Uncover hidden Gilded Age secrets on a 2-3 hour guided tour of Madison Square Park. Decode architecture and street walls in NYC’s historic heart.
Uncover hidden Gilded Age secrets on a 2-3 hour guided tour of Madison Square Park. Decode architecture and street walls in NYC’s historic heart.
- Flatiron Building - This walking tour explores the Gilded Age, a period when this neighborhood thrived as a fashionable world-class city center from the 1860s to the 1920s. We begin by providing context to the broader history of the city and the significant role Madison Square played in its development.
- Madison Square Park - At the…
- Flatiron Building - This walking tour explores the Gilded Age, a period when this neighborhood thrived as a fashionable world-class city center from the 1860s to the 1920s. We begin by providing context to the broader history of the city and the significant role Madison Square played in its development.
- Madison Square Park - At the intersection of Fifth Avenue, Broadway, and 23rd Street, this area was the heart of the Gilded Age. It emerged as a new social, political, and cultural hub during the Industrial Age’s economic boom. The old elite, like the Astors, were outpaced by new industrial wealth, such as the Vanderbilts, with Madison Square at the center of this social transformation.
Beyond the social and cultural history of the Gilded Age, the subsequent era and the buildings that replaced it are also worth exploring. These structures have their own fascinating histories and commercial significance, contributing to the unique architectural logic of New York City.
- Fifth Avenue - We walk along Fifth Avenue between 23rd and 18th Streets, analyzing the buildings to understand their development. We explore when they were built, for whom, and how they have evolved.
Here, we examine New York’s iconic late 19th-century steel-frame manufacturing loft buildings, often designed in the elongated Beaux Arts style. Known later as Paternoster Row, this area transitioned from a street of class and wealth to one filled with office buildings housing publishers, architects, textile manufacturers, and piano showrooms. It was a once-prominent business district in a now-forgotten upper-class neighborhood.
- ABC Carpet & Home - This six-block stretch of Broadway between Madison and Union Square is a quiet, hidden gem in New York City. The street is rich with fragmented French Second Empire, Beaux Arts, and Neo-Classical architecture. During the Gilded Age, this area was part of the Ladies’ Mile Historic Shopping District, known for high-end shopping without the intrusion of elevated trains or horse car rails. Women would step from carriages to shop along this unusually narrow and quiet stretch of Broadway, which remains a charming locale today.
- Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace National Historic Site - We explore how the former President’s life fits into the broader history of the area.
- Sixth Avenue (Avenue of the Americas) - The blocks of Sixth Avenue from 18th to 23rd Streets feature well-preserved old department stores and shopping emporiums. This area was a middle-class shopping district, but some establishments were also frequented by the elite.
We delve into the history of the department stores that once brought vibrant energy to these blocks, while also appreciating the architectural relics and ruins that tell the stories of earlier times and previous occupants.
- Sixth Avenue (Avenue of the Americas) - Crossing 23rd Street to the north, we enter the old “Tenderloin” district, known for adult entertainment before the advent of radio and television. It is surprising to modern sensibilities that a district of saloons, brothels, and gambling halls was so close to venues for respectable activities.
Few buildings from this red-light district survive, as such areas are rarely preserved. The remaining structures housed middle and lower-middle-class neighborhoods, as well as large African American and Jewish communities. These blocks are linked to some of the city’s most scandalous and deviant stories.
- Tin Pan Alley - One of New York’s newest historic districts, Tin Pan Alley was the heart of the American music industry for a brief period. Located along 28th Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenues, this area was where sheet music flourished and popular music was born. Early music marketing and promotion techniques, known as plugging, originated here.
- Hotel Wolcott - Crossing Broadway, we immediately sense a historical shift as we move a few feet to Fifth Avenue, entering the upper-class part of town.
The Wolcott Hotel was one of over a dozen luxurious Gilded Age hotels in the area, many of which have since been converted to SROs and city housing.
- Empire State Building - Once the site of the original Waldorf-Astoria and the residences of the Astor brothers, the Empire State Building held the title of the world’s tallest building for 40 years.
- Fifth Avenue - The final leg of the tour covers the blocks between the Empire State Building and the Flatiron Building. These blocks are a Rosetta Stone of New York history, featuring buildings from every era as the city expanded uptown.
- 230 FIFTH ROOFTOP BAR NYC - We conclude the tour at any convenient point in Madison Square for the guests.
- Professional guide
- Professional guide
- Gratuities
- Gratuities
This 2-3 hour guided walking tour around Madison Square Park seeks out what’s left to be found of the Gilded Age city. On this tour we read the architecture and decode the street walls in a neighborhood that was once the New York’s city center at the height of the Gilded Age. Where the city came from (Soho), and where it moved to (Times Square, Museum…
This 2-3 hour guided walking tour around Madison Square Park seeks out what’s left to be found of the Gilded Age city. On this tour we read the architecture and decode the street walls in a neighborhood that was once the New York’s city center at the height of the Gilded Age. Where the city came from (Soho), and where it moved to (Times Square, Museum Mile, and the shops of Fifth Avenue) is integral to understanding how New York, and Madison Square, developed. You’ll learn answers to questions you didn’t know you had about New York City, and leave with the deeply satisfying sense of understanding a city that author James Baldwin called ‘spitefully incoherent’.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.