New York Public Library Digitizes 137 Years of New York City Directories

New York Public Library is digitizing its collection of New York City Directories, 1786 through 1922/3, serving them free through the NYPL Digital Collections portal. The first batch—1849/50 through 1923—have already been scanned, and the 1786–1848/9 directories are right now being scanned. The whole collection will be going online over the coming months. Staff at NYPL are currently teaching computers to read the wobbly typeset, to interpret the strange abbreviations, and the occasionally slightly less than geometric layout of the directories to make the old print text machine readable. The goal is to make the directories text searchable in powerful new ways, in order to build datasets that will inform research in New York City history, genealogy, and beyond. More technical posts on this work will follow.

New York City Directories waiting to be digitized.
New York City Directories waiting to be digitized. 

Why are city directories interesting? I wrote a post about this in 2012, Direct Me NYC 1786: A History of City Directories in the United States and New York City, that described what city directories  are and why they are useful research tools. In summary, city directories record historical information that describes New York City and its history: the names and addresses of its residents, the names and addresses of  churches, businesses, schools, police stations, courts, and other government offices, as well as the names of individuals associated with those institutions, as far back as 1786. David Franks' 1786 directory, for instance, lists important historical figures. On page 63, under Lawyers, we find best friends Alexander Hamilton (1757–1804) and Aaron Burr (1756–1836), Brockholst Livingston (1757–1823), who served on the Supreme Court (1807–1823),  and Richard Varick (1753–1831), Mayor of New York City (1788–1789). 

New York Directory, 1786
New York Directory, 1786

City directories contain much more than lists of names and addresses. They record the price of travel and postage, the kinds of occupations undertaken in the city, the layout of streets, and at what time the sun was predicted to rise and set. Not for nothing were the early directories often referred to as almanacs.

In addition to textual information, city directories feature many images, including maps, illustrations of buildings, and advertisements, occasionally printed on  colored or decorative paper. Directories record the city's built and commercial history.

Previously the directories for New York City (i.e. what we now might call Manhattan) were available only in the Library, either on microfilm, or via subscription databases, the original print directories now being too delicate to be regularly served to patrons. One or two could be found on the Internet, but coverage there was patchy. In many instances, the directories were reproduced from microfilm only. The Library has, where possible, scanned the directories, presenting them as hi-res, color surrogates of the original print copies. Now anyone and everyone will be able to access the directories free of charge, online.

​ Doggett's New York City directory, 1850/51

Initially the city directories will be browseable, through NYPL Digital Collections, but the Library wants to make the directories work harder, to integrate them with other digital collections: maps, deeds, census records, family histories, prints, photographs, and so on. The directories will eventually be text searchable, enabling researchers to create new datasets. For instance, and I'm speaking theoretically here, researchers might be able to track addresses across directories. Where, for instance, were theaters on Broadway located overtime? Where did people live and work? Can we see in datasets derived from the information in the directories a history of commuting? Where were cemeteries located in New York? What types of business were most prevalent? What were the different types of family names listed in New York City? How many people were listed in the directories? Where did our ancestors live in the city during the years covered? The potential for new knowledge creation is limitless.  Expect to hear more on these datasets, and their implications for the Library's NYC Space/Time Directory soon.

Accessing the directories

So what do we have now? Initially the city directories can be accessed and browsed through Digital Collections. Eventually around 175,000 pages of information, featuring the names of millions of New Yorkers, will be online.

Here are some viewing tips.

Blake's Patent Fireproof Paint (1851)

To browse the directory like a book, click the “View as Book” icon. Tip: it’s the icon to the left of the image that looks like an open book. Click each page to turn to the next, until you find the page you want. You can scoot ahead lots of pages by opening the drop down “Jump to” menu and clicking the page you want, or by dragging the pointer at the bottom of the page, from left to right. 

Once you have found the page you want, I recommend clicking the individual page link at the top of the browser, above the corresponding page, to look at that page on its own. I recommend this because this option allows you to use the Scroll Wheel Zoom, to zoom right in on the text.

A closer look

Let’s look at a directory in detail. Doggett’s New York City Directory for 1850-51, cost $2 (a princely sum), and recorded the names and addresses of some 80, 290 New Yorkers living or doing business as far North as 42nd Street. New York City’s population in 1850 was around 696,000.

Churches 1850
Doggett's New York City Directory for 1850-1851: Churches

Index

Next is the Index to the Appendix (the Appendix was later expanded and renamed the City Register, a classified listing made up of business card-style advertisements). This is a useful index for finding the names and addresses of asylums,banks, churches and burial grounds, courts, foreign consuls, hotels, newspapers, police stations, post offices, schools, and more besides. Want to know the price of a stamp? How many people lived in New York in 1840 and 1845? Who the various members of city government were? The names of the railroad companies? Packet steamer destinations? Where to catch a bus? It's all here.

Next is an Alphabetical List of Nurses (might one of these nurses have delivered your ancestor? Or be your ancestor?). Then an almanac, tables showing the times that the sun and moon set and rose (vital information in 1850), followed by Names Too Late For Insertion, Removal, & C, which is just that: genealogists might consult this page if you can’t find a name listed in the main city directory section.

Directory

Flipping past some interesting advertisements, we find the City Directory itself. Following a key to the abbreviations used in the directory (al. for alleyway, n.r. for North River, ct. for court, etc), we see listed the names, occupations, residential addresses, and business addresses of our New York ancestors. The first few entries offer further clues. Elias E. Aaron, at 214 Tenth,  is late a commission merchant, i.e. he is retired: some life news right there. Clarissa Abbot, who lives at 47 Grand Street, is the widow of the late Abijah Abbot. Many women are not listed in the directories until they become widows, and often the name of their deceased husband is included. The 1855 New York State Census lists a Clarissa Abott, 29, widow, living in the First Ward of New York City, with her three children, Mary, 10, Kate, 8, and Frank, 6. Could this be the widow Clarissa listed in the 1850 directory? The dates work.

Clarissa Abbot, New York City directory, 1850/51
Clarissa Abott, 29. 7th Ward NYC, 1855

Business addresses are usually listed first. Some entries even describe how business was done, below, for Timothy Abbott, coal merchant.

Individuals are identified by professional calling (Rev., elsewhere Dr.), and all manner of occupations are represented, some common today, many forgotten: cooper, druggist, carman, tailor, drygoods, musician, inspector, saddler, milliner, carpenter, importer, steamboats, weaver, tinsmith, sugarmaker,  and more besides.

Dipping into the directory, one finds all sorts of characters from mid-19th century New York City history. For instance...

James Harper (1795-1865), and his brothers Fletcher (1806-1877), John, and Joseph launched Harper’s, the second oldest monthly magazine printed in the U.S., in June 1850. They ran their publishing business, Harpers & Brothers, at 82 Cliff Street, and would go on to publish Harper’s Weekly in 1857, and Harper’s Bazar (later Harper’s Bazaar) in 1867.

James Harper. John Harper. Joseph Wesley Harper. Fletcher Harper.
James Harper. John Harper. Joseph Wesley Harper. Fletcher Harper.

154 Nassau Street is the business address of Horace Greeley (1811–1872), proprietor of the New York Daily Tribune, a newspaper he founded in 1841. The Tribune’s weekly edition, featuring Greeley’s editorials, was nationally popular. Greeley was a Whig, then a progressive Republican, and later a Liberal Republican. He campaigned against political corruption, and for the abolition of slavery. During his time with the Tribune, he included among a number of illustrious employees editor Whitelaw Reid (1837–1912), the newspaper’s owner after Greeley’s death, who went on to become U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom (1905-1912). He also employed two European correspondents, Messrs. Karl Marx (1818-1883) and Friedrich Engels (1820-1895). The Tribune Building was conveniently located on the same block as Tammany Hall, a source of much political news.

Also on Nassau is the New York Evening Post: Bryant William C. & Co. publishers, 18 Nassau h. Roslyn, L.I. The New York Post is, of course, still with us, the oldest  daily newspaper in the United States. On the same street, 108  is home to George Wilkes’s National Police Gazette.  Don’t let the title fool you. This was a scandal rag, full of lurid stories about criminal careers, seduction, murder, and rape, replete with graphic (by 19th c. standards) illustrations. It sold 40,000 copies per issue.

Map of the City of New York, Plate 11 / William Perris (1852) , showing the offices of Harpers & Brothers.


Caleb Smith Woodhull (1792-1866) could likely be found at one of three addresses: 5 City Hall, in his capacity as 70th Mayor of New York City, from 1849 to 1851, at his law office, 59 Fulton Street, or at home, 24 Beekman Street.

Waiting in the political wings is one William M. Tweed,  26 years old and in the business of brush making, at 240 & 357 Pearl Street, home being 31 Rutgers. Tweed had the previous year helped found the Americus Fire Company No.6, known as ‘The Big Six,’ with himself as its head. Fire companies at this time were a way into politics, and Tweed came to the notice of the Democrats. In 1852 he was voted in as a member of the U.S. House of Representatives for New York's 5th district.

Herman Melville (1819-1891) lived at 103 Av. 4 (Fourth Avenue), with his wife Elizabeth (Shaw), whom he had married in 1847. During his years in New York Melville wrote his first novels, Typee: A Peep at Polynesian LifeOmoo (1847), Mardi, Redburn (both 1849), and White Jacket (1850). Melville’s U.S. publishers were the previously mentioned Harpers & Brothers.

Photographer Matthew Brady isn’t yet described as a photographer, but as a daguerreotypist, plying his business at 205 Broadway, Brady’s National Gallery of Daguerreotypes. He lived at the American Hotel, 229 Broadway. Frenchman Louis Daguerre developed his photographic process in 1839, and Brady came to hear of it from none other than Samuel F.B. Morse. Shortly after, the young photographer opened his first studio, in 1844.

Brady's National Gallery of Daguerrotypes (1850)

The aforementioned Samuel F.B. Morse was a 19th century Renaissance man. A talented painter he produced portraits of John Adams and James Monroe, among many others. He was also an inventor, contributing to the development of telegraph, and was a co-inventor of Morse Code. He also ran for Mayor of New York City, but was unsuccessful. In 1850 he lived at 142 Nassau, with his second wife, Sarah Elizabeth Griswold.

Cornelius Vanderbilt (1794–1877), “steamboats, 9 Battery pl. H. 10 Washington Place.”

In 1838 two steamships, the Sirius  and the Great Western steamed into New York harbor, the first such vessels to cross the Atlantic, from Europe to the U.S. In the next few decades English and German steamship companies, often with the assistance of government money back home, came to dominate Trans-Atlantic steamship travel. With the exception of companies like Edward Knight Collins’ United States Mail Steamship Company (1848-1854), located at 74 South Street, U.S. shipping companies during the middle of the century focused on overseas trade and serving markets at home. The 1848 California Goldrush was good for New York, and men like Vanderbilt, August Belmont (1813-1890), Prosper M. Whitmore (1798-1876), Royal Phelps (1809-1884), and John A. Dix (1798-1879) made fortunes opening up trade routes to California, via the treacherous Cape of Good Hope, or across Panama and Nicaragua. Between 1851 and 1854 $175 million in gold from California wound up in New York City.

Street Directory

The next section, the Street Directory, describes the streets and cross streets of New York City. This information is useful to anyone researching real estate and house histories, and, from 1870 on, searching the U.S. Federal Census for Manhattan by address. The Street Directory helps researchers locate historical buildings, and addresses. Street names and numbers have a habit of changing over time. If you find a record that says your ancestor lived at 35 East 14th Street in 1850, it does not necessarily go that they lived at the site of the current 35 East 14th Street. Historical street directories help us pinpoint a place in time, especially useful when there is no property map to go by.

Advertisements

Barnum's American Musuem (1850)

The 1850-1851 directory finishes with pages of advertisements for, among other things, Webster’s Dictionary, “Reduced to $6” (a hefty $188 today), and Barnum’s American Museum, on Broadway, opposite The Astor House. Phineas Taylor "P. T." Barnum’s  American Museum was open from 1841 to 1865, when it burned down. Prior to that the building had been home to Scudder’s Museum, which occupied the lot, from 1830. Burrows and Wallace, writing in Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898, describe Barnum’s American Musuem…

Barnum stocked his American Museum [...] with jugglers and ventriloquists, curiosities and freaks, automata and living statuary, gypsies and giants, dwarfs and dioramas, Punch and Judy shows, models of Niagara Falls, and real live American Indians.[...] And, of course, [Barnum] featured blackface dancers, Ethiopian melodists, and the new minstrel show. (p.644)

Other features included were the 2’1" Charles Stratton, better known as Major Tom Thumb, and the Fejee Mermaid, an object purporting to be a mermaid, but actually a hideous model combined of the skeletons of a monkey and a fish. No-one said the past was pretty.

Barnum and Commodore Nutt
Barnum and Commodore Nut

So there you have it. An exciting new collection, and a free digital gateway into researching New York City history, and genealogy. I hope that this post has described to you why this digitization project is great news, and how the directories connect to a wealth of other materials in the Library's collections: maps, photographs, newspapers, books, microfilm, and more besides. As we move forward, as the directories are turned into datasets, researchers will be able to build new tools with the (free) data that the Library makies available.

Libraries and researchers working together to create new knowledge.

Resources:

New York City Directories

Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898 / Edwin G. Burrows and Mike Wallace

 

Comments

Patron-generated content represents the views and interpretations of the patron, not necessarily those of The New York Public Library. For more information see NYPL's Website Terms and Conditions.

I am thrilled that you are

I am thrilled that you are doing this for us who are searching for more information on our relatives. My family came to this country in the 1880's and all stayed in New York City. This will help me immensely.

NYC Digitized Directories

THANK YOU - this is a tremendous assistance to our ongoing research!

Success with digitized NYC directories

Phil, thanks for your post. I'm having great success with some of my subject families in the 1850s. Sue

NYC Digitized City Directories

Thank you this will be great to find all my relatives that came from the former Yugoslavia & settled in New York City. Found jobs, got married and had children. I hope we will be able to just search by last name. If you have to go page by page this is to time consuming.. . Can you tell us when the service of looking them up by name will be available. Once again I hope you will reply. Thanks for starting to make the city directories available - this is a great service for everyone to use..

Great work! I'm tinkering on

Great work! I'm tinkering on Louisville's city directories from 1851-1923 to try and extract the same types of data sets. Right now I'm working page analysis, segmentation and classification based on opencv. Do you all share any code for analyzing the NYC directories? I'd love to be able to browse and contribute.

Hi Chris --

Hi Chris -- You may be interested in the work we're doing on the NYPL Space/Time Directory project, where we're working on parsing the city directory data using OCR and other tools: https://github.com/nypl-spacetime/ We'd love to hear what you think, and hear what you're up to! Cheers -- Josh

Copyright

This is great. Are there any copyright issues that you had to deal with? Is there a certain cutoff date that you had to stop at due to copyright?

Copyright

@Mike -- our copyright analysts could give you the formal response, but the gist is that we scanned for this project only the materials published in the US prior to 1923, which puts those materials in the clear in terms of copyright. You can see a bit more on this chart: http://copyright.cornell.edu/resources/publicdomain.cfm Hope that helps, and thanks for the interest!

Bravo!

As one who has spent his last 8 years scanning hundreds of thousands of pages of historical political (socialist and communist) newspapers, journals, and pamphlets from the period of 1912 - 1975 (roughly) and making them freely publicly available, I APPLAUD the outstanding work of the NY Public Library in making a freely-available digital record of this material. Preserving it and freeing it from limited access at the same time. Bravo! THIS is truly what all great libraries should be doing. NOT locking up such material behind pay-walls, or presenting deliberately crippled digital images of low resolution or presentation that thwarts downloading, as is commonly done these days by many academic institutions. ---marty Martin H. Goodman MD Director, Riazanov Library digital archive projects Board of Directors, Holt Labor Library of San Francisco associated with Marxists.org web site (oldest and largest site on the web presenting freely to all socialist and communist periodicals and pamphlets across the spectrum of left publications)

Directed to Directories

Marty Goodman, and thank you for what you're doing...along with Phil who wrote the article. 8 years, Bravo to you and all who have spent thousands of hours/pages putting the past into the present.

New York City Directory

I am delighted to learn that digitized copies of the NYC Directories will be available on line. Years ago, I wrote my PhD dissertation on 18th and 19th century NYC musical instrument makers. I spent over a year at NYPL (and New-York Historical Society) going through the directories page by page looking instrument makers and their shops just before personal computers became available. (Many note cards were involved.) Being able to access this information on line will be a major boon for future researchers. Thank you!

Phil,

Phil, Many people would search in our catalog, not our digital portal, for the city directories. Hope you can make a link in our catalog for them. Jack Sherefkin

NYCL research

We cannot wait to access the directories to find more information on our great grandparents' and grandfather's life in Manhattan and Brooklyn from 1888 to 1901. Just visited New York CL from the UK to complete research and cannot thank the library staff, in particular in the Mapping Room for all their help and guidance. You do a fantastic job.

NYC Directly

I'm very excited about being able to have a place to try and find my ansters!

searchable?

These are great! Are thew newly scanned directories keyword searchable? I don't think they are, but I'd love to know if that's a possibility! Thanks for this terrific new resource.

searchabilty

I hope that the directions for searching will be improved. I can't figure out how to go the next year after completing searching through one directory.

Month of publication of NYC directories

For genealogical reasons, it would be useful to know when editions were published. For instance, it says that the 1879-1880 edition was issued in 1879. But, what month in 1879? At least, the general timetable for publication, if not for a specific year, might be explained to users. That way, a person who appears in an edition can be assumed to have had a residence before a certain month. If an immigrant, one would have an idea of when he traveled to America, possibly some years earlier than he later stated to the Census-takers.

Thanks, Seth. The directories

Thanks, Seth. The directories will answer that question. Check the title pages, or other prefatory pages before the list of names. Directories in the 19th century were for the most part compiled after May 1st, Moving Day in NYC, and usually issued sometime in June. But, yes, check the title pages for individual years.

when did directories close for publication?

I have an additional question re the dating of info in a directory. Trow's General Directory, says on the title page, for example, "For the year ending July 1, 1902," but the copyright year at the bottom of the page is for the previous year, in this case 1901. Any thoughts on when we might reasonably date information in a particular directory? My current puzzle, for example, is figuring out when a photography studio moved. And many thanks for the digitization project. Invaluable.

Michael Vernon, daughter "Bessie" is Orphan Train Rider NY to IA

My grandmother came after Nov. 1886 and before Oct. 4, 1890 on one of the Orphan Trains from NY to Dubuque, Dubuque, Iowa. I am glad to see you scanning these City Directories. So I can get possibly what Train companies where used. Maybe what the exact Train Engine looked like. What the exact Train Route from NY to Iowa was back then. I visited NYC, Manhattan, NY a few years ago in Aug. Loved getting maps with two addresses from the phone books back in 1887-1889 where a Michael Vernon/Vernan lived. Made copies of the maps and went to the addresses and took photo's of where possibly my grandmother and her parents lived. Possibly at that time might be able to connect other relatives. This is wonderful to see and be able to use. Thank you.

City Directories

I am so incredibly excited to see all these City Directories on line. What a gold mine for genealogists and anyone doing research in New York State. Thank you NYPL, job well done!

Thank You

After spending countless hours struggling with the ancient microfilm readers on 42nd Street this is such a relief and so very helpful. Can't thank you enough. So many more researchers will now benefit.

NYC Directories

Question: Will the NYC directories 1802 - 1848 be added to the collection, and if so, do you know a time frame? Thank you.

NYC directories 1802 - 1848

Holly, the directories covering the years 1802-1848 are in the queue to be digitized but we've been working our way through other projects recently in addition to patron requests through the Permissions department. We should be able to start the directories in the next few months and I'm hoping we will be able to complete them by the end of the year. Thanks for your interest and your patience. They're on the way! - Eric

Reply to Eric Shows

I am thrilled to hear that these years will be coming online. Years ago I remember visiting the NYG&B for a day (in the old building) and viewing many of them. But I have numerous other people I would like to track through these years. I will be looking forward to seeing them! Thanks so much for your reply.

Update on digitizing the remaining NYC Directories

I am happy to see that 5 or 6 of the directories between 1801 and 1848 have been digitized, and I am certainly hoping that the remaining volumes are still on track by the end of the year! They are immeasurably helpful for genealogy work, and I hope to see them online while I am still compos mentis and able to take advantage of them!

1922/23 City Directory & Legibility

I am delighted to find the NYC directories online. Thank you for your great work. However, at least for 1922/23 Directory, I am not sure how to see a page legibly enough to read anything other than the larger type. I tried opening a page in a separate browser window and zooming in, but still couldn't read individual names and address. Is there another technique that I should be using or are higher resolutions available of specific pages?

1922/23 City Directory & Legibility

Thank you for this valuable data set! I also have similar problems in viewing these 20th century directories. When "Viewing as book" the images are too blurry to read. I also have no idea how to get to the desired pages. I am researching the "R"s, for the name "Russell". How do I get to the higher page numbers, without paging 100 at a time until I reach the "Rs"? How may I read these pages, in focus, once I get there?

Thanks and Correction of date in Direct Me NYC 1786 post

Thanks very much for your blog postings on city directories. A post about an 18th Paris directory of names/trades on MEDMED-L, the medieval medicine listserve got me to wondering about earlier city directories. Your reference to Dorothy Spear, Bibliography of American Directories through 1860, and her reference (and your link!) in turn to Edward Salisbury, led me to a 16th-century list of London barber surgeons which will interest the MEDMED folks. Correction: 1588 -- the date given in your quote from Dorothy Spear for the earliest directory, should be 1538, as the Salisbury article makes clear. With continuing thanks, Karen Reeds 3/17/2018 Princeton Research Forum, a community of independent scholars: http://www.princetonresearchforum.org/
First of all, thank you for providing your programs to the public on GitHub and for all of your hard work to create such a beautiful digital collection. I am a senior history undergraduate at St. Mary's University in San Antonio, Texas and a prospective candidate for MSLIS programs at Pratt, CUA, or UT Austin. I have been working with city directories and sanborn maps of San Antonio, Texas, where I attend school and was referred to your GitHub repositories by a professor this past weekend. I'm a bit of a newbie on the command line, is there a way to use the tesseract and hocr detect columns parsers/transcribers to batch transcribe hundreds of pages at once? Is there a good reason NOT to do this? Or is this the approach y'all took at NYPL? Thank You!

Directories for outer boroughs

Where would I find digitized directories for Astoria, Ravenswood and Jamaica for the second half of the 19th century?

City Directories

Great project and I’m looking forward to completion. I have a large format photo of the interior of my great-grandfather’s toothpaste factory, family lore says it was in Brooklyn, c. 1910-20. . Would love to be able find the actual location when this project is complete!

NYC Directories

I was so excited to find this resource, but it is nearly impossible to read the majority of the content. Any advice?

Brooklyn NY German City Directories

Were there any Brooklyn city directories geared towards the German speaking communities in Williamsburg and Ridgewood? Or any German language newspapers for those areas that might have obituaries? I am looking for alternative genealogical sources.Thanks so much for all your outstanding work on the NY City Directory Collection.

Segregation & Slavery in NYC

Hello - Slavery in NY wasn't outlawed until 1847. Do these directories include only affluent white men? There were free Black communities (like Seneca) but were the residents included in these directories, too?

Unlisted Names?

I have ancestors that I know lived in NYC in the 1870s, but I can’t find them in any of the Directories. I’m sure there are plenty of possible reasons for this, but one comes to mind: do you know if it cost anything to be listed in these directories? Thanks!

Directory Abbreviations.

I am researching an individual who I have found in the 1863-64 NYC directory. Next to his name are the lower case initials u s a. followed by his address as h 153 Crosby. I wondered if these initials designated that he was visiting from another country and that this was his temporary address? I was not able to find an explanation in with other abbreviations provided at the beginning of the directory. Thanks for any help with this!

Hi Eileen. I recommend

Hi Eileen. I recommend contacting the librarians at the Milstein division. You can email them (history@nypl.org) or fill out this web form: https://www.nypl.org/help/email-a-librarian/milstein

U.S.A abbreviation in a City Directory

Eileen, One thought for you to consider...The abbreviation U.S.A. and time frame of the city directory you referenced in 1863-4 may mean that the individual you are researching worked in the United States Armory during the Civil War. This abbreviation is often seen in the Springfield, MA city directory for that time frame as many residents of that city worked for the main armory for the Army of the North in Springfield. One thing that does not make sense is why their address was Crosby Street in Manhattan, unless his family still lived there and the individual was temporarily employed in Springfield during the war between the states. When the war ended there were massive layoffs at the armory, then the individual may have returned to the family home in NYC.

How far has this project gotten?

Greetings! I learned about this back in 2016, but, as of now, I only found one Queens, NY, directory with only about 10 pages digitized. Has this project stalled? Am I not looking in the right place? Thanks!