PODCAST · history
Gotham Center Podcasts
by The Gotham Center for New York City History
A podcast featuring scholars and experts talking about New York City’s most important historical sites and organizations, for Open House New York (OHNY) Weekend. Each recording presents a story or narrative about some participating location or institution, which can be used to supplement in-person visits, or to bring the OHNY Weekend experience home to anyone unable to see these NYC treasures.
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Season 5, Episode 3: Louis Armstrong House
Season 5, Episode 3: Louis Armstrong HouseBy Thomas Brothers
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Season 5, Episode 2: Weeksville
Season 5, Episode 2: WeeksvilleBy Judith Wellman
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54
Season 5, Episode 1: The Rockaways
Season 5, Episode 1: The RockawaysBy Ayasha Guerin
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Season 4, Episode 1: 9/11 Memorial
Site and Sounds: 9/11 MemorialBy James YoungOn today’s episode of Sites and Sounds, James Young talks about the 9/11 Memorial at Ground Zero.
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52
Season 3, Episode 8: Mother Zion AME Church
<figure class=" sqs-block-image-figure intrinsic " > Graham Russell Gao Hodges, author of David Ruggles: A Radical Black Abolitionist and the Underground Railroad in New York City, on Mother Zion A.M.E. Church and its nationally influential antislavery leaders.
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Season 3, Episode 2: Domino's Sugar Factory
<figure class=" sqs-block-image-figure intrinsic " > Brendan Cooper, author of The Domino Effect: Politics, Policy, and the Consolidation of the Sugar Refining Industry in the United States, 1789–1895, on the rise and fall of the enormous Williamsburg, Brooklyn factory.
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Season 3, Episode 3: Ebbets Field
<figure class=" sqs-block-image-figure intrinsic " > Bob McGee, author of The Greatest Ballpark Ever: Ebbets Field and the Story of the Brooklyn Dodgers, on the iconic stadium (formerly in Crown Heights) and its still-bemoaned departure.
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Season 3, Episode 4: B. Altman's
<figure class=" sqs-block-image-figure intrinsic " > Sharon Zukin, author of Point of Purchase: How Shopping Changed American Culture, on ‘B. Altman’s,’ the famous Midtown department store, and the new world of consumption it helped make.
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Season 3, Episode 5: Blackwell Island
<figure class=" sqs-block-image-figure intrinsic " > Stacy Horn, author of Damnation Island: Poor, Sick, Mad, and Criminal in 19th-Century New York, on the notorious ‘lunatic asylum,’ prison, workhouses, and hospitals that once stood on Roosevelt Island.
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Season 3, Episode 6: The African Grove
<figure class=" sqs-block-image-figure intrinsic " > Shane White, author of Prince of Darkness and Stories of Freedom in Black New York, on the African Grove, a theater company which played with an entirely black cast and crew to mostly black audiences in the last days of slavery in NYC.
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Season 3, Episode 7: Seneca Village
<figure class=" sqs-block-image-figure intrinsic " > Alexander Manevitz, author of The Rise and Fall of Seneca Village: Remaking Race and Space in Nineteenth-Century New York City (forthcoming), on the free black community destroyed to build Central Park.
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Season 3, Episode 9: African Meetinghouse
<figure class=" sqs-block-image-figure intrinsic " > Leslie Alexander, author of African or American? Black Identity and Political Activism in New York City, 1784-1861, on the African meetinghouse, headquarters of the secret society that created the state’s first incorporated black organization; for a century, NYC’s most prominent black mutual aid group.
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Season 3, Episode 10: James Rivington Printshop
<figure class=" sqs-block-image-figure intrinsic " > Christopher F. Minty, author of “American Demagogues”: The Origins of Loyalism in New York City (forthcoming), on James Rivington and his controversial printshop in Hanover Square.
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Season 3, Episode 11: Fort Amsterdam
<figure class=" sqs-block-image-figure intrinsic " > Russell Shorto, author of the national bestseller The Island at the Center of the World, on Fort Amsterdam and the Dutch colony it protected.
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Season 3, Episode 1: North Brother Island
<figure class=" sqs-block-image-figure intrinsic " > Randall Mason, co-author of North Brother Island: The Last Unknown Place in New York City, on this now-abandoned, once-feared part of Gotham’s archipelago, which served for decades as (often forced) quarantine for the ill during various epidemics.
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Season 2, Episode 1: The Metropolitan Opera
<figure class=" sqs-block-image-figure intrinsic " > Charles Affron, co-author of Grand Opera: The Story of the Met, on the world famous opera company.
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Season 1, Episode 22: The Wyckoff House
Edith Gonzalez, a historical archaeologist, on Wyckoff House, the oldest structure in NYC, a Dutch-era farmhouse situated in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Canarsie.
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Season 1, Episode 21: The Woolworth Building
Gail Fenske, author of "The Skyscraper and the City: The Woolworth Building and the Making of Modern New York," on the architectural landmark in Tribeca.
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Season 1, Episode 20: Woodlawn Cemetery
Fred Goodman, former Rolling Stone editor and the author of "The Secret City: Woodlawn Cemetery and the Buried History of New York," on the Bronx graveyard next to Van Cortlandt Park.
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37
Season 1, Episode 19: The Waterfront Museum
Kurt Schlichting, author of "Waterfront Manhattan: From Henry Hudson to the High Line," on the Waterfront Museum in Red Hook.
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Season 1, Episode 15: Prison Ship Martyr Monument
Michael Hattem, co-founder of the Junto and historian of colonial NYC, on the Prison Ship Martyrs Monument, where the remains of nearly 11,000 P.O.W.'s in the American Revolution are buried, in Fort Greene.
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35
Season 1, Episode 18: United Nations Headquarters
Pamela Hanlon, independent historian and the author of "A Worldly Affair: New York, the United Nations, and the Story Behind Their Unlikely Bond," on the international body's headquarters in Turtle Bay.
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34
Season 1, Episode 17: Roosevelt House
Blanche Wiesen Cook, Graduate Center historian and the definitive biographer of Eleanor Roosevelt, on her former home, now a CUNY-affiliated think tank in the Upper East Side.
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Season 1, Episode 14: The Old Quaker Meeting House
R. Scott Hanson, NYC field researcher for Harvard’s Pluralism Project and the author of "City of Gods: Religious Freedom, Immigration, and Pluralism in Flushing, Queens," on the neighborhood's famous Quaker meetinghouse.
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Season 1, Episode 13: NYC Transit Museum
Peter Derrick, MTA veteran and the author of "Tunneling to the Future: The Story of the Great Subway Expansion That Saved New York," on the Transit Museum in Downtown Brooklyn.
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Season 1, Episode 11: Newtown Creek Wastewater Treatment Plant
Robin Nagle, author of "Picking Up" and the anthropologist-in-residence at NYC's Department of Sanitation, on the Newtown Wastewater Treatment Plant in Greenpoint.
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30
Season 1, Episode 12: Noguchi Museum
Olga Sooudi, an anthropologist at the University of Amsterdam and the author of "Japanese New York: Migrant Artists and Self-Reinvention on the World Stage," on the Noguchi Museum in Long Island City.
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Season 1, Episode 10: Newtown Creek Alliance
Steve Lang, professor of urban studies at LaGuardia Community College, CUNY and the author of “Striving for Sustainability on the Urban Waterfront," on the Newtown Creek Alliance.
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Season 1, Episode 9: Morris-Jumel Mansion
Margaret Oppenheimer, author of "The Remarkable Rise of Eliza Jumel," on the Morris-Jumel Mansion in Washington Heights, Manhattan's oldest house, famed for its notable inhabitants General Washington and Aaron Burr.
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Season 1, Episode 8: King Manor
David Gary, curator at the American Philosophical Society, on King Manor, in Jamaica, Queens, the home of Alexander Hamilton's "right hand man," the influential Federalist and early antislavery leader Rufus King.
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Season 1, Episode 7: Jefferson Market Library
Simon Baatz, John Jay College historian of crime and science in the 19th and early 20th century, on Jefferson Market Library, the Victorian Gothic courthouse in Greenwich Village.
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Season 1, Episode 6: Henry St. Settlement
Marjorie Feld, author of "Lillian Wald: A Biography," on the famous Progressive reformer’s Henry Street Settlement, celebrating its 125th year of offering social services, art, and health care to the immigrant families of the Lower East Side.
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Season 1, Episode 5: Governors Island
May Joseph, professor of social science and cultural studies at Pratt Institute, and the author of "Fluid New York: Cosmopolitan Urbanism and the Green Imagination," on Governors Island.
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Season 1, Episode 4: Federal Hall
Don Hawkins, "dean of Washington, DC architectural history," on the early city hall remodeled by Pierre Charles L'Enfant for the seat of America's first government, on Wall Street.
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Season 1, Episode 3: The Edgar Allen Poe Cottage
Richard Kopley, distinguished professor of literature at Penn State DuBois, author of "Edgar Allan Poe and the Dupin Mysteries," on the writer's cottage in Fordham, the Bronx
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Season 1, Episode 2: Brooklyn Army Terminal
Barbara Christen, author of "Cass Gilbert, Life and Work, on Brooklyn Army Terminal," the military-site-turned-manufacturing-complex in Sunset Park, designed by the famous architect.
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Season 1, Episode 1: The African Burial Ground
Andrea Frohne, author of "The African Burial Ground in New York City," on the site containing the remains of 20,000 slaves in lower Manhattan
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Season 2, Episode 2: AT&T Long Distance Building
Kathleen Murphy Skolnik, co-author of The Art Deco Murals of Hildreth Meière, on the lobby of the AT&T Long Distance Building in Tribeca
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Season 2, Episode 11: Scandinavia House
Eric Dregni, author of "Vikings in the Attic: In Search of Nordic America," on Scandinavia House in Murray Hill.
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Season 2, Episode 9: Institute of Classical Art and Architecture
Francis Morrone, the noted architectural historian, author of eleven books, on the Institute of Classical Art and Architecture in Midtown.
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16
Season 2, Episode 10: Paul Taylor Dance Studio
Angela Kane, professor of dance at the University of Michigan and the forthcoming author of the first critical study of Paul Taylor, on the famous choreographer’s studio in the Lower East Side.
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15
Season 2, Episode 7: Fresh Kills
Martin Melosi, author of the forthcoming Fresh Kills: A History of Consuming and Discarding in New York City, on the infamous landfill-turned-park in Staten Island
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14
Season 2, Episode 5: Bullet Space
Amy Starecheski, author of Ours to Lose: When Squatters Became Homeowners in New York City, on Bullet Space in the Lower East Side
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Season 2, Episode 4: Brooklyn Navy Yard
Mark R. Wilson, author of Destructive Creation: American Business and the Winning of World War II and The Business of Civil War, on the Brooklyn Navy Yard.
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Season 2, Episode 3: Brooklyn Grange
Lindsay K. Campbell, author of City of Forests, City of Farms: Sustainability Planning for New York City’s Nature, on the Brooklyn Grange rooftop farm at the Navy Yard
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11
Season 2, Episode 1: Alice Austen House
Bonnie Yochelson, author of a forthcoming study of Alice Austen, on the pioneering Gilded Age photographer’s home in Staten Island
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Season 2, Episode 8: Gowanus Canal Conservancy
Joseph Alexiou, author of Gowanus: Brooklyn’s Curious Canal, on the notoriously polluted creek, and the Conservancy working to restore it.
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Season 1, Episode 16: The Ridgewood Reservoir
Sergey Kadinsky, NYC Parks Department analyst and the author of "Hidden Waters of New York City," on the Ridgewood Reservoir in Highland Park, on the Queens-Brooklyn border.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
A podcast featuring scholars and experts talking about New York City’s most important historical sites and organizations, for Open House New York (OHNY) Weekend. Each recording presents a story or narrative about some participating location or institution, which can be used to supplement in-person visits, or to bring the OHNY Weekend experience home to anyone unable to see these NYC treasures.
HOSTED BY
The Gotham Center for New York City History
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