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>Amnestyyy
No edit summary
imported>Amnestyyy
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Edit|Database/Locations (AC3):Wall Street|Text=Edit this tab}}
[[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.

Revision as of 16:33, 31 May 2016

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.