Flush, Flow & Fill: A History of Water & Public Health in NYC

Janes Walk

Led By Elizabeth Yuko

This 1.2 mile live walking tour of the East Village will begin at the Astor Place Cube — across the street from the first public restroom in the city — and make stops at locations including McSorley’s Ale House, a former public bathhouse, and the 10th Street Historic District — and end at the Temperance Fountain in Tompkins Square Park. During the walk we’ll discuss how access to various types of water impacted public health in the city, from flush toilets and drinking fountains, to bathing and leisure activities. We’ll visit public works projects, tenements, fashionable row houses, and a historic park. Attendees will come away with a greater appreciation of modern sanitation, safe drinking water, and indoor plumbing. Participants should wear comfortable shoes and bring water (if they’d like).

This walk is sold out, but the waitlist is open.

Accessibility

The walking tour route in 1.2 miles. We're starting at Astor Place, so the 6 train stops there. And we're ending in Tompkins Square Park, near the 1st Ave stop on the L train, and the 2nd Ave stop on the F train.

Location Information

RSVP is required and capacity is limited. Meeting location, ending location, and directions will be provided via email before walk date.

guided

Saturday, May 3, 2025
1:00 PM
90 minutes

Borough: Manhattan
Theme: Art & Architecture, History & Culture
Language: English
MacDougal Street in the Greenwich Village neighborhood of Manhattan. Photo: Wikimedia Commons, Beyond My Ken.