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  1. As you explore these 1880s photographs of Brooklyn, you’ll step back into a crucial decade that helped shape the borough and, by extension, the New York City we know today. #1 Boilers and Iron-Clad Shop Ship in Brooklyn Heights, Brooklyn, 1880. 1 Point.

  2. Aug 27, 2013 · The park wasn’t in the original plan for the city; in 1853, the state of New York empowered the city to acquire more than 700 acres of land under eminent domain to create the expanse. “There ...

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  4. The 1881 photograph of Downtown Manhattan from the under-construction Brooklyn Bridge shows a drastically different Manhattan skyline than the one that would emerge within the next 20 years. As seen in the photograph, most buildings reach no more than five stories, and the overall landscape is low s.

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    • $19.99 - $24.99
    • John Roebling and His Son Washington
    • Challenges Met by The Brooklyn Bridge
    • Pioneering Efforts of The Brooklyn Bridge
    • Years of Construction and Rising Costs
    • The Grand Opening

    John Roebling, an immigrant from Germany, did not invent the suspension bridge, but his work building bridges in America made him the most prominent bridge builder in the U.S. in the mid-1800s. His bridges over the Allegheny River at Pittsburgh (completed in 1860) and over the Ohio River at Cincinnati (completed 1867) were considered remarkable ach...

    Talk of somehow bridging the East River began as early as 1800, when large bridges were essentially dreams. The advantages of having a convenient link between the two growing cities of New York and Brooklyn were obvious. But the idea was thought to be impossible because of the width of the waterway, which, despite its name, wasn’t really a river. T...

    Perhaps the greatest innovation dictated by John Roebling was the use of steel in the construction of the bridge. Earlier suspension bridges had been built of iron, but steel would make the Brooklyn Bridge much stronger. To dig the foundations for the bridge’s enormous stone towers, caissons—enormous wooden boxes with no bottoms—were sunk in the ri...

    After the caissons had been sunk to the river bottom, they were filled with concrete, and the construction of the stone towers continued above. When the towers reached their ultimate height, 278 feet above high water, work began on the four enormous cables that would support the roadway. Spinning the cables between the towers began in the summer of...

    The grand opening for the bridge was held on May 24, 1883. Some Irish residents of New York took offense as the day happened to be the birthday of Queen Victoria, but most of the city turned out to celebrate. President Chester A. Arthurcame to New York City for the event, and led a group of dignitaries who walked across the bridge. Military bands p...

  5. The Brooklyn Bridge, Williamsburg Bridge, George Washington Bridge, and Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge were the world's longest suspension bridges when opened in 1883, [2] 1903, [3] 1931, [4] and 1964 [5] respectively. There are 789 bridges and tunnels in New York.

    Name
    Opening Year
    Length(feet)
    Length(meters)
    1883
    5,988
    1,825
    1909
    6,854
    2,089
    1903
    7,308.0
    2,227.48
    1909
    3,724
    1,135
  6. Apr 11, 2016 · Bronx; Brooklyn; Queens; NYC Crime; Education; New York Politics; Sports. ... The Brooklyn Bridge, shown here in 2016, claimed between 20 and 30 lives during the construction process in the 1800s.

  7. June 23, 1980 [12] Designated NYCL. August 24, 1967 [2] Location. The Brooklyn Bridge is a hybrid cable-stayed / suspension bridge in New York City, spanning the East River between the boroughs of Manhattan and Brooklyn. Opened on May 24, 1883, the Brooklyn Bridge was the first fixed crossing of the East River.