Download - The Irregular Guide to New York City
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THE IRREGULAR GUIDE TO
NEW YORK CITY
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
MEET THE DEAD
Introduction
1. A Picnic in a Potters Field
2. The Secret Cemetery
3. A Kidnapped Corpse
4. A Headless Ghost
5. The Land of the Dead
6. Other Cemeteries to Visit: Tiniest, African, Quaker
POOP
Introduction
7. Outhouses and Privies
8. Toxic Muck
9. The Newtown Creek Digester Eggs
10. The Houseboats of the Gowanus Canal
11. Bathing in Public
THE CITY BENEATH YOUR FEET
Introduction
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12. Chinatowns Bloody Tunnels
13. Manhattans Underground Cow Tunnels of Doom
14. The Abandoned Subway Station
15. The Mystery of Track 61
16. The Rockefeller Escape Route
17. The (Almost) Invisible Stream
18. Other Underground Places to Visit: Atlantic Avenue
LOST AND FOUND
Introduction
19. The Town Brooklyn Swallowed
20. The Campbell Apartment
21. Scenic Stops on the Underground Railroad
22. The Secret of the Brooklyn Bridge
23. When Horses Ruled the Citys Streets
24. Hidden Houses
25. Other Hidden Places to Visit: Grove Court, Patchin and Milligan Places, and
Pomander Walk
HAUNTED HOUSES
Introduction
26. The Voice in the Clock
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27. The Little Old Lady Who Refuses to Leave
28. The Girl in the Well
29. A Haunting in Hells Kitchen
30. Other Haunted Places of Note: The Ear Inn and the Belasco Theater
GETTING MESSY
Introduction
31. The Earth Room
32. Rat Watching
33. Urban Foraging
34. Guerilla Gardening
RANDOM WEIRDNESS
Introduction
35. The Secret Mail Delivery System
36. Manhattanhenge
37. Manhattans Bermuda Triangle
38. The Tugboat Graveyard
39. A Trip Through Time
40. Wormholes: Cobble Hill and Clinton Hill, South Street Seaport, Sylvan Place,
Historic Richmond Town
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SPELLBOUND
Introduction
41. Manhattans Secret Magic Library
42. The Speakeasy Bookstore
43. The Treasure Beneath Bryant Park
44. The Library with a Criminal Record
45. The Best Place to Reboot Your Brain
BIZARRE BAZAAR
Introduction
46. A Cabinet of Curiosities
47. Witchcraft Supplies
48. Chinatown
SCAVENGER HUNT
Introduction
49. Rooftop Houses
50. Sewer Alligators
51. The Green Man
52. Gargoyles, Grotesques, and Caryatids
53. Ghosts of the Past
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MEET THE DEAD
Millions of people call New York City home. While youre here, youll spend so
much time trying not to bump into the living that you may forget to pay your
respects to our dead.
In places like Brooklyn and Queens, graveyards are often easy to find.
However, if you visit Manhattan, you might not encounter a single tombstone.
Where are all the cemeteries? you will wonder. People have been dying here for
more than four hundred years. Where did they all go?
Dont fret. The dead are still here. Its just that most of their graves lie
unmarked. Should you want to pay them a visit, youll first have to know where to
look.
A PICNIC IN A POTTERS FIELD
Washington Square Park is the perfect place for a picnic, so grab yourself a hot
dog and hunt for an empty spot on the grass. Before you chow down, have a
moment of silence for your unseen hosts. Because even if the park looks empty,
youre not alone. Over twenty thousand people are buried beneath you.
Many of Manhattans public parks share the same dark history. Before their
trees were planted and playgrounds built, they were potters fields, where the
bodies of the poor or unknown were laid to rest.
Washington Square Park houses many such unfortunate souls (along with
at least one criminal who was hanged nearby*). Most of the parks deceased
residents were victims of yellow fever, one of the many nasty diseases that
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ravaged New York in the nineteenth century. Today, the bodies beneath the grass
have been largely forgotteneven though their bones dont always stay buried. A
few years back, when the park was renovated, the remains of several people were
unearthed, along with the tombstone of a man named James Jackson, who died in
1799. (Jackson himself was never discovered.)
* Hangmans Elm stands on the northwest corner of Washington Square Park.
Its believed to be the oldest tree in Manhattanaround 250 to 330 years old.
Though there are no records of hangings taking place here, legends dating back
to the nineteenth century claim that the tree was the site of executions.
THE SECRET CEMETERY
Before it was discovered by a band of girl geniuses, the Marble Cemetery was one
of Manhattans best-kept secrets. Even now, few people realize that there is a
hidden graveyard right in the heart of the East Village. Its gate is usually locked,
so be sure to check the schedule on the cemeterys website (marblecemetery.org).
If youre lucky and the Marble Cemetery is open while youre in town, you
definitely wont want to miss it.
The first thing youll need to do is find the cemeterys gate on Second
Avenue between Second and Third Streets. (Dont get confused and go to the other
less interesting Marble Cemetery around the corner.) Past the graveyards
entrance is a long, narrow alley. At the end of this passage, youll find a large,
grass-covered lawn surrounded by an old stone wall (parts of which have
collapsed). But you wont find any tombstones. Why? Because the two thousand
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people who were buried here in the nineteenth century werent given individual
graves.
Beneath your feet are 156 rooms. Each once belonged to a wealthy New
York family whose members intended to spend eternity side by side in a cramped
marble chamber. (The families names are inscribed on plaques set in the
graveyards walls.) In order to enter the underground vaults, youd have to lift one
of the stone slabs that are set in the grass. (Its not recommendedand probably
illegalbut if you do, be sure to say hello to Augustus Quackenbush.)
A KIDNAPPED CORPSE
On the corner of Tenth Street and Second Avenue, youll find St. Marks in the
Bowery, the second oldest church in Manhattan. Beneath the St. Marks
churchyards are stone burial vaults. One of these belongs to Peter Stuyvesant,
whose spirit is rumored to haunt the vicinity. (If you see a ghost with a wooden
leg, thats probably Pete.) Inside another vault lie the remains of a wealthy
businessman named Alexander Stewart, who was buried at St. Marks in 1876.
Three weeks later, his corpse was stolen and held for ransom.
Grave robbing was quite common in the nineteenth century. Back then, if
you paid a midnight visit to a New York cemetery, you were likely to spot groups
of shovel-wielding thieves tiptoeing around in the dark. These might have been
common crooks raiding coffins and pulling the rings off of skeletal fingers. Or they
could have been medical students searching for fresh corpses to dissect.
But the grave robbers who stole Alexander Stewarts body from St. Marks
in the Bowery were after a much bigger prize$20,000, to be precise. And they
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got their ransom from his grieving widow. No one knows for sure if the body that
was returned to St. Marks actually belonged to Mr. Stewart, but rumor has it that
his family took special measures to ensure his remains would not be disturbed. It
is said that if the vault is ever opened, the church bells will ring, alerting the city
that grave robbers are on the prowl once again.
A HEADLESS GHOST
The oldest church in Manhattan is St. Pauls Chapel. There are many reasons one
might choose to visit this historic place of worship. However, I recommend a tour
of its graveyard. Lots of well-known dead people are buried therebut only one of
them is missing his head.
George Frederick Cooke (17561812) was a gifted actor with an
unfortunate addiction to alcohol. He died penniless and was buried in a paupers
grave in St. Pauls churchyard. Somewhere between his deathbed and the
cemetery, Mr. Cooke became separated from his head. Some say he sold his skull
to science before he died in order to help pay his medical bills. Others claim
Cookes doctor took the head as a souvenir. (He wasnt the only physician to keep
a piece of a favorite patient. The practice wasnt uncommon in those days.)
The actor may have been in the grave, but that didnt prevent his head
from returning to the stage. Over the next century or so, Cookes skull often
appeared in productions of Hamlet. Alas, Poor Yorick! Today, the skull is in the
Scott Library at Thomas Jefferson University. Perhaps someone should tell poor
Mr. Cooke. They say his headless ghost can still be seen wandering the St. Pauls
cemetery, searching in vain for its missing noggin.
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THE LAND OF THE DEAD
As soon as you pass through the gothic gates of Green-Wood Cemetery in
Brooklyn, you will find yourself in the land of the dead. For almost two hundred
years, this is where many of New Yorks most famous (and infamous) citizens
have been buried. Take one of the paths that snake through the 478 acres of
woods and valleys and youll see bizarre marble tombs perched atop knolls,
forbidding mausoleums built into the hills, and countless ghoulish monuments to
the dead. You might even spot the entrances to Green-Woods underground
catacombs if you know where to look. The cemetery is lovely, peaceful, and
delightfully creepy. But few people seem eager to spend time with the dead. In
fact, if you visit during the week, you probably wont see another living soul.
What you will see, however, are large flocks of parrots. Smart, squawking
emerald-green monk parakeets. Decades ago, a few of the Argentinean natives
managed to escape from a container at JFK airport. Hundreds of their
descendants now call Brooklyn homeand many of them live in Green-Wood
Cemetery.
OTHER CEMETERIES TO VISIT
The tiniest graveyard in New York can be found on a triangular sliver of land on
Eleventh Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenues. The cemetery was started in
1805 by the Jewish congregation of Shearith Israel, and was originally much
larger. In 1830, Eleventh Street was built, and many of the graves were dug up
and moved. (Or were they?)
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In 1991, construction workers discovered the bones of over four hundred
people buried in Manhattans financial district. The site, which is now home to the
African Burial Ground National Monument (290 Broadway), was part of a 6.6-
acre unmarked cemetery where freed and enslaved Africans were laid to rest in
the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
Some people (including me) believe that Brooklyns Prospect Park is the
most beautiful park in the city. Go through the entrance on Fifteenth Street and
Prospect Park West, walk toward the woods, and youll come across a rather
unexpected sight. Nestled between the trees is a twelve-acre Quaker cemetery
that dates from the mid-nineteenth century. Your mom might be interested to
know that Montgomery Clift is buried there.
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POOP
I know what youre thinking. I can see poop anywhere. Whats so great about the poop
in New York? Nothingaside from the fact that we have an awful lot of it. So much,
in fact, that its played an important role in the history of this city. Before we
figured out how to deal with all the poop we produce, it poisoned our water,
befouled our rivers, and spread diseases that killed hundreds of thousands of New
Yorkers. Its the twenty-first century, and we still havent cleaned it all up. So grab
a pair of nose plugs, and lets take a look at how we got into this mess. I
promiseits going be fascinating.
OUTHOUSES AND PRIVIES
Go for a stroll through Manhattans Greenwich Village or Brooklyns Cobble Hill,
and youll find yourself surrounded by so many old houses that you may feel like
youve taken a trip back in time. Many of the buildings youll pass were
constructed in the first half of the nineteenth century. Lovely, arent they? Now
heres something to think about: most were built before indoor plumbing made its
way to New York. So where did people go to the toilet, you ask? Why, in the
backyard, of course!
Take a peek behind any old house or apartment building in New York City,
and youre likely to find a yard of some sort. Today, these little patches of ground
are used for gardens or barbecue grills. But not long ago, they would have held an
outhouse or privy. These structures came in all shapes and sizes. Some were
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quite fancy. Others were little more than a shack. But no matter how nicely an
outhouse may have been decorated, it was still just an outdoor toilet built over a
pit.
If you were rich, your family would have had its own outhouse. If you lived
in an apartment building in a poor neighborhood like the Lower East Side of
Manhattan, you probably shared the same privy with more than fifty other people.
Even the deepest pits tend to fill up rather quickly when that many people are
making deposits. The filth would often overflow into the courtyard and seep into
neighboring basements.
Keeping an outhouse or privy (somewhat) sanitary was a nasty business.
Just like today, well-off New Yorkers hired others to do their dirty work. The pits
beneath their outhouses were emptied by necessary tubmen who worked the
nightshift. While the rich slumbered, the tubmen would fill their night carts with
sewage, which they later dumped in the citys rivers. On hot summer nights, even
the wealthy couldnt escape from the stench that followed the tubmen as they
made their rounds.
Want to visit a New York outhouse? Theres an original outhouse at the
Merchants House Museum and a reconstructed privy at the Tenement Museum,
located at 97 Orchard Street.
TOXIC MUCK
You may have seen a movie or two about old New York in which women glided
through the streets in beautiful, ground-sweeping dresses and gentlemen paraded
around in perfectly polished shoes. Now Im going to introduce you to a common
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(but often overlooked) feature of New Yorks old houses that proves such scenes
were pure fantasy. Its called a bootscraper. Most nineteenth-century homes in the
city will have one. (Youll usually find them built into iron railings that lead up the
stairs to the front door.)
For most of the 1800s, bootscrapers were an absolute necessity. Why?
Because the streets were disgusting. If youd taken a walk through most parts of
town, your shoes would have ended up caked with rancid muck. Until the 1880s,
New York City didnt have a sanitation department to collect garbage or shovel
snow. So it stayed in the streets. Most neighborhoods still relied on privies that
often overflowedinto the streets. And then there were the horses that pulled all
those charming old carts and carriages. In 1900, horses left 2.5 million pounds of
manure on the streets of New York every single day.
So think about all those beautiful, ground-sweeping dresses the women
used to wear. And do remember that a proper lady would have never lifted her
skirts to get past a nasty stretch of sidewalk. (She couldnt risk a gentleman
seeing her ankles.) Now arent you glad you waited until the twenty-first century to
pay New York City a visit?
THE NEWTOWN CREEK DIGESTER EGGS
Located on the scenic banks of one of the most polluted bodies of water in the
United States is the Newtown Creek Wastewater Treatment Plant. The largest of
New Yorks fourteen wastewater plants, this is where much of the citys poop
comes to be treated. If youre interested in sewage (and what explorer isnt?) the
plant is well worth the trip out to Brooklyn. Theres a Visitors Center where you
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can learn exactly what happens to the stuff you flush down the toiletand a
Nature Walk that lets you explore the grounds. But the plants incredible sludge-
processing Digester Eggs are what make it a first-class destination. Take a tour,
and youll swear youre on the set of a science-fiction film. The Digester Eggs
earned their name because they resemble eight enormous steel eggs. On top,
glass-enclosed catwalks stretch from one egg to the next, and at night, the entire
facility is lit with blazing blue lights. In New York, we treat our sludge in style.
And the very best part? Once every month, the public is allowed to visit the
Digester Eggs. Make a reservation at [email protected].
THE HOUSEBOATS OF THE GOWANUS CANAL
In a city like Amsterdam, which is famous for its canals, living on a houseboat is
as good as it gets. However, as you may have already guessed, the canal in
Brooklyn is nothing like Amsterdams. And yet it too has its share of houseboats.
Heres an exercise that will help you imagine what life might be like for the
brave souls who choose to make a home on Brooklyns Gowanus Canal. . . . First,
get a little toy boat. Then locate the foulest, most disgusting public toilet around.
(Gas stations are always a good place to start.) Drop your boat into one of the
toilet bowls. Try to pretend that you call that boat home. Imagine the smells and
sights one would endure. Pretty horrible, right? Well, believe it or not, there are
worse places to live. Like the Gowanus Canal.
This is no exaggeration. Gowanus water is teeming with countless disease-
causing pathogens. Cholera. Typhus. Gonorrhea. And every time theres a big
rainstorm, New York Citys ancient sewer system releases raw sewage directly into
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the canal, where it mixes with highly toxic chemicals left behind by the factories,
tanneries, and gas refineries that have lined the Gowanus for the past 150 years.
Take a dip in the water, and youd probably emerge with a little less skin. The
Gowanus is also rumored to have been a mob dumping ground. Some might argue
that such stories are pure fiction, but I honestly couldnt think of a better place to
toss a body or a bag of guns.
One of my favorite spots along the canal is the boat dock. (Look for the
boat-shaped sign that reads, Brooklyns Coolest Superfund Site.) There youll
find a warning that urges boaters to avoid coming into contact with the water or
sediment in the canal. Apparently the warnings havent dissuaded the canoe club
that meets at this site every Saturday from May to October. If youre interested,
members of the public are more than welcome.
If youd rather stay dry and hunt for houseboats, try walking over the
historic Carroll Street Bridge. Theres usually a houseboat or two moored
between the Carroll St. and Union St. bridges. And believe me, theyre well worth
a peek. (Especially if you like art involving giant octopi.)
BATHING IN PUBLIC
If youre exploring the Gowanus Canal, you should pay a visit to Public Bath #7 on
the corner of Fourth Avenue and President Street. Today, few such buildings
remain, but in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, public baths like
this one could be found all over the city. In those days, few people were lucky
enough to have bathtubs in their homes. And only the wealthy had showers. If you
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were poor, a public bath may have been your only way to get clean. What better
way to get to know the neighbors than to shower with them, right?
(Interested in learning more about what it was like to be poor back then?
Just visit the Tenement Museum on the Lower East Side.)
Public Bath #7 is now known as the Brooklyn Lyceum, a multi-use space
with a gym, theater, and caf. These days, its swimming pool is empty, and its
showers were removed long ago. But look closely, and youll spot ample proof of
the buildings past. Grab a snack at the caf, take a peek under the benches, and
youll see exactly what I mean.
If youre staying in Manhattan, dont miss one of the most beautiful public
baths ever built in the city. (In fact you can even take a dip! The facility is still in
use as a recreation center.) The Asser Levy Public Baths (built 19041906) are
located on East Twenty-Third Street at Asser Levy Place.
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THE CITY BENEATH YOUR FEET
If youve ever thumbed through one of my Kiki Strike books, then you know they
take place in a Shadow City under the streets of New York. You probably assumed
I made it all up. I didnt. Beneath your feet lies a subterranean world of secret
tunnels, abandoned train stations, and forgotten rivers and streams. Only the
bravest explorers would dare set foot in the real-life Shadow Citys dark, deserted
passages. If you count yourself among them, grab a pair of boots and some rat
repellent. I hope youre not afraid of the dark.
CHINATOWNS BLOODY TUNNELS
Long before Chinese immigrants began arriving in New York, the Manhattan
neighborhood we now call Chinatown was know as Five Points. For much of the
nineteenth century, it was the most notorious slum in the United States. Giant
pigs roamed freely, eating garbage right out of the gutters. Violent gangs with
names like the Dead Rabbits and the Pug Uglies fought to the death in the streets.
The air reeked of raw sewage and rampant disease sent countless residents to an
early grave.
While most of the people who called the slum home were honest working
folks, the Five Points had a reputation as a haven for criminals. Visitors who
wanted a glimpse of the dark side of New York would often take a tour of the
neighborhood. But only the bravest would have ventured into the tunnels beneath
it.
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Most of the mysterious tunnels under Chinatown probably date to the Five
Points days. But by the late nineteenth century, Five Points had become
Chinatown, and when the Chinese gang wars erupted in the early twentieth
century, the subterranean passages were used by Tong Gangs to ambushor
escape fromtheir enemies.
Today, many of these tunnels still exist, but few people have access to
them. However, one passage is open to the publicand if youre heading to
Chinatown, you wont want to miss it. Go to 5 Doyers Street. (The street was once
known as the Bloody Angle because so many men died there during the gang
wars.) Youll find an ordinary door with a staircase behind it. At the bottom of the
stairs is the Wing Fat Shopping Mall.
This strange underground shopping center was once a dark, wood-lined
tunnel lit only by kerosene lamps. The locked doors youll pass all lead to other
tunnels. No one really knows how many there areor what purposes they serve
today.
MANHATTANS UNDERGROUND COW TUNNELS OF DOOM
Two hundred years ago, a strange parade took place in New York City almost
every single night. If you looked out your window, you would have seen hundreds
of cows trotting south to their doom. Then, in the mid-nineteenth century, New
York made it illegal to herd cattle through the citys streets. This presented a
problem because most of the livestock lived on farms north of the city, while most
of the slaughterhouses were located at the bottom of Manhattan island. The
solution? Cow tunnels. These underground passages made it possible for farmers
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to drive their cows to slaughter without blocking street traffic. Eventually, the
slaughterhouses moved out of town, and over time, the tunnels fell out of use.
Construction crews have been known to unearth strange wood-lined cow
tunnels roughly ten feet wide and eight feet high. Theres one beneath Greenwich
Street on the west side of Manhattan. And there are said to be two beneath
Twelfth Avenueone at Thirty-Fourth Street and another at Thirty-Eighth Street.
The rest have been forgottenbut theyre probably still down there, just waiting to
be explored.
THE ABANDONED SUBWAY STATION
The City Hall Subway Station was built in 1904 and closed to the public in 1945.
And for the next sixty-five years, New Yorkers broke every rule trying to get a
glimpse of one of the city's lost treasures. Why? Because City Hall may be the
most amazing subway station in Manhattan, with arched ceilings, chandeliers, and
fabulous skylights.
Until recently, one of the only ways to see the station (aside from
infrequent tours) was to sneak onto a downtown 6 subway at the last stop on the
line (Brooklyn Bridge). The 6 trains use the City Hall stop to turn back uptown, but
for decades, passengers werent allowed to go along for the ride.
Fortunately, subway conductors stopped kicking people off the trains in
2010! Just stay on the downtown 6 after the last official stop, and you can ride
through City Hall station without getting in trouble. And no one wants to get in
trouble. Right?
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THE MYSTERY OF TRACK 61
Underneath the luxurious Waldorf Astoria Hotel in midtown Manhattan lies a
mysterious train station. Few people have seen it, and even fewer know why it was
builtor who once rode in the private train car that still sits on the tracks.
Who was powerful enough to have a secret train station built beneath one
of the fanciest hotels in the world? And why did he need his own private car?
In the 1940s, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was keeping a secret
from the country. Hed contracted polio decades earlier, and the disease had left
him unable to walk on his own. He didnt want the world to know about his
infirmity, so he kept it carefully hidden. The secret train station beneath the
Waldorf Astoria was constructed so that he could enter and leave the hotel without
being seen in a wheelchair.
A 1940s-era armor-clad train car (with bulletproof windows) remains
parked thirty feet below the New York streets, ready to whisk FDR out of the city
at a moments notice. Rumor has it that the station itself still serves as an
emergency exit for presidents and other dignitaries whenever they come to town.
THE ROCKEFELLER ESCAPE ROUTE
740 Park Avenue has long been considered the most prestigious address on the
island of Manhattan. Built seventy-five years ago, it has been home to Vanderbilts,
Bouviers, Rockefellers, and royalty. To purchase an apartment in the building, you
must be more than just wealthyyou must be among the worlds super-rich.
For decades, 740 Park Avenue has also been at the center of one of
Manhattans most beloved urban myths. According to rumor, shortly after the
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building opened, John D. Rockefeller Jr. built an underground escape route
beneath it. The tunnel is said to have led from the basement to nearby
subterranean train tracks where the Rockefeller private train could carry John Jr.
away from the city.
Most people, including the Rockefeller family, claim that the story is pure
fantasy. Now, however, it seems that there may be more truth to the tale than
previously thought.
In 2006, members of the NYC Water Works were working fifteen feet
beneath the street outside 740 Park Avenue when they happened upon an old
vault. Inside, the plumbers discovered a series of hidden chambers connected to
the buildings basement. Each had an arched ceiling roughly ten feet in height and
walls composed of old bricks. No one seems to know what purpose the forgotten
chambers may have served, but some have suggested that they are part of a lost
tunnel built not by the Rockefellers, but by their neighbors, the Vanderbilts.
(Of course this underground discovery wasnt the first for the NYC Water
Works. They say theyve found everything from abandoned pools to forgotten
barber shops deep beneath Manhattan.)
THE (ALMOST) INVISIBLE STREAM
The next time youre in Greenwich Village, stop at the intersection of Minetta
Street and Minetta Lane*. Are you there? Great. Now take a look around. Believe it
or not, youre standing on top of a roaring stream.
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Over a century ago, before Manhattan was flattened and covered in asphalt,
the island was a pretty soggy place. Much of downtown was marshland, and
dozens of creeks and small rivers trickled all over town.
As the city grew, ponds and swamps were drained, and New Yorks streams
were buried beneath its streets. But these subterranean waterways never dried
up. Theyre still there, flowing beneath our feet. (A good sign that youre near one
is the presence of a weeping willow tree.) Theres only one problem: very few
people today know where they are. And if you start building on top of a forgotten
spring, youre going to end up with nothing more than a damp pile of bricks.
Fortunately, theres a map that can tell you where to find all of Manhattans
invisible waterways. Over five feet long and remarkably detailed, the Viele map
shows all the rivers, streams, and ponds that no one has seen in over one hundred
years.
But theres still one place where you can see Minetta Creek. Inside the
lobby of an apartment building at 2 Fifth Avenue, theres a clear plastic pipe that
rises out of the floor. If you visit after a rainstorm, you may notice water bubbling
up into the tube. Minetta Creek flows under the building, and sometimes when the
weather is wet, it decides to make an appearance.
* Another interesting note about Minetta Street and Minetta Lane: at the end of
the nineteenth century, this might have been the most dangerous intersection in
New York. The author Stephen Crane called the Minettas two of the most
enthusiastically murderous thoroughfares in the city. The Minettas had a
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dreadful reputation and were said to be home to killers and bandits with names
like Bloodthirsty and Apple Mag.
OTHER UNDERGROUND PLACES TO VISIT
Beneath Atlantic Avenue, one of the busiest streets in Brooklyn, lies an enormous,
abandoned railroad tunnel that was forgotten for over sixty years. It was
rediscovered in 1981 by a nineteen-year-old kid named Bob Diamond. Before
1981, few New Yorkers would have believed there was a tunnel to be found. Bob
proved there was. Few believed Diamond when he insisted that there might be a
perfectly preserved steam engine in an unexplored section of the tunnel. Now
there may be evidence that could prove him right. Unfortunately, you wont be
able to join the search. Until recently, Diamond led tour groups into the Atlantic
Avenue Tunnel. Then the city shut him down. But be sure to check online before
you visit. Its always possible that the authorities could have a change of heart.
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LOST AND FOUND
In a city the size of New York, almost anything can be lost or forgotten. Wooden
legs have been left behind in taxi cabs. Pet boa constrictors slither out of their
homes and disappear into the sewers (only to emerge later on in somebodys
toilet). If you keep your eyes open while youre visiting, you may find more than
lost limbs and slippery snakes. A hidden town was once discovered in the middle
of Brooklyn. And if an entire village can vanish in New York City, who knows what
else you might find if you bother to look.
THE TOWN BROOKLYN SWALLOWED
Most people think that the greatest archaeological discoveries take place in
faraway deserts or rainforests. But even in the biggest, most populous cities on
earth, there are still hidden treasures waiting to be found. Case in point:
Weeksville, Brooklyn.
In 1838, a free African American named James Weeks started a small but
thriving community in the part of Brooklyn that is now known as Bedford-
Stuyvesant. Over the following decades, Weeksville served as a refuge for African
Americans fleeing persecution in other parts of the country. But as time passed,
Weeksvilles residents died or moved away. Though it was located in the heart of
Brooklyn, by the middle of the twentieth century, the little town had been
swallowed by overgrown weeds and was utterly forgotten.
Then, in 1968, a pilot flying over Brooklyn noticed several tiny wooden
houses in the middle of a large vacant lot surrounded by housing projects. An
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entire town had been discovered in New York City. Since then, the four
farmhouses that were spotted from the air have been renovated and are now open
to the public. Not only are they an important part of American historythey
should serve as a reminder to never take the familiar for granted. (Who knows
what might be found in the vacant lots youll come across while youre in New
York!)
THE CAMPBELL APARTMENT
Grand Central Station in Manhattan is one of the most famous train stations in
the world, and like many of New York's historic buildings, it has its own share of
secrets. For instance, as millions of people hurry through the station every year,
most are unaware of the existence of a mysterious room called the Campbell
Apartment.
Tucked away in a hidden corner of the building, the magnificent space
features an unusual mix of medieval and Renaissance decor. Theres an enormous
fireplace, painted ceilings, and wood-paneled walls. This was once the strange and
wonderful office of John W. Campbell.
A wealthy businessman, John Campbell built his Grand Central office in the
early 1920s. He made sure his unusual workspace came with all the amenitiesa
kitchen, butler, pipe organ, and a Persian rug worth 3.5 million dollars in todays
money. Very little is known about the eccentric Mr. Campbell, and some have
suggested that he may have actually lived in the train stationa theory many
experts reject.
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When Campbell died in 1957, his apartment became the Grand Central
Jail. In the late 1990s, however, the space was restored to its former glory and
used to house a bar. Finding it may require a little searching, but its well worth
the trouble.
SCENIC STOPS ON THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD
When the building that houses the Bialystoker Synagogue at 7-11 Willett Street in
Manhattan was constructed in 1826, it was known as the Willett Street Church.
The churchs founders included a rather unusual featurea hidden door that
could be accessed from the balcony. Behind the door, a ladder led to the attic,
which was lit by two little windows. Many experts now believe that the church was
a stop on the Underground Railroad, and that the secret space was used to hide
runaway slaves as they made their way to freedom in Canada.
Another stop on the Underground Railroad was Duffield Street in downtown
Brooklyn. Hidden in the basements of six old houses were mysterious rooms that
might have concealed runaway slaves in the nineteenth century. Long-forgotten
tunnels linking the buildings have also been discovered. Unfortunately, only 227
Duffield Street has survived the wrecking ball, and organizers are trying to turn it
into a museum.
THE SECRETS OF THE BROOKLYN BRIDGE
In 2006, workers inspecting the foundation of the Brooklyn Bridge made an
astounding discovery. Near the entrance ramp to the bridge on the Manhattan
side, they found a dark vault that hadnt been opened in over forty years. The
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room was crammed, floor to ceiling, with food, blankets, drugs, and other medical
supplies. All of the items appeared to date from the late 1950s and early 1960s.
At that time, the men who ran New York worried that the city might come under
nuclear attack. When their emergency stash was discovered decades later, its
said that the crackers theyd stored were still perfectly crispy.
However, if Id just survived a nuclear attack, I think Id probably check out
the other vaults beneath the Brooklyn Bridge. Many of these vast structures were
once used to store wine and champagne. (You can see their entrances from the
corner of Gold and Frankfort Streets.) And at least one of the vaults was briefly
used as an apartment until the authorities discovered its resident and gave him
the boot.
WHEN HORSES RULED THE CITYS STREETS
Imagine New York without any cars, buses, or trucks. A hundred years ago, horses
were the citys main form of transportation. And if you think that sounds
charming, think again. The sound of horseshoes on cobblestones was said to be
deafening. The traffic was even worse than it is today. And every time you needed
to cross an avenue, you practically had to wade through horse dung. (The smell
had to be nauseating.)
Those days are long gone, of course, but you can still see evidence of them
all over town. If youre especially sharp-eyed, you may discover a hitching post.
(Theres one on West Washington Street near Sixth Avenue.) But its the horses
old homes that are the easiest to spot.
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Wander around one of Brooklyns older neighborhoods (Brooklyn Heights,
Cobble Hill, Boerum Hill), and youre bound to pass dozens of old carriage houses
and stables. But if youre staying in Manhattan, youll want to check out the
charming rows of stables known as MacDougal Alley and the Washington Mews.
In the 1830s and 1840s, if you were very rich, you might have lived in one
of the mansions on Washington Square Park. And if you were a rich horse, you
might have lived in MacDougal Alley or the Washington Mews. Cute little two-story
stables line both lanes. The horses would have lived below and servants would
have slept in the quarters above. (Thats how much respect servants got in those
days.) Once cars replaced horses among the fashionable set, artists moved into
the stables. A few may still be there today.
HIDDEN HOUSES
Theres a reason theyre called hidden houses. You cant see them from the street.
These remarkable dwellings are tucked behind other buildings, and most of the
time the only clue that youve found one is a door marked with an address that
ends in an A or 1/2 or the presence of a horse walk.
There are said to be around seventy-five hidden houses in the area
surrounding Greenwich Village. Most are former carriage houses and workshops.
There are even a couple that were once large privies! What they are now is
anyones guess. The best way to see many of them is by using the satellite view on
Google Maps. However, you might be able to get a peek of the hidden houses at
58A Charles Street and 7 Leroy Street. And if all that walking makes you hungry,
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theres a hidden house in the courtyard of a restaurant located at 28 Cornelia
Street.
When youre done, make your way to the corner of Charles and Greenwich
Streets, where youll find a strange little house that served as the inspiration for
Kiki Strikes hidden house! Probably a barn when it was first built, its at least two
hundred years old, and until 1967 it could be found on the corner of York Avenue
and 71st Street (almost four miles from its present location).
OTHER HIDDEN PLACES TO VISIT
In 1848, a grocer on Grove Street decided to build housing for the people who
worked for him. Find the passageway between 10 and 12 Grove Street. Peer
through the gate and youll see what look like six fairy-tale cottages. Now known
as Grove Court, the cul-de-sac used to be called Mixed Ale Alley.
Milligan Place and Patchin Place (both near Tenth Street and Sixth
Avenue) were built in the 1840s, when the Jefferson Market neighborhood was still
noisy and foul-smelling. For the next seventy years, the buildings had no electricity
or indoor plumbing. So its hard to believe that these two little hidden places later
became home to some of the most famous writers in American history (E. E.
Cummings, Theodore Dreiser, Eugene ONeillheck, even Marlon Brando lived in
Patchin Place for a while!). Patchin Place also boasts the only gas street lamp left
in the city. Once all of New York was lit by flickering gas flames.
On the Upper West Side of Manhattan, you may stumble across Pomander
Walk, a block-long lane between Broadway and West End Avenue. The twenty-
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seven miniature houses here look like they belong in a quaint English village. Its
been called the most charming street in New Yorka title it might well deserve.
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HAUNTED HOUSES
Im about to introduce you to four New York ghosts youll be able to visit. But
there are hundredsif not thousandsof phantoms here that you wont get a
chance to meet. New York is an old city, and many of the buildings youll pass
while youre here are probably home to a spirit or two. My house in Brooklyn, for
instance, is haunted by the ghost of a woman named Anne. Her father bought the
building shortly after it was constructed in 1852. Anne was born a few years later,
and shes never really left. Shes a very playful ghost. She once threw a clove of
garlic at my butt. Sometimes after I leave a room Ive tidied up, Ill return a few
minutes later to find that Annes tossed a few items back on the floor. And late at
night, I often hear her walking up the stairs. A previous resident claims to have
seen Annes ghost. She hasnt appeared to me, but theres no doubt shes here.
And Im glad Annes decided to keep me company.
THE VOICE IN THE CLOCK
A few years ago, I was in Washington Heights (just north of Harlem), doing a little
research at the old Morris-Jumel Mansion. (The mansion and the surrounding
grounds are one of my favorite places in New York City. If you ever have a chance,
take a bag lunch and enjoy it in the garden. Its lovely, quiet, and just a little bit
creepy.) While I was there, I heard an interesting ghost story.
I was speaking with a woman who has worked at the mansion for decades, and I
asked her if the building had any ghosts. (According to the Internet, the place is
packed with spirits.)
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She pointed to a grandfather clock on the first floor and said, About fifty
men have heard a woman speak to them from inside that clock.
One visitor told her that he had first come to the mansion on a school trip
when he was fifteen years old. His teacher had asked each student to pen a two-
hundred-word essay about an object in the mansion. This particular young man
chose the clock. As he was scribbling notes, the little door on the front of the clock
opened, and he heard a womans voice call, Come closer. Then the clock began
to vibrate. The kids teacher assumed that he was the one shaking the clock and
yelled at him from across the room. Thats when the boy heard the woman say, I
want you.
It took the young man twenty years to work up the courage to visit the mansion
again. He came with his wife, who refused to set foot inside the building. So he
ventured in alone and stood in front of the clock for over an hour, but he never
heard the womans voice again.
THE LITTLE OLD LADY WHO REFUSES TO LEAVE
Visit the Merchants House Museum, located in downtown Manhattan (29 E.
Fourth Street), and youll find yourself walking through a bizarre time capsule. In
1835, a wealthy businessman named Seabury Tredwell purchased the house for
his wife and seven children. His eighth child, Gertrude, was born in 1840. As her
parents and siblings died or moved away, Gertrude refused to leave her childhood
home. She expired in an upstairs bedroom in 1933.
Its an unremarkable storyexcept for one fact. Gertrude wasnt fond of
change. Over the years, she never altered anything about the house or its
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furnishings. When the city purchased the building after Gertrudes death,
historians found that the house looked exactly as it had in the mid-nineteenth
century. There were no modern conveniences of any sortand an outhouse in
the backyard was still in use.
Now, Gertrudes house is a museum, with the Tredwells belongings
(including their undergarments) on display. But for many visitors, Gertrude herself
is the main attraction. They insist that shes still there, though perhaps a little
harder to see. Shes most often spotted descending the stairs or standing by the
fireplace in the kitchen. The piano has been known to play on its own, and guests
have detected the scent of flowers, even when there are none around.
THE GIRL IN THE WELL
Two hundred years ago, the neighborhood we now call SoHo was nothing but
countryside. And on the spot that now marks the intersection of Greene and
Spring Streets, there was a brick well. Three days before Christmas in 1799, the
body of a twenty-two-year-old woman named Elma Sands was found floating in the
water. Most people believed the young womans fianc had murdered her. His trial
was the talk of New York, and though there appeared to be ample proof that hed
killed poor Elma, he was eventually found not guilty.
Two centuries have passed, and it seems Elma still hasnt found justiceor
peace. The ghost of a young woman in sopping wet clothes has often been spotted
in or around the restaurant that now sits at 129 Spring Street. Neighbors have
reported seeing Elma through the windows. Garbage men have encountered her
spirit in the alley behind the building.
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For years, no one could identify the dripping ghost of 129 Spring Street.
Then, in the 1990s, when the restaurant was being renovated, they found
something strange under the basement. It was the well in which Elma Sands had
drowned. In fact, its still there, if youd like a look.
A HAUNTING IN HELLS KITCHEN
Hells Kitchen is a neighborhood just west of New Yorks theater district. A while
back, it was a pretty wild place, but these days, the area doesnt really live up to
its name. However, there may be one little patch of evil left in Hells Kitchenin a
hidden courtyard known as Clinton Court.
Look for a wrought-iron gate at 422 Forty-Sixth Street between Ninth and
Tenth Avenues. Past the entrance, an alley leads to an old carriage
house/residence that was built around 1800 on the site of a potters field. One of
the bodies buried below is said to belong to a sailor who was hanged for taking
part in a mutiny. Known to Clinton Court residents as Old Moor, the sailors
ghost is so terrifying that a young woman died trying to escape from it. According
to legend, she tripped over her dress and fell down the stairs in front of the
building.
Later, a little girl named Margaret died in the very same manner, and now
all three spirits haunt Clinton Court together.
OTHER HAUNTED PLACES OF NOTE
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The Ear Inn (326 Spring Street), a two-hundred-year-old house thats been a bar
for most of its existence, is said to be haunted by the mischievous ghost of a
sailor named Mickey. (He likes to pinch ladies, so beware.)
Many actors and performers claim that the spirit of the man who built the
Belasco Theater (111 West 44th Street) returns every night to enjoy the shows.
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GETTING MESSY
New York has never been known for its cleanliness. Its stinky, rat infested, and
plagued by puddles that arent filled with rain water. As far as Im concerned
those are three of the things that make this city so darn wonderful. And anyone
who wants to experience the best of New York simply cant be afraid to get a little
bit messy.
THE EARTH ROOM
The Earth Room (141 Wooster Street in SoHo) is a 140-ton interior earth
sculpture created in 1977 by artist Walter De Maria. Whats an interior earth
sculpture, you ask? In this case its an enormous room filled with dirt.
Here are four reasons you might consider giving it a look:
1. Its really weird and wonderful in person.
2. Its worth over a million dollars. (If you can figure out a way to get it to your
house.)
3. Its free to visit.
4. Its worm free (for now, hint-hint).
RAT WATCHING
You can spot rats anywhere in New York, but if you want to see a whole army of
rodents, just head over to Manhattans beautiful City Hall Park. While your friends
or family marvel at the majesty of New Yorks two-hundred-year-old City Hall, have
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a seat on a park bench and train your eyes on the ground. Youll see dozens of
foul little beasties frolicking about in broad daylight, just a few yards from the
mayors office. Watch as they scamper through the grass, weave between
unsuspecting visitors feet, and swipe food from innocent children.
According to rat experts, the abandoned subway station and tunnels
beneath City Hall Park offer the rats an ideal shelter. Though theyre usually
nocturnal, these fearless rodents emerge in the afternoon as people flock to the
park to enjoy their lunch. They steal whatever scraps they can, and then slink back
to their underground lairs.
URBAN FORAGING
Some people use the term urban foraging as a synonym for dumpster diving.
If youre into that sort of thing, youll have plenty of fun here in New York. (In the
summertime, you can literally dumpster dive when the city turns dumpsters into
swimming pools during the Summer Streets Festival.)
However, Im more interested in the brand of urban foraging thats taught
by one of New Yorks most beloved eccentrics, Wildman Steve Brill (the only
person in the city whos ever been arrested for eating a dandelion). Sign up for a
tour, and the Wildman will guide you through one of New Yorks parks, showing
you which plants, mushrooms, and fruits are edible, medicinal, dangerous, or
poisonous. Its just the sort of class that every explorer should take. And it might
prove particularly useful if you ever lose your way in Central Park.
GUERILLA GARDENING
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While youre visiting New York, theres a simple way to make a lasting markand
leave the city a little more beautiful. Just keep your eyes open for a rather unusual
type of vending machine. The contents will be roughly the same size and shape as
a large gumball, but I wouldn't recommend chewing them. Instead of candy, these
machines dispense seed bombs. Pop in a quarter, and you'll receive a ball made
of clay, compost, and seeds. Toss it into any crack, crevice, or abandoned lot, and
soon tiny plants will begin to sprout. Each seed bomb is guaranteed to make the
world a little bit greener.
Interested? Go to greenaid.co for a map of seed-bomb vending-machine
locationsnot just in New York, but around the world.
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RANDOM WEIRDNESS
Ive witnessed some pretty strange things since I moved to New York. And thats
one of the reasons Ive stayed. The unexpected is waiting for you around every
corner here. If you pay attention, youll see something new every time you open
your curtains or step outside. Why do you think so many writers live here? New
York is a constant source of inspiration. So take good notes while youre visiting.
With all the random weirdness this city has to offer, you might just stumble across
the subject of your own first (or next) book!
THE SECRET MAIL DELIVERY SYSTEM
Many old New York office buildings possess a curious feature. Fixed to a wall on
each floor is a small, oddly shaped box labeled MAIL. They dont look like
ordinary letter boxes. Each is connected to a metal or plastic tube that stretches
from ceiling to floor. None of them are still in use, but its clear that mail was once
placed inside. Then it was supposed to GO somewherebut where? And how?
Believe it or not, the boxes belong to a super-cool and mostly forgotten
means of mail delivery: the pneumatic tube system.
More than twenty-seven miles of pneumatic tubes lie underneath
Manhattan. The system, which is well over one hundred years old, was built at a
time when New Yorks streets were even filthier and more congested than they are
today. Aboveground mail delivery was difficult and time-consuming, so the
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pneumatic tube system was built to deliver mail underground to post offices
throughout New York City.
Shot by air pressure, cylindrical canisters filled with mail would whiz
through the tubes at up to thirty-five miles an hour, arriving at their destinations
within minutes. At one point, roughly one-third of all the mail sent or received in
the city was sent via the underground system. In fact, it was so successful that
many office buildings adopted pneumatic tubes for their own internal mail.
Heres the best part. The system is STILL DOWN THERE. What would it
take to put it back into service? And what purposes (good or evil) might it serve? It
seems to me that a secret means of delivering information or objects throughout
New York could come in handy. Ill leave it to you to figure out how.
MANHATTANHENGE
When the Druids built Stonehenge (possibly with the help of extraterrestrials),
they arranged the rocks in such a way that the sun would put on a spectacular
show every solstice. But you dont need to travel to Britain if you want to be
dazzled. Twice a year, New Yorkers (and our guests) experience what we like to
call Manhattanhenge. On one date before the summer solstice and one date after,
the setting sun lines up with the east-west streets in Manhattan. The effect is
absolutely magical. Look west from any intersection on the island, and it will seem
as if the heavens have opened up at the end of the street.
Manhattanhenge takes place in May and July, but the exact dates change
every year. Be sure to do a little detective work before you plan your trip. If youre
here during the show, you should try to experience it.
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NEW YORKS BERMUDA TRIANGLE
If you drive to New York, be sure not to park your car near the Empire State
Building. Its not the threat of pennies flung from the building by mischievous
touristsor the base jumpers who attempt to parachute from its upper stories
that should convince you to keep your distance.
According to news reports, the five-block radius around the Empire State Building
is a Bermuda Triangle for cars. Engines stall. Batteries die. Car doors refuse to
open. Over the past few years, hundreds of people have had their cars towed, only
to discover that they function perfectly the minute theyre out of the skyscrapers
shadow.
Are radio transmissions from the building to blame? Is some sinister force
at work in New Yorks greatest landmark? Or is it all just an urban myth? Its time
to find out for yourself!
THE TUGBOAT GRAVEYARD
Many New York visitors who want a cheap, scenic boat ride will hop on the Staten
Island Ferry at the tip of Manhattan, take a round trip, and return to Manhattan
without setting foot on Staten Island. They have no idea how much theyre
missing.
If you head to Rossville on the southwestern coast of Staten Island (take
the X19 bus to Arthur Kill Road), youll find an extraordinary graveyard. For over
one hundred years, the Witte Marine Equipment Company has been hard at work
dismantling old boats and ships that once sailed through New York Harbor. Its a
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slow process, however, and dozens of boats (mostly tugboats) have been waiting
in the shallow waters for decades. Today, many are little more than ghosts of their
former selves, which makes the site incredibly eerie. Its as if the boats were lured
to the shore by some malevolent force, then damaged and left for dead. If youre
really adventurous, you might consider renting a kayak and touring the site from
the water. But be sure to take your camera along. Once you leave, you may find it
hard to believe what youve seen.
A TRIP THROUGH TIME
I love the Met and the Museum of the City of New York. But in my opinion, the
most fascinating museum around is the New York Transit Museum in Brooklyn (at
the corner of Boerum Place and Schermerhorn Street). Lets start with the fact
that the entire museum is located underground in a decommissioned subway
station. (If youve seen a movie set in the subway, theres a good chance this was
the station where it was shot.) Cool, right? It gets so much better.
The upper level of the museum has some great exhibits if youre interested
in the workings of the subway system. The bottom level of the museum will blow
your mind. The stations tracks are occupied by over eighteen perfectly preserved
old subway cars. There are cars (complete with ads) from every decade since the
subway first opened in 1904 (and a few that are even older than that). You can
step into an elegant car from the 1920s or a futuristic-looking car from the 1960s.
Have a seat and pretend youre on a trip through time.
The museum is quite inexpensive by New York standards. But even if they
doubled the entrance fee, it would be worth every penny. If youre looking for a
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weird and wonderful experience, you cant get any better than the Transit
Museum.
WORMHOLES
If youve read any science fiction, you know that a wormhole is a shortcut through
time. Find one, and you can travel back to a different era in the blink of an eye.
There are quite a few wormholes in New York Cityspots that can make you
believe that youve stepped right into another century.
Cobble Hill and Clinton Hill are two neighborhoods in Brooklyn that
appear much as they did in the nineteenth century. Youll find carriage houses,
mews, and stately mansions that look like nothing else youll see in New York.
(Want fabulous? Check out the Charles Millard Pratt House at 241 Clinton Avenue
or the Caroline Ladd Pratt House just down the street at 229.) Some of the
mansions are even open for tours one day every spring.
South Street Seaport in downtown Manhattan is a major tourist attraction.
Skip the main drag (Fulton Street) and walk down the side streets. Youll get a
sense of what the New York waterfront was like in the days when sailors, gangs,
and pirates ruled the docks.
If you visit the haunted Morris-Jumel Mansion in Washington Heights, take
a peek at nearby Sylvan Terrace. Its a short cobblestone lane lined with perfectly
preserved houses from the nineteenth century.
If you want to see what the city looked like in its early days, Historic Richmond
Town is the place to go. The entire Staten Island town is a museum, with over
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thirty historic buildings, some of which date to the seventeenth century, and
almost all are open to the public.
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SPELLBOUND
Theres nothing I love more than libraries and bookstores. Without them, I
probably would have landed in jail a long time ago. (When I get bored, I start
causing trouble. Just ask my mom.) These days, every time I step into a library or
bookstore, my brain begins to tingle. I cant help but imagine that theres some
strange, magical book tucked away on the shelves, just waiting for me to discover
it.
I couldnt even begin to list all of the great libraries and bookstores in New
York. Many (like Books of Wonder at 18 W. 18th Street) are known to book lovers
all over the world. So Im going to introduce you to a few special spots you might
not have heard of. In fact, a couple are so secret that only the most persistent
explorers will even be able to find them.
MANHATTANS SECRET MAGIC LIBRARY
Hidden on the island of Manhattan is a library with over 11,000 books on the
subject of magic. Its called the Conjuring Arts Research Center, and if youre
clever enough to locate it, youre welcome to visit. (And if you cant, you can
always check out the website at conjuringarts.org.)
Enter the rare books room, and youll find dusty tomes that date from as far back
as 1480and mind reading pamphlets from the seventeenth century. Many of
the items collected are one of a kind. Theres even a book titled Valuable Secrets
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that Id personally love to read. What kind of secrets, I wonder? And how valuable
are they? If you find out, please let me know!
THE SPEAKEASY BOOKSTORE
Somewhere on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, on the second floor of a
building in the East 80s, is a secret (and technically illegal) bookstore known as
Brazenhead Books. Its run by a man named Michael Seidenberg, who has turned
his own apartment into a wonderland of used books. The stores address is a
secret, but those who find it are welcomed warmly. Once inside, theres a chance
you could end up rubbing elbows with some of New Yorks best-known writers, but
youll definitely leave with something you cant wait to read.
THE TREASURE BENEATH BRYANT PARK
Bryant Park is a lovely public space adjacent to the main branch of the New York
Public Library at Forty-second Street and Fifth Avenue. Its a great place to have
lunch or watch one of the free movies they show every summer. But whenever I
visit, I find it hard to concentrate on food or films. Im too busy thinking about the
treasure thats buried below.
Hidden beneath the park are the librarys archivestwo vast floors with
120,000 square feet of space and well over one hundred miles of stacks. Every
single shelf holds priceless treasures: Babylonian tablets. The trunks Herman
Melville took with him to sea. Theodore Dreisers death mask. George
Washingtons recipe for beer. The archives contents are worth untold millions (if
not billions) of dollars. Id pay almost anything for a little more than a look.
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Kirsten Miller promo for KIKI STRIKE 1, 2, & 3
THE LIBRARY WITH A CRIMINAL RECORD
At the intersection of Tenth Street and Sixth Avenue, on the site of a former
market and fire tower stands Jefferson Market Library. Built in 1877, the library
may look like a fairy-tale castle, but it was originally a courthouse where some of
the most famous murder trials in the citys history took place. (In the basement,
you can still see where the prisoners were held before they faced the jury!) Next
door, on a plot of land thats now a garden, stood a prison.
By the end of the 1920s, if you were a female criminal, this is where you
were sent. The courthouse was used only for womens trials. The actress Mae
West visited in 1927 when she was charged with (and convicted of) corrupting
the morals of youth.
THE BEST PLACE TO REBOOT YOUR BRAIN
The Housing Works Bookstore Caf (126 Crosby Street) sells used books and
coffee (the perfect combination). All proceeds go to help homeless people with
HIV/AIDS. (And if you browse through the donated books, youll probably find one
that once belonged to me.) The fact is, there are few bookstores like this left in
New York. The store itself is gorgeous, with sliding ladders, spiral staircases, and
mahogany balconies. The selection of titles is weird and wonderful. And the coffee
is pretty great too.
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Kirsten Miller promo for KIKI STRIKE 1, 2, & 3
BIZARRE BAZAAR
You cant visit New York and not do a little shopping! But why come all the way
here only to buy things you can get back at home? Whatever strange, rare or
exotic item your hearts always desired, theres a store in this city that sells it.
(Seriouslytheres a shop here that sells nothing but mayonnaise.)
A CABINET OF CURIOSITIES
Theres one store in this city I never leave without a shopping bag in my hand.
Evolution (120 Spring Street in SoHo) is a one-stop shop for skulls, beetles,
taxidermy, and fossils. Have you been looking for a gorilla skull to decorate your
mantle? Theyve got it. Would a framed dung beetle delight your dad? Theres a
wide assortment to choose from. And if youre in the mood for a snack, I
recommend grabbing a box of the tasty barbecue-flavored crickets.
WITCHCRAFT SUPPLIES
On Ninth Street between First and Second Avenues, youll find Enchantments, the
citys largest witchcraft supply store. Ive never dabbled in witchcraft, but as a
direct descendant of one of the Salem witches, I take the subject quite seriously.
You should too if you intend to visit this store. Youll find a wide variety of herbs,
talismans, candles, and charms. If you have time, you can even sign up for
classes. Feel free to ask questions, but it might be wise to avoid any mention of
Harry Potter.
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Kirsten Miller promo for KIKI STRIKE 1, 2, & 3
CHINATOWN
Chinatown, in downtown Manhattan, is the most wonderful place on earth.
Tourists often find their way to Canal Street, which is lined with little shops that
are famous for selling counterfeit Rolexes and Louis Vuitton handbags. If I were
you, Id save your cash and buy a few new experiences instead. Visit a fruit vendor
and sample the spiky, notoriously foul-smelling durian fruit (which I happen to
find quite delicious). Stop by an herbalist shop and cure whatever may ail you.
Pick up a few bags of dried squid for your friends back at home. (A good place to
go for snacks of all sorts is Aji Ichiban at 23 East Broadway.) Splurge on a few
yards of silk embroidered with dragons. Just wander around Chinatown for a
while. I promise, youll find a million things more interesting than a knock-off
handbag.
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Kirsten Miller promo for KIKI STRIKE 1, 2, & 3
SCAVENGER HUNT
Odds are youre traveling with someone who has a few things shed like to see too.
Even if you end up being dragged to some terrible tourist trap, theres no reason
you cant have a little fun on the way. New York is filled with fascinating sites that
few visitors ever bother to see. Keep your eyes open and see if you can spot the
following. . . .
ROOFTOP HOUSES
If you live in New York, you know theres nothing more magical than a rooftop
house. Theyre incredibly hard to spot. Some can only be seen from certain
angles. Others can only be spotted if youre flying over the city in a helicopter. So
when you happen to see one, its a very special occasion.
Okay, okay, here are a couple of hints: Be sure to look up (to the east)
when youre passing the corner of Thirteenth Street and Third Avenue. Theres a
sweet wooden cottage with a pretty garden perched on top of one of the buildings.
And check out the apartment building on the northeast corner of First Avenue and
First Street. It looks rather ordinaryuntil you realize theres a Nantucket-style
beach house built on its roof.
SEWER ALLIGATORS
Most New Yorkers will laugh at anyone who asks if there have ever been alligators
in our sewers. That shows you how much most New Yorkers know. Seventy-seven
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Kirsten Miller promo for KIKI STRIKE 1, 2, & 3
years ago, a teenager discovered an eight-foot alligator at the bottom of a
manhole in Harlem. The event was even written up in the New York Times.
According to a former superintendent of New York sewers (a man once
known as the King of the Sewers), that eight-foot gator wasnt alone. When the
gentleman went down into the sewers to investigate, he claimed to have found . . .
Alligators serenely paddling around in his sewers. [Their] length, on the
average, was about two feet. Some may have been longer. . . . [A]
colony appeared to have settled contentedly under the very streets of
the busiest city in the world.
Was he having a laugh at the citys expense? Only the King of the Sewers knows.
(And I don't think hes taking questions anymore.)
THE GREEN MAN
Looking for a way to amuse yourself while riding a city bus or strolling down the
street? Try searching the buildings above your head for the Green Man. (Not to be
confused with Little Green Men.) It doesnt matter whether youre uptown or
downtownonce youve spotted a Green Man, youll begin to see him everywhere.
All over the city, he looks down from windows, watches over churches, and peeks
out from garden walls.
Thought to be of Celtic origin, the mysterious Green Man is perhaps one of
the most ancient deities in the Western world. Some Green Man carvings in
Europe are more than a thousand years old. Usually depicted as a mans face
sprouting leaves or other vegetation (though there are a few Green Women too),
the Green Man represents the power and presence of the natural world. He comes
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Kirsten Miller promo for KIKI STRIKE 1, 2, & 3
in thousands of shapes and sizes, and his personality can range from jolly to
severe.
Even on short walks through Manhattan, Ive counted dozens of Green Men.
Sometimes its a little creepy to spot him looking down at me. Hes hidden all over
the city, but unless you have a sharp eye, you may never know hes there.
GARGOYLES, GROTESQUES, AND CARYATIDS
Green men arent the only ones watching, of course. Wherever you go in New York,
devils and demons and fearsome creatures leer down at passersby. Giant stone
women (caryatids) hold up balconies and entrances. The city is filled with magical
creatures that are easy to findbut most people never even look.
GHOSTS OF THE PAST
All around New York, there are not-so-hidden clues to the citys past. You may
spot fading, century-old advertisements for stables, snake oil, or ladies corsets.
The ghostly outlines of torn-down houses can sometimes be seen on the sides of
neighboring buildings. Cobblestones and trolley rails peek through the asphalt in
older parts of town. And if you see something that looks ancient or out of place,
just do a little research. Even a rusty metal bootscraper may have a great tale to
tell!