Downtown’s rich and
varied history, from Colonial settlement to world-famous urban complex,
spans close to four centuries. This compact area at the tip of Manhattan
Island – half of it built on land reclaimed from surrounding waters of
about one square mile – has played an outsized role in the development
of both the city and the nation, and is rich in both memories and
monuments. With the tragedy of September 11th , Downtown has once again,
if unwillingly, taken center stage in the ongoing drama of New York. But
those events shouldn’t obscure the remarkable trajectory of Downtown’s
history, which has no parallel anywhere in the country.Centuries before
the arrival of European colonists, Downtown was home to a thriving Native
American culture. Broadway, Downtown’s major thoroughfare, follows the
path of an ancient Algonquian trade route hundreds of miles long – and
today ends at Bowling Green, where the Smithsonian National Museum of the
American Indian helps keep Native American history and culture alive.
The first Dutch traders
arrived around 1612, followed by settlers led by Peter Minuit, first
director general of the colony of New Netherland. The Dutch called their
Downtown settlement Nieuw Amsterdam. Though nothing remains above ground
from the half-century of Dutch rule, today’s winding streets – the
famous Downtown canyons – follow the plan laid out by Dutch colonists.
The English captured the
colony in 1664, renaming it for the Duke of York. Downtown’s Hanover
Square takes its name from the Hanoverian dynasty that still occupies the
British throne. Just over a hundred years later, the English built a
statue of King George III in Bowling Green, and a fence to guard it from
rebellious colonists – who toppled the statue in 1776 but left the
fence, which still encircles the park.
Revolutionary plotters met
secretly at the Queen Charlotte Tavern (named for the wife of George III).
Renamed Fraunces Tavern at the end of the Revolutionary War, it played
host in 1783 to General George Washington’s famed farewell dinner for
his officers. New York served as the young nation’s first capital, and
in 1789, Washington took the presidential oath of office at Downtown’s
Federal Hall on Wall Street. The original building has disappeared, but a
few blocks to the north on Broadway Washington’s original pew is
preserved in Downtown’s Colonial-era St. Paul’s Chapel.
New York’s prosperity
grew out of its prominence as the nation’s most important port. Early
19th-century China clipper ships sailed from South Street, the “Street
of Ships,” on the East River, while the blocks around Bowling Green grew
into Steamship Row. Immigrants to New York first disembarked at South
Street too, until a processing center opened in Downtown’s Castle Garden
– predecessor of nearby Ellis Island and now called Castle Clinton.
Today’s South Street Seaport preserves buildings and ships, while the
skyscraper offices of the Cunard line rise above lower Broadway.
Colonists and immigrants
established Downtown houses of worship early on. Trinity Church, founded
in 1699 as a parish of the Church of England, after the Revolution became
one of the nation’s first Episcopal congregations. State Street is home
to the Shrine of St. Elizabeth Bayley Seton, baptized in 1803 at St.
Peter’s Church on Barclay Street. Shearith Israel, the first Jewish
congregation in North America, built its synagogue on Mill Street in 1654.
John Street Methodist Church is the descendant of the 1768 Wesley Chapel,
the nation’s first Methodist Church; an off-shoot, the African Methodist
Episcopal Zion Church, became one of the nation’s most prominent
African-American congregations.
William Bradford set up New
York’s first printing press in 1693 at a Downtown office located on
Pearl Street. In 1725, he published the first New York Gazette. His
apprentice, John Peter Zenger, was jailed for libel by a colonial
administration unhappy with his reporting; Zenger’s acquittal became a
landmark in the fight for freedom of the press. By the 19th century, so
many publications had moved to Downtown’s Park Row that it became
informally known as Newspaper Row, and the surrounding area as Printing
House Square.
Wall Street has been
synonymous with banking and finance for two centuries. The New York Stock
Exchange traces its origins to an informal group of brokers meeting under
a buttonwood tree on Wall Street as early as 1792, just two years after
Alexander Hamilton, the nation’s first Secretary of the Treasury, issued
bonds to pay the Revolution’s debt. Countless banks, insurance companies
and express offices (including American Express) built Downtown
headquarters in and around Wall Street.
Changing technology and
lack of space helped make Downtown the birthplace of the American
skyscraper. Starting with the seven-and-a-half-story Equitable Building at
120 Broadway, built at the end of the 1860s, skyscraper development
brought a succession of major towers, from the romantic Gothic fantasy of
Cass Gilbert’s Woolworth Building to the elegant Modernism of Gordon
Bunshaft’s 140 Broadway. Even with the loss of the World Trade
Center’s twin towers, New York today still boasts more skyscrapers than
any city in the world. And nowhere else is the skyscraper’s 140-year
trajectory better represented than in Downtown.
Today, with an historic
center beautifully set between two rivers and a majestic harbor, stunning
architecture, tall ships and the city’s most dramatic views, Downtown
continues to make history, of all kinds. As we begin recovery and
reconstruction, Downtown can take heart in the knowledge that it has a
special and distinguished past, and that we can and will build on that
past as we work to ensure Downtown’s future.