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New York City NY Tourism and Sightseeing
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Where is New York City New York?
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New York City New York
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New York New York Tourism At a GlanceBest Time to Visit New York City New York Since New York's big "clean-up", anytime is a good time to visit. Christmas is a spectacular time to hit this vibrant city, when it's decorated to a tee and as aesthetically pleasing as a picture postcard. The streets are bustling, shoppers are making mad last-minute dashes and the weather is cold - as it should be this time of year. Also, many Broadway shows are opening during the months between October and May (although openings now extend well into July). During the warmer months, the streets of New York are filled with parades, celebrating everything from Gay Pride to Puerto Rican Day. Click Here to find hotels in New York City. If you need additional visitor information for New York City, Click Here. Average New York City Weather The city is pretty chilly during the winter, thanks to winds that whip in off the Hudson. However, it's rare to see snow accumulate in Manhattan. One thing is true: You have to wrap up, from head to toe. Summer in the city is muggy. Many locals leave Manhattan and head for the coast during this time of year. Summers are so unpleasant because the heat gets trapped in the city, spurring folks to find respite in air-conditioned restaurants, theaters and museums. Keep in mind that subway stations aren't air conditioned and they usually smell bad when it's hot. The city wakes up in September, when the weather is milder and dry. This is a great time to visit because the natural setting is unreal, especially in the many parks. Transportation New York is best explored on foot. Travelers really don't need a car when visiting New York - even those travelers heading to Long Island or other surrounding neighborhoods. Extensive public transportation makes it convenient to travel between areas of interest. Driving in the city can be hazardous to your health, especially if you're inexperienced at it. There's no such thing as defensive driving here. It's more about survival of the fittest and the fittest are usually cab drivers. Also, there's basically no such thing as free parking. Parking in most garages costs up to $20 (for three hours). It's ridiculous. The subway system is one of the most comprehensive around. Stretching 714 miles long, it's the fastest way to get anywhere in the city and the outer boroughs (including the Bronx, Brooklyn and Queens), and it runs 24 hours a day. Tokens are a mere $1.50, with reduced fares for people with disabilities and for senior citizens. For travelers on an extended trip, MetroCards, purchased for a specific amount, are also available at all subway stations. Everyone has heard the horror stories about New York taxis. However scary they might be, they are very convenient. You can hail a cab at nearly every corner - even at night. The fare is $2 for the first 1/5-mile, 30¢ for each 1/5-mile thereafter, and 25¢ for each 75 seconds not in motion. A 50¢ surcharge is added to rides begun between 8 pm and 6 am. Bridge and tunnel tolls are extra, and drivers expect a 15% tip. In-Season Costs Bottom line: It's expensive. There are some bargains to be had, but you have to search for them. New York Tourism - New York City Attractions, Activities and Day Trips It's not hard to imagine spending weeks in New York City. Investigating the Big Apple can be overwhelming. However, if you do decide that you want to venture out of Manhattan, or impress your friends by investigating an outer borough by subway, visit the Brooklyn Museum of Art or Prospect Park, the Bronx Zoo and the New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx, or the American Museum of the Moving Image in Queens - just to name a few options. Of course, there's always Princeton, New Jersey, a quick 45-minute train ride out of the city. Along the way, you'll pass Rutgers University. If you have some time, head out to Long Island or the Hamptons. Make sure you have plenty of cash on hand. There is always Coney Island and its famous roller coaster. If you take the subway, you'll get there in an hour's time. Don't forget to indulge in a Nathan's hotdog while you're there.
Click Here to find things to do in New York City. Click Here to view a list of attractions in New York City. Click Here to find restaurants in New York City. Click Here to find local events in New York City.
Things to do in New York City NY, Sightseeing and New York City NY Tourism New York City NY Tourism - Planning a New York City NY Vacation Below is a list of New York City NY tourist attractions, activities, events, hotels, restaurants and visitor information entries to help you plan a New York City NY Vacation! Find detailed information on the New York City NY tourism entries by clicking on their links. Narrow your search by selecting from a specific New York City NY travel category on the left hand menu.
Explore All Of New York's Regions You can find New York tourist attractions and activities in all of New York's regions: Albany, Brooklyn, Finger Lakes, Ithaca, Jamaica, Lake George, Lake Placid, New York City, Niagara Falls, Rochester, Syracuse and Other.
Fun Things to do during your New York City NY Vacation - Top New York City NY Tourist Attractions and Activities Some of the most popular New York City NY tourist attractions that list on our site include Castle Clinton National Monument , General Grant National Memorial and Gateway National Recreation Area.
Fun activities in New York City NY include AMC Loews Raceway 10, UA Westbury Stadium 12 and UA Staten Island Stadium 16.
Create an online New York City NY vacation itinerary You can use WeGoPlaces.com to plan your New York City NY vacation itinerary! To begin, select from our list of New York City NY tourist attractions, activities, accommodations, events, restaurants or New York City NY vacation & visitor information entries. Click the "Add" button to add individual entries to your online New York City NY vacation itinerary.
Featured New York Tourist Attractions and Activities Please visit our New York featured listings - Monster Jam at Lebanon Valley Speedway, Green Day at Times Union Center, Jason Mraz at Constellation Brands Performing Arts Center, Keith Urban at Blue Cross Arena, Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips at the Glen, American Idols Live at Times Union Center, US Open Tennis Grounds Admission Only at Arthur Ashe Stadium and New York Yankees at The New Yankee Stadium.
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On Location Tours, Inc. Manhattan TV and Movie Tour
Category: New York Recreation near New York City, New York User Rating: Be the first to write a review for On Location Tours, Inc.!
Description of this New York City area Activity: Visit the locations of more than 80 TV shows and movies, including the apartment building where Monica, Chandler, and the other Friends live, the Seinfeld “Soup Nazi,” the Ghostbusters firehouse, the townhouse used on The Cosby Show, the diner seen in Spiderman, the design studio from Will & Grace, and the bar used in Coyote Ugly. www.screentours.com
Media Contact: Susan Palmer
Phone (203) 874-6298
E-mail: kshpal@optonline.net
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On Location Tours, Inc. Sex and the City Tour
Category: New York Recreation near New York City, New York User Rating: Be the first to write a review for On Location Tours, Inc.!
Description of this New York City area Activity: On Location Tours, Inc.
347 Fifth Avenue Suite 1402 New York, NY 10016 (212) 683-2027 www.screentours.com
Visit over 40 locations from the popular show Sex and the City including the outside of Carrie’s apartment, the Jimmy Choo shoe boutique, the shop where Charlotte bought her “Rabbit,” the furniture store where Aidan worked as a designer, and the bar owned by Steve and Aidan. www.screentours.com
Media Contact: Susan Palmer
Phone (203) 874-6298
E-mail: kshpal@optonline.net
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Castle Clinton National Monument National Monument
Category: New York National Park near New York City, New York User Rating: Be the first to write a review for Castle Clinton National Monument!
Description of this New York City area Attraction: More than a dozen forts were built to defend New York Harbor at the time of the War of 1812. The Southwest Battery was constructed on the rocks off the tip of Manhattan Island between 1808 and 1811. Although fully armed and staffed, the fort never had occasion to fire upon an enemy. In 1817, the fort was renamed Castle Clinton in honor of DeWitt Clinton, Mayor of New York City. The army vacated the fort in 1821 and the structure was deeded to New York City in 1823. In the summer of 1824, a new restaurant and entertainment center opened at the site, now called Castle Garden. A roof was added in the 1840s and Castle Garden served as an opera house and theater until 1854.
On August 3, 1855, Castle Garden, now leased to New York State, opened as an immigrant landing depot.
During the next 34 years, over 8 million people entered the United States through Castle Garden, until it was closed on April 18, 1890. The building was altered once again and reopened as the New York City Aquarium on December 10, 1896. It was one of the city's most popular attractions until it closed in 1941.
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Federal Hall National Memorial National Monument
Category: New York National Park near New York City, New York User Rating: Be the first to write a review for Federal Hall National Memorial!
Description of this New York City area Attraction: 26 Wall Street was the site of New York City's 18th century City Hall. Here John Peter Zenger was jailed, tried, and acquitted of libel for exposing government corruption in his newspaper, an early victory for freedom of the press. City Hall hosted the Stamp Act Congress, which assembled in October 1765, to protest "taxation without representation." After the American Revolution, the Continental Congress met at City Hall, and in 1787 adopted the Northwest Ordinance establishing procedures for creating new states.
When the Constitution was ratified in 1788, New York remained the national capital. Pierre L'Enfant was commissioned to remodel City Hall for the new federal government. The First Congress met in the new Federal Hall, and wrote the Bill of Rights, and George Washington was inaugurated here as President on April 30, 1789. When the capital moved to Philadelphia in 1790, the building again housed city government until 1812, at which time Federal Hall was demolished.
The current structure on the site was built as the Customs House, opening in 1842. In 1862, Customs moved to 55 Wall Street and the building became the U. S. Sub-Treasury. Millions of dollars of gold and silver were kept in the basement vaults until the Federal Reserve Bank replaced the Sub-Treasury system in 1920.
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General Grant National Memorial National Memorial
Category: New York National Park near New York City, New York User Rating: Be the first to write a review for General Grant National Memorial!
Description of this New York City area Attraction: This memorial to Ulysses S. Grant, victorious Union commander of the Civil War, includes the tomb of General Grant and his wife, Julia Dent Grant. A West Point graduate, Grant served in the Mexican War and at various frontier posts, before rapidly rising through the ranks during the Civil War. Grant's tenacity and boldness led to victories in the Battles of Vicksburg and Chattanooga and Robert E. Lee's surrender at Appomattox, scenes depicted by mosaics in the tomb. In 1866 Congress awarded Grant his fourth star making him the first full General of the Armies.
A grateful nation twice elected Grant to serve as President of the United States, from 1869 to 1877. Grant's accomplishments include signing the act establishing the first national park, Yellowstone, on March 1, 1872. After the Presidency, Grant settled in New York City. Ulysses S. Grant died of throat cancer on July 23, 1885 in Mount McGregor, New York, and was laid to rest in New York City on August 8th.
Approximately 90,000 people from around the country and the world donated a total of over $600,000 towards construction of his tomb, the largest public fundraising effort ever at that time. Designed by architect John Duncan, the granite and marble structure was completed in 1897 and remains the largest mausoleum in North America. Over one million people attended the parade and dedication ceremony of Grant's Tomb, on April 27, 1897.
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Governors Island National Monument National Monument
Category: New York National Park near New York City, New York User Rating: Be the first to write a review for Governors Island National Monument!
Description of this New York City area Attraction: Governors Island is a 172-acre island located a half-mile from the southern tip of Manhattan in New York harbor. Its name comes the time when New York was a British colony and the colonial assembly reserved the island for the exclusive use of New York’s royal governors.
When the American Revolution began in 1776, George Washington ordered the island to be fortified with earthworks just prior to the Battle of Long Island (also known as the Battle of Brooklyn) - the first ever engagement of the fledgling Continental Army with British forces. The island’s artillery covered the retreat of the Continental Army, preventing the revolution from a swift and devastating end, but New York City remained under British occupation for the remainder of the conflict.
With American independence from Britain in 1783, New York and the nation were determined to prevent any future occupation of the city and its strategic waterways by an enemy power. Towards that end, two fortifications were placed on Governors Island in the years preceding the War of 1812 as part of an extensive coastal defense system. The first, Fort Jay, is a square five bastioned fort started in the 1790's. The second, Castle Williams, is a circular casemated work completed in 1811. The two forts are among the best remaining examples of First System (Fort Jay) and Second System (Castle Williams) American coastal fortification.
During the Civil War, Castle Williams held Confederate prisoners of war. After the war, it was used as a military stockade and became the east coast counterpart to military prisons at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas and Alcatraz Island in San Francisco Bay.
In 1878 the military installation on the island, then known as Fort Columbus, became a major Army administrative center and, in 1939, the headquarters of the United States First Army. When the Army left Governors Island in 1966, the installation became a U.S. Coast Guard base - the largest in the world. It’s closing in 1997 concluded almost two centuries of the island’s use as a federal reservation.
In 2001, the two historic fortifications and their surroundings became a national monument. On January 31, 2003, the Governors Island National Monument was transferred to the U.S. Department of the Interior and is now managed by the National Park Service.
As a new national monument, Governors Island is not fully operational, so services and facilities are extremely limited.
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Hamilton Grange National Memorial National Memorial
Category: New York National Park near New York City, New York User Rating: Be the first to write a review for Hamilton Grange National Memorial!
Description of this New York City area Attraction: Hamilton Grange National Memorial, located at 287 Convent Avenue, preserves the home of founding father Alexander Hamilton. Born and raised in the West Indies, Hamilton came to New York in 1772 at age 17 to study finance at King's College (now Columbia University).
Hamilton became a supporter of the cause of the American patriots during the political turmoil of the 1770s. Commissioned as a Captain of Artillery at the beginning of the American Revolution, he soon became an aide-de-camp to George Washington.
After the war, as a member of Congress, Hamilton was instrumental in creating the new Constitution. As co-author of the Federalist Papers he was indispensable in the effort to get the Constitution adopted. As the first Secretary of the Treasury (1789-1795) he devised plans for funding the national debt, securing federal credit, encouraging expansion of manufacturing and organizing the federal bank.
Hamilton commissioned architect John McComb Jr. to design a Federal style country home on a sprawling 32 acre estate in upper Manhattan. This house was completed in 1802 and named "The Grange" after the Hamilton family's ancestral home in Scotland, but served as his home for only two years. On July 11, 1804, Hamilton was fatally wounded in a duel with his political rival Aaron Burr.
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Harlem Spirituals, Inc. tours through New York and its boroughs incl. Harlem
Category: New York Tour near New York City, New York User Rating: Be the first to write a review for Harlem Spirituals, Inc.!
Description of this New York City area Attraction: Harlem Spirituals/New York Visions pioneered tours to the Harlem neighborhood over 20 years ago. Combining African American heritage, cultural exchanges, community, local churches and businesses, with gospel and jazz music in itineraries, we have introduced over 100,000 visitors per year from around the world to Harlem making it today one of New York City’s top places to visit. We are a full service receptive tour operator offering leisure and business travelers alike all the best New York has to offer- Accommodations, transportation, dining, and entertainment. Our group and special services department customizes programs for meetings, conventions and family reunions.
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Jacques Marchais Museum of Tibetan Art Himalayan style Tibetan Buddhist temple & gardens.
Category: Staten Island Art Museum near New York City, New York User Rating: Be the first to write a review for Jacques Marchais Museum of Tibetan Art!
Description of this New York City area Attraction: The Jacques Marchias Museum of Tibetan Art was founded in 1945, by Jacques Marchai, nee Edna Coblenz, a collector and dealer of Tibetan Buddhist Art. The Museum's collection contains more than 1,200 objects, including statues of buddha, lamas, arhats, protector deities and thangka paintings. The Museum building, set into a steep hillside, is reminiscent of Himalayan style architecture. The grounds include meditation gardens and a fish and lotus pond. The Museum is committed to promoting the awareness and preservation of Tibetan art and culture, through exhibitions and programs including performances and lectures by Tibetan scholars, monks, and lamas. The Museum is open Wednesday-Sunday from 1-5 pm. Call for information 718-987-3500, www.tibetanmuseum.org.
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Manhattan Sites National Park
Category: New York National Park near New York City, New York User Rating: Be the first to write a review for Manhattan Sites!
Description of this New York City area Attraction: Manhattan Sites is a unique urban park that consists of six separate sites representing the Seventeenth through the Twentieth Centuries.
Federal Hall National Memorial is the headquarters for each unit, and was the site of the first national capital of the United States under the Constitution.
Castle Clinton National Monument was a fort built for the War of 1812. It was later used as an entertainment center, immigration station, aquarium, and finally a National Monument.
Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace National Historic Site is the birth site of the 26th President of the United States.
General Grant National Memorial is the final resting spot for Ulysses S. Grant and his spouse, Julia.
Hamilton Grange National Memorial, is the home of Alexander Hamilton from 1802 until his death in a duel with Aaron Burr in 1804.
Saint Paul's Church National Historic Site, which is located in Mount Vernon, New York, was used as a hospital following the Revolutionary War battle at Pell's Point in 1776.
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Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace National Historic Site National Historic Site
Category: New York National Park near New York City, New York User Rating: Be the first to write a review for Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace National Historic Site!
Description of this New York City area Attraction: Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace NHS is located at 28 East 20th Street, between Broadway and Park Avenue South.
Theodore Roosevelt, the 26th President of the United States, lived at this site from his birth on October 27, 1858 until he was 14 years old. The reconstructed house contains five period rooms, two museum galleries and a bookstore.
Teedie, as young Roosevelt was nicknamed, was a sickly but bright boy, from a wealthy family. To improve his health, Teedie began an exercise program at the house's outdoor gymnasium that started a lifelong passion for the "strenuous life."
After graduating from Harvard, Roosevelt pursued his boyhood dreams, as a rancher, naturalist, explorer, author and Colonel of the Rough Riders. His political service included reforming the U.S. Civil Service Commission and New York City Police Department, and terms as Governor of New York and Vice President of the U.S.
Theodore Roosevelt became president when William McKinley was assassinated in September 1901. As President, Roosevelt pushed progressive reforms, such as conservation of public lands and trust busting, and negotiated an end to the war between Russia and Japan, for which he won a Nobel Peace Prize.
Roosevelt's original birthplace was demolished in 1916. After Roosevelt's death in 1919, the site was purchased by the Women's Roosevelt Memorial Association, rebuilt and decorated with many of its original furnishings by Roosevelt's sisters and wife.
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New York City Travel Articles
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