Database: Wall Street: Difference between revisions
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[[File:DB Wall Street.png|right|180px]] | [[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. | ||
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.) | 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. | 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. | ||
[[Category:Database | {{DEFAULTSORT:Wall Street}} | ||
[[Category:Database: Locations]] | |||
[[Category:Animus 3.0 database entries]] | |||
Revision as of 04:37, 1 March 2015

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.