From the shanty town in Central Park to the crime-plagued slums of Lower Manhattan, these vivid images allow you to inhabit the streets of New York as they were a century ago.

Like this gallery?

Share it: Email And if you liked this post, be sure to check out these popular posts: 47 Colorized Old West Photos That Bring The American Frontier To Life Colorized Civil War Photos That Bring America's Deadliest Conflict To Life 32 Colorized World War I Photos That Bring The Tragedy Of The 'War To End All Wars' To Life 1 of 46 2 of 46 A bootblack stands near City Hall Park. July 1924. Lewis Hine/Library of Congress; Ryan Stennes 3 of 46 Shanty town dwellings sit in Central Park at the height of the Great Depression. 1933. Bettmann/Getty Images; Ryan Stennes 4 of 46 A beggar, perhaps disfigured during World War I, sits on the street. Date unspecified. Bain News Service/Library of Congress; Ryan Stennes 5 of 46 The interior of a subway car including well-dressed female passengers and a uniformed male conductor. Circa 1910. Hulton Archive/Getty Images; Ryan Stennes 6 of 46 Harlem. 1943. Gordon Parks/Library of Congress; Ben Thomas 7 of 46 An Italian immigrant woman and her three children at Ellis Island, on their way to join the family patriarch in Scranton, Pa. 1908. Lewis W. Hine/Museum of the City of New York/Getty Images; Marina Maral 8 of 46 Central Park. 1933. Samuel H. Gottscho/Library of Congress; Jecinci 9 of 46 Nikola Tesla at work in his office in Manhattan. 1916. Jecinci 10 of 46 A Ruthenian immigrant at Ellis Island. Circa 1906. Augustus Francis Sherman/New York Public Library; Dynamichrome 11 of 46 "Lunch Atop a Skyscraper." Laborers take their lunch break on a steel beam atop the 70-story RCA building in Rockefeller Center, more than 800 feet above the street. Sept. 20, 1932. Bettmann/Getty Images; Ryan Stennes 12 of 46 At 72nd Street and Broadway, a horse-drawn fire engine races toward a blaze. Circa 1910. Bettmann/Contributor/Getty Images; Ryan Stennes 13 of 46 A peanut vendor at work in Lower Manhattan. 1945. Todd Webb Archive; Ryan Stennes 14 of 46 A Guadeloupean immigrant at Ellis Island. Circa 1911. Augustus Francis Sherman/New York Public Library; Dynamichrome 15 of 46 Men and women stand in an alley known as "Bandit's Roost" off Mulberry Street in Manhattan. Circa 1887-1890. Jacob Riis/Wikimedia Commons; Ryan Stennes 16 of 46 An impoverished young girl, holding a baby, sits in a doorway next to a garbage can. Circa 1890. Jacob Riis/Museum of the City of New York/Getty Images; Ryan Stennes 17 of 46 Waiters serve lunch to two steel workers on a girder high above the city during construction of the famed Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. Nov. 14, 1930. Keystone/Getty Images; Ryan Stennes 18 of 46 Romanian shepherd immigrant at Ellis Island. Circa 1906. Augustus Francis Sherman/New York Public Library; Dynamichrome 19 of 46 The German airship Hindenburg flies over New York City, just hours before suffering its deadly explosion in Lakehurst, N.J. May 6, 1937. The Metropolitan Museum of Art; Ryan Stennes 20 of 46 A butcher poses with his tools. Circa 1875. Wikimedia Commons; Ryan Stennes 21 of 46 Kids playing in the street join hands. West Harlem. 1946. Todd Webb Archive; Ryan Stennes 22 of 46 Soliders and sailors sit by Father Duffy's statue in Times Square as some boys shine their shoes. June 1943. CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images; Ryan Stennes 23 of 46 A Cossack immigrant at Ellis Island. Date unspecified. Augustus Francis Sherman/New York Public Library; Dynamichrome 24 of 46 A window washer at work on the Empire State Building poses during a brief break from his duties. March 24, 1936. Bettmann/Contributor/Getty Images; Ryan Stennes 25 of 46 Children play near a dead horse left to rot in the street. Circa 1905. Wikimedia Commons; Ryan Stennes 26 of 46 Schoolboys in Harlem. 1930. Keystone-France/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images; Ryan Stennes 27 of 46 Immigrant at Ellis Island identified as a "Hindoo boy." 1911. Augustus Francis Sherman/New York Public Library; Dynamichrome 28 of 46 Orchard Street in the Lower East Side. Circa 1902-1914. New York Tenement House Department/New York Public Library; Ryan Stennes 29 of 46 Jackie Robinson. 1954. Bob Sandberg/Library of Congress; Dana Keller 30 of 46 The Brooklyn Bridge. Circa 1904. Library of Congress; Dana Keller 31 of 46 A Romanian piper immigrant at Ellis Island. Circa 1910. Augustus Francis Sherman/New York Public Library; Dynamichrome 32 of 46 Infamous gangster Albert Anastasia, victim of a gangland slaying, lies murdered on the floor of the barber shop inside Manhattan's Park Sheraton Hotel. Oct. 25, 1957. George Silk/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images; Ryan Stennes 33 of 46 Children lick a massive block of ice in order to stay cool on a hot day. July 6, 1912. Library of Congress; Ryan Stennes 34 of 46 A couple share their farewell kiss at Penn Station before he ships off to war. Circa World War II. Alfred Eisenstaedt/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images; Ryan Stennes 35 of 46 An Algerian immigrant at Ellis Island. Circa 1910. Augustus Francis Sherman/New York Public Library; Dynamichrome 36 of 46 Bar patrons hold up their glasses and toast the end of Prohibition. December 1933. Imagno/Getty Images; Ryan Stennes 37 of 46 A boy and several men pause from their work inside a sweatshop. 1889. Jacob Riis/Library of Congress/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images; Ryan Stennes 38 of 46 A laborer works on the frame of the Empire State Building. 1930. Lewis Hine via Wikimedia Commons; Ryan Stennes 39 of 46 A Sámi immigrant at Ellis Island. Circa 1910. Augustus Francis Sherman/New York Public Library; Dynamichrome 40 of 46 The Brooklyn end of the Manhattan Bridge while still under construction. 1908. AP Photo/Eugene de Salignac/NYC Municipal Archives; Jecinci 41 of 46 Mulberry Street in Mahattan. Circa 1900. Detroit Publishing Co./Library of Congress; Dynamichrome 42 of 46 Newsies and other child laborers gather outside a newspaper office. February 1910. Lewis Hine/Library of Congress; Ryan Stennes 43 of 46 Rev. Joseph Vasilon, a Greek-Orthodox priest and immigrant at Ellis Island. Circa 1910. Augustus Francis Sherman/New York Public Library; Dynamichrome 44 of 46 The Manhattan Bridge as seen from Pike and Henry Streets. 1936. Berenice Abbott/New York Public Library; Ryan Stennes 45 of 46 A laborer during construction of the Empire State Building. 1931. Lewis Hine/New York Public Library; Ryan Stennes 46 of 46 Like this gallery?

Share it: Email

44 Colorized Photos That Bring The Streets Of Century-Old New York City To Life View Gallery

In the years just after the Civil War, the population of New York City sat at slightly less than 1 million. By the close of World War II, some 80 years later, that population had skyrocketed to approximately 7.5 million (and has increased by "only" about 1 million in the 75 years since).

Across the decades between those two wars, New York's population and the city itself grew by unprecedented leaps and bounds as immigrants from around the world streamed in and new construction reached, figuratively and literally, for the skies.

Yet, like so many periods of great growth, these decades also brought great tumult and upheaval as poverty and overcrowding crippled the downtrodden while street gangs and organized crime flourished in response.

Such poverty ultimately came to a head during the Great Depression of the 1930s, when the situation grew so dire that parts of Central Park itself became a shanty town. But it was during those same few years that the Chrysler Building, the Empire State Building, Rockefeller Center, Radio City Music Hall, and many other landmarks were built.

In fact, much of what defines New York in the popular imagination to this day rose out of the ashes of the 1929 Wall Street crash that kickstarted the Great Depression. Once again, tumult and growth went hand in hand as New York City became the metropolis we know today.

Experience this tumult and growth for yourself in the gallery above — featuring colorized photos of New York taken between roughly the 1870s and the 1940s — and discover more about the history of New York during this era below.

Immigration

Any portrait of New York and its growth in the years between the Civil War and World War II must begin with the enormous swell of immigration in those years. By the time the U.S. government opened an immigration processing station on Ellis Island on December 17, 1900, the city had already been welcoming hundreds of thousands of immigrants per year for more than a decade. But after Ellis Island, those numbers truly exploded.

Throughout the first 15 years of the 20th century, an average of more than 5,000 immigrants entered New York via Ellis Island (largely from central, eastern, and southern Europe) each day. Today, nearly 40 percent of the U.S. population can trace at least one of their ancestors back to the immigrants who came through Ellis Island during that short span.

And with so many residents — the city's population more than tripled between 1890 and 1910 — packed into a small cluster of immigrant neighborhoods, overcrowding, poverty, and crime quickly became an inevitable result.

Poverty And Crime

By 1920, New York's number of foreign-born immigrants had reached 2 million, which was more than one-third of the city's total population. And an enormous number of those immigrants took up residence in just a few of the city's neighborhoods, causing places like Chinatown, Little Italy, and the Lower East Side to swell far beyond capacity.

With overcrowding a major issue, many immigrants were forced to live in dilapidated tenements that would widely be considered unlivable today.

Landlords converted single-family units into multi-room apartments, leading to situations in which seven people would be living within a space of about 325 square feet, the size of half a subway car. What's more, these tiny apartments often lacked toilets, showers, baths, and even flowing water. Landlords weren't even required to install toilets in tenements until 1904.

And such desperate living conditions among the city's poor often led to desperate acts in the form of street gangs and organized crime.

For decades starting in the mid-1800s, infamous gangs like the Bowery Boys and the Dead Rabbits had battled it out in Lower Manhattan's Five Points neighborhood. And with immigration and poverty soaring at the close of the 1800s into the early 1900s, many more turned to crime.

From the Chinese gangs of "The Bloody Angle" to the nascent Mafia in Little Italy and beyond, criminal enterprises flourished as drugs, prostitution, gambling, and even murder became big business in impoverished immigrant communities in the early years of the 20th century. Everyone from Lucky Luciano and Meyer Lansky to Dutch Schultz and Al Capone got their start in the breeding ground for crime that was the slums of New York circa 1900-1930.

Depression And Growth

The same poverty that helped fuel New York's early-1900s rise in crime reached a climax with the Great Depression.

After the Wall Street crashes of September and October 1929, the United States and the rest of the Western industrialized world sank into the worst economic cataclysm in modern history. The worldwide GDP fell by an unthinkable 15 percent and American unemployment reached a historic high of about 25 percent in 1933.

And perhaps no place in America felt the effects of the Great Depression worse than the place where it at least nominally started: New York. With so many immigrants — so many of them already impoverished — having poured into the city over the preceding decades, the city's housing and job prospects were shaky even before the crash.

Then the crash came and made things much, much worse. In the words of the New York Tenement Museum: "By 1932, half of New York's manufacturing plants were closed, one in every three New Yorkers was unemployed, and roughly 1.6 million were on some form of relief. The city was unprepared to deal with this crisis."

However, the city ultimately proved well prepared to respond. Progressive Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia's housing initiatives shut down 10,000 decrepit tenements (more than half of which lacked central heating and toilets) and forced landlords to upgrade another 30,000.

In the end, the Great Depression served to expose the relatively hidden wounds that had been festering in New York for years — or at least force the powers that be to do something about them. And with those wounds cleaned out, the city was able to rebuild into something stronger and become, in many ways, the New York we know today.

Next, see footage of what life was like on the streets of New York City in the early 20th century:

Images colorized by Ryan Stennes, Benjamin Thomas/Colours Of Yesterday, Marina Maral, Dana Keller, Jecinci, and Jordan Lloyd/Dynamichrome.