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Pushcarts that line both sides of Rivington Street. Here most anything can be bought.
M3Y6195 
Pell Street. Chinatown. Here are food shops to delight the Chinese taste.
M3Y6188 
One of the busiest streets in the city, Nassau Street. Opened in 1696.
M3Y6178 
In the heart of the millinery retail district - 39th Street and 6th Avenue.
M3Y6218 
Fifth Avenue. North from 50th Street. Here are the world's most lavish shops and the world's smartest traffic.
M3Y6248 
The Tombs Prison at Centre Street.
M3Y6190 
Here lived Thomas Paine, who wrote "The Age of Reason" which had much to do for the cause of the American Revolution. Built about 150 years ago. At Bleecker Street. Greenwich Village. Torn down Dec. 1
M3Y6200 
Noontime. 6th Avenue from 42nd Street. Center of employment bureau catering to the cheap labor market.
M3Y6229 
Fraunces Tavern. Corner Pearl and Broad Streets. The most historic site in the city. Erected 1719. Here Washington bade farewell to his officers 1783.
M3Y6167 
Bowling Green. Lower Broadway. Oldest park in the city. Here begins Broadway, longest street in the world.
M3Y6166 
Procession. 5th Avenue - 41st Street. Shoppers to the department stores and shops in the vicinity.
M3Y6223 
Sub-Treasury at Nassau and Wall Street. Here stood Federal Hall.
M3Y6176 
Former home of John James Audobon, the great naturalist. Audobon lived here about 1850. Stood on Riverside Drive 155th Street. Demolished in 1933.
M3Y6281 
Edgar Street. Shortest Street - Trinity Place. First appeared on the map in 1797. Prior to that time was part of Hudson River.
M3Y6172 
Relics of old New York. At Battery Place. Homes of Greeks and Syrians.
M3Y6165 
Homeward bound after the day's toil. 42nd Street and 6th Avenue looking south.
M3Y6230 
42nd Street from 6th Avenue "L."  It reaches across Manhattan from river to river, from Hell's Kitchen to new Tudor City.
M3Y6231 
Wall Street. West from William Street. A wall for defense was erected 1625 by the Dutch, hence its name.
M3Y6174 
"Columbus Monument." 59th Street, Columbus Circle.
M3Y6258 
42nd Street and 5th Avenue. More people pass here daily at this corner than perhaps anywhere else in the world.
M3Y6224 
George Miller, Jr.
Rivington Street. Here are the sweatshops which furnish much of the clothing to the uptown shops. 
Location Museum of the City of New York/New York, NY/USA
Unique Identifier M3Y6194 
Type Image 
Purpose Public 
Size 6300px × 5114px 
Photo Credit The Museum of the City of New York / Art Resource, NY 
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Tags
AUTOMOBILES
gelatin silver transparency
lantern slide
Lower East Side (New York, N.Y.)
Manhattan (New York, N.Y.)
PEDESTRIANS
Rivington Street (New York, N.Y.)
Signs and signboards
Sweatshops