Welcome to Assassin's Creed Wiki! Log in and join the community.

Database: Wall Street: Difference between revisions

From the Assassin's Creed Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Vatsa1708
New..
 
imported>Gabriel Auditore
mNo edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Edit|Database/Locations (AC3):Wall Street|Text=Edit this tab}}
{{Edit|Database/Locations (AC3):Wall Street|Text=Edit this tab}}
[[File:DB Wall Street.png|right|180px]]
In the 17th Century, this marked the edge of the city of New Amsterdam, and it was the location of the city's 12-foor palisade wall. The wall itself was torn down by the British in 1699 but the name "Wall Street" stuck.
In the 17th Century, this marked the edge of the city of New Amsterdam, and it was the location of the city's 12-foor palisade wall. The wall itself was torn down by the British in 1699 but the name "Wall Street" stuck.



Revision as of 13:05, 15 March 2013

[Edit this tab]

In the 17th Century, this marked the edge of the city of New Amsterdam, and it was the location of the city's 12-foor palisade wall. The wall itself was torn down by the British in 1699 but the name "Wall Street" stuck.

By the late 18th century this was already becoming a financial centre - traders met at the Merchant Coffee House at the corner of Water Street, and under a buttonwood free outside to trade securities. (This buttonwood free is the site of the Buttonwood Agreement, which was the beginning of the New York Stock Exchange.)

The street is only 8 blocks long - as long today as you see it here in the late 1700s. If that seems extremely small remember: the skyscrapers are tall, rather than wide. Otherwise they'd be called Floorhuggers.