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(wind blowing)
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(awe-inspiring music)
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(majestic music)
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- [Narrator] Our journey
begins at Hyde Park Mansion,
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the summer home of the Vanderbilt family
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on the Hudson River,
about 100 miles upstream
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from New York, which
is just one of the many
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great houses overlooking the river.
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Heading south, we take in
West Point Military Academy
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as well as a famous golf club
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and a notorious prison facility.
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At Sleepy Hollow, we take a
look at the old Dutch church
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in Washington Irving's creepy tale
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before looking at two more
19th-century mansions.
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The river then takes us down
to the city that never sleeps,
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New York.
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(birds chirping)
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The Hudson River flows for
315 miles through New York
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and is named after Henry
Hudson who explored it in 1609.
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In the late 19th century,
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during what has become
known as the Gilded Age,
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many beautiful, large mansions were built
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for wealthy industrialists
along the river.
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Hyde Park Mansion, with its 54 rooms,
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was home to Frederick William
Vanderbilt and constructed
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in the Beaux-Arts
architectural style from 1895.
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It was designed to be a
seasonal country residence.
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The house was very modern at the time
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and used concrete and
steel in its construction.
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Electricity came from
a private power house
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and the house even had
hot air central heating.
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The original estate was around 600 acres
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but in 1938, much of
the land and the mansion
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were donated to the National Park Service.
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(gentle instrumental music)
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Two miles downriver is
the Springwood Estate
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which is the birthplace,
home and burial place
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of the 32nd President
of the United States,
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Franklin D. Roosevelt.
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The estate was bought by the
President's father in 1866
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who then enlarged the house.
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It was further enlarged in 1915
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so that they yet-to-be-president
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could entertain his political friends.
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He designed the two wings himself,
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giving the house a Colonial Revival Style.
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The Roosevelt Library, close to the house,
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was the first Presidential Library
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built in the United States
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and was designed by the
President himself in 1939.
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(wind blowing)
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(majestic music)
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The Hudson River is still a busy waterway
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and navigable for much of its length.
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With the opening of the
Erie Canal further upstream,
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goods could be transported
between the city of Buffalo
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and the Great Lakes and
the Port of New York.
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The success of the waterway
led to industrial growth
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along the river during
the late 19th century.
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However, serious pollution
problems of raw sewage
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and industrial waste followed
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and it was only from the 1960s
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that anti-pollution legislation
finally came into force
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and the clean up effort could begin.
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Environmental protection
was also important
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for the landscape overlooking the river.
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The Hudson Highlands were saved
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and became a state park
during the mid 20th century,
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as previously the area had
been heavily logged and mined.
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(gentle instrumental music)
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Today, the 6,000 acre
park, with its proximity
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to New York City, is a popular
destination for day hikes.
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(birds chirping)
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Just downstream is the United
States Military Academy
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at West Point, and the oldest
of the five such academies
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in the United States.
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It was founded in 1802 with the motto,
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"Duty,
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"honor,
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"country."
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On the hill above West
Point is Fort Putnam,
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Completed in 1778, to protect the Hudson
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during the Revolutionary War.
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It was later enlarged but had
gradually fallen into disuse
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by the mid 19th century.
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Around 65,000 cadets have
graduated from West Point,
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including several household
names, Custer, Lee,
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Sherman and Meade from the Civil War.
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From World War II, MacArthur,
Bradley and Patton.
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And also two presidents, Ulysses S. Grant
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and Dwight D. Eisenhower.
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George Washington is
celebrated as America's first
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Commander in Chief who won
independence for America
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before the academy was founded.
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In West Point's history,
there have been 74 recipients
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of the Medal of Honor, the
highest award for bravery
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in the United States.
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On the opposite bank of the Hudson
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is the first railroad track to be built
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in the sate of New York in 1831.
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The line was originally called
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The Mohawk and Hudson Railroad
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and was built by Frederick
William Vanderbilt
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whose house we saw earlier.
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In 1853, the line became
part of the much bigger
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New York Central Railroad.
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(upbeat music)
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Today, diesel locomotives carry commuters
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to and from Grand Central
Station in New York
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on a 75-mile scenic stretch of track,
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much of it running
right next to the river.
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In 1996, the Hudson National Golf Club
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opened up on the site of an old estate
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downstream from West Point
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and the mansion easily
converted into the club house.
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The 260-acre site, which
now ranks in the top 100
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golf clubs in America,
offers unrivaled views
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over the Hudson River.
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(upbeat music)
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The club is unusual in that
players have to walk the course
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and only have use of a golf
cart if over 60 years of age
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or physically infirm.
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(birds chirping)
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A very different sort of
club is a few miles downriver
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and one that you don't
really want to join.
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Sing-Sing Correctional Facility.
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This maximum-security prison
came into being in 1824.
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Over the years there
have been 614 executions,
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but in 1972, the death
penalty was finally declared
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unconstitutional in the state of New York
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and the electric chair was removed.
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Today the prison houses
around 2,000 inmates.
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(wind blowing)
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(gentle instrumental music)
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In 1996, North Tarrytown
was renamed Sleepy Hollow
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when residents voted to have it changed
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to honor Washington Irving's story,
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The Legend of Sleepy
Hollow, published in 1820,
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which was set in the town.
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The story is still in print today.
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Over the decades, the legend has been made
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into several films, including
Tim Burton's version in 1999.
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In The Legend of Sleepy Hollow,
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the cemetery and old Dutch church,
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which is the oldest church in the state,
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feature prominently in the tale
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where Ichabod Crane, the new schoolmaster,
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competes with a rival for the
hand of Katrina Van Tassel.
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When he leaves a party
at the Van Tassel house,
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he rides his horse, Gunpowder,
towards a wooden bridge
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close to the church and cemetery,
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where he sees the Headless
Horseman on the other side.
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Irving writes, "In the
dark shadow of the grove
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"on the margin of the brook,
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"he beheld something huge,
misshapen, black and towering.
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"It stirred not but seemed
gathered up in the gloom
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"like some gigantic monster
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"ready to spring upon the traveler."
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Ichabod was never seen again.
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But who was the horseman?
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An evil spirit from the
past in search of his head?
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Or was it Ichabod's rival?
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The Legend of Sleepy Hollow
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leaves it up to the reader to decide.
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(jaunty music)
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On a hill above Sleepy Hollow
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is one of New York State's
most famous houses,
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built for the industrialist
John D. Rockefeller
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who had made a fortune
in the oil business.
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Commanding wonderful
views over the Hudson,
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it is named Kykuit,
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derived from the Dutch
word meaning lookout.
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The Classical Revival house
took six years to complete
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and was finally finished in 1913.
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It's six stories high, with
the two basement floors
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housing all the service rooms
as well as delivery tunnels
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and inter-connecting passageways.
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The garden is laid out
in a series of terraces
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and in the park, mature
trees were transplanted
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at huge cost and placed
into prominent positions.
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The house is now open to the public
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and a National Historic Landmark.
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In 1952, construction began
on the Tappan Zee Bridge
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across the Hudson at
its second-widest point.
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It's the first bridge upriver
from the City of New York.
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Because it was built at a
time of material shortages
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during the Korean War,
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it was only meant to last for 50 years.
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But together with an increase of traffic
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that was never envisaged,
the cantilever bridge
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is beginning to deteriorate
and a new bridge is planned.
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Half a mile from the bridge
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is a Gothic Revival house begun in 1838
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and today called Lyndhurst.
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The original house was smaller
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and given the nickname Paulding's Folly
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after its builder, William Paulding
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because of its unusual
architectural style.
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The second owner, George Merritt,
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a successful businessman,
doubled the size of the house
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in the 1860s and named it Lyndenhurst
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after the linden trees on the estate.
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In 1880, the house was
purchased by railroad tycoon
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Jay Gould who added the first
steel-framed conservatory
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in the United States, replanted the park
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and called the house Lyndhurst.
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The house is still privately owned.
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Perhaps one of the most
unusual properties to be built
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during the Gilded Period
of the late 19th century
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is this domed octagonal house,
the Armour-Stiner House.
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It was named after its first two owners,
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Paul Armour and Joseph Stiner.
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Paul Armour built the
octagonal house in 1860
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but with without a dome,
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that was added by the
second owner, Joseph Stiner,
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00:13:02,160 --> 00:13:03,540
in the 1870s.
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He also enlarged the house,
creating what we see today.
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The design may well be unique in America
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and its exuberant style led
to it being described as
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the Taj Mahal of the Hudson Valley
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and a pastry chef's nightmare.
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In 1976, the house was declared
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a National Historic Landmark.
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Our journey is fast approaching
the City of New York
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and the river becomes a
transport system for commuters.
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Alongside the river and on
the border with New Jersey
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is the Palisades Interstate Parkway,
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00:13:46,120 --> 00:13:48,710
a major route in and out of the city
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and now designated a National Landmark.
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00:13:52,570 --> 00:13:57,570
Construction began just after
the Second World War in 1947
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00:13:57,840 --> 00:14:01,270
and was completed 10 years later.
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00:14:01,270 --> 00:14:05,350
The Parkway takes its name
from the New Jersey Palisades,
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a line of cliffs on the Hudson.
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00:14:08,030 --> 00:14:10,850
And behind the cliffs is the silhouette
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of one of the best-known
and best-loved cities
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in the world, New York.
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(wind blowing)
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(ethereal music)
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With special permission
from New York's Air Traffic
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00:14:33,580 --> 00:14:37,090
Control Center to climb to 5,000 feet,
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00:14:37,090 --> 00:14:40,230
the whole of Manhattan
is set out before us.
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Manhattan is one of the five
districts of New York City,
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the others being the Bronx, Queens,
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Brooklyn and Staten Island.
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But Manhattan, the smallest of the five,
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is the most densely populated
and the heart of the city.
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It's a major commercial, financial
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and cultural center of the
United States and the world.
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00:15:09,120 --> 00:15:12,180
This awe-inspiring sight, with its myriad
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of high-rise buildings,
looks simply spectacular
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00:15:15,500 --> 00:15:16,950
from the air.
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00:15:16,948 --> 00:15:19,698
(ethereal music)
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00:15:21,083 --> 00:15:23,123
(helicopter whirring)
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So, one of the best ways to see New York,
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00:15:25,700 --> 00:15:28,650
without doubt, has to be by helicopter.
256
00:15:28,650 --> 00:15:31,160
And several companies
operate passenger flights
257
00:15:31,160 --> 00:15:34,750
around the city, some of
them will include flying out
258
00:15:34,750 --> 00:15:36,660
to the Statue of Liberty,
259
00:15:36,660 --> 00:15:40,400
surely one of the most
famous statues in the world.
260
00:15:40,399 --> 00:15:43,569
(helicopter whirring)
261
00:15:45,000 --> 00:15:48,250
The gilded flame held aloft
by the Statue of Liberty
262
00:15:48,250 --> 00:15:50,520
has been a symbol of freedom
to millions of people
263
00:15:50,520 --> 00:15:53,800
around the world for over 120 years.
264
00:15:55,090 --> 00:15:58,520
The statue was to be a gift
to the people of America
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00:15:58,520 --> 00:16:01,740
from the people of France in 1876,
266
00:16:01,740 --> 00:16:04,280
in recognition of the friendship forged
267
00:16:04,280 --> 00:16:06,420
during the American Revolution,
268
00:16:06,420 --> 00:16:09,090
and also to celebrate the centennial
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00:16:09,090 --> 00:16:11,110
of the Declaration of Independence.
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00:16:13,120 --> 00:16:15,770
It was agreed that the base
would be funded and built
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00:16:15,770 --> 00:16:19,210
by America and placed on
what is now Liberty Island.
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00:16:20,310 --> 00:16:23,360
Following years of hard
fund raising in both the US
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00:16:23,360 --> 00:16:25,710
and France, the statue eventually arrived
274
00:16:25,710 --> 00:16:28,160
in New York in 1885.
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00:16:29,920 --> 00:16:33,240
The 350 individual pieces were packed
276
00:16:33,240 --> 00:16:37,350
in 214 crates and took
four months to assemble
277
00:16:37,350 --> 00:16:38,530
on the new pedestal.
278
00:16:41,260 --> 00:16:44,530
On October the 28th, 1886,
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00:16:44,530 --> 00:16:46,340
the dedication ceremony took place
280
00:16:46,340 --> 00:16:48,460
in front of thousands of spectators.
281
00:16:49,570 --> 00:16:53,180
And in 1984, the Statue
of Liberty was declared
282
00:16:53,180 --> 00:16:56,960
a World Heritage Site
by the United Nations.
283
00:16:56,957 --> 00:17:00,897
(gentle instrumental music)
284
00:17:00,900 --> 00:17:02,960
Close by is Ellis Island,
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the gateway for millions of immigrants
286
00:17:04,900 --> 00:17:07,750
arriving in the new world
and where roughly half
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00:17:07,750 --> 00:17:10,410
the population of America
can probably trace
288
00:17:10,410 --> 00:17:11,660
their families back to.
289
00:17:13,030 --> 00:17:17,830
The center operated between 1892 and 1954
290
00:17:17,829 --> 00:17:20,549
and the small island
was gradually enlarged
291
00:17:20,550 --> 00:17:24,490
through landfill until
9/10ths of it was artificial.
292
00:17:25,550 --> 00:17:28,030
It is now a much-visited museum.
293
00:17:31,130 --> 00:17:33,750
Tourist boats criss cross the harbor
294
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along with various ferries,
295
00:17:35,740 --> 00:17:39,960
including the distinctive
orange Staten Island Ferries
296
00:17:39,960 --> 00:17:42,290
which pass Governor's Island.
297
00:17:42,287 --> 00:17:46,247
(gentle instrumental music)
298
00:17:46,250 --> 00:17:48,920
The name goes back to
a time of British rule
299
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when the island was the exclusive preserve
300
00:17:51,480 --> 00:17:53,600
of New York Royal Governors.
301
00:17:56,266 --> 00:17:59,876
(energetic music)
302
00:17:59,880 --> 00:18:03,120
Bridges are a distinctive
feature of New York
303
00:18:03,120 --> 00:18:05,420
and the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge
304
00:18:05,420 --> 00:18:07,580
straddles the entrance to the harbor
305
00:18:07,580 --> 00:18:09,860
and joins Staten Island to Brooklyn.
306
00:18:11,225 --> 00:18:13,855
The bridge is named after
the Italian explorer
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00:18:13,860 --> 00:18:17,480
Giovanni da Verrazzano
who was the first European
308
00:18:17,480 --> 00:18:19,940
to enter the harbor in 1524.
309
00:18:22,210 --> 00:18:25,510
It was completed in 1964 and at the time
310
00:18:25,510 --> 00:18:28,990
was the longest suspension
bridge in the world.
311
00:18:28,992 --> 00:18:31,832
(energetic music)
312
00:18:32,910 --> 00:18:35,370
In 1883, the Brooklyn Bridge
313
00:18:35,370 --> 00:18:37,860
was the longest suspension
bridge in the world
314
00:18:37,860 --> 00:18:40,140
as well as the first to be build of steel.
315
00:18:41,190 --> 00:18:44,100
The pedestrian walkway offers great views
316
00:18:44,100 --> 00:18:46,770
of the city and bridge.
317
00:18:46,770 --> 00:18:49,890
It took 16 years to build
and claimed the lives
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00:18:49,890 --> 00:18:54,370
of 20 people, including its
designer, John A. Roebling.
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00:18:55,370 --> 00:18:59,350
Most died of caisson disease,
known today as the bends,
320
00:18:59,350 --> 00:19:01,770
after coming up too fast from the caissons
321
00:19:01,770 --> 00:19:03,550
below the East River.
322
00:19:03,552 --> 00:19:06,072
(energetic music)
323
00:19:06,070 --> 00:19:07,620
The George Washington Bridge
324
00:19:07,620 --> 00:19:09,580
is the first to cross the Hudson
325
00:19:09,580 --> 00:19:13,010
and connects Washington Heights
to Fort Lee in New Jersey.
326
00:19:15,070 --> 00:19:18,300
The double-decker bridge
was completed in 1931
327
00:19:18,300 --> 00:19:20,490
and has 14 lanes for traffic.
328
00:19:22,070 --> 00:19:25,150
By the year 2007, the bridge was carrying
329
00:19:25,150 --> 00:19:28,310
well over 100 million vehicles a year.
330
00:19:29,670 --> 00:19:32,700
Also along the Hudson River
is the New York Passenger
331
00:19:32,700 --> 00:19:36,710
Ship Terminal which is also
known as Luxury Liner Row.
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00:19:37,840 --> 00:19:39,530
Before the age of air travel,
333
00:19:39,530 --> 00:19:41,470
this was where passengers would arrive
334
00:19:41,470 --> 00:19:44,620
in the great ocean liners
from around the world.
335
00:19:44,617 --> 00:19:45,827
(helicopter whirring)
336
00:19:45,830 --> 00:19:49,860
Even today around a million
people arrive by ship each year
337
00:19:49,860 --> 00:19:53,110
and get superb views of
the city before docking.
338
00:19:54,780 --> 00:19:58,000
The East River separates
Manhattan and Brooklyn
339
00:19:58,000 --> 00:20:00,820
on Long Island and was the
busiest shipping channel
340
00:20:00,820 --> 00:20:02,950
in the early part of New York's history.
341
00:20:03,900 --> 00:20:07,130
The Williamsburg Bridge was built in 1896,
342
00:20:07,130 --> 00:20:09,570
13 years after the Brooklyn Bridge.
343
00:20:11,870 --> 00:20:15,480
Overlooking East River is the
United Nations Headquarters,
344
00:20:15,480 --> 00:20:16,970
built in 1950.
345
00:20:17,993 --> 00:20:19,493
The land it stands on
346
00:20:19,490 --> 00:20:22,140
is considered to be
international property.
347
00:20:23,120 --> 00:20:25,960
A mile upstream and the river forks right
348
00:20:25,960 --> 00:20:29,260
under Hell Gate Bridge before widening out
349
00:20:29,260 --> 00:20:31,990
at LaGuardia Airport and Rikers Island,
350
00:20:33,130 --> 00:20:35,830
New York City's main jail complex.
351
00:20:37,380 --> 00:20:41,310
The Harlem River forms part
of the Hudson Estuary System
352
00:20:41,310 --> 00:20:43,470
and serves as a narrow channel
353
00:20:43,470 --> 00:20:45,760
dividing the Bronx from Manhattan.
354
00:20:47,190 --> 00:20:51,020
And over this short stretch
of river are 14 bridges.
355
00:20:52,090 --> 00:20:56,030
Close by are the old
and new Yankee Stadiums.
356
00:20:56,030 --> 00:20:58,930
The furthest away, built in 1923
357
00:20:58,930 --> 00:21:01,580
and the nearest in 2006.
358
00:21:04,430 --> 00:21:06,810
The best-known open space in New York
359
00:21:06,810 --> 00:21:08,730
must be Central Park.
360
00:21:08,730 --> 00:21:11,560
This 770 acre open space
361
00:21:11,560 --> 00:21:14,280
was completed by 1873
362
00:21:14,280 --> 00:21:17,040
and is the most popular
park in the United States.
363
00:21:18,470 --> 00:21:21,380
One of its creators, Frederick Olmsted,
364
00:21:21,380 --> 00:21:23,680
said that it was of, "Great importance
365
00:21:23,677 --> 00:21:27,207
"as the first real park
made in this country.
366
00:21:27,207 --> 00:21:30,877
"A democratic development of
the highest significance."
367
00:21:34,730 --> 00:21:38,040
It took 16 years to create
and involved planting around
368
00:21:38,037 --> 00:21:41,317
500,000 trees and shrubs.
369
00:21:41,320 --> 00:21:44,160
Lakes were dug, hills created,
370
00:21:44,160 --> 00:21:47,590
follies built, formal gardens laid out
371
00:21:47,590 --> 00:21:49,120
and bridges constructed.
372
00:21:50,920 --> 00:21:54,480
The only building encroaching
into the perfect rectangle
373
00:21:54,480 --> 00:21:58,680
is the Metropolitan Museum
of Art, begun in the 1870s.
374
00:22:00,235 --> 00:22:03,755
At the southern end of Manhattan
is the financial district
375
00:22:03,760 --> 00:22:05,680
which roughly overlaps the original
376
00:22:05,680 --> 00:22:09,600
New Amsterdam settlement
of the 17th century.
377
00:22:09,600 --> 00:22:12,630
And right on the end is Battery Park
378
00:22:12,630 --> 00:22:14,530
where the Dutch and then the British
379
00:22:14,530 --> 00:22:16,010
had an artillery fort.
380
00:22:17,683 --> 00:22:21,163
The district is home to
major financial institutions
381
00:22:21,160 --> 00:22:24,620
including the Federal Reserve
and the Stock Exchange.
382
00:22:26,550 --> 00:22:29,700
It was also home to the Twin Towers
383
00:22:29,700 --> 00:22:31,770
until the tragedy of 9/11.
384
00:22:32,820 --> 00:22:34,590
And that appalling event
385
00:22:34,590 --> 00:22:36,260
meant that the Empire State Building
386
00:22:36,260 --> 00:22:40,220
was once again the tallest
skyscraper in New York.
387
00:22:40,218 --> 00:22:42,968
(birds chirping)
388
00:22:43,880 --> 00:22:47,930
It was built in the Art Deco Style in 1931
389
00:22:47,930 --> 00:22:51,660
and is still the 15th
tallest building in the world
390
00:22:51,660 --> 00:22:53,560
at 1,250 feet.
391
00:22:57,870 --> 00:23:00,070
It was opened in dramatic fashion
392
00:23:00,070 --> 00:23:03,010
when president Hoover pushed
a button in the Oval Office
393
00:23:03,010 --> 00:23:06,480
in Washington and turned the lights on.
394
00:23:06,482 --> 00:23:09,072
(swanky music)
395
00:23:15,740 --> 00:23:18,800
New York comes alive at night
396
00:23:18,800 --> 00:23:21,070
and nowhere is it more brightly lit
397
00:23:21,070 --> 00:23:23,280
than around Times Square.
398
00:23:23,283 --> 00:23:25,873
(swanky music)
399
00:23:28,731 --> 00:23:31,571
Back in 1899, Oscar Hammerstein
400
00:23:31,570 --> 00:23:35,580
built the Victoria and Republic
theaters and since then
401
00:23:35,580 --> 00:23:38,330
Broadway has been at the
heart of entertainment.
402
00:23:38,330 --> 00:23:41,210
Theater goers take in a
show and then eat and drink
403
00:23:41,210 --> 00:23:43,430
in one of the many bars and restaurants.
404
00:23:44,820 --> 00:23:47,230
The bright lights welcome everyone,
405
00:23:47,230 --> 00:23:49,970
ward off the darkness and produce a city
406
00:23:49,970 --> 00:23:51,730
where everything seems possible.
407
00:23:52,970 --> 00:23:56,610
New York is known as the
city that never sleeps,
408
00:23:56,610 --> 00:23:59,410
a saying taken from a film of 1924.
409
00:24:00,770 --> 00:24:03,220
Even the traffic contributes
to the lighting effect
410
00:24:03,220 --> 00:24:07,230
along the streets, like long
multi-colored glowing ribbons.
411
00:24:08,980 --> 00:24:11,250
Buildings are lit with neon hoardings
412
00:24:11,250 --> 00:24:14,750
and some of the skyscrapers
are lit like works of art,
413
00:24:15,650 --> 00:24:18,000
none more so than the Chrysler Building.
414
00:24:18,882 --> 00:24:21,472
(swanky music)
415
00:24:23,616 --> 00:24:26,186
For many people, this
is the greatest Art Deco
416
00:24:26,190 --> 00:24:30,840
building in the city and
was completed in 1930.
417
00:24:30,840 --> 00:24:33,640
At night, the distinctive V-shaped lights,
418
00:24:33,640 --> 00:24:36,620
which were fitted when the
skyscraper was being built,
419
00:24:36,620 --> 00:24:38,560
have become an iconic sight.
420
00:24:39,810 --> 00:24:41,820
The floodlighting was added later.
421
00:24:42,709 --> 00:24:45,289
(swanky music)
422
00:24:52,570 --> 00:24:55,670
Seen from the river, the
city resembles a magical
423
00:24:55,670 --> 00:24:58,860
ocean liner, set against a black sky
424
00:24:58,860 --> 00:25:01,850
to dazzle, entertain and amaze.
425
00:25:04,090 --> 00:25:07,210
Great walls of glass sparkle in the night
426
00:25:07,210 --> 00:25:09,710
as the skyscrapers reflect the light
427
00:25:09,710 --> 00:25:12,180
from the streets of the
city that never sleeps.
428
00:25:13,298 --> 00:25:15,878
(swanky music)
429
00:25:19,541 --> 00:25:21,861
And out in the harbor,
the Statue of Liberty
430
00:25:21,860 --> 00:25:25,030
watches over the city,
her light shining out
431
00:25:25,030 --> 00:25:26,940
for the freedom she represents.
432
00:25:28,280 --> 00:25:31,320
A perfect place to end this journey.
433
00:25:31,317 --> 00:25:33,897
(swanky music)
434
00:25:36,904 --> 00:25:40,074
(awe-inspiring music)
435
00:26:00,212 --> 00:26:03,052
(dramatic music)
32519
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