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Manhattan |
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Manhattan![]() The financial district at the south end of Manhattan island, New York, USA. The island was bought from local American Indians by Peter Minuit of the Dutch West India Company in 1626 for goods worth $24. Today it is linked to Long Island and Staten Island by bridges and to Brooklyn by a tunnel. ![]() Apartments with Italian flags in the ‘Little Italy’ district of Manhattan in New York. This area of the city, centred on Mulberry Street, is traditionally the home of families of Italian immigrant origin. ![]() The United Nations headquarters in New York, USA, was designed by a team of architects from several countries and opened in 1963. The provision of this permanent headquarters for the UN was financed by a donation from the millionaire John D Rockefeller. ![]() The United Nations permanent headquarters building, lit up for the UN's 50th anniversary in 1995, forms part of the Manhattan skyline, New York, USA. ![]() The Woolworth Building, Lower Manhattan, New York, USA, which rises in 60 storeys to an overall height of 241 m/792 ft. It was designed by US architect Cass Gilbert in 1908, when he was 49 years old. He died aged 74 years while visiting Brockenhurst in Hampshire, England, in 1934. Island of the city of New York, USA, forming most of a borough; population (2000 est) 1,537,200. It is 20 km/12.5 mi long and 4 km/2.5 mi wide, and lies between the Hudson and East rivers. The rocks from which it is formed rise to a height of more than 73 m/240 ft in the north of the island. Manhattan Island is bounded on the north and northeast by the Harlem River and Spuyten Duyvil Creek (which separate it from the Bronx); on the south by Upper New York Bay; on the west by the Hudson River (which separates it from New Jersey); and on the east by the East River (which separates it from Queens and Brooklyn). The borough of Manhattan also includes a small port at the Bronx mainland and several islands in the East River. Manhattan is the economic hub of New York City, although there are large residential and industrial areas here also. It includes the Wall Street business centre, Broadway and its theatres, Carnegie Hall (1891), the Empire State Building (1931), the United Nations headquarters (1952), Madison Square Garden, and Central Park. The twin towers of the World Trade Center collapsed on 11 September 2001, minutes after each was struck by hijacked aircraft piloted by terrorists. The death toll was estimated at around 3,000. The English explorer Henry Hudson first came here in 1609. A Dutch trading post, called New Amsterdam, was established in 1624; Peter Minuit, the first Dutch governor-general, bought it from the Algonquins in 1626 for the equivalent of $24. The British navy took control of New Amsterdam in 1664; it was retaken by the Dutch in 1673, but they ceded it back to England in 1674. From 1785 to 1790 New York was the seat of the US government; George Washington was sworn in as first president of the USA at Manhattan's Federal Hall. In the 19th century New York experienced a huge influx of European immigrants, and its population rose dramatically. Manhattan became a separate borough of New York City in 1898.
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, had got to be enumerated among the Manhattan nabobs. Notwithstanding the house of Miss Emmerson stood in the midst of the numberless villas that adorn Manhattan Island, the habits of its mistress were retiring and domestic. The war with Spain, many years' generous mint and watermelon crops, a few long-shot winners at the New Orleans race-track, and the brilliant banquets given by the Indiana and Kansas citizens who compose the North Carolina Society have made the South rather a "fad" in Manhattan. |
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