About, The Armory Foundation. Accessed April 27, 2016
artstroll.com
Welcome, Uptown Arts Stroll. Accessed April 27, 2016. "Call for artists: Visual artists, singers, musicians, dancers, poets, theater groups, performance artists, etc., in Washington Heights, Inwood and West Harlem, are invited to participate in the 2016 Uptown Arts Stroll."
Welcome, Uptown Arts Stroll. Accessed April 27, 2016. "Chamada de artistas: artistas visuais, cantores, músicos, dançarinos, poetas, grupos de teatro, artistas performáticos, etc., em Washington Heights, Inwood e West Harlem, são convidados a participar do Passeio Uptown Arts de 2016".
Tanne, Janice Hopkins. Washington to New York: Drop Dead, New York (magazine), July 18, 1994. Accessed November 16, 2017. "1928: Columbia-Presbyterian opens its doors as the nation's first academic medical center."
About Us, Columbia University Medical Center. Accessed April 27, 2016. "Em 1928, a Universidade de Columbia criou o primeiro centro médico acadêmico do país (CUMC) em sua localização atual em Washington Heights em uma aliança com o Hospital Presbiteriano .... CUMC foi construído na década de 1920 no local anterior de Hilltop Park, o antigo estádio dos New York Yankees".
cuny.edu
macaulay.cuny.edu
"The Peopling of New York 2011: Armenian and Greek Immigrants", William E. Macaulay Honors College. Accessed July 14, 2016. "The Greeks, however, did not start moving into Washington Heights until the 1920's. So many Greeks moved into Washington Heights in the 1950's and 1960's that the community began being referred to as the 'Astoria of Manhattan.'"
Armstrong, Lindsay. "Washington Heights' Jewish Population Thriving After Lean Years"Arquivado em 2016-08-19 no Wayback Machine, DNAinfo.com, November 4, 2013. Accessed June 26, 2016. "In the past decade, the number of people living in Jewish households in Washington Heights grew 144 percent — from approximately 9,500 in 2002 to almost 24,000 in 2011, according to the most recent Jewish Community Study, released by the United Jewish Appeal Federation of New York in January 2013. This increase was the largest growth rate of any neighborhood in New York City or its suburbs, even in Orthodox Brooklyn, according to the study — which is done every decade."
Home Page, Hudson Heights Owners Coalition. Accessed April 27, 2016. "We are an association of owner occupied residential properties located in the Washington Heights neighborhood of Hudson Heights. Our boundaries are between J. Hood Wright Park (173rd Street) and Fort Tryon Park (Margaret Corbin Circle at 192nd Street), west of Broadway."
Fernandez, Manny. "New Winds at an Island Outpost", The New York Times, March 4, 2007. Accessed July 14, 2016. "The Irish arrived in the early 1900s. European Jews, among them the family of Henry Kissinger, flocked there to escape the Nazis in the 1930s and 1940s, around the time that affluent African-Americans like the jazz musician Count Basie migrated up from Harlem. By the 1950s and 1960s, so many Greeks lived in Washington Heights that the neighborhood was known as the Astoria of Manhattan. Even as that label gained currency, Cubans and Puerto Ricans were beginning to move in. The '80s and the '90s, however, belonged to the Dominicans."
Sullivan, Ronald. "Officer Tells of Partner's Slaying in Drug Operation", The New York Times, October 20, 1989. Accessed April 27, 2016. "Two police officers were killed in separate drug-related shootings that night. The other, Officer Michael Buczek, was killed during a raid in Washington Heights."
Garb, Maggie. "If You're Thinking of Living In Hudson Heights: High Above Hudson, a Crowd of Co-ops,", The New York Times, November 8, 1998. Accessed April 28, 2016. "The neighborhood is called Hudson Heights by local real estate brokers and activists, to distinguish it from the sprawling blocks of Washington Heights to the south and east. It is situated west of Broadway between the George Washington Bridge and Fort Tryon Park and is set on rocky cliffs above the Hudson River."
Boland Jr., Ed. "F.Y.I.", The New York Times, December 8, 2002. Accessed November 16, 2017. "On April 30, 1903, Hilltop Park opened in what is now Washington Heights on a hill over looking the Hudson River. It stretched from 165th Street to 168th Street between Broadway and Fort Washington Avenue.... Hilltop Park was demolished in 1914, and Columbia Presbyterian was built on the site in the 1920's."
Smith, Sarah Harrison. "A Gothic Haven for Saints and Unicorns", The New York Times, December 14, 2012. Accessed July 14, 2016. "In 1925, Rockefeller, who owned property there, gave the Metropolitan Museum of Art money to buy the Barnard Cloisters for $600,000 — the first in a series of gifts that included the park, financing to build a larger Cloisters at its northern end, 700 acres across the Hudson River (to protect the view) and the extraordinary Unicorn Tapestries, which Rockefeller presented just before the new Cloisters opened in 1938."
Fernandez, Manny. "Change and Outrage at the Bus Station That Time Forgot", The New York Times, October 5, 2008. Accessed February 16, 2017. "There is a bust of O. H. Ammann, the designer of the George Washington Bridge, but no prominent display honoring Pier Luigi Nervi, the man who designed the station."
Anderson, Susan Heller; and Dunlap, David W. "New York Day by Day; Big Name And Short Road", The New York Times, August 25, 1986. Accessed June 6, 2016. "The Trans-Manhattan, the main New York approach to the George Washington Bridge, is the shortest of the short at 8/10ths of a mile."
Staff. "All for the Auto but Not Rails", The New York Times, January 31, 1963. Accessed July 15, 2018. "and the new Alexander Hamilton bridge-a vital connection with the Cross-Bronx Expressway-has just been opened to span the Harlem River."
"Streetscapes: The High Bridge - Beauty on the Comeback Trail", The New York Times, April 25, 2013. Accessed June 6, 2016. "However delightful the Sunday promenade 140 feet up will be, the experience cannot compare to the original grandeur of the bridge itself, an engineering marvel when it was completed in 1848 to carry the Croton Aqueduct from the Bronx to Manhattan."
Fernandez, Manny. "New Winds at an Island Outpost". The New York Times, March 4, 2007. Accessed April 28, 2016. "Os dominicanos, na verdade, aumentaram como uma porcentagem da população total em Washington Heights e Inwood, de 43% em 1990 para 53% em 2005."
nyu.edu
Nguyen, Pauline and Sanchez, Josephine. "Ethnic Communities in New York City: Dominicans in Washington Heights", New York University. Accessed May 21, 2007. "Washington Heights stretches roughly thirty-five blocks across the northern tip of Manhattan island. It encompasses a broad tract of land, taking in 160th Street to about 189th Street and all that lies between the wide avenues of Broadway, St. Nicholas Boulevard, and Fort Washington Avenue. The majority of its occupants are the smiling, chestnut-skinned immigrants of the Dominican Republic, whose steady arrival accounts for 7 percent of New York City's total population, and makes up its highest immigrant group."
Nguyen, Pauline and Sanchez, Josephine. "Ethnic Communities in New York City: Dominicans in Washington Heights", New York University. Accessed May 21, 2007. "Washington Heights se estende por cerca de trinta e cinco quarteirões através da ponta norte da ilha de Manhattan. Ele abrange uma ampla extensão de terra, levando a 160th Street até a 189th Street e tudo o que fica entre as largas avenidas da Broadway. St. Nicholas Boulevard e Fort Washington Avenue A maioria de seus ocupantes são imigrantes sorridentes da República Dominicana, cuja chegada constante representa 7% da população total da cidade de Nova York e compõe o maior grupo de imigrantes".
Hogan, Lawrence. "Hilltop Park was Home to Great Pitching Feats"Arquivado em 5 de agosto de 2016, no Wayback Machine., The National Pastime Museum, October 29, 2013. Accessed April 27, 2016. "Em setembro de 1908, em uma de suas mais brilhantes realizações, o craque de Washington de 20 anos, Walter Johnson fechou o New York Highlanders em três jogos consecutivos "
Calabi, Marcella; and Ritter, Elizabeth Lorris. "How Hudson Heights Got Its Name"Hudson Heights Guide, October 29, 2010, backed up by the Internet Archive as if August 18, 2011. Accessed April 28, 2016.
Armstrong, Lindsay. "Washington Heights' Jewish Population Thriving After Lean Years"Arquivado em 2016-08-19 no Wayback Machine, DNAinfo.com, November 4, 2013. Accessed June 26, 2016. "In the past decade, the number of people living in Jewish households in Washington Heights grew 144 percent — from approximately 9,500 in 2002 to almost 24,000 in 2011, according to the most recent Jewish Community Study, released by the United Jewish Appeal Federation of New York in January 2013. This increase was the largest growth rate of any neighborhood in New York City or its suburbs, even in Orthodox Brooklyn, according to the study — which is done every decade."
Hogan, Lawrence. "Hilltop Park was Home to Great Pitching Feats"Arquivado em 5 de agosto de 2016, no Wayback Machine., The National Pastime Museum, October 29, 2013. Accessed April 27, 2016. "Em setembro de 1908, em uma de suas mais brilhantes realizações, o craque de Washington de 20 anos, Walter Johnson fechou o New York Highlanders em três jogos consecutivos "