Wall Street, today a canyon of tall buildings in New York's historic Financial District, is not only one of the most famous streets in the United States, it's also a stand-in for the entire American financial system.
One of the first facts you learn as a student of New York City history is that Wall Street is named for an actual wall that once stretched along this very spot during the days of the Dutch when New York was known as New Amsterdam.
The particulars of the story, however, are far more intriguing. Because the Dutch called the street alongside the wall something very different.
During the colonial era, the wall was torn down and turned into the center of New York life, complete with Trinity Church, City Hall and a shoreline market with a disturbing connection to one New York's financial livelihoods -- slavery.
So how did this street become so associated with American finance? The story involves Alexander Hamilton, a busy coffee house and a very important tree.
Visit the website for more images and information about this subject
More Bowery Boys episodes related to this one:
George Washington's New York Inauguration
Life In New Amsterdam
Land of the Lenape
Tearing Down King George: The Revolutionary Summer of 1776
Trinity Church: Anchor of Wall Street
#157 Early Ghost Stories of Old New York
#156 The Boy Mayor of New York
#155 Sesame Street to Seinfeld: NYC TV 1969-2013
#154 New York in the Golden Age of Television
#153 NYC and the Birth of Television
#152 Bellevue Hospital
#151 The Limelight: Church, Nightclub and Mall
#150 Consolidation! Five Boroughs, One Big City
#149 John Peter Zenger and the Power of the Press
#148 The Great Blizzard of 1888
#147 Art Insanity: The Armory Show of 1913
#146 Herald Square
#145 Bicycle Mania! From Velocipede to Ten-Speed
Hurricane Sandy Update
#144 Mysteries and Magicians of New York
#143 Water for New York: Croton Aqueduct
#142 New York University (NYU)
#141 New York Beer History
#140 Rockaway Beach
#139 Brooklyn Academy of Music
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Southern Mysteries Podcast
Irish Songs with Ken Murray
History Obscura
The Rest Is History
Revolutions