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How much do you actually know about New York City? Did you know they tried to anchor Zeppelins at the top of the Empire State Building? Or that the high-rent district of Park Avenue was once so dangerous it was called "Death Avenue"? Lively and comprehensive, "Inside the Apple" brings to life New York's fascinating past. This narrative history of New York City is the first to offer practical walking tour know-how. Fast-paced but thorough, its bite-size chapters each focus on an event, person, or place of historical significance. Rich in anecdotes and illustrations, it whisks readers from colonial New Amsterdam through Manhattan's past, right up to post-9/11 New York. The book also works as a historical walking-tour guide, with 14 self-guided tours, maps, and step-by-step directions. Easy to carry with you as you explore the city, "Inside the Apple" allows you to visit the site of every story it tells. This energetic, wide-ranging, and often humorous book covers New York's most important historical moments, but is always anchored in the city of today.
NYC tour guides and authors James and Michelle Nevius explore
the lives of 20 iconic New Yorkers--from Dutch governor Peter
Stuyvesant to Alexander Hamilton, park architects Frederick Law
Olmsted and Calvert Vaux to JP Morgan and John D. Rockefeller,
Jr.--and use them to guide the reader through four centuries of the
city's story. Beginning with the oldest standing building in the
city, a 1652 farmhouse in Brooklyn, and journeying all the way to
the rebuilding of the World Trade Center, the book follows in the
footsteps of these iconic New Yorkers. The authors tell the stories
of everyone from slave traders and long-forgotten politicians to
the movers and shakers of Gilded Age society and the Greenwich
Village folk scene. One part history and one part personal
narrative, Footprints in New York creates a different way of
looking at the past, exploring new connections and forgotten
chapters in the story of America's greatest metropolis.
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