**


Never-before-seen photos from 100 years ago

<http://showMessage?sMid=28&&filterBy=&.rand=19827209&midIndex=28&mid=2_0_0_1_66120064_AI1XimIAAU6jUZpV0A1gqx92shk&fromId=#Bold>

 [image: Delancey Street]

Always moving: Workers dig in Delancy Street on New York's Lower East Side
in this photo dated July 29, 1908. The historical pictures released online
for the first time show New York in the late 19th and early 20th centuries

 [image: Brooklyn Bridge]

A bridge too far? Painters hang from suspended wires on the Brooklyn Bridge
October 7, 1914 -- 31 years after it first opened
 [image: Manhattan Bridge]

Genesis of a icon: In this June 5, 1908 photo, the Manhattan Bridge is less
than a shell, seen from Washington Street. It wouldn't be opened for
another 18 months and wouldn't be completed for another four years
 [image: Grand Central Termina]

The main concourse of Grand Central Terminal, in New York, is seen from the
Campbell apartment in this 1937 photo. The posh apartment, in one of
America's grandest train stations, was the playground of financier John
Campbell in the roaring 1920.

The project was four years in the making, part of the department's mission
to make city records accessible to everyone, said assistant commissioner
Kenneth Cobb.

'We all knew that we had fantastic photograph collections that no one would
even guess that we had,' he said.



Taken mostly by anonymous municipal workers, some of the images have
appeared in publications but most were accessible only by visiting the
archive offices in lower Manhattan over the past few years.

Researchers, history buffs, filmmakers, genealogists and preservationists
in particular will find the digitized collection helpful. But anyone can
search the images, share them through social media or purchase them as
prints.
 [image: Crime scene]

Dead men can tell tales: When the New York Times wrote about elevator
operator Robert Green, left, and Jacob Jagendorf, a building engineer,
right, it reported that their bodies found lying at the bottom of an
elevator shaft November 24, 1915, told the story of the pair's failed
robbery attempt

 [image: Charles 'Lucky' Luciano]

Notorious: This is the original April 18, 1936 booking photo for Charles
'Lucky' Luciano. Luciano is considered the father of organized crime in New
York and was the first to divide the city sections controlled by five mob
families

 [image: Murder]

Murder most foul: A detective took this crime scene photo in 1918 after
children found the body of Gaspare Candella stuffed in a drum and dumped in
a field in Brooklyn, New York

The gallery includes images from the largest collection of criminal justice
evidence in the English-speaking world, a repository that holds glass-plate
photographs taken by the New York City Police Department.

It also features more than 800,000 color photographs taken with 35mm
cameras of every city building in the mid-1980s to update the municipal
records, and includes more than 1,300 rarely seen images taken by local
photographers of the Depression-era Works Progress Administration.

Because of technological and financial constraints, the digitised gallery
does not include the city's prized collection of 720,000 photographs of
every city building from 1939 to 1941. But the database is still growing,
and the department plans to add more images.
 [image: Astoria pool]

New Yorkers cool off in the Astoria public pool with the Hell Gate railroad
bridge looming in the background in the summer of 1940.
 [image: Babe Ruth]

The Great Bambino: In this September 30, 1936, Works Progress
Administration, Federal Writerís Project, photo provided by the New York
City Municipal Archives, a man hands a program to baseball legend Babe
Ruth, center, as he is joined by his second wife Clare, center left, and
singer Kate Smith, front left, in the grandstand during Game One of the
1936 World Series at the Polo Grounds in New York

 [image: Man with newspaper]

Moment in history: The headline of the newspaper the man in this May 18,
1940 photo reads: 'Nazi Army Now 75 Miles From Paris.' This picture shows
the corner of Sixth Avenue and 40th Street in Manhattan

 [image: George Washington Bridge]

The view from New Jersey: A man peers across the Hudson River into
Manhattan from his perch on the George Washington Bridge on December 22,
1936

Among the known contributors to the collection was Eugene de Salignac, the
official photographer for the Department of Bridges/Plant Structures from
1906 to 1934. A Salignac photograph, taken on October 7, 1914, and now
online, shows more than a half-dozen painters lounging on wires on the
Brooklyn Bridge.

'A lot of other photographers who worked for the city were pretty talented
but did not produce such a large body of work or a distinct body of work,'
said Michael Lorenzini, curator of photography at the Municipal Archives
and author of 'New York Rises' that showcases Salignac images.

One popular cache includes photos shot mostly by NYPD detectives, nearly
each one a crime mystery just begging to be solved. A black-and-white,
top-down image of two bodies in the elevator shaft is a representative
example.

Although it did not carry a crime scene photo, the New York Tribune
reported November 25, 1915, under the headline 'Finding of two bodies tells
tale of theft,' that the bodies of a black elevator operator and a white
engineer of a Manhattan building were found 'battered, as though from a
long fall.'

The news report said the two men tried to rob a company on the fifth floor
of expensive silks, but died in their attempt. The elevator was found with
silk inside, stuck between the 10th and 11th floors.
 [image: Manhattan]

The Third Avenue elevated train rumbles across lower Manhattan in this
undated photo. City Hall can be seen in the background

 [image: Homeless man]

Hard times: An unemployed man in an old coat lays on a pier in the New York
City docks during the Great Depression, 1935

 [image: Triborough Bridge]

In 1936, the Triborough Bridge, which links Manhattan, Queens and the
Bronx, was not yet complete. The Hells Gate Railroad Bridge looms in the
distance

  [image: Lower East Side]
 [image: Breadline]

Busy streets: Men and women stroll a row of jewelry shops on the Lower East
Side (right) and stand in line for bread during the Great Depression (left)
  [image: Two girls]

See how it's changed: In this circa 1890 photo, a pair of girls walk east
along 42nd Street. Acker, Merrall and Condit wine shop delivery wagons are
on the right and the C.C. Shayne Furrier sign can be seen on the roof
overhead.

 [image: Building roads]

Building roads: Workers lay bricks to pave 28th Street in Manhattan on
October 2, 1930

 [image: Decrepit]

This circa 1983-1988 photo provided by the New York City Municipal Archives
shows 172 Norfolk Street, which is now the Angel Orensanz Foundation, in
New York. Over 800,000 color photographs were taken with 35-mm cameras for
tax purposes. Every New York City building in the mid-1980s can be viewed
in this collection.







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