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This partial list of city nicknames in New York compiles the aliases, sobriquets, and slogans that cities in the U.S. state of New York are known by (or have been known by historically), officially and unofficially, to municipal governments, local people, outsiders, or the cities' tourism boards or chambers of commerce.
Various nicknames are featured on a wall at John F. Kennedy International Airport.. The Big Apple – first published as a euphemism for New York City in 1921 by sportswriter John J. Fitz Gerald, who claimed he had heard it used the year prior by two stable hands at the New Orleans Fair Grounds because of the large prizes available at horse races in New York. [3]
Big Apple Corner at 54th Street and Broadway, in Manhattan's Theater District "The Big Apple" is a nickname for New York City.It was first popularized in the 1920s by John J. Fitz Gerald, a sportswriter for the New York Morning Telegraph.
Many city nicknames roll off the tongue like it's second nature. New York City is, of course, "the Big Apple." Paris is the "City of Love." Los Angeles is the "City of Angels." They're a given at this
The nickname "Mets" was adopted: being a natural shorthand to the club's corporate name, the "New York Metropolitan Baseball Club, Inc.", [32] [33] [34] which hearkened back to the "Metropolitans" (a New York team in the American Association from 1880 to 1887), [35] and its brevity was advantageous for newspaper headlines.
It also meant that Red Hook had the worst percentage of juvenile delinquency in New York City’s five boroughs. The cover of Dimatteo’s latest book, which chronicles the part Red Hook played in ...
The nickname "Empire State" is believed to have origins dating back to a letter written by George Washington in 1785, where he praised New York's resilience and referred to it as "the Seat of the ...
The skyline of New York City at night. The City That Never Sleeps is a ubiquitously used nickname and advertising slogan for New York City.Photographer Jacob Riis describes The Bowery as never sleeping in his 1898 book Out of Mulberry Street: Stories of Tenement Life in New York City.