East Coast US, Northeastern US

New York, New York

By the time we moved out of Connecticut a couple months back, I’d lived there for 2 months shy of 6 years. And in that time, I only managed to spend about 24 hours in New York City. Total. Despite the fact that it was only 2.5 hours away.

My main excuse is that it’s expensive – at least from the perspective of a broke grad student. Also, 5-6 hours total travel time is pretty far for a day trip. So I really didn’t spend as much time in the city as I would’ve liked.

One day, I’ll go back and give New York the exploration it deserves. For now, I have the memories and photos and experiences from my 3 brief trips to the Big Apple.

My first thought upon arrival in NYC: wow, this is a whole different world!

Hundreds of skyscrapers and thousands of yellow cabs, pedestrians and neon signs, and that bustling energy that’s almost addictive. It’s unlike anything else I’ve ever experienced, and while I can say with absolute certainty that I’d never want to live there, it’s definitely a place I want to spend more time exploring.

My first visit to the city lasted about 2 hours. I was taking the train to North Carolina to visit a friend and had a moderately lengthy layover at Penn Station. I messaged another friend asking what I could do in 2 hours with my luggage and it turned out that she worked about 2 blocks away at the time and was able to meet up with me and give me a mini tour. So we grabbed some coffee (it was a chilly November day) and she led me through the throngs of people to Times Square and the Empire State Building.

A couple years later, my friend/roommate offered to take me into the city for a day. She’s very familiar with New York so she was basically my tour guide. We were on the road by 7am on a Sunday and miraculously managed to get into the city without hitting any traffic. We parked and proceeded to walk about 13 miles (21 km) as we explored the highlights of Central Park, Times Square, and Midtown Manhattan.

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Central Park
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Times Square

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Rockefeller Center
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The Met

We also went for a stroll along The High Line, which is an old elevated rail line that sits about 30 feet above Manhattan, parallel to 10th Ave. It’s from here that I caught my first ever glimpse of the Statue of Liberty, way off in the distance!

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Now, despite my love of teaching and exploring and adventure, I am absolutely an introvert. And sometimes my introverted self needs some alone time. Sometimes I read, sometimes I write, and sometimes I binge watch TV shows. I once watched an entire season of Friends in one (cold and snowy) day, and I’m not embarrassed to admit it.

Anyway, the point of this little tangent is that my favorite show of all time is Castle. If you haven’t heard of it, you should definitely check it out (the first 7 seasons, don’t bother with season 8). The main character is a novelist named Richard Castle who just so happens to reside in Manhattan, and the exterior facade that they use to depict his apartment is located on the corner of Crosby and Broome Streets in SoHo.

So naturally, I asked my friend if we could walk 12 blocks out of our way so I could see it (yes, I’m that obsessed). Since she’s such a wonderful person, she humored me.

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Fast forward three years, and our time in Connecticut was winding down. Pat and I were frantically trying to get through our “Before We Leave CT” to-do list – which was already a much-narrowed-down version of all the places I’d like to eventually go – and “visit the Statue of Liberty” remained unaccomplished. So, in one of my spur of the moment travel planning sessions, I looked up boat tickets for the Statue of Liberty/Ellis Island tour. They were selling out quickly, and months in advance, so we decided we better pick a weekend and just book them.

I was pleasantly surprised that it was only $21.50 per person for round-trip boat fare plus entry into both attractions (including a climb to Lady Liberty’s crown), and – as it turns out – an extremely in-depth self-guided audio tour of both locations.

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Battery Park & Castle Clinton National Monument

We were on the 10:40am ferry out of Battery Park in Manhattan (tours also depart from Liberty State Park in New Jersey) and got thoroughly drenched with rain on the 20 minute ride out to Liberty Island. Pat and I seem to have developed a nearly-flawless track record when it comes to booking things in advance and then having terrible weather when the day finally arrives.

It’s a trend I’m eager to break.

Anyway, once on the islands you’re left to your own devices. Ferries depart every 20 minutes, so we took our time to walk through the museum and climb the statue and then simply hopped on the next available boat to depart for Ellis Island.

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I highly recommend taking time to walk through the Liberty Island museum – it was fascinating to learn about the origins, design, building, and transport of the Statue. History knowledge has never been a strong point for me, but I knew even less about the Statue of Liberty than I realized.

The same can be said for Ellis Island.

I was under the impression that all arriving immigrants landed at Ellis Island but, in reality, the boat docked at New York Harbor first. First- and second-class passengers were screened on board the ship while en route and then allowed to disembark upon arrival. Third-class and steerage passengers (in other words, most of them) were ferried to Ellis Island for screening and then ferried back to the mainland once they were cleared for entry.

The museum at Ellis Island is enormous, and we easily could have spent most of the day there. I read somewhere that 3 hours was a good amount of time for this entire trip, but I’d say that’s only accurate if you’re not interested in the museums.

The Ellis Island National Museum of Immigration has three different self-guided tours, complete with audio narration (free and available in many languages) if you’d like. We only had time for one, so we followed the Immigrant Experience tour. This tour walked us through the process of arriving at Ellis Island and being screened for entry into the US.

We began in the main room, where we would’ve been asked to deposit our baggage before ascending the stairs to the Registry Room. This enormous room was where screening began.

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The screening process was, at times, very different from what would be considered appropriate today. They would do a brief medical exam to check for communicable diseases, and you were quarantined in the Ellis Island hospital if you had one. They also checked mental health with various reading and/or visual tests.

Anyone deemed physically or mentally unwell was detained for further questioning to ensure they wouldn’t become a burden on society. Additional screening protocols included watching a person ascend the stairs and timing their completion of various puzzles (which were used because most immigrants didn’t speak English, therefore watching them complete such tasks was a much easier way to test their mental capacity).

Unmarried women were not allowed entry unless a family member already in the US could vouch for them. Anyone without at least $25 was also not allowed to pass the screening checkpoint (though in the audio tour, one immigrant recalled how his family had only $25 between them so the first in line would present the money and then place it in their back pocket so the next family member could present it, etc. and this is how they gained entry).

A small percentage of immigrants were detained for further questioning due to various other reasons as well; if they were suspected of breaking immigration laws, for example. I took a mock test to see if I’d be allowed entry, but I was denied – because I live with Pat out of wedlock, already have a job (contract laborers were not allowed), and admitted to singing/talking to myself on occasion. (Who doesn’t, right? But apparently that raises questions about my mental sanity.)

In total, only 2% of immigrants were actually turned away during the entirety of Ellis Island’s operations (although, 2% of 12 million still equates to thousands of individuals being placed on steam ships back to their original port) and a couple thousand died in the hospital on the island, mostly of communicable diseases.

Long story short, the Ellis Island museum and audio tours are very in depth and informative, and I highly recommend taking the time to do at least one of them.

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Pudgey poses at the bow of the ferry just before departing Ellis Island

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After returning to the mainland, we took a 2 mile walk up to McSorley’s Old Ale House, a mid-19th century Irish Tavern and the last New York City bar to prohibit entry to women (they held out until it became illegal in 1970).

This place was recommended to us by a couple on our tour bus during our recent Costa Rica trip. They serve only light ale and dark ale, in 2 half pint glasses (and no, you cannot just order 1 half pint). We had the dark ale, and it was pretty darn good. McSorley’s is certainly the place to go if you’re looking for some good beer and a hefty dose of history.

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Apparently everyone feels this way, because it was standing room only when we arrived, and even that was scarce. It would’ve been nice to sit at a table and have some time to look at everything hanging from the walls, but we ended up just chugging our beers and moving on.

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Hungry and full of beer, we ended up around the corner at a small pizza place called Ray’s. It wasn’t crowded but had an ‘A’ health rating, so we figured that was good enough for us. It probably wasn’t New York’s best pizza, but it was reasonably priced, and we enjoyed our meal.

And that pretty much wrapped up our day in the city; we hopped back on the subway up to Grand Central Station and then transferred to Metro North for the trip back to New Haven.

But just before we hopped on the train, my second most unbelievable ‘small world’ moment occurred.

Some of you may recall my detailing of my most unbelievable ‘small world’ encounter: the time I ran into my undergraduate ecology professor from Washington at a lake in the Canadian Rockies (if not, you can read that tale here).

Well, this time I was the professor and one of my students was… well, the student.

In a city of 8.5 million people, a student of mine – who was likewise not from New York City – just so happened to be descending a set of stairs in Grand Central Station at the exact same time I was ascending them.

Big freaking city, small freaking world.

6 thoughts on “New York, New York”

  1. I live on Long island and still can’t get myself to visit the city more often. And, I haven’t been to the statue of liberty, but have seen it from a different boat tour. But the Ellis Island museum tour seems interesting, would be informative to learn how people came in back then.

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  2. Interesting story about our ancestry goes along with this post. I looked for years for the immigration records of the Kwoczalla family. I knew they were here in 1860 but didn’t know exactly when they came. I looked at every boat list I could find that came into NYC from 1850 to 1860 using Alois Kwoczalla’s age to determine my starting point. I looked and looked. Nothing! Then I read about Castle Garden at the Battery in NYC. Yes Castle Clinton was know as Castle Garden before the Statue of Liberty was erected and THIS is where all European immigrants were brought for processing. Our ancestors came from Bremerhaven Germany on the boat SS Nord America sailing ship; although steamers were in use in 1856 when they arrived. The Nord America was a Barque which is a three mast sailing ship and it was owned by Hamburg-Amerikanische Packetfarhrt Aktien-Gesellschaft or HAPAG. If you take notice you still see HAPAG printed on shipping trailers as the company still exists. Anyway they sailed into Hoboken N J where the Hamberg American docks were and were loaded onto a steam powered ferry to Castle Clinton, they were processed and moved on to Pittsburgh. Before it was Castle Garden the site was known as Fort Clinton built or West Battery built to defend NYC during the War of 1812. The name Castle Clinton was chosen to commemorate both uses of this section of the battery. Because it is the embarkation point for the trip to Ellis Island and the Statue of Liberty it has the destinction of being the most visited National Park/ Monument in the nation.

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