Itinerary
This is a typical itinerary for this product
Stop At: Flatiron Building, 175 5th Ave At 23rd St., New York City, NY 10010-7703
This walking tour looks at the Gilded Age that flourished in this neighborhood as a fashionable world class city center between the 1860s to the 1920s. We spend a few minutes giving context to the greater history of the city, and the role Madison Square played in its development.
Duration: 15 minutes
Stop At: Madison Square Park, Between 23rd and 26 streets and Madison and Fifth Avenues, New York City, NY 10010
Where Fifth Avenue, Broadway and 23rd Street all meet was the center of the Gilded Age. It was just becoming the new social, political, and cultural hub when the economy leapt forward in the Industrial Age (and wealth). The former patriarchy and landed elite like the Astors were out-spent by the new Industrial wealth like the Vanderbilts by a long-shot; Madison Square center stage for that social overthrow.
In addition to the social-cultural history that shone during the Gilded Age, the era and buildings that replaced it are also worth exploring, and we'll find they, too have a fascinating history and commercial business buildings that overran everything in their path. There is a logic to the history that makes the buildings of New York make sense.
Duration: 10 minutes
Stop At: Fifth Avenue, 5th Ave, New York City, NY 10118-4810
We walk the blocks of Fifth Avenue between 23rd and 18th Streets, decoding the buildings as we go, understanding the order of development. What buildings were built when, for who, and how did they changed?
Here, New York's "signature" building-type that can be found almost anywhere: the late 19th-century "state-of-the-art" steel-frame, manufacturing loft building, often in the "elongated" Beaux Arts style are examined in detail.
Later known as Paternaster Row for the home mission office buildings and their publishing operations, it was a street of class and wealth converted to office buildings that included publishers, architects, textile manufacturers, and piano salerooms. A long forgotten business district in an even longer forgotten upper class neighborhood.
Duration: 10 minutes
Stop At: ABC Carpet & Home, 881 & 888 Broadway, New York City, NY
Broadway between Madison and Union Square only runs for six blocks, and it is the quiet heart, cocooned blind spot, in New York City today. No streetwall is more rich in fragmented French Second Empire, Beaux Arts, Neo-Classical relics. These were the elite, so-called "carriage trade" blocks of high-end shopping during the Gilded Age. This part of the Ladies' Mile Historic Shopping District did not have an elevated train, it didn't even have the grade-level horse car rails; women stepped from carriages to shop along this unusually narrow and quiet stretch of Broadway. It remains a gem locale in the city today.
Duration: 15 minutes
Pass By: Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace National Historic Site, 28 E 20th St between Broadway and Park Avenue South, New York City, NY 10003-1311
We see how the former President's life fits in with the history
Stop At: Sixth Avenue (Avenue of the Americas), New York City, NY
The blocks of Sixth Avenue from 18th to 23rd Streets are an incredibly well preserved set of old beautiful department stores and shopping emporia. This was the middle class part of town for shopping, but even some of these incredible buildings housed establishments were worthy of the carriage trade.
We learn a little about the department stores that once brought a long-lost energy to these blocks, never forgetting the architectural relics and ruins all around that tell the history of earlier times and previous occupants.
Duration: 10 minutes
Stop At: Sixth Avenue (Avenue of the Americas), New York City, NY
We cross 23rd street going north and enter the old "Tenderloin", the adult entertainment blocks in an era before radio and television. It is surprising to our sensibilities today that a district of saloons, brothels and gambling halls was so close to venues for the most respectable activities that attracted the most respectable citizens.
It's not surprising that fewer buildings survive on this side of 23rd Street, redlight districts are not often preserved. What structures are left standing, besides venues and houses of ill-repute, housed middle and lower-middle class neighborhoods, and large African American and Jewish communities. These blocks attach to some of the city's most salacious, deviant and scandalous stories.
that thrived for about 30 years on this side of Broadway.
Duration: 15 minutes
Stop At: Tin Pan Alley, 28th Street and Fifth Avenue Between Fifth and Sixth Avenues, New York City, NY 10001
Tin Pan Alley is one of New York's latest historic districts. For a brief period of time the heart of the American music industry was condensed into a few buildings along 28th Street between Fifth Avenue and Sixth Avenue.
Here sheet music proliferated and popular music ensued. The early marketing methods of music promoters--the many manifestations of plugging--began here.
Duration: 5 minutes
Stop At: Hotel Wolcott, 4 W 31st St, New York, NY 10001, USA
We cross Broadway and immediately sense the historical shift in the streetwall as we walk just a few feet to Fifth Avenue, and the upper class part of town.
The Wolcott Hotel was one of over a dozen fine, Gilded Age hotels in the immediate vicinity, many now converted to SROs and city housing.
Duration: 10 minutes
Pass By: Empire State Building, 20 West 34th Street, New York City, NY 10001
The site of the original Waldorf-Astoria, and before that, residences of Astor brothers, the Empire State Building was the tallest building in the world for 40 years.
Pass By: Fifth Avenue, 5th Ave, New York City, NY 10118-4810
The final leg of the tour are the blocks between the Empire State Building and the Flatiron Building. These blocks are the Rosetta Stone of New York history, containing buildings from every era passing through in the city's move uptown.
Pass By: 230 FIFTH ROOFTOP BAR NYC, 1150 Broadway On Broadway Between 26th Street And 27th Street, New York City, NY 10001-7704
We ends the tour at any point in Madison Square that is convent for the guests.