Episode Seven delves into the dynamic social, economic, and physical transformations that unfolded in the city after the war. It highlights the significant waves of African-American migration and Puerto Rican immigration during the '40s, '50s, and '60s, alongside the onset of white flight and the rise of suburban living. The episode also addresses the extensive changes brought about by highways and urban renewal, largely orchestrated by Robert Moses. The narrative builds to a peak with the demolition of Penn Station, the controversy surrounding the Lower Manhattan Expressway, and the social and financial struggles of the '60s and '70s, culminating in New York's remarkable resurgence over the past twenty-five years.
Show
New York: A Documentary Film
Episode
S01E07
Air Date
Oct 01, 2001
Season 1 Episodes
S01E01
Invasion Of The Land
S01E01
The Country and the City (1609–1825)
S01E02
Taking to the Air
S01E02
Order and Disorder (1825–1865)
S01E03
The Silk Spinners
S01E03
Sunshine and Shadow (1865–1898)
S01E04
Intimate Relations
S01E04
The Power and the People (1898–1918)
S01E05
Supersocieties
S01E05
Cosmopolis (1919–1931)
S01E06
City of Tomorrow (1929–1941)
S01E07
The City and the World (1945–2000)
S01E08
The Center of the World (1946–2003)