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Winter on the East River in 1934: While men sweep snow off the roof of a coffee warehouse in Brooklyn, the mighty Manhattan skyline rises above. By John Cunning.
Was the Brooklyn Bridge ever painted green? An enchanting vintage postcard of the bridge seems to say so. https://t.co/AOG66fRmtF
A painter captures the "blue hour" in rainy 1940s New York City
https://t.co/PRhGCgPxe1
Inside a New York City "relief station" during the Depression https://t.co/nBv3wu0SLR
What's left out of a story and illustration about Thanksgiving at a New York City orphanage in the 1870s. https://t.co/Ea3fiRXSVk
A painter captures pedestrians crossing paths on a blustery Depression-era day on 59th Street
https://t.co/jBdwynaC17
One painter's view of Williamsburg in the 1940s https://t.co/Q0z6tS5MgC
The Chatham Street corner where colonial New York's famous "tea water pump" used to be https://t.co/zllimNovOr
The East River skyline as seen from Brooklyn in 1934, by John Cunning. The warehouses look like today's Empire Stores in DUMBO
All the way to enjoy the East River at 86th Street in 1862, Currier & Ives