Photos show crime-ridden New York City in the 70s and 80s
A return to this? Gritty images show New York City ravaged by crime in the 70s and 80s when the Big Apple was dubbed ‘Fear City’ – amid growing concern it will ‘relapse’ as $1 billion is stripped from the NYPD
- In the 1970s, crime-ridden and grimy New York City was a dangerous place where the NYPD warned people not to take the graffiti-filled subway
- By 1974, then Mayor Abraham Beame faced nearly $10 billion in debt and cut the police department. The NYPD then issued a pamphlet, Welcome to Fear City: A Survival Guide for Visitors to the City of New York
- In 1975, the city almost declared bankruptcy and asked for federal aid but was denied
- Crime persisted throughout the 1980s while people squatted in abandoned buildings left in disrepair by landlords who couldn’t pay property taxes. Crack and other drugs invaded the city and became an epidemic
- There were glimmers of hope as Wall Street did mostly well in the 1980s but crime persisted and the Central Park Jogger rape case tore at the city. It wasn’t until the 1990s that crime started to go down
- Because of the COVID-19 pandemic and lockdown, New York City is ‘$9 billion in the hole’ and may cut jobs
- The city has also been rocked by protests over the murder of George Floyd and police brutality
- Mayor Bill de Blasio said he would cut the NYPD’s $6 billion budget by $1 billion. Over 270 uniformed cops have retired since the protests, according to the New York Post
- It is unclear when Broadway will reopen and as COVID surges in other parts of the nation, the city’s reopening, such as indoor dining, is currently being reconsidered
Published: 17:02 EDT, 30 June 2020 | Updated: 06:10 EDT, 1 July 2020
Gritty photos taken in New York during the 1970s have laid bare why it used to be dubbed ‘Fear City’, amid concern it is heading back to the dark days with crime and disorder on the rise even as $1billion is slashed from the NYPD.
In the 1970s, the city faced $10 billion in debt, teetered on the knife’s edge of bankruptcy, and then Mayor Abraham Beame was forced to cut the police, fire and sanitation departments.
Every type of crime – robberies, assaults, murders, grand larcenies – was up. Nowhere was safe, including and especially the subways, every inch of which was covered with graffiti.
The NYPD revolted, going so far as to issue a pamphlet called Welcome to Fear City: A Survival Guide for Visitors to the City of New York.
Trash littered the streets. Landlords abandoned buildings because they couldn’t or wouldn’t pay property taxes. Fires burned through the Bronx. President Gerald Ford’s administration refused to help, spurring a famous headline that declared Ford to City: Drop Dead.
In March, New York City screeched to a halt to prevent the spread of COVID-19. The heart of the city’s economy, which includes tourism and theater, its small businesses, and restaurants and bars, closed. It now faces a $9 billion hole in its budget – echoing the 1970s. During that decade, then Mayor Abraham Beame was forced to cut the police, fire and sanitation departments while crime soared. Crime persisted into the 1980s. Above, the NYPD frisks a man, who may have been homeless, near the Port Authority in Manhattan in January 1988
Mayor Abraham Beame asked President Gerald Ford and the federal government for help because the city had $10 billion in total debt. The administration refused, spurring a famous headline that declared Ford to City: Drop Dead. Due to the budget constraints, the city cut services and trash was not collected. New York City almost filed for bankruptcy in 1975. Above, police arrest a man accused of being a crack dealer in February 1989 in the Bronx. The police officer on the left holds a bag that contains crack vials
Now, Times Square is a tourist haven that thronged with theatergoers before the pandemic shutdown. But in the 1970s and ’80s, it was populated with pornography, peep shows and sex workers. Rudy Giuliani, who was mayor from 1994 to 2001, made it a top priority to clean up Times Square. Above, sailors, probably during Fleet Week, outside of a 24-hour peep show that offers ‘The Best Porn in NYC’
After Mayor Beame cut the police department due to the city being billions in debt, the NYPD issued a pamphlet called Welcome to Fear City: A Survival Guide for Visitors to the City of New York. The pamphlet, which was distributed in June 1975, had guidelines, such as ‘stay off the streets after 6 P.M.,’ ‘do not walk,’ and ‘avoid public transportation.’ Tourists were to avoid the subway at all costs. Above, people ride the graffitied train in the 1980s
An emblem of death – a skull in a black hood – graced the cover of Welcome to Fear City: A Survival Guide for Visitors to the City of New York. Every type of crime – murders, robberies, assaults – was up in the 1970s. Crime continued into the 1980s as New York City was hit hard by crack and a HIV/AIDS crisis. Above, three police officer in Times Square when it was gritty and dangerous are in 1981. Behind the trio is a marquee that states, ‘Touch Me’
Today, like in the 1970s, the NYPD faces cuts to its department. The murder of George Floyd, a black man, at the hands of a white Minneapolis police officer in May has caused a nationwide wave of protests. In New York City, protestors have been outside of City Hall calling for the NYPD to be defunded. Mayor Bill de Blasio and the City Council are considering decreasing the police department’s current $6 billion in funding by one billion. Above, plainclothes officers arrest a man, center, for driving while intoxicated on 14th Street in 1985
There were glimmers of optimism in the 1980s. Wall Street and real estate began to pick up. Culturally, the city thrived as cheap rents and squatting attracted musicians, artists and writers. Hip hop, which started in the 1970s, began to take hold. Above, two boys enjoy the day on a quadracycle in Bushwick, Brooklyn
Crime was so rampant in the 1970s that some citizens took it upon themselves to police. Brooklyn native Curtis Sliwa formed the Guardian Angels. Sliwa was a McDonald’s manager in the Bronx. ‘The Bronx was slipping into the abyss in the-mid 70s,’ he told DailyMail.com in November 2017. ‘It was burning down block by block. Gangs controlled whole neighborhoods. I had to take the subways, because I was living in Brooklyn at the time, which was also earning the nickname “Crooklyn.” And so from riding the trains to walking the streets to managing a McDonald’s in the Bronx, it was chaos – anarchy.’ Above, three Guardian Angels – one of which sports the group’s signature red beret – in Times Square in 1988
Above, the Fire Department of the City of New York, known as the FDNY, puts out a trash fire on Crosby Street in Soho on July 5, 1979. Now, Soho is one of the city’s most expensive area that is populated with high-end retail such as Prada. Some of those upscale stores were looted during recent protests against police brutality. In the 1970s and ’80s, Soho was filled with lofts and galleries and known for its art
Above, looters entering a convenience store on Avenue A during a riot near Tompkins Square Park in Manhattan’s East Village in the early 1990s. In 1988, people who lived in the park – the homeless, punks, drug dealers and users – rioted against gentrification and the police came out in full force to quell it
Crime persisted in the 1980s and the crack and the HIV/AIDS epidemics took hold of the city.
But there were signs of hope. Wall Street and real estate began to come back and unemployment went down. Ed Koch, who was mayor from 1978 to 1990, focused on rebuilding neighborhoods.
Critics said this led to gentrification and it sparked a riot in Tompkins Square Park in 1988. Police used a heavy hand against the homeless, drug dealers and users that lived in the Alphabet City spot in Manhattan’s East Village.
Koch lost to David Dinkins at the end of the decade. The Central Park Jogger case, in which a white woman was violently beaten and raped while on a run in April 1989, rocked the city. Five young black teenagers went to prison for the rape but all were later exonerated. Race tensions continued with a riot in Crown Heights, Brooklyn in 1991.
Crime started to recede during the Dinkins administration but it wasn’t until Rudy Giuliani became mayor in 1994 that crime truly went down.
Giuliani and his new police commissioner William Bratton implemented the so-called ‘broken windows’ policy that focused on minor crimes, such jumping the turnstyle to get on the subway for free and ending graffiti-filled trains. Giuliani also focused on cleaning up Times Square, an area that was populated with pornography, peep shows and sex workers.
It is unclear the extent that ‘broken windows’ worked and critics pointed out it disproportionately focused on low-income communities and people on color, but murders and crime went down in the latter half of the 1990s and crime remained down until the increase of shootings that have hit the city lately.
Giuliani shepherded the city through the tragedy of the September 11, 2001 terror attacks and its aftermath. And New York City came roaring back.
During Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s three terms from 2002 to 2013, New York City enjoyed growth and prosperity – although his stop-and-frisk policy of stopping teens and young men remains controversial. Current Mayor Bill de Blasio campaigned and won on a platform of equality, such as building affordable housing, and a different type of policing and department than Bloomberg.
But the city screeched to a halt in March due to the threat of the COVID-19 pandemic and instituted a lockdown to curb the virus that has killed over 17, 600 New Yorkers.
The lifeblood of the economy that included tourism, the service industry such as restaurants and bars, and small businesses closed. After years of the city’s budgets being in the green, it is now faced with a $9 billion hole, high unemployment and a wave protests against the police brutality and the murder of George Floyd, which was captured on video. On May 25, a white Minneapolis police officer put his knee on Floyd’s neck for over seven minutes after an arrest over the alleged use of a counterfeit $20 at a store.
The protests were mainly peaceful, but there was looting of high-end retail stores on Fifth Avenue, in Soho and Union Square. Shootings have spiked and the mystifying trend of popping off fireworks has rocketed. De Blasio’s relationship with the NYPD has been rocky, and the New York Post reported that 272 uniformed cops have retired. The City Council aims to cut $1 billion from the department budget while an ‘Occupy City Hall’ movement to defund the police continues.
Above, the NYPD carry shields to retake Avenue A during a riot outside Tompkins Square Park in Manhattan’s East Village. The riot began after police allegedly beat a homeless man
In the 1970s, New York City faced huge debt and budget problems. Mayor Abraham Beame was forced to cut the police, fire and sanitation departments. Above, firefighters at the aftermath of a fire at 653 Broadway in Noho on February 1979
Ed Koch, who was mayor from 1978 to 1990, focused on rebuilding neighborhoods. Critics said this led to gentrification and it sparked a riot in Tompkins Square Park in 1988. Police used a heavy hand against the homeless, drug dealers and users that lived in the Alphabet City spot in Manhattan’s East Village. Above, men are up against the wall as the cops search and arrest them in Harlem in 1987
Because New York City was in a financial crisis during the 1970s, landlords abandoned their buildings. In the 1980s, the city’s Department of Housing Preservation and Development worked with police to evict squatters in the abandoned buildings. Above, an abandoned lot on East 8th Street in the East Village
Above, three young men sport red Nike jackets in Harlem in 1988. In 1989, Mayor Koch lost to David Dinkins. The Central Park Jogger case, in which a white woman was violently beaten and raped while on a run in April 1989, rocked the city. Five young black teenagers went to prison for the rape but all were later exonerated. David Dinkins, who served from 1990 to 1993, was the city’s first black mayor
Homeless was an issue during both the 1970s and 1980s. In both those decades, sex workers were out in the open and clearly visible. Areas that are now upscale, such as parts of Hell’s Kitchen and under the High Line, were known for spots to pick up both male and female sex workers. And of course, Times Square. Above, women working in New York City in 1988
In the 1980s, the stock market made modest gains until October 19, 1987 when it plunged and Wall Street lost $500 billion. But there was cause for optimism in the city as Wall Street and real estate began to come back and unemployment went down. Above, workers on Wall Street leave at the end of the day after that October 19, 1987 crash
Above, former President Jimmy Carter waves on September 3, 1984. Carter, his wife Rosalynn, and 40 friends from his hometown of Plains, Georgia spent five days to rehabilitate the abandoned building in the East Village
Crime started to recede during the Dinkins administration but it wasn’t until Rudy Giuliani became mayor in 1994 that crime truly went down. Giuliani and his new police commissioner William Bratton implemented the so-called ‘broken windows’ policy that focused on minor crimes, such jumping the turnstyle to get on the subway for free and ending graffiti-filled trains. Giuliani also focused on cleaning up Times Square, an area that was populated with pornography, peep shows and sex workers, seen above in the 1980s
The World Trade Center towers, seen above on June 3, 1985, was originally comprised of seven buildings. The complex, which cost $400 million to build, opened in April 4, 1973. It long stood as a symbol of American finance. It was bombed on February 26, 1993. On September 11, 2001, two planes crashed into the towers and they both collapsed. The terrorist attack took nearly 3,000 lives. It took months to clean up the site and then rebuild the towers of the complex. Mayor Rudy Giuliani shepherded the city through the tragedy of the September 11, 2001 terror attacks. And New York City came roaring back
During Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s three terms from 2002 to 2013, New York City enjoyed growth and prosperity although his stop-and-frisk policy of stopping teens and young men remains controversial. Current Mayor Bill de Blasio campaigned and won on a platform of equality, such as building affordable housing, and a different type of policing and department than Bloomberg. Above, boys and teens outside of a boarded-up building in the 1980s
During the 1970s, many landlords couldn’t or wouldn’t pay their property taxes and let their buildings fell into disrepair. Many buildings were abandoned and boarded up. There were also fires in the Bronx. Hip hop is said to have started in the Bronx in the 1970s. Above, teenagers breakdance next to a wall with graffiti in the Bronx in 1984
Above, a taxi without wheels in New York City in 1987. Due to COVID-19 and the lockdown, New York City now faces a $9 billion budget hole. Protests continue to defund the NYPD with Mayor Bill de Blasio and the City Council contemplating $1 billion in cuts to the police force that would include cutting around 1,100 police recruits, Politico reported. Protesters who have been camped outside of City Hall for days say the cut is not enough
The nationwide protests against police brutality after the murder of George Floyd, a black man who died after a white Minneapolis police officer put his knee on his neck for over seven minutes on May 25 have mostly been peaceful. In New York City, there was looting of high-end retail stores on Fifth Avenue, in Soho and Union Square. Shootings have spiked and the mystifying trend of popping off fireworks has rocketed. De Blasio’s relationship with the NYPD has been rocky, and the New York Post reported that 272 uniformed cops have retired. Above, police arrest pro-life protesters against abortion at a Planned Parenthood in Second Avenue on January 13, 1989
Above, Soho residents protest against a disco and juice bar coming to their artsy neighborhood on October 19, 1974. Soho was known for its art and art galleries until it became a place for upscale shops. Protests against gentrification have continued since the 1970s, including a riot in Tompkins Square Park in 1988. Police used a heavy hand against the homeless, drug dealers and users that lived in the Alphabet City spot in Manhattan’s East Village
Above, sculptor Duane Hanson standing with life-size fiberglass models of winos, cops, soldiers and demonstrators in front of a Soho art gallery in the 1980s