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The Flatiron Building circa 1903, with Broadway on the left and Fifth Avenue on the right, and lots of street traffic all around this early skyscraper shortly after its completion. 8x10 inch glass negative, Detroit Publishing Co. View full size.
Actually Pach Brothers Studio continued operation (at a different location until 1994. I took portrait classes from the last owner, Oscar White. Interesting man, he did presidential portraits form either FDR or Truman to at least Johnson as he brought that portrait into our class to show us. I took his classes in the mid-1970s to late 1970s. More information is available here.
The streetcars visible are all cable cars.
The Metropolitan Street Railway main line ran along Broadway from Battery Place up to 7th Ave, and then along 7th to 59th Street at Central Park. One of its branches ran along 23rd Street to Lexington Ave (right in front of the Flatiron here) and up to 105th street.
[These are electric streetcars. The traction line on Broadway was converted to electric power in 1901. Below, news item from May 27, 1901. - Dave]
In just about any early photo of the Flatiron Building you can see one or more brave souls roaming around on the lower ledges. I suppose today that'd be the Designated Smoking Area!
Here's the Cable Building at Broadway and Houston Street in Manhattan. Built in 1893 to turn the cables of Manhattan's traction cars, which first started running in the mid-1880s. The basement housed the steam engines and cable wheels.
[An impressive infrastructure that was phased out in favor of electric streetcars in the early 1900s. - Dave]
What a great shot but I have to wonder; what makes all those trolley's go? No overhead wires but it seems a slot between the tracks. Cable cars?
[They're electric streetcars. The power supply is underground. - Dave]
At least five NYC locations since 1867 for these portrait photographers of some repute. The last shop closed in 1947. The studio here was 925 Broadway. The retail operation in the building was a firm called Van Gaasbeck Oriental something. The building still stands; the ground floor houses a Restoration Hardware that is usually deserted.
Always a treat to see another shot of this iconic building as it was intended to look.
As much of a beauty now as it was in 1903!
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