The first walking guide ever to explore New York City through its unique archaeological underpinnings This pocket-sized guidebook takes the reader on eight walking tours to archaeological sites throughout the boroughs of New York City and presents a new way of exploring the city through the rich history that lies buried beneath it. Generously illustrated and replete with maps, the tours are designed to explore both ancient times and modern space.On these tours, readers will see where archaeologists have discovered evidence of the earliest New Yorkers, the Native Americans who arrived at least 11,000 years ago. They will learn about thousand-year-old trading routes, sacred burial grounds, and seventeenth-century villages. They will also see sites that reveal details of the lives of colonial farmers and merchants, enslaved Africans, Revolutionary War soldiers, and nineteenth-century hotel keepers, grocers, and housewives. Some tours bring readers to popular tourist attractions (the Statue of Liberty and the Wall Street district, for example) and present them in a new light. Others center on places that even the most seasoned New Yorker has never seen—colonial houses, a working farm, out-of-the-way parks, and remote beaches—often providing beautiful and unexpected views from the city’s vast shoreline. A celebration of New York City’s past and its present, this unique book will intrigue everyone interested in the city and its history. Diana diZerega Wall is professor of anthropology at the City College of the City University of New York. Anne-Marie Cantwell is professor of anthropology at Rutgers University.
Author(s): Diana diZerega Wall, Anne-Marie Cantwell
Year: 2004
Language: English
Pages: 225
Contents......Page 6
Acknowledgments......Page 8
Introduction......Page 10
Tour 1 The Harbor Islands......Page 18
Tour 2 Lower Manhattan: Dutch New Amsterdam, Colonial New York, and the Premier City of the New Nation......Page 42
Tour 3 Greenwich Village: At Home in Nineteenth-Century New York......Page 72
Tour 4 Northern Manhattan: How the First Archaeologists Uncovered Indian, Colonial, and Revolutionary War New York......Page 94
Tour 5 The Bronx Shore with Views of Queens: A Voyage through Thousands of Years of Indian Life along the City’s Coast......Page 120
Tour 6 The Farms and Towns of Queens County......Page 142
Tour 7 The Town of Brooklyn: The Third-Largest City of the Nineteenth-Century Nation......Page 164
Tour 8 Southern Brooklyn: Native American and Early New York......Page 186
Bibliographic Sources for Each Tour......Page 206
Bibliography......Page 208
Illustration Credits......Page 216
Index......Page 218