Track level, main and exits, concourses, Penna. Pennsylvania Station, New York, N.Y

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Track level, main and exits, concourses, Penna. Pennsylvania Station, New York, N.Y

description

Summary

"G 7523" on negative.
Detroit Publishing Co. no. 071937.
Gift; State Historical Society of Colorado; 1949.

The City History Collection. Predominantly Manhattan Views.

The history of New York City's transportation system. New York City is distinguished from other U.S. cities for its low personal automobile ownership and its significant use of public transportation. New York is the only city in the United States where over half of all households do not own a car (Manhattan's non-ownership is even higher, around 75%; nationally, the rate is 8%). New York City has, by far, the highest rate of public transportation use of any American city. New York City also has the longest mean travel time for commuters (39 minutes) among major U.S. cities. The Second Industrial Revolution fundamentally changed the city – the port infrastructure grew at such a rapid pace after the 1825 completion of the Erie Canal that New York became the most important connection between all of Europe and the interior of the United States. Elevated trains and subterranean transportation ('El trains' and 'subways') were introduced between 1867 and 1904. Private automobiles brought an additional change for the city by around 1930, notably the 1927 Holland Tunnel.

The train station image dataset is picked from the world's largest public domain archive. Made in two steps - first, curated set, followed by running 25 Million public domain images through image recognition, it comprises more than 50,000 train station images from all countries and times. All images are in the public domain, so there are no restrictions on the dataset usage - educational, scientific, and commercial.

date_range

Date

01/01/1905
place

Location

new york
create

Source

Library of Congress
copyright

Copyright info

No known restrictions on publication.

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