GOLD STREET, Manhattan

by Kevin Walsh

While meandering about desultorily in the rain down Maiden Lane in the eastern Financial District downtown in May 2003 I came across an unmarked street issuing north. I ascertained after about a block’s march that I had stumbled on Gold Street, which, to me at the time, embodied all that they tell you about downtown Manhattan’s meandering cart paths. Though cars do use it, Gold Street is one of Manhattan’s narrowest, and therein lay my fascination.

The slight curves of Gold Street were incorporated in Hagstrom’s detailed downtown map (left) which, unfortunately, was discontinued in the late 1980s in favor of a much blander model.

Gold Street from Maiden Lane in 2003. The street isn’t named for the color or the precious metal but a flower…

 

 

 

When the Dutch arrived in the early 1600s they found a field in this general area that was filled with yellow celandine flowers, which they called the gouwe and subsequently the new settlement the Gouwenberg. The British, with their penchant for taking Dutch names and re-molding them for English-speaking ears, simply re-named it Golden Hill – which became the site of a battle between the redcoats and patriots in 1770. After a period in which the street was called Rutgers Hill, for patriot and Tammany politician Henry Rutgers (who owned vast land holdings in Manhattan), it eventually reverted to simply Gold Street. Fittingly theFederal Reserve Bank of New York (lots of gold there) is a block away, at 33 Liberty Street.

 

Before the new high-rise residential 2 Gold Street was completed in 2005, the big vacancy at Gold Street and Maiden Lane pernitted some interesting views of surrounding buildings.

Ghost staircases on Maiden east of Gold; right: rear ends of Pearl Street buildings from the mid-1800s. Note the building on the right: while it has become a parking garage, its ancient exterior has been cleverly preserved, so it doesn’t look like a garage: parking garages are routinely ugly, whether in NYC or anywhere else.

#2 Gold Street now occupies this site.

 

LEFT: A view of 70 Pine Street, formerly the Cities Service Building, now the American International Building (insurance). It has 66 floors and was completed in 1932 by architect Henry Dougherty, making it a contemporary of the Empire State Building. It was the first skyscraper featuring double-deck elevators.

RIGHT: 90 John Street (the Renaissance), built 1931

Quite possibly 90 John, bordering on Gold, had something to do with maritime industries or insurance, since Viking galleons, steam ships, and seahorses can be seen in bas-relief on the exterior.

 

In 2006 the scaffolding and constructionfencing are gone as the 51-story 2 Gold Street by architect Avinash K. Malhotra has been completed, but the secret views of the surrounding buildings are gone too. Unusually, the new davit-style lampposts that populate Broadway from Bowling Green north to City Hall Park are employed here.

Platt Street, which extends 2 blocks from William to Pearl, crosses Gold Street here. It was named in 1834 for merchant Jacob Platt, through whose property it was extended.

2 Gold Street stands on property formerly occupied by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York Annex.

 

Curving Gold Street between Platt and John Strets in 2003 (above) and 2006.

 

I have snapped the 1888 Excelsior Power Company Building often…it’s a Forgotten NY favorite…but never in full sun before! Its exquisite brickwork, arched windows and incredible sign (pressed tin?) with intricate, fanciful lettering shines forth on this often dark, narrow lane. Its cast iron wall lamp still has its 1940s Bell luminaire. It is the oldest remaining NYC powerhouse, built by William Grinnell, and converted to apartments by Max Wechsler in 1979.

 

The ‘newest’ alley in the Fulton Fish Market neighborhood is also one of the oldest. In 2001 the section of Ryders Alley facing Gold Street was given back one of its original names, Eden’s Alley. It had that name prior to 1842. The lane is apparently named for a friend of Aaron Burr, Medcef Eden, who had a farm further uptown in the vicinity of where Times Square is today, along a stream flowing along Bloomingdale Road (now Broadway).

 

The intersection of Gold and Fulton Streets is John Delury Senior Plaza, after the longtime labor leader of the Uniformed Sanitationmen’s Association.

Nearby Worth Street is also called “Avenue of the Strongest”, after the NYC sanitationmen‘s sobriquet.

Although most NYC street signs are green and white (maroon and white in historic districts) black and white street signs were installed in 2000 by the Alliance for Downtown New York (which runs the Lower Manhattan Business Improvement District) as part of their Streetscape Improvement/Wayfinding Project. This project provided Lower Manhattan with new street signs, signs providing directions to major landmarks and subways, and Heritage Site markers and district maps.

It’s the best NYC street sign design (by Pentagram) I’ve ever seen and I wish they could be used citywide.

7/10/06

9 comments

Old Skool September 19, 2012 - 5:19 pm

As always you are the font of all knowledge.

Reply
Richard Waskewicz September 20, 2012 - 9:29 am

I believe 90 John St was originaly the headquarters of AIG or their predessesor.
The Federal Reserve Bk had a building on the n/e corner of Maiden Lane and Gold. There was a vault where they kept new unissued savings bonds. As a cable splicer for New York Telephone in the 70’s I had to do work in the vault. There was a guard with a gun watching me the whole time I was there.

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Barbara Negron January 18, 2016 - 1:43 pm

I found your site while looking for 81 Gold Street. JW Forbes Silversmith was located at 132 Fulton Street and Mr. Forbes resided at 81 Gold Street. Not knowing Gold Street it took a little time finding exactly where it was. Mr. Grandfather Benjamin Wood was a silversmith and he writes about Mr. Forbes in his reflection on his life. This was in the around 1816 – 1820/

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Dave Addison January 15, 2018 - 2:42 pm

From what I see on “Find a Grave”, there once was a cemetery called Gold St which I assume was here.

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Kevin Taylor October 1, 2019 - 1:08 am

I live in the wadsley bridge area of the city of Sheffield England and found this picture of a steel firm in the 19 century with a reference to Gold street in New York

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Mary July 21, 2020 - 12:08 pm

My great-grandfather Patrick Joseph QUINN (1835-1903) lived at 81 Gold Street from at least 1871 through 1880.

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Bill Miecuna October 20, 2020 - 5:46 pm

An 1893 Map “Parts of Wards 2 & 4 Plate 5” show the “Healy Building” at the corner of Ferry and Gold. Is there any information about this building?

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JT February 18, 2021 - 5:41 pm

Gold Street previously Rutgers Hill was not named for Henry Rutgers but for his ancestors who purchased that corner starting at Gold and Maiden Lane.
Brothers Harmen Rutgers II and Anthony Rutger’s I. Each bought land: Harmen II bought that corner in 1711 and Anthony bought between Smith (now Williams) and Nassau Streets on the north side. They were expanding the Brewery on Stone Street near Whitehall which their father Harmen Rutgers I
had purchased in May of 1693 from the Heirs of Isaac deForest as a dwelling, brewery and bakery. Harmen II’s son Hendrick bought land for a farm house know as Rutgers Farm surrounded by Catherine, Clinton, Water and Madison Streets. The British had seized the corner between Rutgers Hill and Williams and the Rutgers were unable to get it back.

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L. Lynch September 11, 2022 - 2:13 pm

Leonard Scott & Co (Publishing Co.)
Owner – Leonard Scott was located 79 Fulton street, New York entrance: 54 Gold Street – in advertisements in many newspapers – 1847 – 1878

Earliest advertisements list the address as 54 Gold street.

In 1880, the firm is listed at 41 Barclay Street, NY

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