#31 - Ellis Island | April 17, 2020
Manage episode 312687353 series 3241789
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Here are 10 worldy facts about Ellis Island that you didn’t know, that you didn’t need to know:
- Ellis island was was originally privately owned.
- Samuel Ellis
- Tried to sell in 1785, but no bites
- City leased it in 1794
- City bought it when he died
- Ellis island was mostly man-made?
- The original island was smaller than the immigration inspection building that stands on it today.
- Land that was elevated during the construction of the subways was used to increase the size of Ellis island by 6 acres.
- Only half of Ellis Island is in New York.
- The other half is in New Jersey.
- The side that is man-made is considered New Jersey.
- In reality though, its a federal island so the government pays to maintain it.
- Ellis Island used to have a hospital on it that was considered to be the best in the world at the time.
- All its corners are rounded corners because, at the time, corners were thought to harbor disease.
- In the 1950’s the government tried to sell Ellis Island. The winning bid was a company that pitched a “completely self-contained city of the future”.
- Hire famed Architect Frank Lloyd Wright
- Last commission that was accepted before his death.
- Ellis Island use be where pirates would go to die
- It was an executioner island
- Pirates would get hanged
- The bodies would actually be displayed from posts or “gibbets”
- The first people to immigrate through ellis island were 3 kids
- They weren’t accompanied by parents or any family members
- It was Annie Moore and her 11-7year old brothers
- They were from County Cork, Ireland
- There is a statue still there commemorating them
- The Transatlantic ships carrying immigrants didn’t ever stop at Ellis Island
- They would stop in Manhattan, let off travelers, and then ferries would take the immigrants to Ellis Island to be inspected
- During WWII it was used as a prison for suspected nazi-sypathisers
- They did almost the same thing during WWI since immigration started to taper off
- They held around 1,500 potential enemies of state there
- Immigrants didn’t change their names at Ellis Island
- Some people say that when traveling through Ellis island, people with very ethnic sounding names would change them at Ellis island, but that's not true
- When being processed the Ellis Island crew would just use the names on the ships manifests
- Names changes either happened in the travelers home country or after being processed through ellis island
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