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New York City Crime Scenes Then and Now: Seeing the Past on Today’s Ordinary Streets

Comparing photographs of a place from different times can be powerful. It shows how much things change, or sometimes, how they stay surprisingly similar. Photographer Marc Hermann took this idea and applied it in a unique and thought-provoking way in New York City. He looked back through the huge collection of pictures at the New York Daily News newspaper. His goal was to find old photos taken at the scenes of crimes.

These old photos capture moments of tragedy and tension that happened decades ago on the city’s streets. They show police officers working, maybe yellow tape blocking off an area, old model cars parked nearby and sometimes crowds of onlookers watching the scene unfold. The buildings in the background look different too, with older styles of signs or architecture common for that time period. The lighting, the graininess of the film, and the clothing people wore all place these images firmly in the past. They show a city with a different feel, marked by specific, often sad, events.

After finding these historic crime scene images, Marc Hermann went to the exact locations in New York City today. He took new photographs of the very same street corners, building fronts, or alleyways. His goal was to line up the modern photos perfectly with the old ones. He matched the angles and perspectives so that when you see the two pictures together, you are looking at the identical spot, just separated by many years.

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When these “then” and “now” photos are placed side-by-side, they create a striking contrast. The street corner that was once a chaotic scene with flashing lights and investigators is now just a regular sidewalk where people walk their dogs or wait for a bus. The building entrance police tape was stretched across might now have a brightly lit storefront or a different kind of door. Modern cars are parked along the curb where vintage vehicles once sat. The people in the present-day photos are just going about their normal day, likely unaware of the dramatic history of that specific location.

Seeing these images together creates a haunting feeling. It makes the past feel incredibly close. The tragic events documented in the old photographs didn’t happen in some far-off, disconnected place; they happened right here, on the very streets and sidewalks that New Yorkers use every single day. It reveals a hidden layer of history beneath the ordinary surface of the modern city. The routine sights of today – a fire hydrant, a street lamp, a set of steps – were all present when something terrible occurred at that spot decades ago.

#1 The wreckage of United Airlines Flight 826 and Trans World Airlines Flight 266, which crashed over NYC in December of 1960.

#2 A stolen car is shown crashed into the light pole at the corner of Classon Ave. and Pacific St. on July 28, 1957.

#3 An M-7 tank destroyer being transported from City Hall to the Public Library on 42nd St. to be put on display on July 22, 1943.

#4 The aftermath of a car wreck that took the life of three-year-old Martha Cartagena, who was riding her tricycle when she was struck and killed on Porter Ave. in Brooklyn on April 4th, 1959.

#5 This photo shows the death of gangster Frankie Yale, whose car slammed into the steps of a Brooklyn home after he was shot from an adjacent car on July 1st, 1928.

#6 The aftermath of a massive and fatal fire at the Elkins Paper & Twine Co. on Wooster St. on February 16th, 1958.

#7 Firefighters try to put out the fire that tore through the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary & St. Stephen Roman Catholic Church in January of 1951.

#8 The aftermath of a massive gas explosion that blew out the windows of the building on 66 Court St. on January 31st, 1961.

#9 Firefighters work to put out a blaze at 31 Grand St. in Brooklyn in February of 1946.

#10 Detective Michael Dwyer seen here in Prospect Park after he committed suicide on Sunday July 30, 1950.

#11 Gangster Salvatore Santoro seen dead in the vestibule of his Hicks St. apartment on January 31st, 1957.

#12 Firefighters put out a fire at the Fulton Fish Market in the South Street Seaport on February 26th, 1961.

#13 Photographer and creator of this series Marc A. Hermann standing next to the shadow of his colleagues from 70 years ago.

#14 Edna Egbert, who lived at 497 Dean St. in Brooklyn, climbed onto her ledge on March 19, 1942. The News captured the distraught woman fighting with the police as she wobbled on the edge. The building is currently painted red, but remains nearly identical to the way it looked 70 years ago.

#15 James Linares lays bleeding in the arms of his girlfriend Josephine Dexidor on September 25th, 1961 after being shot by her husband.

Written by Andrew Thompson

Andrew Thompson is an archaeologist and historian who specializes in the study of war and conflict. He writes about the brutal history of warfare, including the World Wars and other significant conflicts. Through his work, he aims to deepen our understanding of the human cost of conflict and inspire us to work towards a more peaceful future.

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