20188.
12686. Drilling holes in side walls of railway tunnel under Hudson River, N.Y.
56. Sailors on land-agile construction men on a suspended iron section, 200 feet above ground, New York.
V23437. Working High Above the Streets Building the Great Steel-framed Skyscrapers, New York.
12155. Looking through arch, Cathedral of St. John the Divine, showing partly finished south wall.
12156. Workmen setting small stones in place in arches of nave, Cathedral of St. John the Divine, NY.
12157. Setting small stones in mortar to form the nave arches, Cathedral of St. John the Divine, NY.
12158. Looking down to street from the top wall, showing masons at work, Cathedral of St. John the Divine, N.Y.
2977. The Speedway, Part of a Beautiful Boulevard Along the Harlem and Hudson Rivers near New York City. “Recognizing the long-standing popularity of horse racing among New Yorkers, the city built a ‘Harlem River Speedway’ along the west bank of the Harlem River in Manhattan,” writes NYCroads.com. “The 95-foot-wide dirt roadway stretched two and one-half miles from West 155th Street north to West 208th Street. Presaging the automobile parkways of the 20th century, the speedway was flanked by trees and pedestrian walkways. When it was not being used as a racetrack, the Harlem River Speedway was used as an exercise track.” Built in 1898, it was opened to automobiles in 1919 and paved a few years later. By the 1940s, it was closed off and incorporated into the Robert Moses-backed Harlem River Drive.