the familiar scene by a quaint and vivid aerial perspective.
Then the “Middle Road” of the beginning
of this century will reappear,—the traces
of a wheat-field on the site of St. Paul’s, still
a fresh tradition; Oswego Market, opposite Liberty
Street, is alive with early customers; the reminiscent
beholds the apparition of Rutgers’s orchard,
whose remaining noble elms yet shade the green vista
of the City Hospital, and which was a place for rifling
bird’s-nests in the boyhood of his pensive companion,
whose father played at skittles on the Bowling Green,
hard by the Governor’s house, while the Dutch
householders sat smoking long pipes in their broad
porticos, cosily discussing the last news from Antwerp
or Delft, their stout rosy daughters meanwhile taking
a twilight ramble, with their stalwart beaux, to the
utmost suburban limit of Manhattan, where Canal Street
now intersects Broadway,—then an unpaved
lane with scattered domiciles, only grouped into civic
contiguity around the Battery, and with many gardens
enhancing its rural aspect. Somewhat later, and
Munn’s Land Office, at the corner of what is
now Grand Street, was suggestive of a growing settlement
and the era of speculation; an isolated coach-factory
marked the site of the St. Nicholas Hotel; people
flocked along, in domestic instalments, to Vauxhall,
where now stands the Astor Library, to drink mead and
see the Flying Horses; and capitalists invested in
“lots” on Bayard’s Farm, where Niblo’s
and the Metropolitan now flourish; the one-story building
at the present angle of Prince Street was occupied
by Grant Thorburn’s father; beyond lay the old
road leading to Governor Stuyvesant’s Bowerie,
with Sandy Hill at the upper end. In 1664, Heere
Stras was changed to Broadway. At the King’s
Arms and Burr’s Coffee-House, near the Battery,
the traitor Arnold was wont to lounge, and in the
neighborhood dwelt the Earl of Stirling’s mother.
At the corner of Rector Street was the old Lutheran
church frequented by the Palatine refugees. Beyond
or within the Park stood the old Brewery, Pottery,
Bridewell, and Poor-house; relics of an Indian village
were often found; the Drover’s Inn, cattle-walk,
and pastures marked the straggling precincts of the
town; and on the commons oxen were roasted whole on
holidays, and obnoxious officials hung in effigy.
Anon rose the brick mansions of the Rapelyes, Rhinelanders,
Kingslands, Cuttings, Jays, Bogarts, Depeysters, Duers,
Livingstons, Verplancks, Van Rensselaers, De Lanceys,
Van Cortlands, etc.; at first along the “Middle
Road,” and then in bystreets from the main thoroughfare
down to the rivers; and so, gradually, the trees and
shrubs that made a rus in urbe of the embryo
city, and the gables and tiles, porches and pipes,
that marked the dynasty chronicled by old Diedrich,
gave way to palatial warehouses, magnificent taverns,
and brown stone fronts.