On September 1, 1858 the NY Marine Hospital was burned down in a mob that stemmed from outrage about housing a quarantine hospital so close to their backyards.
A tradition in New York City returns as the MTA brings back 1930s-1970s trains to service Queens and Manhattan on Sundays this month.
On this Day in NYC History: December 2nd, 1657, the Nieuw Amsterdam City Council enacted legislation banning household goods as mean of payment for alcohol.
Fuerza Bruta at the Daryl Roth Theater is a dream-like spectacle. A "360-degree experience" with water dancing and acrobatics, Fuerza Bruta is a must see.
The National Trust has been cataloging the oldest graffiti in the US. Instead of tagging with aerosol, artistss used anything they could find--even their own blood
On Wednesday, January 22nd, we’ll be offering readers the chance for intimate, hour-long tour of the Woolworth Building led by Jason Crowley.
Fourth and fifth graders in Bronx Public School 48 have uncovered a long forgotten chapter of Bronx history: a slave graveyard inside Joseph Rodman Drake Park
In a fitting twist of fate, the site currently occupied by the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian was where Fort Amsterdam was located in NYC
We're offering 15% off to our Untapped Cities Shop through Monday using the coupon code TGIVING.
Here are our picks for the Best of the Untapped Cities Photo Pool for this week. Remember, to submit your