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Columbia University Libraries

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Columbia University Libraries is the library system of Columbia University and one of the largest academic library systems in North America. With 15.0 million volumes and over 160,000 journals and serials, as well as extensive electronic resources, manuscripts, rare books, microforms, maps, and graphic and audio-visual materials, it is the fifth-largest academic library in the United States and the largest academic library in the State of New York . Additionally, the closely affiliated Jewish Theological Seminary Library holds over 400,000 volumes, which combined makes the Columbia University Libraries the third-largest academic library, and the second-largest private library in the United States.

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117-701: The services and collections are organized into 19 libraries and various academic technology centers, including affiliates. The organization is located on the university's Morningside Heights campus in New York City and employs more than 500 professional and support staff. Additionally, Columbia Libraries is part of the Research Collections and Preservation Consortium (ReCAP) along with the Harvard Library , Princeton University Library , and New York Public Library . The Columbia University Libraries began with

234-532: A world's fair to be held there three years later, and then in 1888, when the area was being considered as the site of the World's Columbian Exposition to be held during 1892. The Bloomingdale Asylum moved to a site in suburban Westchester County in 1888, followed by the Leake and Watts Asylum three years later. Their respective campuses were purchased by Columbia University, which could not expand their existing campus at

351-429: A building owned by Columbia. In the subsequent years, new building codes resulted in the removal of decorative elements on many buildings in the neighborhood. The residential community of Morningside Heights remained centered around the neighboring institutions, and was relatively safe compared to nearby neighborhoods, though many residents stayed away from Morningside Park. A 1982 Times article mentioned that Broadway

468-660: A city landmark, was rebuilt in 1894–1895, replacing an earlier gatehouse in the middle of the road. The aqueduct continued to carry water until 1955. The 119th Street gatehouse was used until 1990; it then sat abandoned for several decades before being proposed for commercial use in 2018. [REDACTED] In 2017, the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission created the Morningside Heights Historic District . The district had first been proposed in 1996; however, Columbia

585-579: A decline in the neighborhood, especially after World War II , when many well-off white residents left for the suburbs, to be replaced by poor African American and Puerto Rican residents. Many of the once-opulent apartment buildings declined in quality. In a sign of the social tensions that had developed in Morningside Heights, in 1958, The New York Times reported that midshipmen of the United States Navy studying at Columbia were forbidden from

702-454: A deep level alignment, with the water being pushed through high-pressure open siphons at each end of the valley. Several gatehouses were built at Amsterdam Avenue and 113th, 119th, 134th–135th, and 142nd Streets, so that pipes could be installed when the aqueduct system was expanded in the future. The gatehouse at 113th Street was built in 1870 and rebuilt in 1890; it serves as an adult daycare center as of 2010 . The gatehouse at 119th Street,

819-602: A dormitory on Claremont Avenue erected in 1931–1932. Two musical institutions, the Institute of Musical Art and the Juilliard School (which later merged ), settled immediately north of the Union Theological Seminary. The Institute of Musical Art constructed its building within 21 weeks in 1910 and had its first classes that same year. The Juilliard building was completed in 1931. The final structure to be built

936-431: A few buildings. More prolific Jewish developers in Morningside Heights created companies that either carried their family names or had more generic names that hid their family's background. Such developers included Carlyle Realty, B. Crystal & Son, and Carnegie Construction. According to Andrew Dolkart , architectural historian at Columbia University, more than half of the early apartment housing in Morningside Heights

1053-544: A few employees. The phrase he received from the University was "You'll never receive any operational funding from Columbia" which proved to be false. The center has had 4 directors including Nevins, including, Ronald J. Grele , and Mary Marshall Clark who is the current director as of June 2001. It wasn't until Clark's time as director that the center gained enough funding to be able to complete extensive projects and partnered with INCITE. Columbia Center for Oral History (CCOH)

1170-627: A museum exhibit for the Museum of Chinese in the Americas . Once ChevronTexaco got involved, and the permanent school program was introduced, classes were required to make either a book or a documentary to be shown publicly. This project was a collaborative project between CCOH, the Museum of Chinese in the Americas, The City University of New York , 9/11 Digital Archives, and New York University 's Asian/Pacific/American Studies Program. Rockafeller Foundation funded

1287-502: A never-built large plaza that would have flanked Riverside Drive. Another notable apartment building is the Hendrik Hudson on Riverside Drive between 110th and 111th Streets, proposed as a hotel but ultimately constructed as a residential building. The northern part of the neighborhood is dominated by two residential complexes: Grant Houses and Morningside Gardens. Grant Houses, a public-housing development composed of ten buildings,

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1404-589: A private Ivy League university. Morningside Heights contains numerous other educational institutions such as Teachers College , Barnard College , the Manhattan School of Music , Bank Street College of Education , Union Theological Seminary , and the Jewish Theological Seminary of America . Additionally, Morningside Heights includes several religious institutions, including the Cathedral of St. John

1521-474: A significant change in the neighborhood's character, and was dubbed by the Real Estate Record and Guide as "the largest single factor [...] in promoting private real estate and building activity on the plateau". Just across Broadway to the west was the campus of Barnard College, a women's college . In 1895, philanthropist Elizabeth Milbank Anderson donated funds on the condition that Charles A. Rich

1638-592: A split between the two main groups that inhabited Morningside Heights—those who were affiliated with institutions and those who were not—setting up conflicts between the two demographic groups. As a response to the Great Depression , many of the apartments had been subdivided into smaller units, with residents frequently dividing their apartments or taking in boarders, or owners converting their buildings to single room occupancy (SRO) hotels. The increasing prevalence of SROs led to attendant socioeconomic problems and

1755-465: A staff service. In the 1890s Columbia was declared a university and moved to its current location in Morningside Heights. There, the Low Memorial Library was built in 1895 to serve as the centerpiece of the new campus. Financed with $ 1 million of University President Seth Low's own money, at full capacity the library was expected to house 1.9 million volumes. However, the library at this point

1872-484: A task force, the Morningside Heights Community Coalition, to rezone certain blocks to require affordable housing in certain types of developments. In 2021, the task force and local politicians announced a proposal to rezone a 15-block portion of Morningside Heights; if implemented, it would be the neighborhood's first rezoning in six decades. Based on data from the 2010 United States Census ,

1989-608: Is 51% in Community District 9, compared to the boroughwide and citywide rates of 45% and 51% respectively. Based on this calculation, as of 2018 , Community District 9 is considered to be gentrifying : according to the Community Health Profile, the district was low-income in 1990 and has seen above-median rent growth up to 2010. Morningside Heights is located in Upper Manhattan , bounded by Morningside Park to

2106-406: Is about the same as the median life expectancy of 81.2 for all New York City neighborhoods. Most residents are children and middle-aged adults: 34% are between the ages of 25 and 44, while 21% are between 45 and 64, and 17% are between 0 and 17. The ratio of college-aged and elderly residents was lower, at 16% and 12% respectively. As of 2017, the median household income in Community District 9

2223-465: Is also listed on the NRHP. Additionally, the Union Theological Seminary complex is listed on the NRHP, and parts of the structure are also a city-designated landmark. There are several traces of the old Croton Aqueduct 's path through Morningside Heights, specifically under Amsterdam Avenue. Due to the presence of the 125th Street valley at the northern border of the neighborhood, the aqueduct descended into

2340-689: Is both a city landmark and NRHP site, as is the Church of Notre Dame at Morningside Drive and 114th Street. Non-religious official landmarks in Morningside Heights include Grant's Tomb , a mausoleum for U.S. president Ulysses S. Grant and his wife Julia Grant . The tomb, located in the middle of Riverside Drive at 122nd Street, is a city landmark, a NRHP site, and a national memorial . The Plant and Scrymser pavilions at Mount Sinai Morningside , located on Morningside Drive between 113th and 114th Streets, were built in 1904–1906 and 1926–1928 respectively; both pavilions are recognized as city landmarks and are on

2457-413: Is composed of apartment buildings, many of which survive from the neighborhood's early-20th century wave of development. While many of the original apartments have been subdivided, numerous original five- to seven-bedroom units remain. Two of the more distinctive apartment structures are The Colosseum and The Paterno , at 116th Street and Riverside Drive , whose curved facades are the only evidence of

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2574-560: Is growing at a pace of 140,000 items per annum . The system attracts over four million visitors a year. The Columbia Center for Oral History Research , the oldest academic oral history research program, was founded at Columbia by Professor Allan Nevins in 1948. Its oral history archives are stored in Butler Library, and contain over 12,000 interviews. Columbia shares an off-site shelving facility, located in Plainsboro, New Jersey , with

2691-461: Is located on the south side of 125th Street, on two superblocks between Broadway and Morningside Avenue, with the site being bisected by Amsterdam Avenue. The six-building Morningside Gardens co-op is located directly southwest of the Grant Houses superblocks and is bounded by 123rd and LaSalle Streets, Broadway, and Amsterdam Avenue. Several sites in Morningside Heights have been designated by

2808-459: Is made up of two complementary centers, the Columbia Center for Oral History Research (CCOHR) and the Columbia Center for Oral History Archives (CCOHA). The archives are housed within Butler Library while the research center is part of Interdisciplinary Center for Innovative Theory and Empirics (INCITE). The research center seeks funding for projects. The results of these projects are sent to

2925-473: The 9/11 Neediest Fund . After 9/11 there was a lot of fear of anthrax attacks and public health was a top priority, especially in terms of returning to normalcy. This project focused on the people that facilitated that movement, both in government and as part of a not-for-profit organization . 30 hours of interview with 34 people were collected over the course of 11 months from January to November 2002. The New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene

3042-678: The Apollo Theater through the lens of African-American history, the history of music and performance, and the history of New York City. The primary interviewers are Brent Hayes Edwards and Steve Rowland who were assisted by Gustavo Azendha, Karald Kisiedu, and Jennella Young. The funding for this project was provided by the Apollo Theater Foundation who receive their support from Edward and Leslye Phillips Family Foundation, Rockefeller Foundation , and New York Community Trust . Most recently running from October 2011 to September 2013,

3159-469: The Bank Street College of Education , which announced its intention to move to the area in 1964; and St. Hilda's & St. Hugh's School , which relocated from Manhattan Valley and Morningside Heights in 1967. Columbia assisted with the latter two additions, since it was interested in making Morningside Heights into a desirable place for its faculty to send their children to primary school. Within

3276-646: The New York City Fire Department 's Engine Company 47 and Engine Company 37/Ladder Company 40. Politically it is represented by the New York City Council 's 7th District. Initially, Manhattan was settled by the Lenape Native Americans, who referred to the area nearby as "Muscota" or "Muscoota", meaning "place of rushes". The nearest Native American settlements were Rechewanis and Konaande Kongh in present-day Central Park , to

3393-616: The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission as official city landmarks and/or are listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP). The Cathedral of St. John the Divine and its six-building cathedral close , on Amsterdam Avenue between 110th and 113th Streets, was designated by the city as an official landmark in 2017. Riverside Church , on Riverside Drive between 120th and 122nd Streets,

3510-579: The Woman's Hospital . In the 1890s, following Morningside Park's completion, several figures began advocating for the use of the name "Morningside Heights" for the region between 110th and 125th Streets. The name "Bloomingdale" was also used for the area around the Bloomingdale Insane Asylum. However, other names such as "Morningside Hill" and "Riverside Heights" were used for the area. When construction started on Columbia University, Teachers College,

3627-696: The "Boulevard" and replaced the former Bloomingdale Road. New pipes for the Croton Aqueduct were laid in 1865, and a still-extant gatehouse at 113th Street was erected later. Plans to relocate the Bloomingdale Asylum were considered as early as 1870, but the Panic of 1873 stalled any additional planning for the rest of the decade. The Ninth Avenue elevated was extended north from the Bloomingdale District to Harlem in 1879, but its route largely skipped

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3744-707: The 1756 donation of the estate and library of Joseph Murray to the university, then known as King's College . Valued at around £8,000, it was the largest single philanthropic gift made in colonial America. In 1763 the college received over 1,000 volumes from Reverend Duncombe Bristowe of London, through the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts . Among its early gifts, the college recorded that "Sundry gentlemen at Oxford gave books, whose names are in them", and in 1772

3861-472: The 1825 purchase of 264 books from the library of Lorenzo Da Ponte , and the donation of the library of Nathaniel Fish Moore to the college. The physical location of the library has moved several times over the course of the university's history. Originally housed in College Hall on Columbia's Park Place campus, it relocated to the university's newly acquired Madison Avenue campus in 1857. A new building for

3978-475: The 1890s and were among the only Old Law Tenements built in the neighborhood. The Cathedral of St. John the Divine, on Amsterdam Avenue between 110th and 113th Streets, had been the first institution to commit to building in Morningside Heights. However, construction proceeded very slowly: the first portion of the cathedral did not open until 1911, and the cathedral remained incomplete a century later. Nonetheless, its presence led other institutions to move to

4095-420: The 1930s, many residents were white and middle-class. The heads of these families included professionals like academics, engineers, doctors, lawyers, and businesspersons who worked in industries such as the garment trade. As early as 1930, the neighborhood was undergoing major demographic changes, and the newcomers included middle-class families who were not necessarily part of any institution. This resulted in

4212-424: The 1990s, and it continued to expand into Morningside Heights. By the end of the decade, there were only 50 apartment buildings between 110th and 122nd Streets that were not owned by the university. Other structures were also built in Morningside Heights, including Barnard's Sulzberger Hall. Morningside Park, which received a series of renovations in the 1980s and 1990s, was no longer considered to be as dangerous by

4329-454: The 2010s, new developments were being built amid several of Morningside Heights' preexisting institutions. For instance, two residential buildings had been erected on the cathedral close of St. John the Divine; part of the old St. Luke's Hospital was being converted into apartments; and the Union and Jewish Theological Seminaries had sold the rights to build apartments on their campuses. However,

4446-506: The Bloomingdale Asylum in 1821. Leake and Watts Services purchased the Society's land east of Amsterdam Avenue between 110th and 113th Streets in 1834, and Ithiel Town 's design for the Leake and Watts Asylum was completed in 1843. In addition, the Croton Aqueduct ran above ground through the modern neighborhood, opening in 1842. Through the late 19th century, Bloomingdale Road was

4563-485: The Cathedral of St. John the Divine, and St. Luke's Hospital in the mid-1890s, no single name was commonly used for the neighborhood. Two names eventually gained the most use; "Morningside Heights" was preferred by the two colleges, while "Cathedral Heights" was preferred by St. John's and St. Luke's. After about 1898, "Morningside Heights" became the most generally accepted, although the diocese at St. John's continued to call

4680-503: The Divine , Riverside Church , the Church of Notre Dame , Corpus Christi Church , and Interchurch Center . The neighborhood also contains other architectural landmarks, such as St. Luke's Hospital (now Mount Sinai Morningside ) and Grant's Tomb . Morningside Heights is part of Manhattan Community District 9 . It is patrolled by the 26th Precinct of the New York City Police Department . Fire services are provided by

4797-844: The East Asian, mathematics, and general sciences sections remained in Low; those too would eventually be relocated elsewhere. In 1974 the library became, along with Harvard Library, Yale Library, and New York Public Library, a founding member of the Research Libraries Group . As of 2020, the Columbia library system contains over 15.0 million volumes, its collections including over 160,000 journals and serials, six million microfilms, 26 million manuscripts, over 600,000 rare books, over 100,000 videos and DVDs, and nearly 200,000 government documents. The library's collection would stretch 174 miles end-to-end, and

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4914-472: The NRHP. Numerous academic buildings in Morningside Heights contain a city or national landmark designation. On the Columbia campus, these sites include Low Memorial Library , a National Historic Landmark as well as a city-designated interior and exterior landmark. Other NRHP sites on the Columbia campus include Philosophy Hall , where FM radio was invented; Pupin Hall , a National Historic Landmark where

5031-627: The Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy." In order to slow the hemorrhaging of books from the library's collections, it was restructured in 1817 and 1821, when it was placed under the control of the college's president and then board of trustees , respectively. Beginning in 1817, the youngest professor of the college would serve as the librarian, including physicist and engineer James Renwick , astronomer and geologist Henry James Anderson , and adjunct professor of classics Robert George Vermilye. The first full-time librarian appointed by Columbia

5148-620: The Research Collections and Preservation Consortium (RECAP), which includes the New York Public Library and the library systems of Harvard University and Princeton University . The system is participating in the Google Books Library Project . The libraries in the Columbia system include: The first recorded librarian of the Columbia Libraries was Robert Harpur , a professor of mathematics at King's College who

5265-553: The Rule of Law Oral History Project has studied how the events of 9/11 changed human and civil rights. In 2010 the project expanded and explored the treatment of prisoners in Guantánamo Bay . The project amalgamated 250+ hours of interviews. Atlantic Philanthropies , who helped fund their own oral history project also gave this project necessary funding. Because of the massive scope, and the proximity Columbia Center for Oral History has to

5382-487: The SROs, which were mostly occupied by racial minorities and did not have rent regulation . Likewise, while apartment buildings were rent-regulated, many units were subject to "affiliation clauses" that extended tenancy only to members of the academic institutions within Morningside Heights. Protests against such clauses continued through the late 1970s. The conflicts peaked in 1968, when protests arose in Columbia's campus and

5499-845: The School for International Studies in Brooklyn and the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Middle School 131 participated. The original funding was provided by the New York Times Foundation and the 9/11 Neediest Fund but it wasn't until the ChevronTexaco Foundation began to fund the project did it become a permanent initiative in 2003. Initially the International School compiled a book of their experiences, and the Chinatown located Dr. Sun Yat Sen school created

5616-447: The SoHa name "insulting and another sign of gentrification run amok", while another said that "the rebranding not only places their neighborhood's rich history under erasure but also appears to be intent on attracting new tenants, including students from nearby Columbia University." The controversy later led to proposals for legislation that would limit neighborhood rebranding citywide. By

5733-528: The Upper West Side were considered part of the Bloomingdale District until Morningside Park was finished in the late 19th century. Large-scale development started in the 1890s with academic and cultural institutions. By the 1900s, public transportation construction and the neighborhood's first subway line led to Morningside Heights being developed into a residential neighborhood. Morningside Heights

5850-403: The architecture of the older row houses in nearby neighborhoods. These developers saw mixed success: while some houses sold quickly, others languished for a decade or were foreclosed . The Morningside Protective Association, established in 1896, unsuccessfully attempted to limit the proliferation of low-rise development. The first tenements in Morningside Heights were built toward the end of

5967-541: The archives to be stored and used as source material for future research. Creating another source of reliable information like this was a goal of founder Allan Nevins. Projects put together by the CCOHR are stored in their archives and consist of as much information as can be found on the subject. Some notable examples are below. These are the current oral history research projects for Columbia Center for Oral History This project compiled about 70 hours of narrative discussing

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6084-479: The area bounded by Broadway, Amsterdam Avenue, and 110th and 113th Streets, where there were reported to be high concentrations of prostitutes. Two years later, the Times called the formerly opulent Hendrik Hudson apartment building "one of the city's worst slum buildings", with several hundred building and health code violations. By 1961, there were 33 SROs in the neighborhood. In 1947, fourteen major institutions in

6201-406: The attacks and gain the insight of as many points of view as possible. 440 interviews had been conducted in the first year and in 2002 and 2003, 202 of those interviewees had done follow-up interviews as well. In 2005 there was a second wave of interviews, but by this time, the project had already splintered and the other projects had taken off. This project spanned from 2002 to 2005 and focused on

6318-479: The attacks on the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001 the oral history project that was inspired has broken into five separate sections. Overall the projects have collected 900 hours of interviews with about 600 individuals. 23 of these hours are on video and 687 are available to the public through the archives. This was the first and largest project on 9/11 started by Mary Marshall Clark days after

6435-438: The attacks. She worked with Columbia University history professor Ken Jackson by utilizing his undergraduate class as volunteer interviewers. The project focused on documenting people's reactions before mass media shaped them, as well as reaching many different communities and groups to hear their perspectives. Clark eventually partnered with Peter Bearman , a sociology professor at Columbia University. At this point, still within

6552-572: The beginning of the 21st century. Despite its redevelopment, the neighborhood still retained some of its working-class character, mostly because of Columbia's affiliation-clause policy, leading the Times to say in 1993 that Morningside Heights "has practically escaped yuppification ". Housing prices started to increase rapidly in the late 1990s. A 1999 Times article mentioned that though there were still tensions between residents and institutions, these conflicts had subsided somewhat, with institutions being more receptive to feedback from residents. In

6669-450: The character of the neighborhood had not yet been developed, early-1900s apartment buildings tended to be erected "modestly", with little ornamentation. The subway opened in October 1904 with stations at 110th , 116th , and 125th Streets, providing a direct connection to Lower Manhattan, the city's economic center at the time. In subsequent years, developers erected larger buildings for

6786-465: The city and Columbia University: the city had proposed erecting 1,000 apartments on Riverside Drive, but Columbia objected because it would have precluded the university's ability to build a proposed western campus. In 1970, I. M. Pei was hired to create a new plan for Columbia's expansion on the South Field, though only one portion of Pei's plan was ever built. In the 1970s, as crimes increased in

6903-434: The city in general, institutional leaders in Morningside Heights raised concerns about safety and security. Meanwhile, Columbia University continued to expand its presence in the neighborhood. By the late 1970s, one in five apartment buildings in Morningside Heights were owned by Columbia, and by the 1980s, it was the neighborhood's largest landlord. In 1979, a Barnard College student was killed by masonry that had fallen from

7020-616: The college received directly from Oxford University , at the request of President Myles Cooper , a copy of every book published by the Oxford University Press . The King's College collection would largely not survive the American Revolutionary War . In 1776, College Hall was commandeered by the New York Committee of Safety to be used as a military hospital and instruction was suspended, in preparation for which

7137-516: The complex, Main Hall, was completed in late 1894; the last, Milbank Memorial Hall, was finished three years later. Both Barnard and Teachers Colleges saw rapid growth in the early 20th century. Only three structures were built for Barnard, resulting in overcrowding; by contrast, numerous large facilities were erected for Teachers College, including a gymnasium, manual arts building, household arts building, and dormitories. Other institutions of higher education on Morningside Heights were developed in

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7254-552: The construction of the Interborough Rapid Transit Company 's first subway line (now part of the New York City Subway 's Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line , serving the 1 train). These buildings contained features that were considered innovative at the time, such as electric lighting, soundproofed and parquet floors, tiled bathrooms with porcelain fixtures, and long-distance telephone lines. Since

7371-646: The contents of the college's library had been deposited in the New York City Hall . Only six or seven hundred items from the King's College library were recovered following the war, and only 111 remain in Columbia University's collections today. Following the war, the newly renamed Columbia College's library was rebuilt and grew over time through gifts, deposits, and purchases; by 1863 it owned nearly 15,000 volumes. Valuable acquisitions during this time period included

7488-505: The early 17th century and called the nearby area "Vredendal", meaning "peaceful dale". The western boundary of New Harlem was drawn through the present-day Morningside Park in 1666, running from 74th Street at the East River to 124th Street at the North River (now Hudson River ) on the neighborhood's western edge. The area to the west of the boundary, present-day Morningside Heights,

7605-506: The early 20th century, the first of which was the new campus of the Union Theological Seminary between Broadway and Claremont Avenue from 120th to 122nd Streets. The campus was composed of several Gothic Revival structures, designed by architects Allen & Collens and arranged around a quadrangle. The structures were completed by 1910, and expanded soon after with the construction of the Stone Gym in 1912 (now part of Riverside Church), and

7722-409: The east of Morningside Gardens, across Amsterdam Avenue. Completed in 1956, it was less successful in racial integration but was praised by local landlords as a deterrent to urban decay. The construction of Grant Houses necessitated the displacement of 7,000 residents. The New York Times described the urban renewal scheme in 1957 as "the biggest face-lifting job under way in this city". Prior to

7839-426: The east, 125th Street to the north, 110th Street to the south, and Riverside Park to the west. The neighborhood is zoned primarily for high-rise apartment buildings, though ground-floor stores are also present on Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue. In practice, much of the neighborhood is composed of structures for the neighborhood's religious or academic institutions. The residential stock of Morningside Heights

7956-635: The east, Manhattanville to the north, the Manhattan Valley section of the Upper West Side to the south, and Riverside Park to the west. Broadway is the neighborhood's main thoroughfare, running north–south. Morningside Heights, located on a high plateau between Morningside and Riverside Parks, was hard to access until the late 19th century and was sparsely developed except for the Bloomingdale and Leake and Watts asylums. Morningside Heights and

8073-404: The existing campuses of neighborhood institutions, two St. Luke's Hospital pavilions were demolished and replaced in the 1950s and 1960s, and a new office wing at Riverside Church opened in 1959. Social tensions began to develop as many of the area's institutions began to expand into the surrounding neighborhood. The newer buildings had architecture that was described as bland, as contrasted to

8190-409: The first eight weeks following the attacks, 200 interviews were conducted, and 300 more over the next eight months were completed. 150 of the interviews were from people within 5 blocks of the towers, while 50-60 came from those who were in the towers at the time and survived. After the initial reactions, Clark and her research team focused on reaching as many different groups of people as possible. There

8307-547: The first experiments on the fission of uranium were conducted by Enrico Fermi ; and Casa Italiana on the East Campus, which is also a city landmark. St. Paul's Chapel is designated as a city landmark but not as a national landmark. On the Barnard campus, NRHP-listed sites include Students' Hall ; Brooks and Hewitt Halls ; and Milbank, Brinckerhoff, and Fiske Halls . The Delta Psi, Alpha Chapter building on Riverside Drive

8424-471: The highlands north of 110th Street, as its route shifted eastward at 110th Street. An elevated station at 110th Street and Manhattan Avenue was not opened until 1903, and even then, it was hard to access due to the steep topography. Thus, while the Upper West Side to the south and Hamilton Heights to the north were developed with row houses by the 1880s, the intervening area had almost no new development. The Real Estate Record and Guide stated that it

8541-453: The late 1990s, some businesses in the area started labeling Morningside Heights and southern Harlem with the name SoHa (for "South Harlem" or "South of Harlem"), as seen in the names of Max's SoHa restaurant and the former SoHa nightclub in Morningside Heights. "SoHa" has become a controversial name, having been used by the real estate industry and other individuals gentrifying the area between West 110th and 125th Streets. One critic called

8658-413: The latter in 1887. The section of Riverside Drive and Park in the Bloomingdale District, of which modern-day Morningside Heights was considered to be part, was completed by 1880. Morningside Park was completed in 1895. Though several other infrastructure improvements were made, development in the region above 110th Street was slow until the 1890s. Broadway, a wide avenue with medians, opened in 1868 as

8775-565: The library designed by Charles C. Haight was completed in 1883. From 1883 to 1888, Melvil Dewey , the creator of the Dewey Decimal Classification and a founder of the American Library Association , was the chief librarian at Columbia, where he also founded the world's first library school in 1887. As librarian, Dewey reorganized the Columbia Libraries, unifying them under one efficient administration and creating

8892-584: The middle class, which had been made feasible by the area's proximity to the subway. Between 1903 and 1911, at least 75 apartment buildings were built in the neighborhood. By 1906, there were 27 such developments underway, including structures on which work had started before the 1901 law had been passed. A Real Estate Record and Guide article published in August 1906 described Morningside Heights as New York City's "most distinctive high-class apartment house quarter". Units on Riverside Drive, despite being further from

9009-504: The neighborhood "Cathedral Heights" well into the 20th century. Additionally, Manhattan's population was growing rapidly, exceeding one million in 1890. Speculative developers , hoping to cater to Morningside Heights' institutions and Manhattan's increasing population, started erecting the first row houses in the area in 1892–1893. These early buildings were designed in the Colonial , Georgian , or Renaissance Revival styles, in contrast to

9126-471: The neighborhood formed Morningside Heights Inc, an urban renewal organization that aimed to reduce poverty and segregation by erecting new housing. Morningside Heights Inc., headed by David Rockefeller , was the first major joint venture between the neighborhood's institutions. Its first project was Morningside Gardens , a middle-income co-op apartment complex between 123rd and LaSalle Streets, Broadway, and Amsterdam Avenue. The project, completed in 1957,

9243-492: The neighborhood still retained a reputation for being relatively affordable, with per-foot housing prices being lower than in nearby neighborhoods. In 2017, part of Morningside Heights was protected as part of the Morningside Heights Historic District . Despite advocacy from local residents, the New York City Department of City Planning declined to rezone Morningside Heights in 2019. This prompted residents to create

9360-511: The neighborhood. The first of these was St. Luke's Hospital, which in 1892 purchased the site directly north of the cathedral as a direct result of influence from cathedral secretary George Macculloch Miller . Built to designs by Ernest Flagg , the first five pavilions in the hospital opened in 1896, with three additional pavilions being added later. Next was Cady, Berg & See 's Home for Old Men and Aged Couples, built at Amsterdam Avenue and 112th Street and opened in 1896. Third to come

9477-542: The only connection to the rest of Manhattan. A stagecoach line along Bloomingdale Road, founded in 1819, was expanded to modern Morningside Heights and Manhattanville four years later. Mansions were developed on the shore, and William Dixon erected small wood-frame houses on 110th Street, which would be referred to as "Dixonville". In 1846, the Hudson River Railroad (later the West Side Line and Hudson Line )

9594-512: The opposite side of the modern-day neighborhood, to the east, Central Park commissioner Andrew Haswell Green proposed Morningside Park in 1867 to avoid the expense of expanding the Manhattan street grid across extremely steep terrain. Landscape designer Frederick Law Olmsted was hired for both projects: he designed Riverside Drive and Park in 1873–1875, and he co-designed Morningside Park with Calvert Vaux in 1873, with further revisions to

9711-618: The oral history project focusing on the Carnegie Corporation has been a lasting effort. The first of three projects began in 1966 and ran until 1974 compiling 479 hours of interviews which translates into 9948 pages of transcript. The second phase beginning in 1996 gathered 216 hours, 52 of which are video. Most recently, the project has been studying how the organization was run under President Vartan Gregorian , however, this global philanthropy organization will have most of its 100-year history documented by this project. Beginning in 2008

9828-426: The people in power who had to organize response teams and get the city back on track. 112 hours of interview were conducted with 68 people running government agencies who responded to the attacks, and 12 interviews were conducted with heavily traumatized people who were directly affected by the response and outreach programs the project focused on. The funding for this project came from The New York Times Foundation and

9945-593: The population of Morningside Heights was 55,929, an increase of 1,721 (3.2%) from the 54,208 counted in the 2000 Census . Covering an area of 465.11 acres (188.22 ha), the neighborhood had a population density of 120.2 inhabitants per acre (76,900/sq mi; 29,700/km ). The racial makeup of the neighborhood was 46.0% (25,750) White , 13.6% (7,619) African American , 0.2% (105) Native American , 13.3% (7,462) Asian , 0.1% (30) Pacific Islander , 0.4% (203) from other races , and 2.9% (1,605) from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 23.5% (13,155) of

10062-822: The population. The population of Morningside Heights changed moderately from 2000 to 2010, with an increase in the Asian population by 27% (1,565), a decrease in the Black population by 16% (1,502), and an increase in the White population by 7% (1,606). The Latino population experienced a slight decrease of 2% (203), while the population of all other races increased by 15% (255) yet remained a small minority. The entirety of Manhattan Community District 9, which encompasses Morningside Heights, Manhattanville , and Hamilton Heights , had 111,287 inhabitants as of NYC Health 's 2018 Community Health Profile, with an average life expectancy of 81.4 years. This

10179-607: The present site of Rockefeller Center in Midtown Manhattan ; and the Episcopal Diocese of New York , which had been looking for sites to build their main cathedral, the Cathedral of St. John the Divine . Several other educational institutions were soon constructed in the area, including Barnard College , Teachers College , Jewish Theological Seminary of America , and Union Theological Seminary . Medical institutions moved there as well, such as St. Luke's Hospital and

10296-729: The program in 1948. There is an extensive list of projects belonging to the center, both current and completed. Currently the office holds 8,000 taped memoirs and 1,000,000 pages of transcripts. Policy was a passion for Allan Nevins, and that inspired him to form the Center for Oral History Research, or more specifically the Columbia University Oral History Research Office . Public policy often has an overload of written information and interview would be helpful in directing research. Nevis requested funding from Columbia University but barely received any—just enough to pay

10413-456: The regulations to which tenement buildings had to conform. To fit these new regulations, the architects of the different developments drew up several general plans to maximize the amount of floor space in each building, while also ensuring every residential unit had windows that faced either a courtyard or the street. The more common plans included L-, I-, O-, or U-shaped designs. Several buildings were erected close to Broadway in anticipation of

10530-428: The same year as the attacks, Columbia became willing to fund operational costs for the center and with the help of Bearman, Clark could apply for grants. Eventually, the project received funding from Rockfeller Foundation, National Science Foundation , New York Times Foundation, and Columbia University. Because of Bearman's involvement, CCOH partnered with ISERP (Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy). Over

10647-579: The simultaneous expansions of other communities with Ivy League universities, which were constructing structures with more distinctive designs. Through the 1960s, Columbia University, Barnard College, and other institutions purchased several dozen buildings in Morningside Heights, leading to accusations of forced eviction and gentrification . Many residential buildings were converted to institutional use, while others were demolished to make way for new institutional buildings, such as Columbia University's East Campus . The process involved demolishing some of

10764-424: The southeast of modern Morningside Heights. Additionally, a Native American path in the area was adapted into part of modern-day Riverside Drive. However, the region remained relatively hard to access because of the steep topography. Prior to the beginning of the 18th century, most travel within modern New York City was made via water, since there were few roads in the region. Dutch settlers occupied Manhattan in

10881-698: The subway, were generally more expensive because of their riverfront views. Jewish and Italian developers had a large influence in early-20th century development in Morningside Heights. For instance, the Italian-American Paterno brothers , along with their brothers-in-law, built The Paterno , The Colosseum , and several other large apartment buildings in the area. Two members of the family, Michael Paterno and Victor Cerabone, also started their own firms and built structures in Morningside Heights. The majority of Morningside Heights developers were Jewish, although most of these Jewish developers created only

10998-615: The surrounding neighborhood over the university's proposal to build a gym in Morningside Park, which would have created separate entrances in mostly-white Morningside Heights and mostly-black Harlem. The university abandoned the plan the next year. Two other major plans were proposed but not built after objections from the community: a proposed expansion of the Interchurch Center, and a nursing home on Amsterdam Avenue between 111th and 112th Streets. There were even disputes between

11115-431: The urban renewal projects, most institutions in Morningside Heights considered its northern boundary to be around 122nd Street, but with the completion of these developments, the area between 122nd and 125th Street was added to the popular definition of Morningside Heights. Three institutions opened or moved into Morningside Heights during the late 1950s and early 1960s. These were the Interchurch Center , opened in 1960;

11232-406: Was "difficult to explore the region without a guide" because of the lack of development there. In 1886, real estate figures and politicians started advocating for the relocation of both asylums in the neighborhood. The asylums were seen as holding up development in the area. The Bloomingdale Asylum had twice rejected offers to purchase its land: first in 1880, when Ulysses S. Grant advocated for

11349-473: Was $ 50,048, though the median income in Morningside Heights individually was $ 81,890. In 2018, an estimated 24% of Community District 9 residents lived in poverty, compared to 14% in all of Manhattan and 20% in all of New York City. One in twelve residents (8%) were unemployed, compared to 7% in Manhattan and 9% in New York City. Rent burden, or the percentage of residents who have difficulty paying their rent,

11466-404: Was Columbia University, whose president Seth Low had commissioned Charles Follen McKim of the architectural firm McKim, Mead & White to design the new Morningside Heights campus in 1893. The plan consisted of 15 buildings and a South Court on the east side of Broadway between 116th and 120th Streets, centered around the university's major library, Low Memorial Library . The Low Library

11583-592: Was a focus on civil liberty violations by the FBI on immigrants from the Middle East and Muslims. When conducting interviews with Spanish speakers, there was a trend to identify and be traumatized by the sheer number of people who jumped from the towers, which was reported by the Spanish-media but not the mainstream media until much later. This project was identified as "longitudinal" because it strove to cover everyone affected by

11700-587: Was appointed in 1763 to "make a catalogue of the Books that now are and hereafter may belong to the Library... and also that he be accountable for the said Books." Following the Revolutionary War, during which the library was largely destroyed, the role of librarian would fall on college professors in rotation: in 1799 the board of trustees "Resolved that the care of the Library be committed to the Professor of Languages and

11817-716: Was built along the Hudson River waterfront, connecting New York City to Albany. By an act of the New York State Legislature passed in 1865, the commissioners of Central Park had the responsibility of executing the Commissioners' Plan of 1811 within Upper Manhattan. The same year, Central Park commissioner William R. Martin put forth the first proposal for a park and scenic road along the Hudson River, which later became Riverside Park and Riverside Drive . On

11934-529: Was classics professor Nathaniel Fish Moore in 1837; he would go on to serve as the college's president following his tenure. Morningside Heights Morningside Heights is a neighborhood on the West Side of Upper Manhattan in New York City . It is bounded by Morningside Drive to the east, 125th Street to the north, 110th Street to the south, and Riverside Drive to the west. Morningside Heights borders Central Harlem and Morningside Park to

12051-495: Was constructed between 1895 and 1897, along with most of the other original structures, and the first classes at the new campus were held in October 1897. Several campus expansions occurred shortly afterward, including Earl Hall in 1902; the first dormitories, Hartley Hall and Livingston Hall , in 1905; South Field, purchased in 1903; St. Paul's Chapel , completed in 1907; and numerous classrooms and other buildings. Columbia's presence in Morningside Heights led to

12168-432: Was developed by one of three firms: George Pelham , Neville & Bagge, or Schwartz & Gross . After World War I , the remaining empty lots were bought and developed. By the 1920s, the neighborhood's character had been fully established. In addition to apartment buildings, Morningside Heights contained commercial ventures, though these were mainly confined to low-rise buildings on the north–south avenues. Through

12285-639: Was extended north from Lower Manhattan to 117th Street. Harman Vandewater acquired part of the De Key farm by 1735, and it was called Vandewater Heights by 1738. On September 16, 1776, the Battle of Harlem Heights was fought in the area, with the most intense fighting occurring in a sloping wheat field that is now the location of Barnard College . A plaque by the Columbia University gate on 117th Street and Broadway commemorates this battle. Vandewater Heights

12402-593: Was featured in the 1980s song " Tom's Diner " by Suzanne Vega , an alumna of Barnard College. Later, exterior shots were used on the television sitcom Seinfeld as a stand-in for the diner hangout of the show's principal characters. Columbia Center for Oral History Research Located within Butler Library , the Columbia University Center for Oral History Research is the oldest oral history program. Pulitzer Prize winner Allan Nevins founded

12519-605: Was growing quickly, and the Low Library would soon not be enough to accommodate its entire collection: in 1904 the Columbia University Libraries held around 400,000 books, a number which would swell to more than a million in little over two decades. Butler Library , currently Columbia's main library, was built 1931 in and funded by a $ 4 million gift from alumnus and philanthropist Edward Harkness . Following its opening in 1934, only special collections , Columbiana, and

12636-543: Was heavily involved as were Dr. David Rosner and Dr. Nancy Van Devanter of Columbia University Public Health. This was the first public oral history program because it was run in public schools as an after school program and worked with the Local 40 Ironworkers. The ironworkers were interviewed to talk about the incident, but this project focused on children both as a means to gain their perspective but also to help these children make sense of what happened as it pertains to them. Both

12753-458: Was hired to design the campus. Before funds ran out, Rich ultimately designed the Milbank, Brinckerhoff, and Fiske Halls , which held their first classes in October 1897. Immediately north was Teachers College, which became affiliated with Columbia University in 1893 and merged with the latter in 1897. The buildings for this campus were designed by William Appleton Potter . The first structure in

12870-450: Was initially occupied by a multi-racial tenant base of just under a thousand families, a third of whom worked at neighborhood institutions. Morningside Gardens drew some opposition, as it replaced an eclectic group of low- and mid-rise housing that was occupied by about 6,000 people, mostly African Americans. Another development in the neighborhood was Grant Houses , a New York City Housing Authority public-housing development located to

12987-402: Was mostly developed by the 1930s. During the mid-20th century, as the institutions within Morningside Heights expanded, cultural tensions grew between residents who were affiliated with institutions and those who were not. After a period of decline, the neighborhood started to gentrify in the 1980s and 1990s. A large portion of Morningside Heights is part of the campus of Columbia University ,

13104-503: Was opposed to such a designation, which would have limited the university's flexibility as a landlord in Morningside Heights. The district includes 115 residential and institutional properties on West 109th Street west of Broadway; the blocks east and west of Broadway from Cathedral Parkway to West 113th Street; the blocks west of Broadway from West 113th to 118th Street; and the blocks west of Claremont Avenue from West 118th to 119th Street. Tom's Restaurant , on Broadway at 112th Street ,

13221-430: Was originally the common lands of British-occupied New York. In 1686, New York colonial governor Thomas Dongan granted the city of New York the patent to a triangular area between West 107th to 124th Streets, extending west to the Hudson River. The city sold the land to Jacob De Key in 1701. An easy connection to the rest of the modern-day city was made two years later, when Bloomingdale Road (modern-day Broadway)

13338-429: Was seeing many new "restaurants and boutiques" that had replaced "dusty shops and fast-food counters". By 1987, Morningside Heights was much safer compared to fifteen years prior, with Broadway being redeveloped as a fashionable shopping district. Much of this effort was undertaken by Columbia, which sought to improve its reputation among the surrounding community. Columbia started to restore several of its buildings in

13455-732: Was sold by 1785 to James W. De Peyster. His brother, Nicholas De Peyster, bought the land directly to the west, along the shoreline. Though a grid for Manhattan Island would be laid out in the Commissioners' Plan of 1811 , the present-day Morningside Heights would remain sparsely developed for the next half-century, with the exception of the Bloomingdale Insane Asylum and the Leake and Watts Orphan Asylum . The Society for New York Hospital had started buying lots between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenues north of 113th Street in 1816, and opened

13572-556: Was the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, across Broadway to the east of Juilliard, whose buildings were completed in 1930. Riverside Church , to the west of the Union Theological Seminary, was completed the same year. There was still little residential development in the first decade of the 20th century. A small concentration of beer gardens began to develop around the "Dixonville" on 110th Street. The New York State Tenement House Act of 1901 drastically changed

13689-487: Was the Woman's Hospital at Amsterdam Avenue and 110th Street, which was designed by Frederick R. Allen of Allen & Collens and completed in 1906. While these projects led to Morningside Heights being known as an "Academic Acropolis", they did not significantly alter the character of the neighborhood. By the late 1890s and early 1900s, Morningside Heights' academic institutions were growing rapidly. The most prominent of these

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