1890s New York

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  • Опубликовано: 25 мар 2013
  • Photos of New York City during the 1890s
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Комментарии • 720

  • @heidigraney4075
    @heidigraney4075 6 лет назад +508

    My great grandma May was born on November 21st, 1897 in NYC. She lived until November 22nd, 1997. Just one day of her 100th birthday.

    • @Iceis_Phoenix
      @Iceis_Phoenix 6 лет назад +24

      Heidi Graney longevity. Bless her ❤

    • @shallows529
      @shallows529 5 лет назад +25

      May she rest well mate.

    • @ravengameslife9071
      @ravengameslife9071 4 года назад +8

      Heidi Graney my great grandmother lived until she was 102. She was born around that date also.

    • @CambriaF
      @CambriaF 4 года назад +10

      she saw so much change in her lifetime in the city. i cant imagine what that would be like

    • @kamihussain1414
      @kamihussain1414 4 года назад +8

      I'm 32 overweight and smoke cigarettes I will never make it to such an age unless I dont make some changes

  • @traceyszostek9059
    @traceyszostek9059 2 года назад +18

    Bless their hearts. Everyone in this video played, worked and was raised with great family values, and now they’re all in Heaven ❤️❤️❤️

    • @darkyboode3239
      @darkyboode3239 Год назад +2

      Some of them are probably in hell, I’m pretty sure not all of them were good people.

    • @illmatic826
      @illmatic826 Год назад +2

      Al Capone was born here, he’s in the hottest pits of hell

  • @roughriderreturns5039
    @roughriderreturns5039 7 месяцев назад +10

    I have watched this quite a few times over the years. It seems to draw me back.

  • @pattycakes4672
    @pattycakes4672 3 года назад +19

    That was lovely. In going thru old boxes from my parent's attic I found family albums from then, and even earlier. The buildings were beautiful.

  • @heru-deshet359
    @heru-deshet359 6 лет назад +53

    New York architecture was so beautiful back then. So sad that so much of it has disappeared.

    • @malcolmcanning548
      @malcolmcanning548 5 лет назад

      Why

    • @janeyd5280
      @janeyd5280 2 года назад +1

      @@malcolmcanning548 just because??

    • @saturn2394
      @saturn2394 2 года назад

      ​@@janeyd5280 Just because what??? Explain or don't leave stupid lazy responses.

    • @burton528hz
      @burton528hz 7 месяцев назад +2

      That post office had to be destroyed. It's too obvious that we did not build it in the 1890's with horse and wagons.

    • @michaelwills1926
      @michaelwills1926 22 дня назад

      Destruction of evidence

  • @nickfontana2801
    @nickfontana2801 4 года назад +53

    It's amazing what our ancestors had to go through; just think, we are all here because there resilience.. absolutely amazing. Today we are spoiled 😊

  • @louisianagrandma9787
    @louisianagrandma9787 6 лет назад +22

    Wonderful piano music!!!

  • @favoritemoneymakers
    @favoritemoneymakers 2 года назад +11

    My great grand ma was born in 1896. She died in 1977 at the age of 81 when I was 6. I still remember her vividly.

  • @beatsmithx1090
    @beatsmithx1090 5 лет назад +26

    I wish I could go inside pictures. I always like to see pictures of old times like these. everything looked so simple. so beautiful

    • @marksimpson5767
      @marksimpson5767 2 года назад +2

      That would be awesome to go into a picture. Old or new. Great idea.

    • @Delgado587
      @Delgado587 Год назад +1

      Wow good idea

    • @BA-fz6lc
      @BA-fz6lc 8 месяцев назад +2

      Me too

    • @AdaKizi248
      @AdaKizi248 2 месяца назад

      Oh, me too. My grandfather was born in New York in 1885, what a treat it would be to walk into one of those pictures and come across a 10- or 12-year-old, who happened to be him.

    • @beatsmithx1090
      @beatsmithx1090 2 месяца назад

      @@AdaKizi248 I'm sure you'd recognize him instantly and he might wonder why you look like his family members. He might think you're his uncle or something

  • @IntoTheLens827
    @IntoTheLens827 7 лет назад +201

    WOW! it's nice to see what everything looked like in New York City Back in the 1890's. My Great-Grandmother was born in Dec of 1893. She lived til she was almost 102. She Died in Sept 1995. She saw ALOT in her life! ALOT OF CHANGES! My grandfather grew up in Manhattan in the 1930's & went out to Queens Village to Raise my mother.

    • @alisaforesthillscb3brigade816
      @alisaforesthillscb3brigade816 4 года назад +4

      Wow..I'm originally from Whitestone queens flushing..ring a bell??!!!..lol..love NY

    • @alisaforesthillscb3brigade816
      @alisaforesthillscb3brigade816 4 года назад +4

      Yep she saw every change that's incredibly phenomenal to have her experience..omg wow!

    • @alisaforesthillscb3brigade816
      @alisaforesthillscb3brigade816 4 года назад +3

      And she saw WW2..they had Nazi u boats in Whitestone fort tottan by Bayside WW2 time. I went to Bayside high school school of band anthrax they were local band thier

    • @Xxstephtation1
      @Xxstephtation1 3 года назад

      U

    • @millster9389
      @millster9389 2 года назад +3

      Very cool, ThatNYCGuy827! My grandmother was a little younger then yours, she was born in Brooklyn in 1912 & died in 2015 at 103. Her mother was pregnant with her when they came over from Abruzzi, Italy in 1912. I was grateful that she lived so long because she was able to tell me so many things about old NY.

  • @mrt8944
    @mrt8944 5 лет назад +24

    I once asked my grandma, born around 1920s, on how they lived such "boring" life. I was a child and asked that coz i knew there was no tv, phones, cars etc back then. She said "though we did not have all those we still knew people who lived far from her home. People had time to visit family and friends. Children had time to play and there were lots of open land to play. People got together and shared their stories which not only passed their time but also helped people de stress if it was something bad. So she was a happy young woman.The one thing she like liked about the later years was that medical advancement helped cure diseases which used to be fatal.

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay 4 года назад

      @Ken Lompart When I got bored as a kid in the 1940's /50's. I learned to keep my mouth shut. If I complained to my mother ,that I was bored, she would say ,''Aren't you the lucky one'', See that tin of polish ? or, ''that bag of spuds over there, and that peeler''

    • @jamiecloud1897
      @jamiecloud1897 4 года назад +2

      Time for you to go back to school and study history. The car was invented in 1886 by Karl Benz and the phone was invented in 1849 by an Italian, but it was Alexander Graham Bell who won the first patent for the phone in 1876.

    • @mrt8944
      @mrt8944 4 года назад

      @@MrDaiseymay Well the poor still have to be content that way... But if you are saying there weren't any kids around to play man you sure must be on an isolated island

    • @peace_cat76
      @peace_cat76 3 года назад

      Thanks for sharing that. Yes, it is hard to miss what you've never had. Except for me, because I miss flying cars. Indeed, it is true I've never had them, but I know these wonderful passenger drones are right around the corner! It is just a matter of patience to be able to watch happily all our roadways turn back into meadows🌾

    • @peace_cat76
      @peace_cat76 3 года назад

      Yet "kids" are indeed still a relatively modern invention it seems.

  • @zaf2774
    @zaf2774 2 года назад +4

    Crazy to know that my great grandpa was born during this era

  • @krystaldaniels7940
    @krystaldaniels7940 4 года назад +16

    These videos are really cool. Makes me feel like im actually there watching a simpler time pass before me. Very nostalgic, thank you for your excellent work!

  • @janepiepes2243
    @janepiepes2243 6 лет назад +3

    Beautiful photos of old
    New York.

  • @jeremywusi
    @jeremywusi 5 лет назад +9

    Love NY so much! I was there from 1999∼2003 had a lot memories there.

  • @sednalkram
    @sednalkram 6 лет назад +20

    I have been painting streets scenes of Buffalo and NY after one of my favorite painters, Childe Hassam (1859-1939) and these photos include some great reference photos. My great grandfather (1845-1927) was a lumbar inspector in Buffalo --I have a nice cedar chest he made about 1905. My mom (1918 - ) will be 100 in November. Her father (1882-1970) went door to door in Buffalo teaching piano. At first I thought the clomp clomp of carriages was charming but then I read how the manure really piled up and how many horse were lost each year, especially in winter, from falls and accidents (thousands/yr).

  • @district5198
    @district5198 2 года назад +5

    Absolutely love the architecture, all of today’s technology yet nothing compares. Rather live back then, then in todays world.

  • @deannasoriano2771
    @deannasoriano2771 4 года назад +3

    You dont know me but I am writing to you from 1895 in my NY City Apartment. I hope you all are enjoying my wonderful city and this invention called the Video. ...

  • @bullsnutsoz
    @bullsnutsoz 5 лет назад +16

    The crooked FED reserve of 1914 killed all of this beauty off!

  • @sandrodream5418
    @sandrodream5418 8 лет назад +28

    Fantastic Video of beautiful people and city...Hi from italy

  • @angelacasey6336
    @angelacasey6336 4 года назад +5

    Love to see these old pictures of NY.

  • @writeract2
    @writeract2 10 месяцев назад +2

    The glorious majesty of 1890s New York - look at the Post Office in 1892.

  • @ZacharySalman
    @ZacharySalman 8 лет назад +185

    That architecture was fantastic. ---SNIP--- yeah my past self had some stupid ideas about modern architecture so I deleted the idiotic tirade against modernism that used to constitute the rest of this comment.

    • @zachmcewen4048
      @zachmcewen4048 6 лет назад +3

      buildings will be much more advanced by the 22nd century than currently.

    • @bethanyzamora1146
      @bethanyzamora1146 5 лет назад +1

      but was it structurally sound?

    • @hestiapetrina9522
      @hestiapetrina9522 5 лет назад +2

      The details are so excellent

    • @xenotypos
      @xenotypos 5 лет назад +7

      @@zachmcewen4048 It depends for what. Generally speaking, that's true, but if humanity disappeared tomorrow, what do you think would collapse first? all the modern buildings. Old stone architecture will stand for a lot of centuries even without human presence, while modern architecture need constant care (and eventually destruction in most cases).
      Another thing: the old architecture is a testimony a civilisation, a culture. Modern architecture is just that worldwide stuff that doesn't have this kind of meaning anymore.

    • @aldofhister6859
      @aldofhister6859 5 лет назад +2

      I tell you what why don't you go back to that time and live for a couple months ! Fire hazard buildings. - walk-ups- no hot water- one toilet per building and no ! Electricity- no heat ! - no welfare no food stamps no unemployment no social security = you wouldn't last a week !

  • @bracken1000
    @bracken1000 6 лет назад +50

    It's funny looking at those people. You wonder what sort of lives they led. They would have had to face World War 1 in about 20 years time, the Russian Revolution etc etc. Little did they know. Just as we today know very little about what will happen in 20 years from now.

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay 4 года назад

      oh, I see what you mean, yeah---hilarious

    • @brian2498
      @brian2498 3 года назад

      they wouldnt face the russian revolution because this is new york city dumbass

    • @mrmesingh520
      @mrmesingh520 3 года назад +1

      What about great Depression of 1929

    • @marksimpson5767
      @marksimpson5767 2 года назад

      World War 1, the Great depression, no alcohol, the beginning of electricity, and many more obstacles to hurdle.

    • @shanebriggs1039
      @shanebriggs1039 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@peace_cat76absolutely love your comment...thankyou

  • @captainblackeye3138
    @captainblackeye3138 8 лет назад +403

    Only 90s kids will remember this #1890skid

  • @kvernon1
    @kvernon1 7 лет назад +29

    Wow, all the buildings were solid as a rock! I wouldn't be surprised if most of them are still standing today (unless they were deliberately subject to the wrecking ball). Wish the Post Office was still around for all of us to admire today.

    • @ravilcn
      @ravilcn 3 года назад +1

      They really werent solid as a rock. They just looked more ornate. Old facades still fall off these buildings every year and sometimes kill or injure people. Many are still standing. But many had to be replaced because there was no more room in the city so they needed to build higher.

  • @ZacharySalman
    @ZacharySalman 8 лет назад +39

    That architecture was fantastic. I'm so glad much of it is preserved today, but it sickens me to think that during the mid-20th century people actually thought they weren't worth keeping, or that a glass box would be better. (Edited to remove some overly harsh comments about modern architecture that I made when I was less experienced in architecture. I actually love a ton of modern architecture, I just hate when a developer builds some cheap crap for maximum profit where there used to be a historic building.)

    • @RonaldReaganRocks1
      @RonaldReaganRocks1 7 лет назад +2

      Amen!

    • @itsallovernowWD1945
      @itsallovernowWD1945 7 лет назад +1

      Modern buildings have structural strength and performance. Architecture back then doesn't have structural framing meaning that buildings are not flexible. The invention of steel framing enables builders to builder taller, flexible structure. Plus its lightweight and and bear wind resistance

    • @ZacharySalman
      @ZacharySalman 7 лет назад +10

      If I was talking about modern structural technology, I would have said that. I am talking purely about aesthetics.

    • @c.benmansour3546
      @c.benmansour3546 2 года назад +1

      I wish we know the real age of these buildings.
      Our history books are ridiculous.

    • @ZacharySalman
      @ZacharySalman 2 года назад +3

      @@c.benmansour3546 We do. I've been studying architecture history at the university level for a few years. Most of these buildings were built in the 3 decades after the Civil War, while some of the smaller wooden buildings date to the early 1800s or the 1700s. I guarantee the historical societies and landmarks commissions in the region have their dates of construction archived.

  • @markzimmerman1899
    @markzimmerman1899 4 года назад +4

    Almost makes you wish you could time travel and see what the world was like at certain points in time. I know, I know, everyday life was far from glamorous, but a time traveler is bound to have some fun observing things from a purely anthropological basis.

  • @GregoryTheGr8ster
    @GregoryTheGr8ster 7 лет назад +18

    Life was so much simpler back then. There was almost no stress. Why can't we go back to those days?

    • @GregoryTheGr8ster
      @GregoryTheGr8ster 7 лет назад +6

      *****
      On second thought, maybe you are right!

    • @mikegloth9839
      @mikegloth9839 7 лет назад +1

      GregoryTheGr8ster amen

    • @JackHY2K
      @JackHY2K 7 лет назад +5

      I'd love to visit those days. I'll be sure to bring medication, vintage money, and dress up appropriately for the era. Regarding technology like smartphones or TV, I can temporarily get along without them.

    • @rollojaxx
      @rollojaxx 7 лет назад +4

      If we get rid of all of our technology we can be there again DELETE ALL YOUR SOCIAL MEDIA

    • @DarthScorpio11
      @DarthScorpio11 7 лет назад +9

      GregoryTheGr8ster
      No stress? Really? Life was extremely stressful, back then. It was just a different type of stress. Yeah, let's go back to the days of Jim Crow, poor science, and when people with mental illnesses were tortured in asylums.

  • @bracken1000
    @bracken1000 6 лет назад +14

    They sure had grand architecture back then.

  • @bobhazel4507
    @bobhazel4507 8 лет назад +62

    Gt grandfather owned a saloon at 453 Washington St in the 1870s. It was a block and a half from the north river (Hudson). The building was razed in the early 1890s and re-dedicated in 1892. You can see that date on top of the building. What remains of the past are the horse hitches that are still there in front of an existing restaurant.

    • @Raju-nx8tr
      @Raju-nx8tr 5 лет назад

      Hooi👍

    • @beatsmithx1090
      @beatsmithx1090 5 лет назад

      Ted Mosby, is that you?

    • @rangerdave1973
      @rangerdave1973 5 лет назад

      I Google earthed the address. What is that building now? Looks neat

    • @real4572
      @real4572 5 лет назад

      Gd

    • @janeyd5280
      @janeyd5280 2 года назад

      Bob Hazel thanks for your story. I makes it more real to hear it.xx

  • @kamalbardia8362
    @kamalbardia8362 5 лет назад +2

    Salute to brilliant visionary who took such photos.
    Those were the days.No pollution,no traffic jams,no hectic and no tension.
    Heart diseases, strokes,cancer ,diabetes to name a few are the byeproducts of today's artificial hectic life in pollution .Salute once again from Indians.

  • @potita24
    @potita24 8 лет назад +201

    The demolition of that NY post office building was a crime!!

    • @lowell5561
      @lowell5561 7 лет назад +26

      Hellen Laespriell I thought the same thing. What a beautiful building.

    • @Nick13ro
      @Nick13ro 7 лет назад +26

      It was called "Mullett's Monstrosity". Apparently was demolished for being too ugly. Was built in the style of the second French Empire. Funny enough its now considered one of that architects best works.

    • @JackHY2K
      @JackHY2K 7 лет назад +8

      Yes agreed!!

    • @richardtruesdale4338
      @richardtruesdale4338 6 лет назад

      Hellen Laespriell ...the building was a hazard..

    • @xenotypos
      @xenotypos 5 лет назад +3

      @RebelWithoutaPause I'm just nitpicking I admit, but how can you even put "greco romano" and "neo-gothic" just next to each other as if it was "one" thing. First, most of the architecture you're refering to as "greco roman" after the Renaissance, and especially in the 19th century, just had a greco-roman "style" but had technically not much to do with the greco roman architecture, which was incomparably less advanced. As for the neo-gothic architecture, it's the complete opposite of anything roman, it was a revival from the gothic architecture which appeared in the middle age in France. It was named "gothic" centuries later, during the renaissance, to belittle it as the product of barbarians (=the goths, even if they had nothing to do with it), as opposed to the roman fashion back then. In a nutshell, nothing roman about it.
      Sorry about the uselessly long post.

  • @davidferro2236
    @davidferro2236 2 года назад +4

    A good photo book is New York Sunshine and Shadow by Roger Whitehouse. Earliest photo is from 1853 and goes to 1915. Most are from the Museum of the City of New York and you could access photos at their website or the NY Public Library, National Archives.
    In 1980, I stayed with artist friends on Mulberry while working at the Bronx VA. That area is too expensive now & photos of hand carts at a wholesale grocer on Mott St are all that are left. That building a blank wall on Mott.
    My grandfather stayed with an uncle on lower Mulberry when he came in 1905 but my foster mother's family arrived in 1880 and lived in Italian Harlem.

  • @rodicab7911
    @rodicab7911 5 лет назад +1

    fantastica. niste foto rare. cit de tare as vrea sa vad aceasta cu ochii mei. salut din moldova

  • @edshed968
    @edshed968 6 лет назад +20

    It sounded like some old drunk playing the piano. Everything and everyone seemed so civilized back then. Forward 120 years and you'll find that society's actually regressed. London, where I'm from, has the same problem as NYC.

    • @pegasusactua2985
      @pegasusactua2985 9 месяцев назад

      People werent any more or less civilized back then. You still had crime, still had debauchery. People don't change.

  • @luizsp6219
    @luizsp6219 7 лет назад +9

    New York, bonita desde antigamente, parece São Paulo antigo.
    New York sempre New York.

  • @Tennisurchin
    @Tennisurchin 5 лет назад +2

    I didn't know that they had motorised trucks in 1897. Eye opener !!

  • @matbianco8842
    @matbianco8842 4 года назад +3

    So beautiful! I would have loved to live in NYC at that time 😘😘

    • @matbianco8842
      @matbianco8842 2 года назад

      @Josh Traffanstedt well that’s your opinion

  • @nanciekruse7147
    @nanciekruse7147 3 года назад +1

    It's like you gave me a wonderful gift. Thank you.

  • @westzed23
    @westzed23 2 года назад +2

    Great photos of the past. Glad that you have labeled them.

  • @DarkNaomi
    @DarkNaomi 3 года назад +4

    2:35 it should be a crime to demolish beautiful old buildings like that.

    • @michaelwills1926
      @michaelwills1926 22 дня назад

      They didn’t care because they didn’t build it.

  • @thomascefalo938
    @thomascefalo938 2 года назад +1

    Love the old Timey piano music! I used to play that type of music on a piano in a turn of the century attraction near where I went to college. I used to put thumbtacks on the hammers to get that tinny sound.

  • @1915164
    @1915164 5 лет назад

    Classic collection, awesome collection, peoples are awesome

  • @kakashi101able
    @kakashi101able 8 лет назад +17

    Thank you for this video!!

  • @endtheliesnow5906
    @endtheliesnow5906 Год назад +3

    The only problem with this video is that it ended after 3 min 38 seconds...I wish there was more!!!

  • @adrianbennett9875
    @adrianbennett9875 3 года назад

    WOW SUCH BEAUTIFUL MUSIC...... HOW DOES ANYONE IGNORE THIS...... IT BEAUTIFUL.

  • @user-ow3xu3go1g
    @user-ow3xu3go1g 3 месяца назад

    This is why I like to watch old westerns, the beautiful scenery in the movies, the simplicity of it just calms your soul

  • @mrbee7455
    @mrbee7455 6 лет назад +1

    Wonderful pic , really love to see old building in real

  • @sednalkram
    @sednalkram 7 лет назад +36

    My Grandpa was born in 1883 and Grandma is 1887 in Buffalo. Grandpa went house to house teaching piano and from age 13 on Grandma sewed dresses (no form just measured). When mom was 4 years old (now 98 and doing well), the doctor said to go out west for her health and so they came to California. They never really understood the laxness of later generations. When you're younger, you think of these time as ancient/long ago -- but when you get older you realize ---not so long ago.

    • @UnknownPerson-ve3uv
      @UnknownPerson-ve3uv 5 лет назад

      Mark Landes you were born in 1928?

    • @ProdNapoleon
      @ProdNapoleon 2 года назад

      @@UnknownPerson-ve3uv his mother would’ve birthed him at like 10 I don’t think so even tho it’s possible

    • @mymixedbiscuit9159
      @mymixedbiscuit9159 Год назад

      by the time i would get older then they are long ago/ancient

  • @nusratjamia7953
    @nusratjamia7953 5 лет назад +2

    Great memories ❣️♥️❤️❤️😍❣️♥️❣️♥️❣️♥️❣️♥️❣️♥️

  • @wjing63
    @wjing63 4 года назад +1

    Great New York. The best city in the world.

  • @nicksmifso8071
    @nicksmifso8071 2 года назад +2

    Amazing how they built all these buildings .With no more than horse and cart and mainly unskilled workers .Most people couldn't even read or write back then .Makes me wonder just how much history is made up.

    • @user-eb5cb6ud1p
      @user-eb5cb6ud1p 6 месяцев назад +1

      Sigh. READ SOME HISTORY. They had a *heck* of a lot more going for them than horse carts. How do you think they made railroads and ocean liners? There were steel mills and steam-driven heavy equipment like cranes and tractors.
      There’s tons of sources where you can find photos and descriptions of construction techniques. Maybe engineers and workers back then didn’t have computers but they weren’t primitive shack-builders either.

  • @eldorado1830
    @eldorado1830 7 месяцев назад +1

    Incredible, thanks for posting.

  • @alexacevedo345
    @alexacevedo345 6 лет назад

    Thanks so much for this videos what a wonder Thank you........

  • @Crazy-Clown-In-Town
    @Crazy-Clown-In-Town 4 месяца назад +2

    Amazing photos. How I wished cameras were invented much earlier cuz I would love to see how New York looked like during the 1600s when it was called New Amsterdam.

    • @semiposer6111
      @semiposer6111 3 месяца назад

      It's 17th century..and you don't say 1600s..you say 1601s.
      New York started in the year, 1524.

  • @joe44850
    @joe44850 2 года назад +3

    Pictures of New York City in the 1890's, along with captions, somehow pissed off at least 452 people. This is why the aliens have stopped visiting.

  • @stardust7930
    @stardust7930 7 лет назад +24

    The electricity age in Nyc wow so beautiful

  • @barbaravyse660
    @barbaravyse660 7 месяцев назад +1

    My dad’s ancestors came to NYC from England and Ireland in the 1840s.

  • @snazzyquizzes2336
    @snazzyquizzes2336 4 года назад +1

    Little did they know ... in less than a hundred years ... Friends would begin ...
    Good video. I never thought that anywhere in the 1890s could look like this.

  • @user-fh7yd3xe5v
    @user-fh7yd3xe5v 6 лет назад +1

    מרגש/גם הסרטון וגם הליווי המוסיקלי. פשוט הנאה צרופה. תודה!

  • @u.s.a.1957
    @u.s.a.1957 2 года назад +3

    TODAY WE ARE WORSE.. THEY LIVED BETTER THAN US... MUCH BETTER LIFE BACK THEM.. I WISH I WOULD HAD LIVED BACK THEN

  • @Jack-md9bk
    @Jack-md9bk Год назад +3

    Man, this is one of the weirdest time periods in history, to me...I mean, they're still in the XIX century, though some pictures look like they were taken in the 1970s, only with horses and carriages! This is the time span where skyscrapers and old-fashioned XIX century clothes coexisted. These pictures really look like someone used a time machine to mix up two completely different time periods, and I love it!

    • @Dovah689
      @Dovah689 Год назад +1

      Look up tartaria it explains everything

    • @user-eb5cb6ud1p
      @user-eb5cb6ud1p 6 месяцев назад +1

      It was a time of transition. The world was on the cusp of what we think of as “modern”. Cars were just on the horizon, electric lines were being run, the airplane was only a few years in the future, and so on.
      It’s not surprising there’d be a contrast as older tech and fashions were being replaced by the world we know. Look up what the 1950s were like - there was still a lot of stuff left from the 1930s and 40s, but you can also see today’s world starting to take shape.
      Fascinating stuff.

  • @1stab
    @1stab 8 лет назад +2

    :54 The New York Palace!!! I love that hotel.

  • @shamanicwisdomkeeper
    @shamanicwisdomkeeper Год назад +2

    It's so amazing how they built all that high tech massive infrastructure with little more than horse-drawn carriages, a few shovels and some good ol' american determination ammirite?! 😁

    • @user-eb5cb6ud1p
      @user-eb5cb6ud1p 6 месяцев назад +1

      FGS read some history. The 1890s weren’t the dark ages. They had ALL KINDS of power equipment, mostly driven by steam - power shovels, tractors, cranes, and so on. How the F do you think they built railroads and ships back then?
      There’s MOUNTAINS of documentation available. Try using the internet to look for things that are more substantial than cat videos.

  • @thomasbarbaro3044
    @thomasbarbaro3044 4 года назад +2

    I was born in 1983, my Gt grandfather was born in 1891 and he died in 1988(97 years old) and when i was a child he always told me about how italy(i'm italian) was different in 1890s' and 1900s'. No car, hard life, all people with good clothes even for go to supermarket.
    P.S.= sorry for bad english i'm from Rome (Italy)

  • @markdittrich2707
    @markdittrich2707 4 года назад

    Great pictures 👍👍👍😀😀😀

  • @aatifkhan8257
    @aatifkhan8257 4 года назад

    SO beautiful

  • @hervy1180
    @hervy1180 5 лет назад +3

    I remember these days, I went with my grandmother and parents through the streets, we had no phones or TV and we had to play out the street, I remember when I saw a car for the first time, me as a kid was really impressed.. Oh good old days how much I miss them.

  • @davidsmith4416
    @davidsmith4416 5 лет назад +3

    Looking at that one street cart loaded down with newspapers. At one time, I believe New York York City had at least half a dozen daily newspapers. What magazines and newspapers survive today are mostly online.

  • @TheBroadcastStudio365
    @TheBroadcastStudio365 6 лет назад +3

    Can you please give me the name of that piano piece? Thanks in advance.

  • @keerthigiridhargoud
    @keerthigiridhargoud 6 лет назад +3

    In 1890 America is already developed..that is the reason today America is top in all segments and ruler in world..

  • @Senoncifossimonoi.....
    @Senoncifossimonoi..... 4 месяца назад

    Splendida come sempre , complimenti x il video e colonna sonora

  • @johnmackey3937
    @johnmackey3937 Месяц назад +2

    Enjoyed seeing this,but living conditions weren't that great for average people. Dentistry and hospital stays were last options for many. You still had horses and what they brought with them in the streets. Like working 12 hours a day, 5-6 days a week, a lot of labor for a simple shirt or socks, maybe an outhouse outside your tenement or a chamber pot in your room? Every apartment didn't have a bathroom, tubs were often in the kitchen, lack of privacy at home, not just for a bath.
    Would like to hover over multiple families to see lifestyles per income, but not live at the time although not rushed.

  • @NameRequiredSoHere
    @NameRequiredSoHere 7 лет назад +1

    I'm an ex-New Yorker. Enjoyed this very much.

  • @punjabiludhiana332
    @punjabiludhiana332 5 лет назад +6

    No traffic jam 👍👍👍
    Nice picture

  • @mrs.g.9816
    @mrs.g.9816 4 года назад +2

    I wouldn't have minded if all world cities would have kept the old architecture. Now every big city looks like any other, with glass and steel super skyscrapers, like it belongs in a science fiction outer space film (a "space opera"). New York City looked so much more human back then. And that post office - Wow! I wouldn't have minded living in the NYC of that time. Of course, I'm not forgetting that public sanitation wasn't that good and the poor had it very rough!. The period music made this video so nice! What's the name of the piece?

  • @sureshtamil7873
    @sureshtamil7873 5 лет назад

    Very nice interesting ,,,,,

  • @user-di2uj1dl9p
    @user-di2uj1dl9p 4 года назад

    Beautiful city , peoples , and arhitecture love from Russia guys .

  • @barbaramcilvaine
    @barbaramcilvaine 7 лет назад +5

    I like the merry go round that says ( A most delightful sensation).

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay 4 года назад

      M'mmmm all the throbbing eh girls?

  • @kevins6418
    @kevins6418 6 лет назад +17

    Too bad post office at 2:35 got demolished

    • @Mr.Obongo
      @Mr.Obongo 4 года назад

      Why tf would they do that? :(

  • @gnuwave
    @gnuwave 8 лет назад +1

    The photo identified as West End, on the Upper West Side, is almost certainly what was then called "The Boulevard," what we now call Broadway. The center mall area exists today, although it has been narrowed over the years to allow room for additional cars.. Incidentally, notice the streetcar on the far left, possibly horse drawn, another clue to the identity of this street.

  • @darrellborland119
    @darrellborland119 2 года назад

    Very nice....thank you!

  • @alisaforesthillscb3brigade816
    @alisaforesthillscb3brigade816 4 года назад

    Incredible..wow

  • @bobyale6159
    @bobyale6159 5 лет назад +5

    1890s NY even looked modern and orderly than most of today’s capital cities of the world. 120 years later!

  • @ktkat1949
    @ktkat1949 8 лет назад +42

    Great video. Would love to time travel back there for a few weeks just to check everything out. Make sure I have my vax, antibiotics and lots of money though.

    • @richpetroleum4560
      @richpetroleum4560 7 лет назад +3

      Bring gold.

    • @richpetroleum4560
      @richpetroleum4560 7 лет назад +5

      And stop buy the grocery store and bring back some pure legal cheap heroin. Thanks.

    • @beatyoutoapulp
      @beatyoutoapulp 7 лет назад +5

      Cops won't believe you purchased that heroin back in the past. They definitely would bust you.

    • @jacobstravail
      @jacobstravail 7 лет назад +4

      kate baxter I'd grab every baseball card from then

    • @nikhilgavit42
      @nikhilgavit42 7 лет назад +2

      Same here

  • @amirasedeek9668
    @amirasedeek9668 6 лет назад

    Beautiful

  • @susanagodinez2611
    @susanagodinez2611 4 года назад +2

    Belleza de arquitectura

  • @orakzaihangu
    @orakzaihangu 4 года назад

    No words, just speechless, I think we all should watch this kind of pics and videos, we will remember the death and God fear, so we will spend our lives in good deeds

  • @1945joshuaruiz
    @1945joshuaruiz 5 лет назад

    My great great great grandparents in the mid 1840’s immigrated from Central America to New York City :p

  • @rexluminus9867
    @rexluminus9867 5 лет назад +2

    Clean air and way less noisy.
    Peaceful times.

    • @Mr.Obongo
      @Mr.Obongo 4 года назад +1

      Richard Head it’s no better today

    • @zulemajohnson1413
      @zulemajohnson1413 4 года назад +1

      Visit the places where the Ellis island immigrants lived, they did the jobs Americans did not want to do

    • @pegasusactua2985
      @pegasusactua2985 9 месяцев назад

      The air was not cleaner. And it sure as hell wasn't peaceful.

  • @marksimpson5767
    @marksimpson5767 2 года назад +1

    How times have changed in 120 years. Planes, rockets, the internet, not sure if life was simpler or harder. Maybe a bit of both.

  • @wdd3141
    @wdd3141 6 лет назад +2

    Would be interesting to see a similar presentation of Boston.

  • @heidigraney4075
    @heidigraney4075 6 лет назад +1

    Life was WAY better back then!!

  • @annaket5148
    @annaket5148 5 лет назад

    Great video ❤️

  • @Edhilues
    @Edhilues 6 лет назад +2

    Imagine if all of these photos were taken in 1080p, pretty much everything will look just like today.

  • @mola4everyourz
    @mola4everyourz 5 лет назад

    great music to it too

  • @kathyoberle9093
    @kathyoberle9093 3 года назад

    I wish I was living in those days, I like the ragtime music and how women dressed in those days.

  • @Momof2825
    @Momof2825 5 месяцев назад +2

    So crazy that people were still going on the Oregon trail and fighting Indians…yellow fever and the elements to get to California not long before these photos

  • @archlutesmith
    @archlutesmith 7 лет назад +45

    Wow,that post office is incredible.why did they demolish it?

    • @Nick13ro
      @Nick13ro 7 лет назад +17

      It was called "Mullett's Monstrosity". Apparently was demolished for being too ugly. Was built in the style of the second French Empire. Funny enough its now considered one of that architects best works.

    • @anubis1751
      @anubis1751 6 лет назад +1

      I was incredibly sadden to know this awesome looking was demolished.
      I guess they thought the original NY Penn Station was "ugly" and look what we got.

    • @3markaw
      @3markaw 6 лет назад +2

      Actually a more modern Post Office was built right above the train tracks on 33rd and eighth. At the time moving mail by train was the new and fastest way. Shame about the wonderful bldg. though. At least it was replaced by a nice park and not an ugly, no character, modern bldg.

    • @justgaming8630
      @justgaming8630 6 лет назад

      bankruptcy

    • @michaeltnewyorknights8413
      @michaeltnewyorknights8413 4 года назад

      @Hunter D built in the early 70's, finished in 72/73.