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asraful2702
👑🇦 🇸 🇷 🇦 🇫 🇺 🇱👑 :
সাপোর্ট করেন ইনশাল্লাহ আমিও সাপোর্ট করব
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md.rohoman.0199879
🫣পরিবারের 😇ছোট ভাই 🥰 :
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🥷2..00..𝓐𝓫𝓭𝓾𝓵𝓵𝓪𝓱...🥷 :
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꧁☬ 𝙾𝚗𝚝𝚘𝚛 𝚟𝚊𝚒 ☬꧂  :
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2026-06-07 04:07:40
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Kinda Interesting Things #225: The Queensboro Bridge Lampposts If you’re walking on 59th Street and 2nd Avenue, right at the entrance of the Queensboro Bridge on the Manhattan side, you’ll come across this old lamppost — a towering landmark that’s been quietly watching New York City for over 100 years. This is the story of the Queensboro Bridge lampposts. The Queensboro Bridge opened on March 30, 1909, linking Manhattan at 59th Street with Queens by way of Blackwell’s Island — known today as Roosevelt Island. Designed by engineer Gustav Lindenthal and architect Henry Hornbostel, construction began around 1901, and the bridge quickly became one of the largest cantilever spans in the world. The lampposts that framed its Manhattan entrance at 59th and 60th Street were installed that same year, in 1909. They were crafted by the William H. Jackson Company (Wm. H. Jackson Co.), an ornamental iron and bronze firm whose roots stretch back to 1827. Each lamppost was richly decorated, built with five tiers of ornamentation and globe-shaped lamps, and anchored by a massive bronze base engraved with the names of four New York City boroughs. (Staten Island was left out) The lamppost standing at 59th Street has mostly remained in place since the day the bridge opened. But its twin on 60th Street had a different fate. It was removed in 1974 during construction of the Roosevelt Island Tramway, when crews needed to clear space for the tram's new path. For decades, no one knew where that missing lamppost had gone — until January 2011, when historian Mitch Waxman discovered its 6,000-pound bronze base tucked under a tarp in the NYC DOT’s storage yard in Queens. Sources: “Base Of Missing 59th Street Bridge Lamppost Found In Queens” (CBS News, 2012) “The Mystery of a Long-Missing Relic Is Solved and Returned to the Public” (New York Times, 2015) “Base of Historic Queensboro Bridge Lamp Rediscovered After Nearly 40 Years” (DNA Info, 2012) “A proud lamppost guards the Queensboro Bridge” (Ephemeral New York, 2013) #nyc #nychistory #DidYouKnow #LearnOnTikTok
Kinda Interesting Things #225: The Queensboro Bridge Lampposts If you’re walking on 59th Street and 2nd Avenue, right at the entrance of the Queensboro Bridge on the Manhattan side, you’ll come across this old lamppost — a towering landmark that’s been quietly watching New York City for over 100 years. This is the story of the Queensboro Bridge lampposts. The Queensboro Bridge opened on March 30, 1909, linking Manhattan at 59th Street with Queens by way of Blackwell’s Island — known today as Roosevelt Island. Designed by engineer Gustav Lindenthal and architect Henry Hornbostel, construction began around 1901, and the bridge quickly became one of the largest cantilever spans in the world. The lampposts that framed its Manhattan entrance at 59th and 60th Street were installed that same year, in 1909. They were crafted by the William H. Jackson Company (Wm. H. Jackson Co.), an ornamental iron and bronze firm whose roots stretch back to 1827. Each lamppost was richly decorated, built with five tiers of ornamentation and globe-shaped lamps, and anchored by a massive bronze base engraved with the names of four New York City boroughs. (Staten Island was left out) The lamppost standing at 59th Street has mostly remained in place since the day the bridge opened. But its twin on 60th Street had a different fate. It was removed in 1974 during construction of the Roosevelt Island Tramway, when crews needed to clear space for the tram's new path. For decades, no one knew where that missing lamppost had gone — until January 2011, when historian Mitch Waxman discovered its 6,000-pound bronze base tucked under a tarp in the NYC DOT’s storage yard in Queens. Sources: “Base Of Missing 59th Street Bridge Lamppost Found In Queens” (CBS News, 2012) “The Mystery of a Long-Missing Relic Is Solved and Returned to the Public” (New York Times, 2015) “Base of Historic Queensboro Bridge Lamp Rediscovered After Nearly 40 Years” (DNA Info, 2012) “A proud lamppost guards the Queensboro Bridge” (Ephemeral New York, 2013) #nyc #nychistory #DidYouKnow #LearnOnTikTok

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