How Workers Raised New York’s First Railway While the City Kept Moving
New York’s first elevated railway began with a 600-foot test ride above Greenwich Street in 1867. This video reveals how Manhattan’s traffic crisis, Charles Harvey’s bold idea, and the labor of mostly unnamed Irish workers helped create the elevated railways that changed urban transportation forever. Before the subway, New York looked upward—and built a new future above its crowded streets.

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How America Blasted a Six Mile Tunnel Through the Continental Divide

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What's Left of New York's Central Railroad | LOST FOREVER

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Construction Workers on the Chrysler Building, 1929-1930

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Classic Railway Films 10 Days of Great Western Steam With John Betjeman 1962

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This 1966 Millstone Technique Will Blow Your Mind—One Wrong Hit = Weeks of Work DESTROYED

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Why No One Wants to Stay in New York's Most Iconic Building

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How Workers Built New York’s First Elevated Railway Without Stopping the City Below

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Why Veterans Stadium DIED

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How America Built the World’s Tallest Railroad Bridge in 1882

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How Workers Built Lighthouses on Atlantic Rocks That Disappeared at High Tide

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How Loggers Built 40-Mile Wooden Water Slides to Send Giant Redwoods Down Mountains by Gravity

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How Men Built New York’s First Clean Water Tunnel Before the City Died of Disease

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How Just One Car Destroyed America's Car Industry

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The Entire History of New York City

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Paddington Station: The London Terminus That Almost Never Got Built

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How Workers Built 200-Foot Smokestacks by Hand Before Cranes Existed

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How One Cook's "INSANE" Idea Saved 4,200 Men From U-Boats

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The Dark Truth Behind the Empire State Building's Construction

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How Laborers Built America’s Roads Before Modern Asphalt Machines

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