No lecture is complete without at least one view of the photographer. Here he is trying to imitate Ruth St. Denis in the "Dance of Spring." One mis-step and his insurance takes effect.
An inspiring view of the city from the 59th Street lake in Central Park.
Night- when tired New Yorkers seek the pleasures of the many theatres, night clubs and restaurants to forget the cares of the day.
"Manhattan Island North." Northern tip of New York City. Still in its primitive state. Contrast this view with the Battery.
South Ferry from Staten Island Ferry. The gateway to the city, South Ferry.
The world famed skyline from an ocean liner.
"From the Paramount Building." 43rd Street - Broadway. Looking northeast from 45th to 60th streets. Radio City not erected.
From the 41st floor of a skyscraper at 41st Street and Madison Avenue. Looking south. Statue of Liberty in distance.
Statue of Liberty. Sunset in New York Harbor. 151 feet above N.Y. Harbor. Unveiled Oct. 28, 1886. A gift from the French people.
"Stone and Steel." Empire State - from 6th Avenue, 33rd Street. No building in the city excites the passerby so much as this - "The Mighty Empire State."
Woolworth Building, New York City. The Highest Building in the World.
["Kiss the Boys Good-bye" theater stills.]
The skyline - a traveler's view of the skyline from the decks of an ocean liner.
New York City Skyline
Above the rooftops. 41st floor, 41st Street. Looking toward the East River. Williamsburg Bridge in the distance.
Fifth Avenue. North from 50th Street. Here are the world's most lavish shops and the world's smartest traffic.
This gigantic figure over the entrance of the R.C.A. building in Rockefeller Center, seems to hold on his shoulders the immense pile of stone and steel mounting to the sky.
42nd Street and 5th Avenue. More people pass here daily at this corner than perhaps anywhere else in the world.