September 21, 1776 - Approximately 1000 houses, a quarter of the city, are destroyed in a fire a week after British troops captured the city during the American Revolution. Arson is speculated and during a round-up of suspicious persons, Nathan Hale is arrested. [1]
August 3, 1778 - Fire near Cruger's Wharf destroys 64 homes. [2]
1794 - Minor yellow fever epidemic leads to creation of Bellevue Hospital .
December 9, 1796 - The "Coffee House Slip Fire," destroys about 50 structures near Murray Wharf. [4]
1798 - The "great epidemic", a major yellow fever epidemic, kills 2086 people from late July to November. [5] Epidemics occur in several other years, but this was the worst of them all. [6]
September 3, 1821 - The Norfolk and Long Island Hurricane causes a storm surge of 13 ft in one hour, leading to widespread flooding south of Canal St., but few deaths are reported. The hurricane is estimated to have been a Category 3 event and to have made landfall at Jamaica Bay, making it the only hurricane in recorded history to directly strike what is now modern New York City.
1822 - Last important outbreak of a yellow fever epidemic in the city.
1832 - CholeraPandemic reaches North America. It breaks out in New York City on June 26, peaks at 100 deaths per day during July, and finally abates in December. More than 3500 people die in the city, many in the lower class neighborhoods, particularly Five Points. Another 80,000 people, one third of the population, are said to have fled the city during the epidemic. [7][8]
December 16, 1835 - More than 600 buildings are destroyed by a fire which rages for two days in the Financial District. Efforts to stop the fire are limited by sub-zero temperatures which freezes water in hoses, wells, and the East River. 23 insurance companies are wiped out by the resulting claims.
1848-1849 - Cholera epidemic begins in December 1848, its spread initially limited by winter weather. By June 1849, it reaches epidemic proportions. Eventually 5071 city residents die. [9]
1866 - Cholera epidemic kills "only" 1137, its spread having been limited by the efforts of the new Metropolitan Board of Health and enforcement of sanitation laws. [10]
July 30, 1871 - A boiler explosion aboard the Westfield IIStaten Island Ferry kills 125 among hundreds of Manhattanites making a weekend trip to the beaches.
December 5, 1876 - A stage scenery fire envelopes the Brooklyn Theatre during a performance of "The Two Orphans" and kills at least 276 people, primarily patrons in the upper gallery. [11]
January 13, 1882 - A train wreck occurs just south of Spuyten Duyvil Creek when a local train from Tarrytown crashes into the tail end of an express from Albany which had stopped on the tracks in order to make an emergency repair. At least 10 persons were killed, including a state senator. [12]
March 12-13, 1888 - The "White Hurricane", aka the Great Blizzard of '88, paralyzes the Eastern seaboard from Maryland to Maine, in New York City causing temperatures to fall as much as 60 degrees. About 21 inches of snow fall on the city, but enormous winds whip it into drifts as much as 20 feet deep. Regionally, over 400 people are said to have died in the storm's path. [13]
August 5-13, 1896 - A heat wave prostrates the city, with temperatures exceeding 90°F for nine days both day and night, with stagnant air and oppressive humidity. About 420 people die, mostly in crowded tenements in areas such as the Lower East Side.
August 9, 1910 - Reformist Mayor William Jay Gaynor is shot in the throat in Hoboken, New Jersey by former city employee James Gallagher. He eventually dies in September 1913 from effects of the wound.
July 30, 1916 - Black Tom Explosion set off by German saboteurs at a munitions arsenal on a small island in New York Harbor kills seven in Jersey City and causes damage as far as the Brooklyn waterfront and even Times Square.
1918 - The Great Influenza Pandemic rages across the country and worldwide. In one particularly virulent October day, 851 people died in New York City alone.
November 1, 1918 - The actions of a substitute motorman filling in during a strike lead to a subway crash in Flatbush, Brooklyn. The Malbone Street Wreck kills 97 people heading home from work and injures a hundred more. [15]
September 16, 1920 - The Wall Street bombing kills 40 at "the precise center, geographical as well as metaphorical, of financial America and even of the financial world." Anarchists were suspected (Sacco and Vanzetti had been indicted just days before) but no one was ever charged with the crime.
August 24, 1928 - A subway crash caused by a defective switch below Times Square kills 16 and injures 150.
March 19, 1935 - The arrest of a shoplifter inflames racial tensions in Harlem and escalates to rioting and looting, with three killed, 125 injured and 100 arrested. [16]
August 1, 1943 - A race riot erupts in Harlem after an African-American soldier is shot by the police and rumored to be killed. The incident touches off a simmering brew of racial tension, unemployment, and high prices to a day of rioting and looting. Several looters are shot dead, and about 500 persons are injured and another 500 arrested.
May 13, 1949 - Holland Tunnel fire caused by exploding truck carrying eighty 55-gallon drums of carbon disulphide seriously damages the tunnel's infrastructure and injures 66, with 27 hospitalized, mostly from smoke inhalation.
December 16, 1960 - Mid-air collision between TWA Flight 266 (inbound to Idlewild Airport, now JFK) and United Airlines Flight 826 (inbound to LaGuardia Airport) over Miller Field, Staten Island. [18] The TWA aircraft crashed at the site, killing all aboard, while the United aircraft continued flying for about eight miles until it crashed in the Park Slope section of Brooklyn, narrowly missing a school. All 134 aboard the aircraft died, along with six persons on the ground in Brooklyn.
March 13, 1964 - Kitty Genovese is stabbed to death in Kew Gardens, Queens. The crime is witnessed by numerous people, none of whom aid Genovese or call for help. The crime is noted by psychology textbooks in later years for its demonstration of the bystander effect, although an article published in the New York Times in February2004 indicated that many of the popular conceptions of the crime were instead misconceptions. [19]
June 28, 1969 - A questionable police raid on the Stonewall Inn, a Greenwich Villagegay bar, is resisted by the patrons and leads to a riot. The event helps inspire the founding of the modern gay rights movement.
December 29, 1975 - A bomb explodes in the baggage claim area of the TWA terminal at LaGuardia Airport, killing 11 and injuring 74. The perpetrators were never identified. [21]
July 29, 1976 - David Berkowitz (aka the "Son of Sam") kills one person and seriously wounds another in the first of a series of attacks that terrorized the city for the next year.
May 16, 1977 - A New York Airways helicopter idling at the helipad on the MetLife - formerly PanAm - building toppled over and its rotor blade sheared off. The blade killed four people on the roof and then fell over the edge and down 59 stories and a block over to Madison Avenue where it killed a pedestrian.
July 13-14, 1977 - New York City again loses power in the blackout of 1977. Unlike the previous blackout twelve years earlier, this blackout is followed by widespread rioting and looting.
December 22, 1984 - Bernhard Goetz shoots four men on a subway who tried to rob him, generating weeks of headlines and many discussions about crime and vigilantism in the media.
April 14, 1989 - Trisha Meili (aka the Central Park Jogger) is violently raped and beaten while jogging in Central Park. The crime is later attributed to a group of young men who were practicing an activity they called "wilding". However, DNA evidence later proved the originally charged teens innocent; a convicted serial rapist confessed to the crime.
March 25, 1990 - Arson at the Happyland Social Club in the East Tremont section of the Bronx kills 87 people unable to escape the packed dance club. [22]
March 22, 1992 - Ice buildup without subsequent de-icing causes USAir Flight 405 to crash on takeoff from LaGuardia Airport. 27 of the 51 on board are killed.
September 11, 2001 - The two 110-story World Trade Center towers and several surrounding buildings are destroyed by two jetliners in a coordinated terrorist attack ("9/11"). One hijacked jet was also crashed into The Pentagon outside Washington, DC and another hijacked jet went down in Pennsylvania. In 2004, the count of the dead in New York City alone from the 9/11 attacks is set at over 2,600 people. It is the worst disaster in New York City's history.