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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,411 --> 00:00:02,991 (wind blowing) 2 00:00:06,709 --> 00:00:09,879 (awe-inspiring music) 3 00:00:35,033 --> 00:00:37,783 (majestic music) 4 00:01:10,490 --> 00:01:13,050 - [Narrator] Our journey begins at Hyde Park Mansion, 5 00:01:13,050 --> 00:01:15,250 the summer home of the Vanderbilt family 6 00:01:15,250 --> 00:01:17,710 on the Hudson River, about 100 miles upstream 7 00:01:17,710 --> 00:01:20,200 from New York, which is just one of the many 8 00:01:20,200 --> 00:01:22,130 great houses overlooking the river. 9 00:01:23,080 --> 00:01:26,930 Heading south, we take in West Point Military Academy 10 00:01:26,930 --> 00:01:28,680 as well as a famous golf club 11 00:01:28,680 --> 00:01:30,320 and a notorious prison facility. 12 00:01:31,580 --> 00:01:34,990 At Sleepy Hollow, we take a look at the old Dutch church 13 00:01:34,990 --> 00:01:37,360 in Washington Irving's creepy tale 14 00:01:37,360 --> 00:01:41,080 before looking at two more 19th-century mansions. 15 00:01:41,080 --> 00:01:44,880 The river then takes us down to the city that never sleeps, 16 00:01:44,880 --> 00:01:46,050 New York. 17 00:01:46,050 --> 00:01:48,200 (birds chirping) 18 00:01:48,200 --> 00:01:52,600 The Hudson River flows for 315 miles through New York 19 00:01:52,600 --> 00:01:56,940 and is named after Henry Hudson who explored it in 1609. 20 00:02:01,630 --> 00:02:03,240 In the late 19th century, 21 00:02:03,240 --> 00:02:06,330 during what has become known as the Gilded Age, 22 00:02:06,330 --> 00:02:08,950 many beautiful, large mansions were built 23 00:02:08,950 --> 00:02:11,400 for wealthy industrialists along the river. 24 00:02:13,690 --> 00:02:16,780 Hyde Park Mansion, with its 54 rooms, 25 00:02:16,780 --> 00:02:20,380 was home to Frederick William Vanderbilt and constructed 26 00:02:20,380 --> 00:02:23,860 in the Beaux-Arts architectural style from 1895. 27 00:02:25,680 --> 00:02:30,080 It was designed to be a seasonal country residence. 28 00:02:30,080 --> 00:02:32,170 The house was very modern at the time 29 00:02:32,170 --> 00:02:35,460 and used concrete and steel in its construction. 30 00:02:35,460 --> 00:02:38,420 Electricity came from a private power house 31 00:02:38,420 --> 00:02:40,990 and the house even had hot air central heating. 32 00:02:42,310 --> 00:02:45,500 The original estate was around 600 acres 33 00:02:45,500 --> 00:02:48,950 but in 1938, much of the land and the mansion 34 00:02:48,950 --> 00:02:51,730 were donated to the National Park Service. 35 00:02:51,731 --> 00:02:54,601 (gentle instrumental music) 36 00:02:54,600 --> 00:02:58,100 Two miles downriver is the Springwood Estate 37 00:02:58,100 --> 00:03:01,550 which is the birthplace, home and burial place 38 00:03:01,550 --> 00:03:04,700 of the 32nd President of the United States, 39 00:03:04,700 --> 00:03:06,310 Franklin D. Roosevelt. 40 00:03:07,990 --> 00:03:12,880 The estate was bought by the President's father in 1866 41 00:03:12,880 --> 00:03:14,620 who then enlarged the house. 42 00:03:15,519 --> 00:03:18,349 It was further enlarged in 1915 43 00:03:18,350 --> 00:03:20,430 so that they yet-to-be-president 44 00:03:20,430 --> 00:03:22,630 could entertain his political friends. 45 00:03:23,550 --> 00:03:25,780 He designed the two wings himself, 46 00:03:25,780 --> 00:03:28,650 giving the house a Colonial Revival Style. 47 00:03:29,820 --> 00:03:32,410 The Roosevelt Library, close to the house, 48 00:03:32,410 --> 00:03:34,140 was the first Presidential Library 49 00:03:34,140 --> 00:03:35,960 built in the United States 50 00:03:35,960 --> 00:03:39,790 and was designed by the President himself in 1939. 51 00:03:41,524 --> 00:03:44,114 (wind blowing) 52 00:03:46,310 --> 00:03:49,060 (majestic music) 53 00:03:52,900 --> 00:03:55,550 The Hudson River is still a busy waterway 54 00:03:55,550 --> 00:03:57,400 and navigable for much of its length. 55 00:03:58,330 --> 00:04:01,500 With the opening of the Erie Canal further upstream, 56 00:04:01,500 --> 00:04:04,850 goods could be transported between the city of Buffalo 57 00:04:04,850 --> 00:04:07,440 and the Great Lakes and the Port of New York. 58 00:04:08,950 --> 00:04:12,100 The success of the waterway led to industrial growth 59 00:04:12,100 --> 00:04:15,300 along the river during the late 19th century. 60 00:04:15,300 --> 00:04:18,600 However, serious pollution problems of raw sewage 61 00:04:18,600 --> 00:04:21,220 and industrial waste followed 62 00:04:21,220 --> 00:04:23,530 and it was only from the 1960s 63 00:04:23,530 --> 00:04:27,520 that anti-pollution legislation finally came into force 64 00:04:27,520 --> 00:04:29,760 and the clean up effort could begin. 65 00:04:34,390 --> 00:04:37,160 Environmental protection was also important 66 00:04:37,160 --> 00:04:39,160 for the landscape overlooking the river. 67 00:04:40,250 --> 00:04:42,840 The Hudson Highlands were saved 68 00:04:42,840 --> 00:04:46,260 and became a state park during the mid 20th century, 69 00:04:46,260 --> 00:04:50,320 as previously the area had been heavily logged and mined. 70 00:04:50,322 --> 00:04:53,002 (gentle instrumental music) 71 00:04:53,000 --> 00:04:56,340 Today, the 6,000 acre park, with its proximity 72 00:04:56,340 --> 00:05:01,180 to New York City, is a popular destination for day hikes. 73 00:05:01,182 --> 00:05:03,932 (birds chirping) 74 00:05:05,310 --> 00:05:08,740 Just downstream is the United States Military Academy 75 00:05:08,740 --> 00:05:12,800 at West Point, and the oldest of the five such academies 76 00:05:12,800 --> 00:05:14,200 in the United States. 77 00:05:15,160 --> 00:05:19,040 It was founded in 1802 with the motto, 78 00:05:19,037 --> 00:05:20,087 "Duty, 79 00:05:20,087 --> 00:05:21,197 "honor, 80 00:05:21,197 --> 00:05:22,837 "country." 81 00:05:22,840 --> 00:05:25,790 On the hill above West Point is Fort Putnam, 82 00:05:25,790 --> 00:05:29,110 Completed in 1778, to protect the Hudson 83 00:05:29,110 --> 00:05:31,310 during the Revolutionary War. 84 00:05:31,310 --> 00:05:35,060 It was later enlarged but had gradually fallen into disuse 85 00:05:35,060 --> 00:05:36,510 by the mid 19th century. 86 00:05:38,150 --> 00:05:42,050 Around 65,000 cadets have graduated from West Point, 87 00:05:42,050 --> 00:05:46,230 including several household names, Custer, Lee, 88 00:05:46,230 --> 00:05:48,410 Sherman and Meade from the Civil War. 89 00:05:49,550 --> 00:05:53,020 From World War II, MacArthur, Bradley and Patton. 90 00:05:54,590 --> 00:05:57,850 And also two presidents, Ulysses S. Grant 91 00:05:59,190 --> 00:06:00,550 and Dwight D. Eisenhower. 92 00:06:02,000 --> 00:06:05,060 George Washington is celebrated as America's first 93 00:06:05,060 --> 00:06:08,490 Commander in Chief who won independence for America 94 00:06:08,490 --> 00:06:10,450 before the academy was founded. 95 00:06:11,600 --> 00:06:15,330 In West Point's history, there have been 74 recipients 96 00:06:15,330 --> 00:06:18,880 of the Medal of Honor, the highest award for bravery 97 00:06:18,880 --> 00:06:20,390 in the United States. 98 00:06:24,550 --> 00:06:26,410 On the opposite bank of the Hudson 99 00:06:26,410 --> 00:06:28,500 is the first railroad track to be built 100 00:06:28,500 --> 00:06:31,210 in the sate of New York in 1831. 101 00:06:32,150 --> 00:06:33,670 The line was originally called 102 00:06:33,670 --> 00:06:36,030 The Mohawk and Hudson Railroad 103 00:06:36,030 --> 00:06:39,080 and was built by Frederick William Vanderbilt 104 00:06:39,080 --> 00:06:40,720 whose house we saw earlier. 105 00:06:43,090 --> 00:06:46,870 In 1853, the line became part of the much bigger 106 00:06:46,870 --> 00:06:49,060 New York Central Railroad. 107 00:06:49,056 --> 00:06:51,636 (upbeat music) 108 00:06:54,980 --> 00:06:57,590 Today, diesel locomotives carry commuters 109 00:06:57,590 --> 00:07:01,260 to and from Grand Central Station in New York 110 00:07:01,260 --> 00:07:04,830 on a 75-mile scenic stretch of track, 111 00:07:04,830 --> 00:07:07,070 much of it running right next to the river. 112 00:07:12,370 --> 00:07:16,120 In 1996, the Hudson National Golf Club 113 00:07:16,120 --> 00:07:18,460 opened up on the site of an old estate 114 00:07:18,460 --> 00:07:20,100 downstream from West Point 115 00:07:21,040 --> 00:07:24,690 and the mansion easily converted into the club house. 116 00:07:24,690 --> 00:07:28,360 The 260-acre site, which now ranks in the top 100 117 00:07:28,360 --> 00:07:31,660 golf clubs in America, offers unrivaled views 118 00:07:31,660 --> 00:07:33,420 over the Hudson River. 119 00:07:33,423 --> 00:07:36,413 (upbeat music) 120 00:07:36,410 --> 00:07:40,010 The club is unusual in that players have to walk the course 121 00:07:40,010 --> 00:07:43,870 and only have use of a golf cart if over 60 years of age 122 00:07:43,870 --> 00:07:44,970 or physically infirm. 123 00:07:46,314 --> 00:07:48,224 (birds chirping) 124 00:07:48,220 --> 00:07:51,740 A very different sort of club is a few miles downriver 125 00:07:51,740 --> 00:07:54,460 and one that you don't really want to join. 126 00:07:54,457 --> 00:07:57,627 Sing-Sing Correctional Facility. 127 00:07:57,630 --> 00:08:01,870 This maximum-security prison came into being in 1824. 128 00:08:03,540 --> 00:08:07,270 Over the years there have been 614 executions, 129 00:08:07,270 --> 00:08:11,040 but in 1972, the death penalty was finally declared 130 00:08:11,040 --> 00:08:14,600 unconstitutional in the state of New York 131 00:08:14,600 --> 00:08:17,190 and the electric chair was removed. 132 00:08:19,300 --> 00:08:23,070 Today the prison houses around 2,000 inmates. 133 00:08:24,055 --> 00:08:25,395 (wind blowing) 134 00:08:25,398 --> 00:08:27,128 (gentle instrumental music) 135 00:08:27,130 --> 00:08:32,130 In 1996, North Tarrytown was renamed Sleepy Hollow 136 00:08:32,490 --> 00:08:34,890 when residents voted to have it changed 137 00:08:34,890 --> 00:08:37,410 to honor Washington Irving's story, 138 00:08:37,410 --> 00:08:41,210 The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, published in 1820, 139 00:08:41,210 --> 00:08:43,500 which was set in the town. 140 00:08:43,500 --> 00:08:46,110 The story is still in print today. 141 00:08:47,240 --> 00:08:49,460 Over the decades, the legend has been made 142 00:08:49,460 --> 00:08:54,250 into several films, including Tim Burton's version in 1999. 143 00:08:56,800 --> 00:08:58,740 In The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, 144 00:08:58,740 --> 00:09:00,900 the cemetery and old Dutch church, 145 00:09:00,900 --> 00:09:02,970 which is the oldest church in the state, 146 00:09:02,970 --> 00:09:05,250 feature prominently in the tale 147 00:09:05,250 --> 00:09:08,460 where Ichabod Crane, the new schoolmaster, 148 00:09:08,460 --> 00:09:11,920 competes with a rival for the hand of Katrina Van Tassel. 149 00:09:14,550 --> 00:09:17,440 When he leaves a party at the Van Tassel house, 150 00:09:17,440 --> 00:09:21,300 he rides his horse, Gunpowder, towards a wooden bridge 151 00:09:21,300 --> 00:09:23,710 close to the church and cemetery, 152 00:09:23,710 --> 00:09:27,510 where he sees the Headless Horseman on the other side. 153 00:09:28,360 --> 00:09:31,520 Irving writes, "In the dark shadow of the grove 154 00:09:31,517 --> 00:09:33,087 "on the margin of the brook, 155 00:09:33,087 --> 00:09:38,087 "he beheld something huge, misshapen, black and towering. 156 00:09:38,387 --> 00:09:42,137 "It stirred not but seemed gathered up in the gloom 157 00:09:42,137 --> 00:09:44,057 "like some gigantic monster 158 00:09:44,057 --> 00:09:46,217 "ready to spring upon the traveler." 159 00:09:48,230 --> 00:09:50,620 Ichabod was never seen again. 160 00:09:51,660 --> 00:09:53,480 But who was the horseman? 161 00:09:53,480 --> 00:09:56,440 An evil spirit from the past in search of his head? 162 00:09:57,460 --> 00:09:59,040 Or was it Ichabod's rival? 163 00:10:00,020 --> 00:10:01,970 The Legend of Sleepy Hollow 164 00:10:01,970 --> 00:10:04,350 leaves it up to the reader to decide. 165 00:10:09,833 --> 00:10:12,423 (jaunty music) 166 00:10:13,790 --> 00:10:15,710 On a hill above Sleepy Hollow 167 00:10:15,710 --> 00:10:18,530 is one of New York State's most famous houses, 168 00:10:18,530 --> 00:10:21,820 built for the industrialist John D. Rockefeller 169 00:10:21,820 --> 00:10:24,510 who had made a fortune in the oil business. 170 00:10:25,910 --> 00:10:28,470 Commanding wonderful views over the Hudson, 171 00:10:28,470 --> 00:10:30,550 it is named Kykuit, 172 00:10:30,550 --> 00:10:33,060 derived from the Dutch word meaning lookout. 173 00:10:34,300 --> 00:10:37,520 The Classical Revival house took six years to complete 174 00:10:37,520 --> 00:10:40,090 and was finally finished in 1913. 175 00:10:41,850 --> 00:10:44,970 It's six stories high, with the two basement floors 176 00:10:44,970 --> 00:10:48,300 housing all the service rooms as well as delivery tunnels 177 00:10:48,300 --> 00:10:50,290 and inter-connecting passageways. 178 00:10:51,830 --> 00:10:54,720 The garden is laid out in a series of terraces 179 00:10:54,720 --> 00:10:57,790 and in the park, mature trees were transplanted 180 00:10:57,790 --> 00:11:01,490 at huge cost and placed into prominent positions. 181 00:11:02,490 --> 00:11:04,470 The house is now open to the public 182 00:11:04,470 --> 00:11:06,400 and a National Historic Landmark. 183 00:11:11,690 --> 00:11:15,860 In 1952, construction began on the Tappan Zee Bridge 184 00:11:15,860 --> 00:11:19,220 across the Hudson at its second-widest point. 185 00:11:19,220 --> 00:11:22,530 It's the first bridge upriver from the City of New York. 186 00:11:23,930 --> 00:11:26,700 Because it was built at a time of material shortages 187 00:11:26,700 --> 00:11:28,260 during the Korean War, 188 00:11:28,260 --> 00:11:30,760 it was only meant to last for 50 years. 189 00:11:31,870 --> 00:11:33,830 But together with an increase of traffic 190 00:11:33,830 --> 00:11:36,710 that was never envisaged, the cantilever bridge 191 00:11:36,710 --> 00:11:40,370 is beginning to deteriorate and a new bridge is planned. 192 00:11:43,660 --> 00:11:44,980 Half a mile from the bridge 193 00:11:44,980 --> 00:11:48,600 is a Gothic Revival house begun in 1838 194 00:11:48,600 --> 00:11:51,290 and today called Lyndhurst. 195 00:11:51,290 --> 00:11:53,200 The original house was smaller 196 00:11:53,200 --> 00:11:55,780 and given the nickname Paulding's Folly 197 00:11:55,780 --> 00:11:58,250 after its builder, William Paulding 198 00:11:58,250 --> 00:12:00,860 because of its unusual architectural style. 199 00:12:02,030 --> 00:12:03,940 The second owner, George Merritt, 200 00:12:03,940 --> 00:12:06,980 a successful businessman, doubled the size of the house 201 00:12:06,980 --> 00:12:10,350 in the 1860s and named it Lyndenhurst 202 00:12:10,350 --> 00:12:12,410 after the linden trees on the estate. 203 00:12:14,580 --> 00:12:18,080 In 1880, the house was purchased by railroad tycoon 204 00:12:18,080 --> 00:12:21,610 Jay Gould who added the first steel-framed conservatory 205 00:12:21,610 --> 00:12:24,730 in the United States, replanted the park 206 00:12:24,730 --> 00:12:26,790 and called the house Lyndhurst. 207 00:12:27,840 --> 00:12:30,170 The house is still privately owned. 208 00:12:32,320 --> 00:12:35,210 Perhaps one of the most unusual properties to be built 209 00:12:35,210 --> 00:12:38,090 during the Gilded Period of the late 19th century 210 00:12:38,090 --> 00:12:42,000 is this domed octagonal house, the Armour-Stiner House. 211 00:12:43,800 --> 00:12:46,590 It was named after its first two owners, 212 00:12:46,590 --> 00:12:48,940 Paul Armour and Joseph Stiner. 213 00:12:51,870 --> 00:12:55,830 Paul Armour built the octagonal house in 1860 214 00:12:55,830 --> 00:12:57,050 but with without a dome, 215 00:12:58,960 --> 00:13:02,160 that was added by the second owner, Joseph Stiner, 216 00:13:02,160 --> 00:13:03,540 in the 1870s. 217 00:13:05,360 --> 00:13:09,100 He also enlarged the house, creating what we see today. 218 00:13:10,890 --> 00:13:13,450 The design may well be unique in America 219 00:13:13,450 --> 00:13:17,180 and its exuberant style led to it being described as 220 00:13:17,180 --> 00:13:19,410 the Taj Mahal of the Hudson Valley 221 00:13:20,400 --> 00:13:23,100 and a pastry chef's nightmare. 222 00:13:24,288 --> 00:13:27,028 In 1976, the house was declared 223 00:13:27,030 --> 00:13:28,960 a National Historic Landmark. 224 00:13:32,020 --> 00:13:35,020 Our journey is fast approaching the City of New York 225 00:13:35,020 --> 00:13:37,890 and the river becomes a transport system for commuters. 226 00:13:39,680 --> 00:13:43,070 Alongside the river and on the border with New Jersey 227 00:13:43,070 --> 00:13:46,120 is the Palisades Interstate Parkway, 228 00:13:46,120 --> 00:13:48,710 a major route in and out of the city 229 00:13:48,710 --> 00:13:51,570 and now designated a National Landmark. 230 00:13:52,570 --> 00:13:57,570 Construction began just after the Second World War in 1947 231 00:13:57,840 --> 00:14:01,270 and was completed 10 years later. 232 00:14:01,270 --> 00:14:05,350 The Parkway takes its name from the New Jersey Palisades, 233 00:14:05,350 --> 00:14:07,170 a line of cliffs on the Hudson. 234 00:14:08,030 --> 00:14:10,850 And behind the cliffs is the silhouette 235 00:14:10,850 --> 00:14:13,610 of one of the best-known and best-loved cities 236 00:14:13,610 --> 00:14:15,730 in the world, New York. 237 00:14:16,935 --> 00:14:18,645 (wind blowing) 238 00:14:18,647 --> 00:14:21,397 (ethereal music) 239 00:14:31,190 --> 00:14:33,580 With special permission from New York's Air Traffic 240 00:14:33,580 --> 00:14:37,090 Control Center to climb to 5,000 feet, 241 00:14:37,090 --> 00:14:40,230 the whole of Manhattan is set out before us. 242 00:14:42,790 --> 00:14:46,760 Manhattan is one of the five districts of New York City, 243 00:14:46,760 --> 00:14:49,560 the others being the Bronx, Queens, 244 00:14:49,560 --> 00:14:51,600 Brooklyn and Staten Island. 245 00:14:52,670 --> 00:14:55,490 But Manhattan, the smallest of the five, 246 00:14:55,490 --> 00:14:59,060 is the most densely populated and the heart of the city. 247 00:15:00,130 --> 00:15:03,010 It's a major commercial, financial 248 00:15:03,010 --> 00:15:06,980 and cultural center of the United States and the world. 249 00:15:09,120 --> 00:15:12,180 This awe-inspiring sight, with its myriad 250 00:15:12,180 --> 00:15:15,500 of high-rise buildings, looks simply spectacular 251 00:15:15,500 --> 00:15:16,950 from the air. 252 00:15:16,948 --> 00:15:19,698 (ethereal music) 253 00:15:21,083 --> 00:15:23,123 (helicopter whirring) 254 00:15:23,122 --> 00:15:25,702 So, one of the best ways to see New York, 255 00:15:25,700 --> 00:15:28,650 without doubt, has to be by helicopter. 256 00:15:28,650 --> 00:15:31,160 And several companies operate passenger flights 257 00:15:31,160 --> 00:15:34,750 around the city, some of them will include flying out 258 00:15:34,750 --> 00:15:36,660 to the Statue of Liberty, 259 00:15:36,660 --> 00:15:40,400 surely one of the most famous statues in the world. 260 00:15:40,399 --> 00:15:43,569 (helicopter whirring) 261 00:15:45,000 --> 00:15:48,250 The gilded flame held aloft by the Statue of Liberty 262 00:15:48,250 --> 00:15:50,520 has been a symbol of freedom to millions of people 263 00:15:50,520 --> 00:15:53,800 around the world for over 120 years. 264 00:15:55,090 --> 00:15:58,520 The statue was to be a gift to the people of America 265 00:15:58,520 --> 00:16:01,740 from the people of France in 1876, 266 00:16:01,740 --> 00:16:04,280 in recognition of the friendship forged 267 00:16:04,280 --> 00:16:06,420 during the American Revolution, 268 00:16:06,420 --> 00:16:09,090 and also to celebrate the centennial 269 00:16:09,090 --> 00:16:11,110 of the Declaration of Independence. 270 00:16:13,120 --> 00:16:15,770 It was agreed that the base would be funded and built 271 00:16:15,770 --> 00:16:19,210 by America and placed on what is now Liberty Island. 272 00:16:20,310 --> 00:16:23,360 Following years of hard fund raising in both the US 273 00:16:23,360 --> 00:16:25,710 and France, the statue eventually arrived 274 00:16:25,710 --> 00:16:28,160 in New York in 1885. 275 00:16:29,920 --> 00:16:33,240 The 350 individual pieces were packed 276 00:16:33,240 --> 00:16:37,350 in 214 crates and took four months to assemble 277 00:16:37,350 --> 00:16:38,530 on the new pedestal. 278 00:16:41,260 --> 00:16:44,530 On October the 28th, 1886, 279 00:16:44,530 --> 00:16:46,340 the dedication ceremony took place 280 00:16:46,340 --> 00:16:48,460 in front of thousands of spectators. 281 00:16:49,570 --> 00:16:53,180 And in 1984, the Statue of Liberty was declared 282 00:16:53,180 --> 00:16:56,960 a World Heritage Site by the United Nations. 283 00:16:56,957 --> 00:17:00,897 (gentle instrumental music) 284 00:17:00,900 --> 00:17:02,960 Close by is Ellis Island, 285 00:17:02,960 --> 00:17:04,900 the gateway for millions of immigrants 286 00:17:04,900 --> 00:17:07,750 arriving in the new world and where roughly half 287 00:17:07,750 --> 00:17:10,410 the population of America can probably trace 288 00:17:10,410 --> 00:17:11,660 their families back to. 289 00:17:13,030 --> 00:17:17,830 The center operated between 1892 and 1954 290 00:17:17,829 --> 00:17:20,549 and the small island was gradually enlarged 291 00:17:20,550 --> 00:17:24,490 through landfill until 9/10ths of it was artificial. 292 00:17:25,550 --> 00:17:28,030 It is now a much-visited museum. 293 00:17:31,130 --> 00:17:33,750 Tourist boats criss cross the harbor 294 00:17:33,750 --> 00:17:35,740 along with various ferries, 295 00:17:35,740 --> 00:17:39,960 including the distinctive orange Staten Island Ferries 296 00:17:39,960 --> 00:17:42,290 which pass Governor's Island. 297 00:17:42,287 --> 00:17:46,247 (gentle instrumental music) 298 00:17:46,250 --> 00:17:48,920 The name goes back to a time of British rule 299 00:17:48,920 --> 00:17:51,480 when the island was the exclusive preserve 300 00:17:51,480 --> 00:17:53,600 of New York Royal Governors. 301 00:17:56,266 --> 00:17:59,876 (energetic music) 302 00:17:59,880 --> 00:18:03,120 Bridges are a distinctive feature of New York 303 00:18:03,120 --> 00:18:05,420 and the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge 304 00:18:05,420 --> 00:18:07,580 straddles the entrance to the harbor 305 00:18:07,580 --> 00:18:09,860 and joins Staten Island to Brooklyn. 306 00:18:11,225 --> 00:18:13,855 The bridge is named after the Italian explorer 307 00:18:13,860 --> 00:18:17,480 Giovanni da Verrazzano who was the first European 308 00:18:17,480 --> 00:18:19,940 to enter the harbor in 1524. 309 00:18:22,210 --> 00:18:25,510 It was completed in 1964 and at the time 310 00:18:25,510 --> 00:18:28,990 was the longest suspension bridge in the world. 311 00:18:28,992 --> 00:18:31,832 (energetic music) 312 00:18:32,910 --> 00:18:35,370 In 1883, the Brooklyn Bridge 313 00:18:35,370 --> 00:18:37,860 was the longest suspension bridge in the world 314 00:18:37,860 --> 00:18:40,140 as well as the first to be build of steel. 315 00:18:41,190 --> 00:18:44,100 The pedestrian walkway offers great views 316 00:18:44,100 --> 00:18:46,770 of the city and bridge. 317 00:18:46,770 --> 00:18:49,890 It took 16 years to build and claimed the lives 318 00:18:49,890 --> 00:18:54,370 of 20 people, including its designer, John A. Roebling. 319 00:18:55,370 --> 00:18:59,350 Most died of caisson disease, known today as the bends, 320 00:18:59,350 --> 00:19:01,770 after coming up too fast from the caissons 321 00:19:01,770 --> 00:19:03,550 below the East River. 322 00:19:03,552 --> 00:19:06,072 (energetic music) 323 00:19:06,070 --> 00:19:07,620 The George Washington Bridge 324 00:19:07,620 --> 00:19:09,580 is the first to cross the Hudson 325 00:19:09,580 --> 00:19:13,010 and connects Washington Heights to Fort Lee in New Jersey. 326 00:19:15,070 --> 00:19:18,300 The double-decker bridge was completed in 1931 327 00:19:18,300 --> 00:19:20,490 and has 14 lanes for traffic. 328 00:19:22,070 --> 00:19:25,150 By the year 2007, the bridge was carrying 329 00:19:25,150 --> 00:19:28,310 well over 100 million vehicles a year. 330 00:19:29,670 --> 00:19:32,700 Also along the Hudson River is the New York Passenger 331 00:19:32,700 --> 00:19:36,710 Ship Terminal which is also known as Luxury Liner Row. 332 00:19:37,840 --> 00:19:39,530 Before the age of air travel, 333 00:19:39,530 --> 00:19:41,470 this was where passengers would arrive 334 00:19:41,470 --> 00:19:44,620 in the great ocean liners from around the world. 335 00:19:44,617 --> 00:19:45,827 (helicopter whirring) 336 00:19:45,830 --> 00:19:49,860 Even today around a million people arrive by ship each year 337 00:19:49,860 --> 00:19:53,110 and get superb views of the city before docking. 338 00:19:54,780 --> 00:19:58,000 The East River separates Manhattan and Brooklyn 339 00:19:58,000 --> 00:20:00,820 on Long Island and was the busiest shipping channel 340 00:20:00,820 --> 00:20:02,950 in the early part of New York's history. 341 00:20:03,900 --> 00:20:07,130 The Williamsburg Bridge was built in 1896, 342 00:20:07,130 --> 00:20:09,570 13 years after the Brooklyn Bridge. 343 00:20:11,870 --> 00:20:15,480 Overlooking East River is the United Nations Headquarters, 344 00:20:15,480 --> 00:20:16,970 built in 1950. 345 00:20:17,993 --> 00:20:19,493 The land it stands on 346 00:20:19,490 --> 00:20:22,140 is considered to be international property. 347 00:20:23,120 --> 00:20:25,960 A mile upstream and the river forks right 348 00:20:25,960 --> 00:20:29,260 under Hell Gate Bridge before widening out 349 00:20:29,260 --> 00:20:31,990 at LaGuardia Airport and Rikers Island, 350 00:20:33,130 --> 00:20:35,830 New York City's main jail complex. 351 00:20:37,380 --> 00:20:41,310 The Harlem River forms part of the Hudson Estuary System 352 00:20:41,310 --> 00:20:43,470 and serves as a narrow channel 353 00:20:43,470 --> 00:20:45,760 dividing the Bronx from Manhattan. 354 00:20:47,190 --> 00:20:51,020 And over this short stretch of river are 14 bridges. 355 00:20:52,090 --> 00:20:56,030 Close by are the old and new Yankee Stadiums. 356 00:20:56,030 --> 00:20:58,930 The furthest away, built in 1923 357 00:20:58,930 --> 00:21:01,580 and the nearest in 2006. 358 00:21:04,430 --> 00:21:06,810 The best-known open space in New York 359 00:21:06,810 --> 00:21:08,730 must be Central Park. 360 00:21:08,730 --> 00:21:11,560 This 770 acre open space 361 00:21:11,560 --> 00:21:14,280 was completed by 1873 362 00:21:14,280 --> 00:21:17,040 and is the most popular park in the United States. 363 00:21:18,470 --> 00:21:21,380 One of its creators, Frederick Olmsted, 364 00:21:21,380 --> 00:21:23,680 said that it was of, "Great importance 365 00:21:23,677 --> 00:21:27,207 "as the first real park made in this country. 366 00:21:27,207 --> 00:21:30,877 "A democratic development of the highest significance." 367 00:21:34,730 --> 00:21:38,040 It took 16 years to create and involved planting around 368 00:21:38,037 --> 00:21:41,317 500,000 trees and shrubs. 369 00:21:41,320 --> 00:21:44,160 Lakes were dug, hills created, 370 00:21:44,160 --> 00:21:47,590 follies built, formal gardens laid out 371 00:21:47,590 --> 00:21:49,120 and bridges constructed. 372 00:21:50,920 --> 00:21:54,480 The only building encroaching into the perfect rectangle 373 00:21:54,480 --> 00:21:58,680 is the Metropolitan Museum of Art, begun in the 1870s. 374 00:22:00,235 --> 00:22:03,755 At the southern end of Manhattan is the financial district 375 00:22:03,760 --> 00:22:05,680 which roughly overlaps the original 376 00:22:05,680 --> 00:22:09,600 New Amsterdam settlement of the 17th century. 377 00:22:09,600 --> 00:22:12,630 And right on the end is Battery Park 378 00:22:12,630 --> 00:22:14,530 where the Dutch and then the British 379 00:22:14,530 --> 00:22:16,010 had an artillery fort. 380 00:22:17,683 --> 00:22:21,163 The district is home to major financial institutions 381 00:22:21,160 --> 00:22:24,620 including the Federal Reserve and the Stock Exchange. 382 00:22:26,550 --> 00:22:29,700 It was also home to the Twin Towers 383 00:22:29,700 --> 00:22:31,770 until the tragedy of 9/11. 384 00:22:32,820 --> 00:22:34,590 And that appalling event 385 00:22:34,590 --> 00:22:36,260 meant that the Empire State Building 386 00:22:36,260 --> 00:22:40,220 was once again the tallest skyscraper in New York. 387 00:22:40,218 --> 00:22:42,968 (birds chirping) 388 00:22:43,880 --> 00:22:47,930 It was built in the Art Deco Style in 1931 389 00:22:47,930 --> 00:22:51,660 and is still the 15th tallest building in the world 390 00:22:51,660 --> 00:22:53,560 at 1,250 feet. 391 00:22:57,870 --> 00:23:00,070 It was opened in dramatic fashion 392 00:23:00,070 --> 00:23:03,010 when president Hoover pushed a button in the Oval Office 393 00:23:03,010 --> 00:23:06,480 in Washington and turned the lights on. 394 00:23:06,482 --> 00:23:09,072 (swanky music) 395 00:23:15,740 --> 00:23:18,800 New York comes alive at night 396 00:23:18,800 --> 00:23:21,070 and nowhere is it more brightly lit 397 00:23:21,070 --> 00:23:23,280 than around Times Square. 398 00:23:23,283 --> 00:23:25,873 (swanky music) 399 00:23:28,731 --> 00:23:31,571 Back in 1899, Oscar Hammerstein 400 00:23:31,570 --> 00:23:35,580 built the Victoria and Republic theaters and since then 401 00:23:35,580 --> 00:23:38,330 Broadway has been at the heart of entertainment. 402 00:23:38,330 --> 00:23:41,210 Theater goers take in a show and then eat and drink 403 00:23:41,210 --> 00:23:43,430 in one of the many bars and restaurants. 404 00:23:44,820 --> 00:23:47,230 The bright lights welcome everyone, 405 00:23:47,230 --> 00:23:49,970 ward off the darkness and produce a city 406 00:23:49,970 --> 00:23:51,730 where everything seems possible. 407 00:23:52,970 --> 00:23:56,610 New York is known as the city that never sleeps, 408 00:23:56,610 --> 00:23:59,410 a saying taken from a film of 1924. 409 00:24:00,770 --> 00:24:03,220 Even the traffic contributes to the lighting effect 410 00:24:03,220 --> 00:24:07,230 along the streets, like long multi-colored glowing ribbons. 411 00:24:08,980 --> 00:24:11,250 Buildings are lit with neon hoardings 412 00:24:11,250 --> 00:24:14,750 and some of the skyscrapers are lit like works of art, 413 00:24:15,650 --> 00:24:18,000 none more so than the Chrysler Building. 414 00:24:18,882 --> 00:24:21,472 (swanky music) 415 00:24:23,616 --> 00:24:26,186 For many people, this is the greatest Art Deco 416 00:24:26,190 --> 00:24:30,840 building in the city and was completed in 1930. 417 00:24:30,840 --> 00:24:33,640 At night, the distinctive V-shaped lights, 418 00:24:33,640 --> 00:24:36,620 which were fitted when the skyscraper was being built, 419 00:24:36,620 --> 00:24:38,560 have become an iconic sight. 420 00:24:39,810 --> 00:24:41,820 The floodlighting was added later. 421 00:24:42,709 --> 00:24:45,289 (swanky music) 422 00:24:52,570 --> 00:24:55,670 Seen from the river, the city resembles a magical 423 00:24:55,670 --> 00:24:58,860 ocean liner, set against a black sky 424 00:24:58,860 --> 00:25:01,850 to dazzle, entertain and amaze. 425 00:25:04,090 --> 00:25:07,210 Great walls of glass sparkle in the night 426 00:25:07,210 --> 00:25:09,710 as the skyscrapers reflect the light 427 00:25:09,710 --> 00:25:12,180 from the streets of the city that never sleeps. 428 00:25:13,298 --> 00:25:15,878 (swanky music) 429 00:25:19,541 --> 00:25:21,861 And out in the harbor, the Statue of Liberty 430 00:25:21,860 --> 00:25:25,030 watches over the city, her light shining out 431 00:25:25,030 --> 00:25:26,940 for the freedom she represents. 432 00:25:28,280 --> 00:25:31,320 A perfect place to end this journey. 433 00:25:31,317 --> 00:25:33,897 (swanky music) 434 00:25:36,904 --> 00:25:40,074 (awe-inspiring music) 435 00:26:00,212 --> 00:26:03,052 (dramatic music) 32519

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