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History of New York
History of New York
New York is called The Big Apple, because in the 1920s and 1930s jazz musicians said that the city was the best and most attractive place.
New York has five boroughs: Manhattan, Brooklyn, the Bronx, Queens and Staten Island
Manhattan is the most famous borough and its where the tourists go!
Four hundred years ago, the Algonquin Indians owned the island of Manhattan. In 1626, a Dutchman called Peter Minuit gave the Indians 24 dollars to buy the island. In about 1650, five hundred people lived there and it was called New Amsterdam.
In 1664 the British took the town from the Dutch and changed its name to New York. At the end of the eighteenth century, many immigrants started to come to America..
They first came from Germany and Ireland, later from Italy, Poland, Russia, Africa and China.
You can take the Water Taxi around the island of Manhattan or take the free ferry from Battery Park to the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island.
Ellis Island was an immigration station in the past; it was the first stop for nearly 17 million immigrants
Many famous people came through Ellis Island, for example Sigmund Freud, Charlie Chaplin and Walt Disney.
It was a gift from the French people in 1886. It is 93 meters high and its arm is 14 meters long.
People from the same origin often live in the same area and create their own communities. The Chinese community is in CHINATOWN
and on Broadway, between 41st and 53rd streets. There are more than thirty theatres on Broadway.
The Brooklyn Bridge connects Manhattan to Brooklyn. When it opened in 1883, it was the worlds longest bridge.
The Empire State Building is NYs tallest skyscraper. Its 381 meters tall and it has 102 floors
The Chrysler building was built by the famous car maker. It was finished in 1930.
The Rockefeller Center includes many buildings, but it is most visited in winter.
A huge Christmas tree and a crowded skating rink attract New Yorkers and tourists.