Informed Archives: The Straphangers Campaign and the NYC Subway System
by Meredith Mann, Manuscripts and Archives Division, Stephen A. Schwarzman Building
August 29, 2017
Much attention has been paid lately to the MTA during what has been termed the “Summer of Hell.” Instead of simply bemoaning the current state of affairs, we can look to a citizen’s group that has been actively working toward improving the City transit system for almost forty years.
Hempstead, Segregation and Black Suburbia
by Candice Frederick
September 29, 2015
In honor of our new exhibition, Black Suburbia: From Levittown to Ferguson, we explore segregation in one of the most popular suburban neighborhoods in the U.S.—Hempstead, New York.
Subway Construction: Then and Now
by Carmen Nigro, Assistant Director, Map, Dorot Jewish, and Local History & Genealogy Divisions, Stephen A. Schwarzman Building
May 4, 2015
Recent photos, compared side by side with photographs of the construction of New York’s first subway, which opened in 1904, provide stark contrasts. They are evidence of an industry drastically changed: the methods of construction used, the condition and expressions of the workers, and the scale of the projects differ in striking ways.
New City Jobs Posted... Be Prepared with Test Books from the Library!
by Christel Ellis, George Bruce Library
July 23, 2014
The City of New York has just begun a new fiscal year, starting on July 1. With this new year comes new opportunities within the employment sector. A wave of new jobs and their applicable tests have opened up... and as a result there is a surge of interest in test preparation books from the New York Public Library.
March Author @ the Library Programs at Mid-Manhattan
by Elizabeth Waters, AskNYPL
March 4, 2014
A new approach to health care reform ... 20 years of Harlem Street Portraits ... humanist architecture ... The Extreme Life of the Sea ... New York City's unbuilt subways ... mothers ... the power of storytelling ... a century of candy ... New York's lost amusement parks ... the public library ... 11 missing men of WWII ... great city planning.
Meet the Speakers at our Fulton Fish Market Talk!
by Jenny Baum, Supervising Adult Librarian, Jefferson Market Library
February 18, 2014
This Wednesday, February 26 from 6-7:45 p.m. at Jefferson Market Library, come to an evening of memory, protest and plans. Here's some information about the upcoming speakers.
November Author @ the Library Programs at Mid-Manhattan
by Elizabeth Waters, AskNYPL
November 4, 2013
Is Detroit City really the place to be? What happens in a typical day at a busy NYC hospital? How does a traveler lose himself all over the globe? Is it possible for the government to achieve full employment in the U.S.? How can government in the 21st century
The Jews of Shanghai: Uncovering the Archives and Stories
by Raymond Pun
March 28, 2013
"Life was difficult in Shanghai, but infinitely better than anything they had left behind. From lower-middle-class comfort, the Tobias family was reduced to poverty but not to starvation. There was always food, always something to eat, always shelter even when the Jewish community was ghettoized shortly after Pearl Harbor. Thus even under terribly difficult conditions Moses Tobias was able to take care of his family but under the Nazis the conditions of the Jews were far worse than merely 'terribly difficult.'
"Shanghai was a multiethnic city and the
Happy Birthday Grand Central Terminal!
by Raymond Pun
February 6, 2013
Did you know that Grand Central Station (also known as Grand Central Terminal) recently turned 100?
Opened in 1871 on 42nd Street between Park and Lexington avenues, the station was renovated and reopened in February 1913. Grand Central is one of the largest train connecters to the Metropolitan Transportation Authority's (MTA) 4, 5, 6,
Short-Term Research Fellows: A Closer Look at Brooklyn History
by Joshua Britton, Short-Term Research Fellow
October 22, 2012
As a graduate student whose dissertation examines the development of Brooklyn in the nineteenth century, I have spent more hours than I care to count the past several years poring through documents in the Brooklyn Historical Society, the Brooklyn Public Library and other repositories in what was formerly the nation's third-largest city and is now New York City's most populous borough. Recently however, through the New York Public Library's Short-Term Research Fellowship Program and
The New York City Historical GIS Project
by Matt Knutzen, Linda May Uris Director, Humanities and Social Sciences Research Divisions, Stephen A. Schwarzman Building
June 13, 2012
Extra! Extra! Read All About the Newsboys Strike of 1899
by Rosa Li, AskNYPL
May 25, 2012
This year the musical Newsies got nominated for eight Tony Awards. The popularity of the Disney Broadway show based on the Disney film has led many of our younger patrons to ask about the newsboys and the strike they led in 1899 on which the film and play are based.
If you are interested in learning more about the strike of 1899 (there were other strikes before and after) simply do
Jane Jacobs and the Hudson Street Ballet
by John Flood, Library Manager, Grand Central Library
May 4, 2012
I read Jane Jacobs's The Death and Life of Great American Cities years before I moved to New York, back when I wrote for community newspapers in my home state of Delaware. Jacobs wrote sensibly, without pretense. She observed things closely, and drew logical conclusions. She obviously cared about her subject passionately, but her arguments were not emotional. They
A Learning Celebration! Food for Body and Soul at the Centers for Reading and Writing
by Hilary Schenker
June 21, 2011
Tutors receive certificates for hours of service.“Spring Learning Celebration Tonight!” reads a handmade sign in the Tompkins Square Library’s Center for Reading and Writing. Paper flowers decorate the folding tables, and green and yellow streamers festoon windows and bookshelves. The first student arrives two hours early, toting two huge aluminum trays of macaroni salad. “Can I leave this here for the celebration?” she says, depositing the heavy trays on a table.
Twice a year, each of the eight
Resources for Affordable Housing in NYC
by Jessica Ross
April 13, 2011
This post offers information about affordable, subsidized and supportive housing programs in New York City.
The various federal, state and local rules and departments governing non-market housing in New York City can be a difficult maze to navigate: there are some support and advocacy organizations at the bottom of the page that may be able to help you chart your path through the NYC housing universe. Remember you can also visit the information desk at your local library branch for help looking for housing information or
The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire
by Lauren Lampasone, Senior Librarian, Stavros Niarchos Foundation Library (SNFL)
March 25, 2011
The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, which took place 100 years ago today, was a tragic incident in New York City's history but also a turning point in the early labor movement.
Life After English Class: Yoko's Story
by Hilary Schenker
January 3, 2011
Yoko and Jacqueline reading at a Learning CelebrationYoko, a former student from Japan, stopped by the Tompkins Square Library's Center for Reading and Writing to say hello. I took the opportunity to ask her a few questions.
How did you find the Center for Reading and Writing?
It was in 2003, November maybe. I actually visited other libraries and I was looking for a conversation class. I think I
Public Assistance Resources in NYC
by Ursula Murphy
December 30, 2010
Are you confused about the numerous benefit and assistance programs offered by New York state and city government and whether you qualify? There is a lot of information to digest out there and it's constantly changing. Both Access NYC and My Benefits are two helpful sites that allow you to screen for your eligibility for public assistance. You can do so anonymously or by creating an account. You will be asked to enter some basic information about yourself and your family to
A Helping Hand from Food Stamps
by Ursula Murphy
December 17, 2010
The United States Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, known more commonly as the Food Stamp Program, provides support to low-income New Yorkers including working families, qualified immigrants, the elderly and the disabled to increase their ability to purchase food. A household must qualify under eligibility rules set by the federal government to enroll in this program. To determine your eligiblity for this or other goverment assistance programs, click
More Radical Women in the Wertheim Study
by Jay Barksdale
December 10, 2010
Food is a Feminist IssueTuesday is the second of the Wertheim Study scholars' lecture series: Singular and Collective: Radical Women Artists [in NYC during the 1970s]. This one, by Dr. Aseel Sawalha, is the collective part. She's going to examine the scene from the perspective of anthropology, focusing on two women's arts collectives: The