Facebook Pixel THEN AND NOW DEPT. MANHATTAN'S SPRINGS | The New Yorker - culture - Les denne historien på Magzter.com

Prøve GULL - Gratis

THEN AND NOW DEPT. MANHATTAN'S SPRINGS

The New Yorker

|

September 22, 2025

In the late eighteen-nineties, when the New Croton Aqueduct was just beginning to pipe water into the Bronx from Westchester, James Reuel Smith, a wealthy classicist with a passion for cataloguing, used a bicycle to survey the springs and wells of Manhattan and the Bronx.

- Robert Sullivan

THEN AND NOW DEPT. MANHATTAN'S SPRINGS

"Can you not talk to me until dinner? I don't want to burn through any good conversation at home."

The tone of the resulting book, "Springs and Wells of Manhattan and the Bronx," published posthumously in 1938, shifts between romantic reverie ("The water is cold and very pleasant"-a spring in West Harlem) and, as the street grid expanded, apocalyptic dread. The old water sources were, Smith wrote, "disappearing from sight with such celerity that it is merely a matter of months when there will be none whatever left in view upon Manhattan island."

FLERE HISTORIER FRA The New Yorker

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size