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Upper East Side

Upper East Side
Neighborhood of Manhattan
The neighborhood of Yorkville on the Upper East Side
View of Yorkville, a part of the Upper East Side (August 2008)
Location in New York City, New York, and the United States
Location in New York City, New York, and the United States
Upper East Side
Location in New York City, New York, and the United States
Location in New York City, New York, and the United States
Upper East Side
Location in New York City, New York, and the United States
Location in New York City, New York, and the United States
Upper East Side
Location in New York City, New York, and the United States
Location in New York City, New York, and the United States
Upper East Side
Coordinates: 40°46′09″N 73°57′56″W / 40.76917°N 73.96556°W / 40.76917; -73.96556Coordinates: 40°46′09″N 73°57′56″W / 40.76917°N 73.96556°W / 40.76917; -73.96556
Country  United States
State  New York
City New York City
Borough Manhattan
Area
 • Total 1.76 sq mi (4.6 km2)
 • Land 1.76 sq mi (4.6 km2)
 • Water 0 sq mi (0 km2)
Population
 • Total 207,543
 • Density 120,000/sq mi (46,000/km2)
  2000 figures for Manhattan CB 8
Ethnicity
 • White 89.3%
 • Asian or Pacific Islander 6.2%
 • Hispanic 5.6%
 • Black 1.3%
 • Other 3.3%
ZIP code 10021, 10028 ,10065, 10075, 10128
Area code(s) 212, 917, 646

The Upper East Side, sometimes abbreviated as UES, is a neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan in New York City, between Central Park/Fifth Avenue, 59th Street, the East River, and 96th Street. The area incorporates several smaller neighborhoods, including Lenox Hill, Carnegie Hill, and Yorkville. Once known as the District, it is now one of the most affluent neighborhoods in New York City.

Before the arrival of Europeans, the mouths of streams that eroded gullies in the East River bluffs are conjectured to have been the sites of fishing camps used by the Lenape, whose controlled burns once a generation or so kept the dense canopy of oak–hickory forest open at ground level.

In the 19th century the farmland and market garden district of what was to be the Upper East Side was still traversed by the Boston Post Road and, from 1837, the New York and Harlem Railroad, which brought straggling commercial development around its one station in the neighborhood, at 86th Street, which became the heart of German Yorkville. The area was defined by the attractions of the bluff overlooking the East River, which ran without interruption from James William Beekman's "Mount Pleasant", north of the marshy squalor of Turtle Bay, to Gracie Mansion, north of which the land sloped steeply to the wetlands that separated this area from the suburban village of Harlem. Among the series of villas a Schermerhorn country house overlooked the river at the foot of present-day 73rd Street and another, Peter Schermerhorn's at 66th Street, and the Riker homestead was similarly sited at the foot of 75th Street. By the mid-19th century the farmland had largely been subdivided, with the exception of the 150 acres (61 ha) of Jones's Wood, stretching from 66th to 76th Streets and from the Old Post Road (Third Avenue) to the river and the farmland inherited by James Lenox, who divided it into blocks of houselots in the 1870s, built his Lenox Library on a Fifth Avenue lot at the farm's south-west corner, and donated a full square block for the Presbyterian Hospital, between 70th and 71st Streets, and Madison and Park Avenues. At that time, along the Boston Post Road taverns stood at the mile-markers, Five-Mile House at 72nd Street and Six-Mile House at 97th, a New Yorker recalled in 1893.


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