17th century Pearl Street takes its name from a prominent
Lenape shell midden that was located on its southern section, and that may have also marked a
Lenape canoe landing. The colonial history of Pearl Street dates back to the early 1600s. A cow path at first, it was laid out in 1633. It lay along a
beachy area known as the
Strand. Its name is an
English translation of the
Dutch Parelstraat (written as Paerlstraet around 1660). The street is visible on the
Castello Plan along the eastern shore of
New Amsterdam, together with
Schreyers Hook Dock (cf. Amsterdam's
Schreierstoren) built by
Broad Canal as the city's first wharf in 1648. It was named for the many
oysters found in the river. During the period of British rule, Pearl Street was known as Great Queen Street. The "Great" was used often to differentiate from Little Queen Street, which became Cedar Street in 1784. Pearl Street's irregular course is due to the fact that it generally followed the original eastern shoreline of the lower part of Manhattan Island, until the latter half of the 18th century when years of
landfill extended the shoreline roughly 700–900 feet (200–300m) further into the
East River, first to Water Street and later to Front Street. The colony's first church was built in 1633, during the tenure of director
Wouter van Twiller at 39 Pearl Street, just outside the
fort. In 1652 a wooden defensive wall was constructed along the town's northern perimeter to protect against possible attack by English colonists. There were two gates: the "land gate" on the
Heerestraat and the "water gate" at Pearl Street. In the mid-1650s, a three-story tavern near what is now 73 Pearl Street became the city's first
City Hall. Printer
William Bradford lived at 81 Pearl. In 1693, he set up the first printing press in the colony.
18th century , on December 21, 1835 The Walton Mansion at 326 Pearl Street was a four story house built in 1752 prior to the
American Revolution, known as the scene of extravagant parties. In 1784,
Alexander Hamilton, and others founded the
Bank of New York and set up offices in the old mansion, until moving three years later to
Hanover Square; at one time a boarding house, it was taken down in 1881.
19th century Herman Melville was born at 6 Pearl Street in 1819. In 1831, soap magnate
William Colgate owned a
Counting house at 211 Pearl. In the winter of 1835, a gas pipe burst in a warehouse at the corner of Pearl and
Merchant Streets, causing
a fire that consumed some 600 buildings over seventeen blocks. Both sides of Pearl Street burned from Wall Street to
Coenties Slip. In 1833, the publishing house of
J. & J. Harper changed its name to Harper & Brothers. The firm was located at 329–331 Pearl Street, facing
Franklin Square. They began publishing
''Harper's New Monthly Magazine'' in 1850. In December 1853 a fire destroyed the premises, but the brothers built a large cast-iron building designed by architect
James Bogardus, which was connected to a second structure on Cliff Street by cast-iron walkways. The building was demolished in 1925, but is memorialized in a painting by
Richard Haas in the
New York Public Library Main Branch's
DeWitt Wallace Periodicals Room. As of 2018, the company, now known as
HarperCollins, is headquartered at
195 Broadway. In 1851, a three-story
brownstone masonry structure was built in the
Italian Renaissance style at
1 Hanover Square. The building extends southwest to 60–64 Stone Street (also known as 95–101 Pearl Street), a set of four-story
Greek Revival brick structures completed in 1836. It served as the first headquarters of the
New York Cotton Exchange from 1872 to 1885. Operated since 1915 as part of a private club called India House, the building is designated as a New York City landmark and is a
National Historic Landmark. In July 1854,
African American school teacher
Elizabeth Jennings boarded a
streetcar at the intersection of Pearl and Chatham Streets and was forcibly ejected.
Chester A. Arthur, a 24-year-old attorney, was successful in a lawsuit brought against the
Third Avenue Railway Company, thus beginning the gradual desegregation of all New York City transit systems by 1865.
Thomas Edison's
Pearl Street Station, the first public
power plant in the United States, was located at 255-257 Pearl Street. It began with one
direct current generator, and it started
generating electricity on September 4, 1882.
20th century New York Telephone put up a large administrative building at
375 Pearl Street, on the north side of the street east of the
Brooklyn Bridge, in the early 1970s. Built in 1991, the
Daniel Patrick Moynihan United States Courthouse at 500 Pearl Street houses the
United States District Court for the Southern District of New York.
21st century In 2014, playwright and theater artist
Toni Schlesinger's
The Mystery of Pearl Street about the 1997 disappearance of artists Camden Sylvia and Michael Sullivan from their Pearl Street apartment following a dispute with their landlord—debuted at the
Dixon Place theater. ==Transportation==