Livestock in nineteenth-century New York City

Submitted by Guest on Thu, 05/26/2005 - 08:52

Louis P. Tremante

In: UA Magazine 2 - Livestock in and around cities

For two centuries after the Dutch settlement of New Amsterdam agriculture on Manhattan Island remained not all that dissimilar from farming elsewhere in northern North America. Over the years farm families engaged in both commercial and subsistence production, raising livestock, garden and field crops. They gladly sold surpluses when they existed, but always sought to provide for domestic needs first.

AttachmentSize
Livestock in nineteenth-century New York City.pdf187.35 KB