HISTORY OF TIMES SQUARE NEW YEAR'S EVE CELEBRATIONS
The first rooftop celebration atop
One Times Square, complete with a fireworks display, took place
in 1904. The New York Times produced this event to inaugurate
its new headquarters in Times Square and celebrate the renaming
of Longacre Square to Times Square.
The first Ball Lowering celebration
atop One Times Square was held on December 31, 1907 and is now
a worldwide symbol of the turn of the New Year, seen via satellite
by more than one billion people each year.
In 1942 and 1943 the Ball Lowering
was suspended due to the wartime dimout. The crowds who still
gathered in Times Square celebrated with a minute of silence followed
by chimes ringing out from an amplifier truck parked at One Times
Square.
The original New Year's Eve Ball weighed
700 pounds and was 5 feet in diameter. It was made of iron and
wood and was decorated with 100 25-watt light bulbs.
The New Year's Eve Ball is the property
of the building owners of One Times Square.
HISTORY OF TIMES SQUARE
Formed by the intersection of Broadway,
Seventh Avenue, and 42d Street, this famous square was named for
the building there that formerly belonged to the New York Times.
The building, located in the center of the square, is still famous
for its band of lights that transmits up-to-the-minute news. Times
Square and the adjacent area form one of the most concentrated
entertainment districts in the nation, featuring legitimate theaters,
motion picture houses, shops, newsstands, bars, and restaurants.
When the New York Times erected a
new building on 43rd Street in 1904, the neighborhood took on
the name "Times Square." Just a few short years before,
Longacre Square as it was then known, was considered a dangerous
place where only those of ill repute would venture.
A decade later, theater, vaudeville
and cabaret migrated to the streets nearby, attracting much tourism
by the 1920s. But the stock market crash of 1929 and the Great
Depression led to a sharp decline in theater attendance. Businesses
needing something to draw people into the area, the notorious
period of Times Square was born. It was mainly during the 60's
and 70's that live nude shows, erotic bookstores, and x-rated
movies occupied the area. By 1975 Times Square was being described
as a 'sinkhole' by a daily New York newspaper. The crime rate
sky rocketed causing Times Square to be the most dangerous place
in the city, keeping tourists away.
In the early 1980s, the city and business
began to band together to make major efforts to restore the neighborhood
to its former, more wholesome, reputation.
By the late 1990's Times Square was
restored to its intended glory. It is uniquely the only zone in
the New York City where tenants are required to display bright
signs. With 27,000 residents and an estimated 26 million annual
visitors each year, Times Square has changed drastically since
it's inauguration 100 years ago.
For more information on Times Square,
visit the Times
Square BID.