Collect Pond NYC
10/02/25
“How did a former pond have a massive influence on the development of Manhattan?”
When we think of Manhattan, we imagine tall skyscrapers resting upon impervious concrete and flanked by hordes of honking cars in one of the most densely populated parts of the world. But hundreds of years ago, when Manhattan was under its rightful indigenous land stewardship, the island was mostly lush forest with plentiful fresh water. On the lower end in what is now Chinatown was a body of water that the colonizers later called Collect Pond. The A subdivision of the Lenape people lived in a settlement by the southwestern shore of Collect Pond. A while after the land was stolen by Europeans, the pond was used for fishing and later a summer picnic and winter ice skating rink. Businesses later discharged their contaminated wastewater into the pond, resulting in severe public health hazards. The city decided to drain Collect Pond by building a canal to the north and filling the pond with soil in 1811. This development paved the way for the creation of the modern Canal Street in New York City, forever altering the structure of the metropolis.
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