
On Friday, I had a biz meeting at 50 Broadway, just a block from New York's historic Trinity Church. How could I resist checking out the folks that have been buried there for 200 years? In the center of the Wall Street district,

Funny, because today it's fat-cat overpaid billionaire tycoon jackasses wandering the neighborhood... But I digress. By the 1820s, Lower Manhattan was getting a might crowded, and a shortage of land below Canal

As the city expanded northward and immigration escalated, the area was victimized by murders, suicides, robberies, brawls, streetcar assaults and kidnappings. Then, by 1936, business overtook

Today, however, adjacent Battery Park City, built on dirt excavated from the WTC, has brought back residents, blending the business capital of the world with a collection of swanky highrises.
Among those buried in the adjoining Trinity Church Cemetery are the nation's first treasurer, Alexander Hamilton, who's on the $10 bill; Astor family founder John Jacob Astor; Robert Fulton of ferry fame; and a lot of other renowned dead people. All dead. Very, very dead.


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