New York
New York — officially named City of New York and
often called New York City to distinguish it from the state of New York,
in which it is located — is the most populous city in the United
States, and the second most populous in North America after Mexico City.
New York City is known affectionately as the "Big Apple" and
recognized as one of several "world cities". Giving some credence
to the city's self-designation as "capital of the world", the
United Nations headquarters is located in New York.
New York City is among the most densely populated places in the United
States. Its population is more than eight million (2000 U.S. Census),
and its land area is 831 km2 (320 square miles); hence the density is
ca. 10,000/km².
New York City is part of the New York metropolitan area with a population
of around 21 million.
City of New York, New York
City flag City seal
City nickname: "The Big Apple"
Location in the state of New York
Counties Bronx County
Kings County
New York
Queens County
Richmond County
Area
- Total
- Water
1,214.4 km² (468.9 mi²)
428.8 km² (165.6 mi²) 35.31%
Population
- City (2003)
- Metropolitan
- Density
8,085,742
18,603,110
6,658.2/km² [including water]
10,292/km² [land only]
Time zone Eastern: UTC-5
Latitude
Longitude
40°47' N
73°58' W
History of New York City
Main Article: History of New York City
The area that now constitutes New York City was inhabited by such Native
American tribes as the Manahattoes and Canarsies long before the arrival
of European settlers, as attested to by discoveries of arrowheads and
other artifacts in areas of the city that are not occupied by buildings
today, such as Inwood Hill Park and Riverside Park. European settlement
began with the founding of the Dutch settlement of New Amsterdam (Nieuw
Amsterdam) on the southern tip of Manhattan in 1626. In 1664, English
ships captured the city without struggle, and it was renamed New York,
after the Duke of York. At the end of the Second Anglo-Dutch War in 1667,
in the Treaty of Breda the Dutch formally signed New York over to the
English and received the colony of Suriname in return.
At the start of the American Revolutionary War, the city was the scene
of important early fighting at the Battle of Brooklyn, suffered a great
fire in which much of it burned, and fell into British control for the
remainder of the war, not to be regained by the Americans until 1783.
"Evacuation Day" was long celebrated in New York.
During the 19th century, the city population boomed by an influx of a
vast number of immigrants. In 1811, the city street grid was expanded
to encompass all of Manhattan with a visionary development proposal called
the Commissioner's Plan. By 1835, New York City overtook Philadelphia
as the largest city in the United States.
During the Civil War, the city's strong commercial ties to the South,
as well as its growing immigrant population, led to a split in sympathy
between the Union and Confederacy, culminating in the Draft Riots of 1863,
the worst civil unrest in American history.
After the war, the rate of immigration from Europe grew steeply, and
New York became the first stop for millions seeking a new and better life
in the United States.
In 1898, New York City took the political form in which it exists to
this day. Prior to 1898, New York City consisted of Manhattan and the
Bronx, which was annexed by the city from southern Westchester County
in two separate actions: the western portion in 1874, and the remaining
portion in 1895. In 1898, a new municipal government, originally called
Greater New York, was created by new legislation. It was divided into
five boroughs. The Boroughs of Manhattan and The Bronx covered the original
city and the rest of New York County. The Borough of Brooklyn consisted
of the City of Brooklyn as well as several municipalities in eastern Kings
County. The Borough of Queens was established in western Queens County,
and covered several small cities and towns, including Long Island City,
Astoria and Flushing. The Borough of Staten Island contained all of Richmond
County. All municipal governments contained within the boroughs were abolished.
A year later, the area of Queens County not contained within the Borough
of Queens became Nassau County. In 1914, the state legislature created
Bronx County, shrinking New York County so it contained only Manhattan.
The five boroughs are now considered to be generally coterminous with
their respective counties.
In the first half of the 20th century, the city became a world center
for industry, commerce, and communication. Interborough Rapid Transit
(the first subway company) began operating in 1904. The New York skyline
soared in the 1930s with the building of some of the world's tallest skyscrapers.
New York at night from satelliteIn the decades after World War II, however,
the city slid into gradual decline with the loss of population to the
suburbs and the erosion of its industrial base. Like many US cities, New
York suffered severe race riots in the 1960s, and by the 1970s, the city
had gained a reputation for being a crime-ridden relic of history. In
1975, the city hit bottom and had to declare bankruptcy.
The 1980s saw a rebirth of Wall Street, and the city reclaimed its role
at the center of the world-wide financial industry. In the 1990s, crime
rates dropped drastically and the outflow of population turned around,
as the city once again became the destination not only of immigrants from
around the world, but of many U.S. citizens seeking to live a cosmopolitan
lifestyle that only New York City can offer. In the late 1990s, the dot
com boom fueled another frenzy of financial speculation that sent the
economy soaring.
The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 also struck at Washington,
D.C., but New York was the city most affected, because of the attack on
the World Trade Center and the thick, acrid smoke that continued to pour
out of its ruins for a few months following the Twin Towers' firey collapse.
However, cleanup of Ground Zero was completed ahead of schedule, and the
city has since rebounded and pushed forward new plans for the destroyed
areas of the World Trade Center. The Freedom Tower, to be built on the
site, is intended to be the world's highest skyscraper after its scheduled
completion in 2008.
New York City government
Main Article: Government of New York City
New York City is governed pursuant to the New York City Charter, as amended.
The charter is enacted and amended by the New York State legislature,
and occasionally through referendum. Though subservient to the State of
New York, the city enjoys a high degree of legislative and executive autonomy.
Like most governmental entities in the United States, the city government
is divided into executive, legislative and judicial branches.
The Five Boroughs
The City of New York is composed of five boroughs, each a county of New
York State:
Manhattan – New York County, population 1,546,856
The Bronx – Bronx County, population 1,354,068
Brooklyn – Kings County, population 2,488,194
Queens – Queens County, population 2,237,815
Staten Island – Richmond County, population 457,383
(Population figures from July 1, 2002 Census estimates — see http://www.census.gov/
for more information).
The boroughs are coterminous with their respective counties, but the
counties do not have actual county governments. Each borough elects a
Borough President, but under the current city charter, the Borough President's
powers are limited—he or she has a small discretionary budget to
spend on projects within the borough. (The last significant power of the
borough presidents—to appoint a member of the Board of Education
—was abolished, with the board, on June 30, 2002.) Currently, borough
presidents serve as ex officio members of various boards and committees.
Residents of the city often refer to the city itself as "the Five
Boroughs," reserving the phrase "the City" to refer to
Manhattan. Those less familiar with the city often (incorrectly) think
Manhattan is synonymous with New York City. The boroughs other than Manhattan
are also referred to as "the Outer Boroughs."
Executive
The executive branch of New York City is headed by the Mayor, who is elected
by direct popular vote. The mayor has executive authority over five divisions
of city government as well as several independent government offices.
The divisions, each comprising several city agencies and headed by an
appointed Deputy Mayor, are:
Operations
Economic Development and Rebuilding
Policy
Administration
Legal Affairs
The mayor has broad emergency powers which can be exercised in cases of
emergency weather conditions, natural disaster, riots, civil unrest, invasion
or other emergency. Most recently, Mayor Michael Bloomberg declared a
state of emergency during the 2003 North America blackout.
Legislative
Legislative power in New York City is vested in a unicameral City Council,
which contains 51 members, each representing a district of approximately
157,000 people. Council members are elected every four years, and the
leader of the majority party is called the Speaker. The current Speaker
of the City Council is Gifford Miller, a Democrat. Like most legislative
bodies, the City Council is divided into committees which have oversight
of various functions of the city government. Bills passed by a simple
majority are sent to the mayor, who may sign it into law. If the mayor
vetoes the bill, the Council has 30 days to override the veto by a two-thirds
majority vote.
Judicial
Unlike the rest of New York State, New York City does not have typical
county courts. Instead, there is a single Civil Court, with a presence
in each borough and city-wide jurisdiction, and a Criminal Court for each
New York City county which handles lesser criminal offenses and domestic
violence cases, a responsibility shared with the Family Court. Unlike
other counties in New York, judges for Family Courts in New York City
are appointed for ten year terms by the mayor, instead of being elected.
Criminal cases are handled on indictment by the Supreme Court in each
New York City county. The Supreme Court also handles larger civil cases,
and grand juries sit in each county. Thus, unlike other states and the
Federal Government, in New York, the Supreme Court is not the highest
court. Appeals are handled by the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court.
The highest court in the state is the Court of Appeals.
Crime
See also: Timeline of New York City crimes
New York has had a reputation as a crime-ridden city, partly due to the
hundreds of TV and movie crime dramas set in it. However, in recent years
it has been ranked in the top ten safest large cities in the United States
by City Crime Rankings (9th edition, 2003). In addition, New York has
been growing safer for most of the last decade. The fight against crime
has been aided by COMPSTAT, implemented in 1994 by the New York Police
Department to map crimes, analyze problems and devise solutions. In the
past decade, violent crime has dropped by two-thirds (see New York Crime
Statistics (http://www.nyc.gov/html/nypd/html/pct/cspdf.html)) and FBI
data indicate that the murder rate in 2000 was the lowest since 1967.
New York City's crime rates vary by neighborhood and borough. Staten
Island is the safest borough in the city, Queens and Manhattan are in
the middle range, while Brooklyn and The Bronx have the highest crime
rates.
There have been some notorious crime sprees. For example, on July 29,
1976 the "Son of Sam", pulling a gun from a paper bag, killed
one person and seriously wounded another, in the first of a series of
attacks that terrorized the city for the next year.
As soon as the Sicilian Mafia moved to New York in the 1920s, they became
infamous with their hits on businesses that did not pay money to them.
They had also set up smuggling rings and fixed boxing matches. The Mafia
flourished due to a distrust of the police in the Italian-American communities
in New York. The five largest crime families in New York were the Bonnanos,
the Colombos, the Gambinos, the Genovese, and the Luchese. The assimilation
of the Italian-American population is choking the Mafia in New York, although
they still operate.
Geography and climate
New York City comprises Manhattan Island, Staten Island, the western part
of Long Island, part of the North American mainland (the Bronx), and several
small islands in New York Harbor.
New York has a humid continental climate. The city is adjacent to water,
so temperature changes are not as drastic as those inland. Every winter,
it snows in New York due to its latitude. Because of its key position,
New York had been king in the shipping passenger trade between Europe
and the Americas for quite some time, until the airplane came into wider
use across the Atlantic.
New York winters are typically cold, and sometimes feature snowstorms
that can paralyze the city with over a foot of snow. Springs are mild,
averaging in the 50s (10-15 degrees celsius) in late March to lower 80s
(25-30 degrees celsius) in early June. Summers in New York are hot and
humid. It is common for temperatures to exceed 90 degrees fahrenheit (32
degrees celsius) but often stay below 100 degrees fahrenheit (40 degrees
celsius). Autumns are comfortable in New York. However, weather is notably
unpredictable in New York, even if not to the degree experienced in some
other parts of the world. Mild, almost snowless winters and chilly summers
surprise New Yorkers from time to time, there have been huge snowstorms
as late as the second week in April, and there can occasionally be large
temperature swings from one day to the next, so travellers are advised
to check forecasts and bring several layers of clothing in late fall and
early spring months (e.g., November, March, April).
Staten Island is hilly and spacious, and is the least populated borough
in New York City. By contrast, space is sparse and valuable on Manhattan;
there is nowhere to build but up, and that is why there are so many tall
buildings in that borough.
New York city, viewed from the TERRA satellite. The prominent green
rectangle is Central Park, on Manhattan island. Ground Zero can just be
distinguished, as the largest of the pale spots near the southern tip
of Manhattan.The city will be threatened if the current patterns of global
warming continue to raise the sea level.
According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area
of 1,214.4 km² (468.9 mi²). 785.6 km² (303.3 mi²)
of it is land and 428.8 km² (165.6 mi²) of it is water. The
total area is 35.31% water.
Demographics
The median income for a household in the city is $38,293, and the median
income for a family is $41,887. Males have a median income of $37,435
versus $32,949 for females. The per capita income for the city is $22,402.
21.2% of the population and 18.5% of families are below the poverty line.
Out of the total people living in poverty, 30.0% are under the age of
18 and 17.8% are 65 or older.
As of 2000, there are 8,008,278 people, 3,021,588 households, and 1,852,233
families residing in the city. The population density is 10,194.2/km²
(26,402.9/mi²). There are 3,200,912 housing units at an average density
of 4,074.6/km² (10,553.2/mi²). The racial makeup of the city
is 44.66% White, 26.59% African American, 0.52% Native American, 9.83%
Asian, 0.07% Pacific Islander, 13.42% from other races, and 4.92% from
two or more races. 26.98% of the population are Hispanic or Latino of
any race.
There are 3,021,588 households out of which 29.7% have children under
the age of 18 living with them, 37.2% are married couples living together,
19.1% have a female householder with no husband present, and 38.7% are
non-families. 31.9% of all households are made up of individuals and 9.9%
have someone living alone who is 65 years of age or older. The average
household size is 2.59 and the average family size is 3.32.
In the city the population is spread out with 24.2% under the age of
18, 10.0% from 18 to 24, 32.9% from 25 to 44, 21.2% from 45 to 64, and
11.7% who are 65 years of age or older. The median age is 34 years. For
every 100 females there are 90.0 males. For every 100 females age 18 and
over, there are 85.9 males.
Economy
New York is a center of many industries in the United States. It was the
early center of the American film industry, until it moved to Los Angeles,
and still has some movie and television production. New York is also a
financial center for the country, containing the New York Stock Exchange,
NASDAQ, American Stock Exchange, New York Mercantile Exchange, and New
York Board of Trade. The New York financial industry is based in Wall
Street, lower Manhattan. New York is also the center of the clothing industry
in the United States. Many fashions come out of New York from different
designers. New York also has a lot of book publishers, which often have
New York as the very first city in publishing. New York also has a large
tourism industry. See below for more details about the tourism industry.
Times Square
Major corporations based in New York City
Amerada Hess
American Broadcasting Company (owned by Disney)
American Express
American International Group
Avon
Bank of New York
Bankers Trust
Bear Stearns
Bloomberg
Bristol Myers Squibb
CBS (owned by Viacom)
Citigroup
Colgate-Palmolive
Conde Nast
Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu
Dow Jones & Company
Ernst & Young
Estée Lauder
FAO Schwarz
Goldman Sachs
HBO (owned by Time Warner)
Interpublic Group
JetBlue
J.P. Morgan Chase
King World Productions
KPMG
MAD Magazine
Marvel Comics
McGraw-Hill Companies
Mercantile Exchange
Merrill Lynch
Metlife
MTV (owned by Viacom)
Mutual of New York
Nasdaq
National Broadcasting Company (owned by General Electric)
News Corporation
New York Stock Exchange
Paine Webber
Pfizer
PricewaterhouseCoopers
Reuters
Revlon
RJR Nabisco
Simon and Schuster (owned by Viacom)
The New York Times Company
Time Warner
Trump Hotels & Casino Resorts
Verizon
Viacom
Altria was based here under its former name Phillip Morris. Altria is
still based here, although some of its major subsidiaries are headquartered
elsewhere (for example, Philip Morris USA is in Richmond, Virginia, and
Kraft Foods has its home in suburban Chicago). Texaco was based here until
it merged with Chevron into San Ramon, California based ChevronTexaco.
The Chrysler Building was funded by famed Detroit car mogul Walter P.
Chrysler, and it later served as the inspiration for the Chrysler New
Yorker automobile. Numerous other companies are based in the New York
City metropolitan area but outside the city limits.
Communications and media
Newspapers and magazines
AM New York (free daily)
BIGNews (monthly)
New York Daily News (daily)
New York Metro (free daily)
New York Observer (weekly)
New York Post (daily)
New York Press (weekly)
New York Sun (daily)
New York Times (daily)
Newsday (daily)
Staten Island Advance (daily)
Street News (every six weeks)
Time Out NY (weekly)
Village Voice (free weekly)
Neighborhoods of New York
Many big-city neighborhoods have a definable history and character of
their own. (In New York, some avenues and even buildings have their own
entry.)
List of Bronx neighborhoods
List of Brooklyn neighborhoods
List of Manhattan neighborhoods
List of Queens neighborhoods
List of Staten Island neighborhoods
See also: List of New York City parks, Geography of New York Harbor
People of New York
Chinatown in ManhattanA resident of New York City is a New Yorker. Residents
of Brooklyn sometimes call themselves Brooklynites and residents of Staten
Island, Staten Islanders. Residents generally refer to New York City (or
just Manhattan) as "New York" or "the city". Ambiguity
is resolved by writing "NYS" for the state and "NYC"
for the city.
To some observers, New York has seemed more of an international city
than an "American" city, due to the large influx of immigrants.
Among U.S. cities, only Los Angeles receives more immigrants. Hundreds
of languages are spoken in New York City. In many major cities in the
world, immigrants tend to cluster into enclaves where they can talk and
shop and work with people from their country of origin. In the United
States, this is most pronounced in New York City. Immigrants of Irish,
Italian, Chinese, Korean, Puerto Rican, African and Jewish origin all
have enclaves within the city, though there are also various neighborhoods
in which people of diverse origins and cultural backgrounds coexist with
greater or lesser degrees of ease. One measure of New York's diversity
is that it has a higher Jewish population than Jerusalem does, and at
the same time, a majority of its population is non-white. New Yorkers
are accustomed to thinking that everyone in the city is a member of a
minority in some sense, but that the more important fact is that all share
an identity as New Yorkers.
Before September 11, 2001, New Yorkers were often stereotyped as rude
and brusque. Since the destruction of the World Trade Center, increased
empathy with New Yorkers has lessened this perception.
The common stereotype of the "New Yorker" is held by many.
The city has a large population and is fast-paced, so New Yorkers are
often seen as having an attitude of superiority as if New Yorkers were
not meant to have any time to spare for anyone else (not even other New
Yorkers). According to the stereotype, they will not hold the door for
anyone, and will scoff the tourist who does. There is tourist mocking
(including tourist jokes), due to the high levels of entertainment they
receive from such abuse and tourists' unfamiliarity with the habits of
city life. And supposedly, New Yorkers are so jaded that things that others
would consider drawbacks to life in The City (crime, prostitution, pollution,
noise...) are instead marks of pride, the very lures that keep them from
ever leaving. One former New York couple, who had left for Los Angeles
in 1926, returned on a visit some decades later, and summarized it thus:
"We forgot how to be mean."
Whereas in the much of the rest of the United States, football has surpassed
baseball as the most popular professional sport, in New York baseball
arguably still stirs the most passion and interest. A World Series championship
by either the New York Yankees or the New York Mets is considered to be
worthy of the highest celebration, including a ticker-tape parade for
the victorious team. While for the rest of the East Coast the rivalry
depicted as being the most intense is the one between the Yankees and
the Boston Red Sox, for New Yorkers the rivalry that stirs deep passions
is between the Yankees and the Mets. Outsiders are frequently unaware
that few baseball fans in New York are fans of both teams at once.
After September 11th, the attitudes of New Yorkers have both changed
and stayed the same. Pride in the city and their way of life have increased
for many, though others show signs of paranoia. "Mets Suck!"
was still graffitied on a scaffold near "Ground Zero." Cabbies
still drive recklessly, though some civilian drivers are more polite than
previously.
New York has an intense rivalry with the city of Boston, Massachusetts.
This is perhaps the most infamous city rivalry in the United States, especially
in the minds of Bostonians.
See also: List of people from New York
Tourism and recreation
The Empire State Building, New York City's tallest buildingTourism is
a very large business, with hundreds of famous buildings, sites, and monuments
in New York City. Many people visit the Radio City Music Hall, the Statue
of Liberty, the Empire State Building, the Brooklyn Bridge, Ellis Island,
and several other famous New York City landmarks. The World Trade Center
was a famous tourist destination before September 11, 2001, and since
that day, Ground Zero has become a very important place for visitors to
see. The most famous FAO Schwarz is located in Manhattan. It is so popular
that long lines to enter are seen as one approaches the building.
Coney Island, in the south of Brooklyn, has New York's roller coasters
and amusement parks.
South Street Seaport, on the south east tip of Manhattan, has naval museums,
shopping and Argentine Tango dancing every Sunday in the summer.
On the west side, NYC has the Intrepid Museum, an air-craft carrier converted
to a sea and air museum.
The first Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade was held in New York on November
27, 1924. Since then this has been an annual event drawing tens of thousands
of spectators and in later years millions of television viewers.
Many people characterize the tourist-filled Manhattan as "New York".
New York is actually more diverse than that, including Bronx, Brooklyn
Staten Island and Queens boroughs even if they have shorter buildings
than Manhattan does.
A common saying about con artists is to say that they are selling "pieces
of the Brooklyn Bridge."
See also New York City Department of Parks and Recreation, List of New
York City parks, New York City cuisine.
Sports teams and stadiums
Unlike most major cities, the New York City metropolitan area has two
teams in most major league sports.
New York Giants, National Football League, Giants Stadium at the Meadowlands
Sports Complex in East Rutherford, New Jersey
New York Islanders, National Hockey League, Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum
in Uniondale, New York
New York Jets, National Football League, Giants Stadium at the Meadowlands
Sports Complex in East Rutherford, New Jersey
New York Knicks, National Basketball Association, Madison Square Garden
New York Mets, Major League Baseball, Shea Stadium (1964-)
New York Rangers, National Hockey League, Madison Square Garden
New York Yankees, Major League Baseball, Yankee Stadium (1923-)
New York Dragons, Arena Football League, Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum
in Uniondale, New York
MetroStars, Major League Soccer, Giants Stadium at the Meadowlands Sports
Complex in East Rutherford, New Jersey
The New Jersey Nets (NBA) and the New Jersey Devils (NHL) are based in
the Continental Airlines Arena at the Meadowlands Sports Complex.
Ebbets Field (torn down in 1960) was the home of the Brooklyn Dodgers
(now the Los Angeles Dodgers) from 1913 until 1957.
The Polo Grounds in northern Harlem (torn down in 1964) was the home
of the New York Giants of Major League Baseball (now the San Francisco
Giants) from 1911 to 1957. It was the first home of the New York Mets,
in 1962 and 1963. It stood just across the river from the Bronx's Yankee
Stadium.
In 2004, the New Jersey Nets was sold to Bruce Ratner, who announced
plans to move it to Brooklyn and build a new state of the art arena. The
New York Jets also hope to move to the West Side of Manhattan and build
a retractable roof football stadium in 2008 once their lease at Giants
Stadium expires. Both of these construction proposals have stirred considerable
opposition.
New York City is home to two minor league baseball teams. Both play in
the short-season Class A New York-Penn League, and each is an affiliate
of one of the city's major-league teams. The Brooklyn Cyclones are a Mets
affiliate, and the Staten Island Yankees are (obviously) affiliated with
the Yankees.
New York City is a finalist to host the 2012 Summer Olympics, with plans
to build many new sporting venues if chosen. The proposed Jets stadium
on the West Side would also be used for the Olympic track and field events,
but the uncertainty as to whether that stadium will be built is a weakness
in the New York City bid.
Museums and cultural institutions
The Metropolitan Museum of ArtAmerican Museum of Natural History
Brooklyn Museum
Carnegie Hall
Jacques Marchais Museum of Tibetan Art
Historic Richmond Town
Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts
Metropolitan Museum of Art – commonly called "The Met"
The Cloisters – medieval art collection
Museum of the City of New York [1] (http://www.mcny.org/) – founded
in 1923 to present the history of New York City and its people.
Museum of Modern Art – MoMA, currently displaying work at a temporary
location called MoMA QNS in Astoria, Queens while the location on 53rd
Street in Manhattan is under construction
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
Whitney Museum of American Art
Staten Island Institute of Arts & Sciences
Transportation
Unlike most of America's car-oriented urban areas, public transportation
is the common mode of travel for the majority of New York City residents.
High parking fees, alternate side of the street parking rules and traffic
jams discourage driving, and the New York Subway—fast, efficient,
but not always clean—provides the best alternative. There are also
numerous bus routes in all five boroughs, and walking is often favored
by locals as a practical and pleasant transportation method for trips
of two or so miles or less. People living in the suburbs in eastern Long
Island, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, and upstate New York either
drive or use the city's far-reaching commuter railroad system to travel
to the city.
High tollway fees on bridges and underground tunnels help raise revenue
and discourage too many commuters from using the crossings. New Yorkers
who live in the city tend to take taxis, buses, subways, and elevated
trains. Ferries are also taken between Manhattan and New Jersey, as well
as other parts of New York City.
Mass transit
New York City boasts the most extensive network of public transportation
in the United States. Responsibility for providing public transportation
falls to a variety of government agencies and private corporations.
Amtrak provides long-distance commuter rail connections via Penn Station
to New England, upstate New York, Washington, DC and the midwest. For
trips of less than 500 miles, Amtrak is often cheaper and easier than
air travel, though not as fast.
New Jersey Transit (NJ Transit) provides extensive commuter rail service
from many parts of Northern and Central New Jersey to Hoboken Terminal
in New Jersey and Pennsylvania Station in Manhattan. Here is a breakup
of the New Jersey Transit network.
New Jersey Transit also provides an extensive network of bus routes radiating
in and out of the Port Authority Bus Terminal.
The Northeast Corridor Line provides electric rail service between Pennsylvania
Station and Trenton. At Trenton, riders can connect to SEPTA and Amtrak.
The North Jersey Coast Line provides electric rail service between Pennsylvania
Station and Long Branch. Diesel service is provided between Long Branch
and Bay Head or Hoboken and Bay Head.
The Raritan Valley Line provides diesel rail service between Raritan and
Newark Penn Station.
The Pascack Valley Line provides diesel rail service between Spring Valley,
NY and Hoboken.
The Bergen, Main and Port Jervis Lines provides diesel rail service between
Port Jervis, NY and Hoboken. NJ Transit has a partnership with Metro North
Railroad in which they provide the vacilities necessary for stations within
the state of New York.
The Montclair-Boonton Line provides electric rail service between Hacketsttown
and Hoboken or Pennsylvania Station. Trains declared MidTOWN DIRECT are
the ones that will terminate at Pennsylvania Station.
The Morris and Essex Lines provide electric rail service between Hackettstown
and Hoboken or Pennsylvania Station and also between Gladstone and Hoboken
or Pennsylvania Station. Trains declared MidTOWN DIRECT are the ones that
will terminate at Pennsylvania Station.
The Secaucus Transfer Station allows passengers on the Port Jervis, Pascack
Valley, Bergen and Main Lines to make a swift connection on selective
Pennsylvania Station bound trains for an easier commute into New York
City.
At Pennsylvania Station in New York, connections are available to Amtrak,
the Long Island Railroad, and the New York City Subway system.
At New Jersey Transit's Hoboken Terminal, transfers can be made to PATH
trains between Hoboken, Jersey City, Newark, and Midtown Manhattan; to
Manhattan-bound ferry service; and to NJ TRANSIT's Hudson-Bergen Light
Rail System. At Newark Penn Station, connections to Amtrak, PATH and NJ
TRANSIT's Newark City Subway are available. PATH can be used to connect
with NJ TRANSIT's Hudson-Bergen Light Rail System.
A person traveling on selective New Jersey Transit Northeast Corridor
Line or North Jersey Coast Line, and Amtrak trains can access Newark Liberty
International Airport by getting off at the Newark Liberty International
Airport Rail Station. From here, the AirTrain Monorail links the station
with the airport's terminals and parking garages. It is a 20 minute ride
from Pennsylvania Station and the first airport in the New York Metropolitan
Area to have such a station/link on a mainline railway.
Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA). The MTA is a New York State
public benefit corporation tasked with providing mass transit in the New
York City metropolitan area through its various subsidiary agencies.
MTA Metro-North Railroad provides commuter service from The Bronx, Westchester
County and southern Connecticut into Grand Central Terminal. Three main
lines terminate in Poughkeepsie, Wassaic, and New Haven. The lattermost
line has connecting branches to New Canaan, Danbury and Waterbury in Connecticut.
In partnership with New Jersey Transit, it also provides commuter services
into Hoboken, New Jersey from Port Jervis and Spring Valley.
MTA Long Island Railroad provides extensive commuter service to most of
Long Island, with destinations in Queens, Nassau and Suffolk via two trunk
lines and six subsidiary branches.
Staten Island Rapid Transit provides north-south commuter service the
entire length of Staten Island.
MTA New York City Transit provides extensive fixed-fare subway and bus
service throughout the five boroughs of New York City. The subway system
is one of the largest in the world, with over 720 miles of track and more
than 400 stations.
Port Authority of New York and New Jersey provides PATH trains connecting
Manhattan to New Jersey, as well as AirTrain service to two major airports.
The Port Authority also owns and operates the three major airports in
the New York City area (see below.) Regional bus service to New Jersey,
upstate New York, Canada and the midwest travels from the Port Authority
Bus Terminal near Times Square and the smaller George Washington Bridge
Bus Terminal.
Airports
The three local airports are JFK International Airport in Jamaica, Newark
Liberty International in Newark, New Jersey, and La Guardia Airport in
Flushing. Most New Yorkers fly domestic flights out of La Guardia, while
many flying domestically into Newark and JFK are not from the New York
area. Although Newark was the first airport in the area, and the closest
to Manhattan, it is in New Jersey.
North: White Plains, Newburgh
West: Paterson, Newark, Newark Liberty International Airport New York
City, JFK International Airport, La Guardia Airport East: Islip
Ferries
Many private ferries are run by NY Waterway, which provides several lines
across the Hudson River, New York Water Taxi, with lines connecting Brooklyn
and Manhattan, and other operators. There is also the free Staten Island
Ferry between Manhattan and Staten Island, operated by the New York City
Department of Transportation.
Taxis
Taxicabs are operated by private companies and licensed by the New York
City Taxi & Limousine Commission. There are two kinds of taxis: "medallion
taxis," which are the familiar yellow taxis, and "car services,"
which may only be radio- or computer-dispatched to pick up customers who
have called for a taxi. Yellow cabs patrol most of Manhattan and may be
hailed with a raised hand and taken--depending on the driver--anywhere
within the five boroughs and parts of New Jersey. As of May 2004, fares
begin at $2.50 ($3.00 after 8 pm, and $3.50 during peak, weekday hours).
Prices go up based on time elapsed and distance traveled.
Events
View of Midtown from the Empire State Building1853 – Exhibition
of the Industry of All Nations (1853)
1898 – Consolidation of what are now the five boroughs into Greater
New York
1909 – Hudson-Fulton Celebration (1909)
1939 – 1939 New York World's Fair exhibits included: The World of
Tomorrow, Futurama, Trylon, Perisphere
1964 – 1964/1965 New York World's Fair
1965 – Northeast Blackout of 1965
1973 – The World Trade Center's Twin Towers become the tallest buildings
in the world
1977 – Blackout of 1977
2001 – September 11 Terrorist Attack
2003 – Northeastern U.S.-Canada Blackout
Timeline of New York City crimes and disasters
List of ticker-tape parades in New York City
Famous New Yorkers
See List of famous New Yorkers.
Plays and musicals set in New York
Little Shop of Horrors
Rent (1996)
West Side Story (1957)
Guys and Dolls
Avenue Q (2003)
Books set in New York
Banana Fish (manga series)
Television shows set in New York
See: List of television shows set in New York City
Movies set in New York
See: List of movies set in New York City
Colleges and universities in New York
Berkeley College
City University of New York (many campuses)
Baruch College
Borough of Manhattan Community College
Brooklyn College
Bronx Community College
City College of New York
CUNY Graduate Center
CUNY Law School
College of Staten Island
Hostos Community College
Hunter College
John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Kingsborough Community College
LaGuardia Community College
Lehman College
Medgar Evers College
New York City College of Technology
Queens College
Queensborough Community College
Sophie Davis School of Biomedical Education
York College
College of Mt. St. Vincent
Columbia University
Cooper Union
Fordham University
Jewish Theological Seminary of America
Juilliard School
Long Island University
Manhattan College
Manhattan School of Music
Marymount Manhattan College
New School University (formerly the New School for Social Research)
New York Law School
New York University
Pace University
Polytechnic University of New York
Pratt Institute
Rockefeller University
Saint John's University
School of Visual Arts
Touro College
Union Theological Seminary
Wagner College
Yeshiva University
Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Sister cities
New York has ten sister cities: Beijing, Budapest, Cairo, Jerusalem, Johannesburg,
London, Madrid, Rome, Santo Domingo, and Tokyo.
Further reading
Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898, Edwin G. Burrows and Mike
Wallace, Oxford University Press, 1998, hardcover, 1416 pages, ISBN 0195116348,
trade paperback, 2000, 1424 pages, ISBN 0195140494
Related articles
Mayors of NYC
New York City Police Department
New York City Fire Department
New York Minute
New York, New York, a song with famous versions by Liza Minnelli and Frank
Sinatra
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