Maybe it's Josh Burdick's love for New York City that brought these photographs, of a 1967 family trip that predates his birth, to light. In an email Burdick explains that, as an electronics technician for the FAA, his father's job took his still-growing family across the country from Texas to to Baltimore, where they took the opportunity to visit the Big Apple. Burdick sets the scene for the tripthe family's only to New York City,

My Mom toted along my three older siblings, Cecil III, Bill, and Jenny while being pregnant with Jeff (to be born in Nov '67). I didn't come along until Dec. '72. She and the kids usually sat on a park bench are [SIC] in the car while my dad hiked up to the top of the Empire State Tower or the Statue of Liberty to shoot these photos. I think he did a pretty good job! The photos are an endearing look into what feels like a whirlwind NYC exploration of another era, and also unknowingly pay tribute to a much squatter city where the Empire State Building stuck out like a sore thumb and Niemeyer and Corbusier's United Nations building was just 22 years old. Burdick had the images scanned from slides, and has also set up a website where he sells prints. Check out his website for more photographs of an erstwhile New York.

More vintage photos of New York City:

What 15 Historic New York City Scenes Look Like Today

Relive the Empty, Industrial Streets of 1990s Williamsburg

Tourists' Photo Treasure Trove Captures 1980s New York City

Fly Back and See Eero Saarinen's TWA Terminal in Its Prime

In Memoriam: 15 Photos of the Twin Towers in the 1970s



· New York City - 1967 [Josh Burdick Photography]

· Flashbacks archive [Curbed]