Before
Sally Albright (Meg Ryan) had her deep-breathing moment at Katz’s Deli, she
endured an exasperating, confusing, and at times illuminating drive from
Chicago to New York with Harry Burns (Billy Crystal). Upon arrival in the Big Apple, Sally dropped Harry off at Washington Square Park, a 9.75-acre public space in Greenwich
Village.
But did you know that this
hugely-popular park was once Dutch farmland?
At least it was, up until April 1797 when the Common Council of NewYork
purchased the fields to the east and combined the spaces to create a public
burial ground, primarily to inter unknown or indigent people.
When New York went through yellow fever
epidemics in the early 1800s, most of the dead were also buried there because
it was (back then) far enough away from
the main city population to be considered a hygienic option. The public cemetery was closed in 1825, but
it is estimated that more than 20,000 bodies were laid to rest there –never to
be moved.
In 1826, the land was
levelled to become Washington Military Parade Ground, where volunteer militia
would train. By the 1830s, urban sprawl
saw the area around the Parade Ground becoming popular for housing developments
so by 1850, the Parade Ground was re-worked into a public park to cater to the
new residents moving around it.
In 1889,
to celebrate the centennial of George Washington’s inauguration, a plaster and
wood memorial arch was erected at the northern end of the public park. The temporary structure proved so popular
with residents and visitors alike, that local architect Stanford White (and his excellent mustache) designed a permanent, marble
replacement that stands 77 feet tall. White's New York monument was inspired by the famous Arc de Triomphe in Paris.
But did you know that during the excavations for the marble arch,
construction workers unearthed human remains, a coffin, and a gravestone dated
1803? Given how many deceased New
Yorkers are getting their eternal rest under the Square, it’s amazing they
didn’t find more.