CITY ISLAND
Island in the northeast of the Bronx with imposing Victorian style houses, ...Read more
THE BRONX ZOO (WILDLIFE CONSERVATION SOCIETY)
Zoological park offering an interesting visit in summer to see more than ...Read more
THE BRONX COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY
Association with a website offering many tours by foot, bus or subway for a ...Read more
NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN
Botanical garden is both a museum of flora and a historical site housing ...Read more
WOODLAWN CEMETERY
Read moreIt's Father Lachaise from New York. Bat Masterson, the sheriff who cleaned up Dodge City before he became a press man in New York, is buried there. And many others with him: players, sportsmen, avid amateurs from the first to the theatre, artists' agents. There's Herman Melville, Duke Ellington and Miles Davis. Bert Williams, who was the first to win a million dollars in vaudeville, is there, but his buddies Bat Masterson and Damon Runyon had to pass the hat to have him buried. Among the other residents for eternity, we can mention Admiral Farragut, the merchant F.-W. Woolworth, Mayor Fiorello La Guardia, Joseph Pulitzer, Alexander Archipenko (who sculpted his own cubist head), Congressman Vito Marcantonio, bacteriologist Hideyo Nohuchi, other mayors and, among four Confederate generals, Archibald Gracie, whose family home Gracie Mansion is now the residence of the city's mayors. A free map awaits you at the entrance. The easiest way to get there is to go to the last stop on line 4. The metro leaves the tunnel at Yankee Stadium and allows you to fly over the Bronx. The journey is dangerous at night for tourists, but correct during the day. The cemetery has a greater variety of trees than the city's two botanical gardens. During the Civil War, Woodlawn served as a fortification to support the retreat of Washington, from the northern Bronx River Valley to White Plains.
VALENTINE-VARIAN HOUSE
Two story property on the old post road, relocated and restored, housing ...Read more
VAN CORTLANDT HOUSE
Georgian style house in the Bronx considered as the scene of the great ...Read more
JOKER STAIRS
Read moreHere's the attraction that has been moving crowds to the Bronx since October 2019: the steps that appear in Todd Phillips' movie Joker, on which Arthur Fleck (Joaquin Phoenix), in the guise of his alter ego Joker, undertakes some memorable dance steps. For movie buffs and influencers, these walks have become an almost unavoidable part of a trip to New York City. At any time of the day, at least a dozen of them reproduce the Joker's dance under the half-amused, half-agacious gaze of the inhabitants of the neighbourhood.