Land under First Building Hit on 9/11 Sold - for $9,000 - - World Trade Center documents at auction A researcher has recently discovered original antique documents for the land under the World Trade Center.
They are part of a unique 200-piece World Trade Center collection, in the Nov. 13th aucti
News-Antique.com - Oct 30,2012 - The collection includes the 1808 manuscript selling land under the first building hit on 9/11, for $9,000. Two World Trade Center was built on the filled-in dock from which Robert Fulton’s “Clermont” steamboat sailed into history on its maiden voyage, in 1807.
The archive’s 1797 deed - signed by George Washington’s first District Attorney for N.Y. - sells land within the future footprint of 5 WTC, site of the “Survivor’s Staircase” of 9/11. Its replacement, now called 2 World Trade Center, is rising on this same land.
This deed’s property, near Dey Street, was within a ball toss of the very first European settlement in Manhattan. When the Dutch ship “Tyger” burned in 1613, its stranded sailors unwittingly founded modern New York City. Ironically, demolition for the World Trade Center began on that same street, in 1966.
Other items in this World Trade Center collection reveal more interesting facts:
• The very first World Trade Center was announced in a simple ceremony at the New York World’s Fair - in 1939. Promising “world peace through world trade” in the “world of tomorrow,” the first World Trade Center was soon scuttled by the outbreak of World War II ...
• The first actual design for the World Trade Center was someplace else – on the Lower East Side, at the foot of Wall Street. Its tallest building would be “50 to 70 stories” ...
• The World Trade Center was highly controversial, and rentals limited to selected businesses. While early plans called for razing vast tracts of lower Manhattan, entire districts were still destroyed, after rallies and court battles were waged ...
• An early drawing shows a cargo ship actually docking inside the World Trade Center building. The architects probably had no idea that Robert Fulton’s steamboat once moored there ...
• An obscure 1970 British novel offered a plot thought preposterous for decades: an airliner sent to destroy New York City.
The World Trade Center archive also includes 147 different, dramatic newspapers following the 9/11 attack, including “extras” rush-printed that afternoon in Pennsylvania and Texas. Also present are rare promotional advertising items.
The collection, estimated at $24,000 to $32,000, shows the startling time-tapestry of the World Trade Center and its site, and captures the chain of New York’s historical evolution from quaint village to center of world trade.
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Among the auction’s hundreds of other original historical documents and collectibles, in 30 fields:
• A letter about the 1876 Presidential election impasse, still undecided in Feb. 1877 ($160-200) ...
• 1869 Republican circular urging supporters to enlist “foreigners in your election district” ($100-125) ...
• Portion of the young Thomas Jefferson’s earliest surviving manuscript from the beginning of his life in elected office. Penned in his first year in Virginia’s House of Burgesses, the 26-year-old’s brilliant bylaws were adopted with just the addition of a few commas ($12,000-18,000) ...
• Pictorial 1860 campaign envelopes for both the Southern and Northern Democratic Parties, which ran separate candidates ($300-400 and $275-375,