Map of Manhattan's Broadway, Explained

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  • Опубликовано: 21 май 2024
  • Go to ground.news/danielsteiner to develop a well-rounded worldview. Subscribe through my link for 40% off unlimited access this month.
    -
    00:00 Introduction
    00:34 The Origins of Broadway
    02:58 Broadway Begins
    05:54 Ad Break
    07:20 Broadway in 1776
    10:30 The Bloomingdale Road
    14:17 Times Square
    16:16 Upper Broadway
    19:29 The impact of Broadway
    -
    Fran Leadon's Book: www.amazon.com/Broadway-Histo...
    Karen's Channel: @PatriotToursNYC
    My Patreon: / danielsteiner
    Resources: www.notion.so/danielsimsstein...

Комментарии • 412

  • @DanielsimsSteiner
    @DanielsimsSteiner  22 дня назад +16

    Go to ground.news/danielsteiner to develop a well-rounded worldview. Subscribe through my link for 40% off unlimited access this month.

    • @siwi666
      @siwi666 20 дней назад +1

      wow, you are amazing and super detailed. Love it!

    • @rudivanrooijen7611
      @rudivanrooijen7611 3 дня назад

      A must read is 'Island at the center of the World - The epic story of Dutch Manhattan and the forgotten colony that shaped America' by author Russel Shorto !!!!
      The USA's constitution and declaration of independence were modelled after those of the Dutch. Furthermore, stocktrade was invented by the Dutch.

  • @JK-ok7lm
    @JK-ok7lm 23 дня назад +332

    I like how you source your information and conduct interviews with experts. It's really refreshing. You should do other cities like Atlanta, Austin, Chicago, SF, LA, and Seattle. :)
    edit: removed duplicate Seattle and put SF

    • @dlazo32696
      @dlazo32696 21 день назад +6

      Agreed! Do Los Angeles next.

    • @meganb1725
      @meganb1725 19 дней назад +4

      No, please just do NYC forever!!!! Lolll

    • @qman66
      @qman66 9 дней назад +1

      No do Anchorage first

    • @ImAnEmergency
      @ImAnEmergency 6 дней назад +2

      Seattle twice?

    • @JK-ok7lm
      @JK-ok7lm 6 дней назад

      @@ImAnEmergency ugh im dumb.

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican 22 дня назад +125

    Yup, the northernmost part of Manhattan has quite the terrain, which is why the deepest stations on the NYC Subway are in northern Manhattan! 190th Street station on the IND Eighth Ave Line, which lies under Fort Tyron Park, is 140 feet/43 m below street level (it's also a short walk to The Cloisters)! THE deepest station on the NYC Subway system is 191st Street on the IRT Broadway-Seventh Avenue Line at 173 feet/53 m below street level! It was built by the Interborough Rapid Transit Company and opened in January 1911 as an infill station along the city's first subway line. So people could use the station because of the topography, they chose to build a pedestrian tunnel to save people a walk of a quarter to one-third of a mile and a steep climb. The tunnel is used as a connector between western and eastern Washington Heights. Passengers using the 191st Street and St. Nicholas Avenue entrance need to take an elevator to access the station due to that intersection's height, but the elevators at that entrance are outside fare control, so it's considered a convenient way to traverse the neighborhood without walking up a hill! This tunnel was shown in the In the Heights movie!
    When you mentioned at the end that they widened and straightened the waterway for ships (the Harlem Ship Canal), you didn't mention this led to the geographic oddity that Marble Hill is still considered a part of the borough of Manhattan and New York County despite it now being attached to The Bronx! Because of the canal, Marble Hill became an island in 1895, but then the river on the north side of the island was fully diverted to the canal with landfill, thus connecting the island to The Bronx! The name of Marble Hill was conceived when Darius C. Crosby came up with the name in 1891 from the deposits of dolomite marble underlying it known as Inwood marble. The marble was quarried for the federal buildings in Lower Manhattan when NYC was the national capital in the 1780s. Despite being part of Manhattan, Marble Hill has a Bronx ZIP code and uses Bronx area codes (though they did fight to retain Manhattan's 212 but it would've been too expensive).

    • @harveywachtel1091
      @harveywachtel1091 4 дня назад +1

      A favorite puzzler offered by NYC transit fans is a request to name four railroad stations in Manhattan. Everyone gets Penn Station and Grand Central Terminal. Anyone who knows the city's transit gets 125th Street. But it's a rare trivia nerd who can name the fourth: Marble Hill on Metro North's Hudson Line.

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un 22 дня назад +101

    For that surviving section of Bloomingdale Road that you mentioned, part of that is Hamilton Place, which was originally the address of Alexander Hamilton's house, The Grange. In late 1798, Hamilton wrote to his wife Eliza that he was planning a project in NYC, the details of which he was keeping secret. During the Quasi-War of 1798-1800, Hamilton served as Inspector General of the United States Army, and so he could not devote time to his project. He wrote a letter to the merchant Ebenezer Stevens in October 1799, offering to buy a parcel adjoining Stevens's land from Jacob Schieffelin. Hamilton had wanted the plot west of the Bloomingdale Road, but Schieffelin would only sell the plot to the east of the road. Hamilton bought the eastern site in August 1800 for a plot of 15 acres, and he commissioned leading NY architect John McComb Jr, who also designed the iconic Montauk Point Lighthouse, Castle Clinton, Old Queens at Rutgers, and New York City Hall, to design a country home on the estate. The house was completed in 1802, just two years before Hamilton's death. Originally located near present-day 143rd Street, the house was moved in 1889 to 287 Convent Avenue before being relocated again in 2008 to St. Nicholas Park.
    Speaking of the Manhattan trolleys you showed at 10:35, it used to have some San Francisco-style operations! Duffy's Hill located on Lexington Ave between 102nd and 103rd Streets, has a grade of 12.6 percent and was named for Michael James Duffy, a Tammany Hall Alderman who built 26 rowhouses there! It was the home of many cable car accidents because the cars had to quickly accelerate and decelerate at this point. The corporation that ran the cable cars had a 24-hour guard stationed at the base of the hill by 1937 to watch over incidents! In Brooklyn, trolleys were once such a part of the Brooklyn scene that the local baseball club was named the Brooklyn Trolley Dodgers, after the people who had to dodge the trolleys to make it to the baseball park, which was then shortened to the Brooklyn Dodgers! Brooklyn once having a streetcar system is even referenced in Pokémon Black/White in Nacrene City!

    • @munchkin8019
      @munchkin8019 22 дня назад +6

      Amazing information Mr President (please don't execute me 🙏😭)

    • @user-pw9td8fb6b
      @user-pw9td8fb6b 22 дня назад +3

      @@munchkin8019 RIP Munchkin8019.

    • @rebekahcuriel-alessi2239
      @rebekahcuriel-alessi2239 2 дня назад

      Wow, cuz here in San Francisco, I wondered when I saw the streetcars which I took to be cable cars... 😊

  • @lucasgonzalez7087
    @lucasgonzalez7087 22 дня назад +117

    throughout the video I kept thinking about what it must have looked like in Assassins Creed 3 only for you to end it with that clip lmao

    • @adurpandya2742
      @adurpandya2742 19 дней назад +3

      I used that game to plan a tour of Boston. Fascinating recreations.

  • @ScotchBeard78
    @ScotchBeard78 23 дня назад +50

    Love your videos. Straight-forward, full of information, and well edited. You're always a must-click.

  • @sevomat
    @sevomat 22 дня назад +61

    New York is actually turning 400 just this month or next - right around now. Not much of a party is being thrown but there it is 🫤

    • @bpdbhp1632
      @bpdbhp1632 19 дней назад +11

      if it still belonged to the dutch there would 100% be a citywide party.

    • @marquisgrissom9129
      @marquisgrissom9129 17 дней назад +10

      There's a party everyday on Dyckman , just like he intended to be

    • @rebekahcuriel-alessi2239
      @rebekahcuriel-alessi2239 2 дня назад

      Ooh. So interesting!! 😊

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un 22 дня назад +27

    That old tower on the right by the bridge at 16:33 is the High Bridge Water Tower, which was authorized by the State Legislature in 1863, was designed by John B. Jervis, the engineer who supervised the building of the High Bridge Aqueduct. The bridge next door is the oldest bridge in NYC as it opened as part of the Old Croton Aqueduct in 1848. Both the bridge and the water tower were part of the first reliable and plentiful water supply system in New York City. Water was pumped up 100 feet (30 m) to a 7-acre reservoir next to the tower (now the site of a play center and public pool built in 1934-1936) which then provided water to be lifted to the tower's 47,000 US gallons tank. This high service improved the water system's gravity pressure, necessary because of the increased use of flush toilets.
    The Old Croton Aqueduct was the first of its kind ever constructed in the United States. The innovative system used a classic gravity feed, dropping 13 inches (330 mm) per mile, and running 41 miles (66 km) into New York City through an enclosed masonry structure crossing ridges, valleys, and rivers! The reason they chose to build an ambitious system is because as the City was devastated by cholera in 1832 and the Great Fire in 1835, the inadequacy of the water system of wells-and-cisterns became apparent, and after they found the Croton River in northern Westchester County was a great source, they wanted to build the delivery system! Today, with three major water systems (Croton, Catskill, and Delaware) stretching up to 125 miles (201 km) away from the city, its water supply system is one of the most extensive municipal water systems in the world! The system's Delaware Aqueduct is the world's longest tunnel as it is 137,000 m or over 85 miles in length!

  • @XGDragon
    @XGDragon 19 дней назад +5

    Is the original text available, where the sentence is written in Dutch?

  • @highbell5172
    @highbell5172 22 дня назад +10

    I live in Irvington, about 25 miles North of the city, and I always think it's fascinating that the same Broadway continues through my town and beyond. There's even a mile marker in a stone wall along the street that marks 25 (or maybe 26 i forget) miles from the city. It really shows how important it is to the city's development and the suburbs north.

  • @Doufu
    @Doufu 23 дня назад +323

    Clicked so fast

    • @DanielsimsSteiner
      @DanielsimsSteiner  23 дня назад +27

      I’m so glad ur here 🙏🏻🙏🏻

    • @Doufu
      @Doufu 23 дня назад +10

      @@DanielsimsSteiner I enjoy all your work! Keep up the exceptional production!

    • @MiggerPlease
      @MiggerPlease 22 дня назад +1

      @@DanielsimsSteinerI came so fast lol

    • @MiggerPlease
      @MiggerPlease 22 дня назад +1

      @@Doufui came in my pants lol

    • @daymoncleveland0622
      @daymoncleveland0622 22 дня назад

      @@MiggerPleaseDamn, you got the whole squad laughin’ 😐

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican 22 дня назад +31

    That Collect Pond you mentioned is why Canal Street is called such! Collect Pond was the main water supply system for the first two centuries of European settlement in Manhattan, but it became polluted because in the 18th century, everyone was doing their business there, as well as run-off from all the tanneries and a slaughterhouse that were built by the pond. Pierre Charles L'Enfant, who is of course famous for planning Washington, DC, proposed cleaning the pond and making it a centerpiece of a recreational park, but this plan was rejected and instead they drained and filled in the pond by digging a canal to the north to encourage the water to drain into the river and with soil partially obtained from leveling the hills of Bayard's Mount and Kalck Hoek. Thus as you mentioned, leading to Canal Street, Five Points, and Chinatown. Today in the area there is a Collect Pond Park though to honor the history, which reopened in May 2014 with a pool evocative of the former Collect Pond.
    Besides the Boston Post Road, there's also the Albany Post Road! In 1669, the then British New York provincial government designated a postal route between NYC and Albany, and it was little more than a narrow path in many places as it followed Wiccoppe and Wappinger tribal trails. Originally stagecoaches headed north started from Cortlandt Street, but this was later moved up to Broadway and 21st Street. In 1703, the legislative body provided for the postal road to be a public and common general highway along the same route, starting in Kingsbridge in The Bronx and ending at a ferry landing in what's now Rensselaer. As you mentioned here, Broadway goes beyond Manhattan, up to Sleepy Hollow, where the name is dropped and becomes Old Albany Post Road and US 9 for the rest of the way. Colonial roads typically had helpful mile markers to help travelers pinpoint where they were. As taverns developed along the road, the mile markers would help locate them. Mile markers were established along the Albany Post Road in 1753, and continued into Manhattan along the Kingsbridge Road. So that mile marker you were talking about for the Boston Post Road at 212th St, was really for the Albany Post Road

  • @amproehl
    @amproehl 21 день назад +6

    Great video. I do have 1 comment about lower Broadway. When I was doing research for a map I made of the Five Points, I found several mentions that, in the early colonial days, the main road North was The Bowery. It was the natural path even back into the days of Native American settlements. The reason for this is there was some natural obstruction that made it hard to travel further along what is today Broadway. Early Manhattan was also quite marshy which also affected early routes North. Canal Street was built, in part, to drain The Collect Pond and the marshy areas around it.

    • @solconcordia4315
      @solconcordia4315 17 дней назад

      There are several geological faults right under Manhattan Island. Note the crooked shape of Manhattan Island bending towards the East forming Kips Bay. There's probably a fault running in parallel with Broadway under the waterline in Kips Bay.
      I used to live on Morningside Heights, close to the precipice overlooking Harlem across Morningside Park. The precipice was probably a geological fault which might have uplifted when the huge weight of the glacier up the Hudson River in the Hudson Valley lifted due to melting.
      The faults tend to run parallel to Broadway because Broadway itself might have been developed in its bent fashion due to its having been an easier way going north avoiding the uplifted natural obstruction in its way.
      Major earthquakes activating these faults right under Manhattan Island can be devastating. Of course, Manhattan schist (consisting of quartz, feldspar, and mica) forming Manhattan's bedrock is very strong so the buildings anchored firmly in the bedrock should be fairly safe. Central Park has bedrock outcroppings which show embedded mica. Teardrop Park in Battery Park City has a gigantic wall/mound/gateway built out of the excavated bedrock.

    • @solconcordia4315
      @solconcordia4315 17 дней назад

      One can also see Manhattan schist exposed at the precipice in Morningside Park. The fault runs alongside Morningside Drive. West 125th Street also has a fault.
      A potential alternate explanation for the formation of the faults may be a tremendous amount of glacial ice weighing on and depressing the area which is now Long Island Sound.

  • @originstory-earth
    @originstory-earth 22 дня назад +5

    I've never been a fan of city tourism, but this channel is making me appreciate it to a whole new level. Excited for you to teach me about my own city!

  • @CentaurusRelax314
    @CentaurusRelax314 21 день назад +13

    I lived in Manhattan for 21 years, until 2012. Really wish I had this kind of fascinating information. As much as I love the city and cherish my time there, I know I would have appreciated it all just a bit more with this kind of historical foundation. Thank you.

  • @LarryMickelson
    @LarryMickelson 22 дня назад +1

    You have awakened within me an interest and love for understanding how cities are laid out. I never really cared until stumbling upon your channel. Now I gobble up every video you post! Thanks for the dedication and high quality videos!

  • @ignaciofernandezdepaz1859
    @ignaciofernandezdepaz1859 22 дня назад

    Love it Dan! Full of details and amazing explanations🙌🏼

  • @Jesse-cx4si
    @Jesse-cx4si 20 дней назад

    This channel is right up my alley! Gracias!! 🙏🏼

  • @ljtinney
    @ljtinney 22 дня назад

    What a treat to wake up and see you have a new video posted!

  • @lougaru2445
    @lougaru2445 6 дней назад

    Bravo! Your hard work deepens my love and connection with New York City. I hope it is rewarding for you as well.

  • @eleonb
    @eleonb День назад

    I just discovered this channel and I immediately loved it and subscribed. Congratulations and thanks!

  • @JJOSamsung
    @JJOSamsung 23 дня назад

    You produce such high quality videos - this channel is going to grow so fast and I can’t wait to be along for the ride!

  • @ShaheenGhiassy
    @ShaheenGhiassy 22 дня назад +7

    Really well done! I liked that it included original research and not just regurgitating other RUclips information

    • @qman66
      @qman66 9 дней назад

      Love city tourism

  • @diphorus9933
    @diphorus9933 22 дня назад

    Great video, loved how the information was presented! Cant wait to see more!

  • @EnjoyTheSilenc3
    @EnjoyTheSilenc3 21 день назад

    First time watching your videos! This was a great watch, very well done, you deserve waaay more recognition!

  • @ethanparker5187
    @ethanparker5187 22 дня назад +5

    This has very quickly become my favorite youtube channel

  • @mraunglinaung
    @mraunglinaung 22 дня назад

    This is so detailed work. Bravo !

  • @patricioc6883
    @patricioc6883 22 дня назад

    Great video! Glad this came up on my feed.

  • @michaelscottland4239
    @michaelscottland4239 15 дней назад

    I cannot express verbally how much I appreciate this video. You really have no idea how much I appreciate this video.

  • @jamesmcalester3794
    @jamesmcalester3794 21 день назад +1

    I love your channel!!! Keep up the great work

  • @jamiebray8532
    @jamiebray8532 22 дня назад

    Man I love topics like this. I would love to see some topics like this on Savannah GA. This was a fantastic video, & I learned so much from it. You're doing great work, keep'em coming please sir.

  • @FlyFishingProf
    @FlyFishingProf 22 дня назад

    Excellent work Daniel.

  • @seanfk
    @seanfk 22 дня назад

    Yes! Ive not watched yet but so excited. Loved your videos recently and i also love NYC history so this is going to be fun!

  • @amoghgaruda
    @amoghgaruda 13 дней назад

    Incredible video. This channel deserves way more subs, I fully expected to see a figure in the millions after watching this high quality content! One day soon. Great research and work

  • @zebesttfd
    @zebesttfd 22 дня назад +7

    This is a long shot, but your video on Tokyo gave me some hope. Istanbul is a very interesting city with it's roads and bridges, especially around the Golden Horn.

  • @meganerd64
    @meganerd64 23 дня назад +5

    This is another amazing video. I have really been enjoying this series. This is bona fide research being done

  • @JohnHoranzy
    @JohnHoranzy 7 дней назад

    Wonderful presentation. Thank you.

  • @MyBelch
    @MyBelch 22 дня назад

    Fantastic. Bravo. Well done. Interesting, informative and visually comprehensive. I grew up across the GW Bridge in NJ, but spent much of my youth in Manhattan. Great info. Headed straight over to Tokyo's Map, where I lived for 15 years later in life.

  • @buff25
    @buff25 20 дней назад

    Amazing vid. As a New Yorker myself, I love learning about the city this way... These vids are great.

  • @MemeSupreme69
    @MemeSupreme69 21 день назад +24

    Oh my god, THAT'S why it's called Wall Street.

    • @purnasaimadala
      @purnasaimadala 15 дней назад +2

      fun fact, you can still see the old wooden posts in the ground there, especially in front of the stock exchange

  • @ericmohler5609
    @ericmohler5609 20 дней назад

    Incredible work. Thank you!! 🙏

  • @Tacojohns123
    @Tacojohns123 23 дня назад

    Love these videos, keep up the great work

  • @daleunroe6074
    @daleunroe6074 18 дней назад +1

    spontaneously I went to NYC to ride in the 5 boroughs ride - I had no knowledge of the city but after biking throughout it for days my mind was stirred with curiosity - thanks for helping give some context and background to some of what I experienced

  • @tinapears
    @tinapears 23 дня назад

    Love it! Can't wait till the next one

  • @raagagrawal
    @raagagrawal 23 дня назад +15

    Your work is so quality! Always impressed with your videos!

  • @MerelyanIdea
    @MerelyanIdea 21 день назад

    The visuals are stellar!

  • @jonjaaay
    @jonjaaay 21 день назад +3

    So many intriguing facts in the comments section. Worth it.

  • @nateferguson4612
    @nateferguson4612 22 дня назад

    Thank YOU so much for this great video. So much to learn about the roads we walk.

  • @hectorchapelier5677
    @hectorchapelier5677 22 дня назад

    Thanks for this video it's always a pleasure to listen to your explanations ! Merci

  • @BlueSaphire70
    @BlueSaphire70 17 дней назад

    Your maps and animations are excellent!

  • @ericcriteser4001
    @ericcriteser4001 21 день назад

    Great presentation. Thanks for sharing.

  • @CrazyPufferfish
    @CrazyPufferfish 22 дня назад

    love your videos. super informative and also entertaining.

  • @jakehr3
    @jakehr3 22 дня назад +2

    Just casually dropping the fact that Wall Street came from the street that was along the outer wall of the original fortifications of New Amsterdam. It both makes so much sense and also something I never even thought about.

    • @tomo9126
      @tomo9126 19 дней назад +1

      The dutch were also the boring street-namers in history.

  • @MonchitoPutito
    @MonchitoPutito 16 дней назад

    great content!!! thanks for your work

  • @tomo9126
    @tomo9126 19 дней назад +7

    8:33 Yes!
    That fence is my favorite spot in the city. I'm so glad you mentioned the fence posts. It incredible that they clearly exist out in public after almost 250 years,
    When I'm in that area I look for tourists and point it out to them.

  • @ReallyNoAlex
    @ReallyNoAlex 22 дня назад

    Here before a million views. These vids are super engaging, you're doing a great job man

  • @meverlo
    @meverlo 22 дня назад

    Exceptionally presented and so well produced in a way that current documentaries so many utube attempts obviously lack.

  • @stevensalazar2713
    @stevensalazar2713 22 дня назад

    Loved it !!! Needed this

  • @ZacCrosby
    @ZacCrosby 22 дня назад

    Such a fantastic look. I love the on the street stuff you do.

  • @OmarAlohaDude
    @OmarAlohaDude 16 дней назад

    Very nicely done.

  • @century21edge
    @century21edge 22 дня назад

    I love your videos! Some of my favorites on RUclips!

  • @PatrickNelsonMusic
    @PatrickNelsonMusic 19 дней назад

    Bravo. Keep ‘em coming. 👍🏼

  • @kieron26
    @kieron26 22 дня назад

    Another NYC video and I’m soooooo here for it. Officially obsessed. 🎉

  • @joycemichelin250
    @joycemichelin250 17 дней назад

    LOVED this. Subscribed. THX

  • @hiyahandsome
    @hiyahandsome 21 день назад

    I learn so much from your videos, thank you!

  • @lanster77schannel
    @lanster77schannel 23 дня назад

    wonderful as always

  • @EdTheFed77
    @EdTheFed77 20 дней назад

    This was really interesting. Nice job.

  • @VoidVerification
    @VoidVerification 19 дней назад

    Recently stumbled upon your channel and I am impressed at the great amount of research you do. Makes these videos very information-dense and interesting!
    A real standout among all these other lazy channels with crappy scripts and stock footage montages.

  • @davidjaslow6458
    @davidjaslow6458 16 дней назад

    Excellent Video on the History of Broadway.

  • @kingsledge
    @kingsledge 14 дней назад

    Just found your channel and subbed. Your videos are top notch! Keep up the good work. I'm so surprised your sub count isn't over a million. It will be soon. Cheers

  • @jphelios8761
    @jphelios8761 11 дней назад

    Love your videos! You should make ones on London and LA!

  • @CarlosCandidoMusic
    @CarlosCandidoMusic 10 дней назад

    Just found your channel and insta-subbed. Great video. Fantastic job!

  • @lowenization
    @lowenization 19 дней назад

    I love this city so much, always great to learn more about it

  • @charlie10010
    @charlie10010 16 дней назад

    Awesome video bro.

  • @davidjaslow6458
    @davidjaslow6458 16 дней назад

    Excellent video on the history of Broadway.

  • @Fiqure242
    @Fiqure242 20 дней назад

    Great work instant subscribe. Love your down to earth attitude. No ring that bell BS.

  • @milancorleone01
    @milancorleone01 22 дня назад +2

    Just got back from a trip to NYC and I was geeking out over the measuring post found in Central park, and also the fact that broadway technically continues till Sleepy Hollow up north! Wish i have known about the broken fences in city hall park, would have been a nice addition to the “me geeking out and my wife being bored” events of the trip XDD

  • @DanielGarcia1980
    @DanielGarcia1980 22 дня назад +1

    Great work! Very resourceful! I'd love to see you do a video on Colfax Ave. here in Denver CO. 🙂

  • @alexandermarquardt597
    @alexandermarquardt597 20 дней назад

    You are doing great work, keep it up.

  • @JaspreetSingh-wm3rz
    @JaspreetSingh-wm3rz 17 дней назад

    Interesting. Wow. You definitely nailed it dude!! Thanks for the video. -YYZ-

  • @Tulpen23
    @Tulpen23 22 дня назад

    Love this kind of video - new subscriber!

  • @94Jusu
    @94Jusu 22 дня назад +1

    Your videos are super! 👌 So nicely edited and well scripted. And the facts you tell and dig for us are something that can’t be found on most RUclips videos (or almost any videos!) in today’s world. As a European I cant wait for you to research some of our age old cities but I understand they are a big task for anyone 😅 Great work! 👏

  • @jyk000
    @jyk000 23 дня назад +3

    Picked up Broadway: A history of NYC in 13 miles at the Strand along with City on a Grid after your last NYC video!

  • @jinbe892
    @jinbe892 7 дней назад

    Woah i was visiting NYC about 3 weeks ago, and had this exact question. You read my mind

  • @alexarobinson2850
    @alexarobinson2850 21 день назад

    I am OBSESSED with these videos. I wish you did less well known cities too. Like Hartford, Springfield, MA, etc. I am so curious about these cities and what happened to them that went so wrong.

  • @wildepete1
    @wildepete1 18 дней назад

    Excellent video. I sense there is still more here you could do a whole documentary about this one road!

  • @rhiannablumberg4803
    @rhiannablumberg4803 20 часов назад

    A+++ Jordan As always!!!❤❤❤

  • @CoryPopp
    @CoryPopp 23 дня назад

    You’re killin it!

  • @FrizzelFry
    @FrizzelFry 20 дней назад

    I really enjoyed this video - thak you

  • @pelhambissell2926
    @pelhambissell2926 17 дней назад

    Great video ! Thanks :)

  • @BradleyJH
    @BradleyJH 17 дней назад

    New sub here. Wow. I just binged all your vids. Including Antarctica vlog. Can’t wait for more. This vid was my fav

  • @Ethan54136
    @Ethan54136 22 дня назад +1

    The first ever hydro-electric system was set up in Appleton, WI. For a brief period in history, a year or two at most, more buildings and homes were lit up by electricity in Appleton than any other place in the world. I love imagining this relatively small city being a beacon of the future during this time, even brighter than great New York City.

  • @Sur-Ron
    @Sur-Ron 7 дней назад

    History is so fascinating

  • @pmtcommenter393
    @pmtcommenter393 22 дня назад

    I love your channel. You should make another video about the city of Boston

  • @nycwayfare
    @nycwayfare 21 день назад

    wow! Thanks to you, I learned a lot of things I didn't know.

  • @Scxoop123
    @Scxoop123 22 дня назад

    Love the content Daniel. Do a video on Florida's Old Dixie Highway

  • @marfand7379
    @marfand7379 21 день назад

    I'm from near London and visited NY for the first time two weeks ago. I couldn't work out why this road cut across a perfect grid system. Now I know. Thanks for the video. Loved New York by the way.

    • @bestboy1986
      @bestboy1986 15 дней назад

      You couldn’t work out how perfect grid systems aren’t actually perfect without this vid? Wow.

  • @muerto8281
    @muerto8281 13 дней назад +1

    Your videos remind me a lot of Johnny Harris i was surprised to see how few subscribers you had! youtube just recommended me and i'm a fan now.

  • @gorillafan1111
    @gorillafan1111 22 дня назад

    great video gang

  • @nywiigshachristian8922
    @nywiigshachristian8922 22 дня назад +5

    please do explanation of roads in Pittsburgh, PA. I’ve been living here since last October and I do delivery for 8+ every single day, but I’m still confused by roads in Pittsburgh from time to time. 😂

    • @JohnWilson-wg4gk
      @JohnWilson-wg4gk 21 день назад

      Visitor : "Can you please give us directions to Presby Hospital ? "
      Pittsburgher : "Yinz can't get there from here. "