historic Places in 1991. After Astroland closed in 2008, Cyclone Coasters president Carol Hill Albert continued to operate it under a lease agreement with the city. In 2011, Luna Park took over the Cyclone. (Full article...)
WSJ Magazine (styled on the cover art as WSJ., in upright characters with a dot at the end) is a luxury glossy news and lifestyle monthly magazine published by The Wall Street Journal. It features luxury consumer products advertisements and is distributed to subscribers in large United States markets. Its coverage spans art, fashion, entertainment, design, food, architecture, travel and more.
Kristina O'Neill was Editor in Chief from October 2012 to 2023. Sarah Ball, previously Style News Editor, became Editor in Chief in June 2023. Launched as a quarterly in 2008, the magazine grew to 12 issues a year for 2014. It was originally intended to be a monthly magazine named Pursuits.
The magazine is distributed within the U.S. Weekend Edition of The Wall Street Journal newspaper (paid print circulation for the Weekend edition is approximately 2.2 million), and is available on WSJ.com. Each issue is also available throughout the month in The Wall Street Journals iPad app. It was also inserted with the
Europe and
Asia editions until those were discontinued in 2017.
With its tagline "The Luxury of Choice", the magazine began operations with an advertising business model that allowed for free delivery to select readers. It followed a trend of contemporaneous new luxury magazines many of which were also delivered as part of free subscriptions that supplemented other subscriptions or memberships. Since it was leveraging a high-end subset of The Wall Street Journal with favorable demographics, many expected the magazine to be successful. ('Full article...)
Built by the
Interborough Rapid Transit Company (IRT), the station opened on May 30, 1906, as part of the
first subway, although the line had opened two months earlier and trains were skipping the station. It is one of three stations in the Fort George Mine Tunnel, which carries the Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line under Washington Heights, and is 120 feet (37 m) below ground level. Due to the station's depth, the tunnel was blasted through the hillside; during the station's construction, a 300-ton boulder had killed 10 miners. The station's platforms were lengthened in 1948. The station was closed from December 2020 to November 2021 for elevator replacement.
The 181st Street station contains two
side platforms and two tracks. The station was built with tile and mosaic decorations as well as a ceiling vault. The platforms contain exits to 181st Street and Broadway. 181st Street is one of three New York City Subway stations that can be accessed only by elevators; however, the station's four elevators are not compliant with the
Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA). The station is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places. (Full article...)
Derek Sanderson Jeter (/ˈdʒiːtər/JEE-tər; born June 26, 1974) is an American former professional baseball
shortstop, businessman, and baseball executive. As a player, Jeter spent his entire 20-year
Major League Baseball (MLB) career with the
New York Yankees. He was elected to the
Baseball Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility in
2020; he received 396 of 397 possible votes (99.75%), the second-highest percentage in MLB history (behind only teammate
Mariano Rivera) and the highest by a position player. He was the chief executive officer (CEO) and part owner of the league's
Miami Marlins from September 2017 to February 2022.
With a population of 2,405,464 as of the
2020 census, Queens is the second-most populous county in New York state, behind Kings County (Brooklyn), and is therefore also the second-most populous of the five New York City boroughs. If Queens were its own city, it would be the
fourth most-populous in the U.S. after
New York City itself,
Los Angeles, and
Chicago. Queens is the fourth-most densely populated borough in New York City and the fourth-most densely populated
U.S. county. It is highly diverse as about 47% of its residents are
foreign-born. (Full article...)
Staten Island (/ˈstætən/STAT-ən) is the southernmost
borough of
New York City, coextensive with Richmond County and situated at the southern most point of
New York. The borough is separated from the adjacent state of
New Jersey by the
Arthur Kill and the
Kill Van Kull and from the rest of New York by
New York Bay. With a population of 495,747 in the
2020 Census, Staten Island is the least populated New York City borough but the third largest in land area at 58.5 sq mi (152 km2); it is also the least densely populated and most
suburban borough in the city.
A home to the
Lenape indigenous people, the island was settled by Dutch colonists in the 17th century. It was one of the 12 original counties of New York state. Staten Island was
consolidated with New York City in 1898. It was formerly known as the Borough of Richmond until 1975, when its name was changed to Borough of Staten Island. Staten Island has sometimes been called "the forgotten borough" by inhabitants who feel neglected by the
city government. It has also been referred to as the "borough of parks" due to its 12,300 acres of protected parkland and over 170 parks. (Full article...)
Named after the Dutch town of
Breukelen in the Netherlands, Brooklyn shares a border with the borough of
Queens. It has several bridge and tunnel connections to the borough of Manhattan, across the
East River, and is connected to
Staten Island by way of the
Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge. With a land area of 69.38 square miles (179.7 km2) and a water area of 27.48 square miles (71.2 km2), Kings County is the state of New York's fourth-smallest county by land area and third smallest by total area. (Full article...)
The Bronx is divided by the
Bronx River into a hillier section in the
west, and a flatter
eastern section. East and west street names are divided by
Jerome Avenue. The West Bronx was annexed to New York City in 1874, and the areas east of the Bronx River in 1895. Bronx County was separated from New York County (modern-day Manhattan) in 1914. About a quarter of the Bronx's area is open space, including
Woodlawn Cemetery,
Van Cortlandt Park,
Pelham Bay Park, the
New York Botanical Garden, and the
Bronx Zoo in the borough's north and center. The
Thain Family Forest at the New York Botanical Garden is thousands of years old and is New York City's largest remaining tract of the original forest that once covered the city. These open spaces are primarily on land reserved in the late 19th century as urban development progressed north and east from Manhattan. (Full article...)
Image 16The Sunday magazine of the New York World appealed to immigrants with this April 29, 1906 cover page celebrating their arrival at Ellis Island. (from History of New York City (1898–1945))
Image 27Anderson Avenue garbage strike. A common scene throughout New York City in 1968 during a sanitation workers strike (from History of New York City (1946–1977))
... that Lucy Feagin founded the
Feagin School of Dramatic Art in New York City, where talent scouts for radio, screen, and stage were always present to watch her senior students' plays?
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