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On July 4, 1842, the Croton Aqueduct delivered its first gallons of pure water to New York City's thirsty residents. Along with the Erie Canal, the aqueduct secured New York's future as a major seat of industry and commerce. Its gravity-fed system of masonry and iron tubes carried the pure waters of the Croton River over forty miles from Westchester County to a massive holding reservoir in what is now Central Park and a smaller distributing reservoir at Murray Hill. The aqueduct served the city for over a century before being decommissioned in 1965.1
Gotham celebrated the opening of the aqueduct and its first reliable supply of clean water on October 14, 1842 (Fig. 1). The city's newspapers described the celebration as the largest since Independence Day, 1776. Between eighteen and thirty thousand people were thought to have marched in a five-mile-long parade. Firemen and temperance workers were among the best-represented celebrants. Horse-drawn fire engines had their ladders decorated "with stripes of bunting, the American flag, and garlands of flowers." The Butchers of New York City and Brooklyn rode on a large car with the "stuffed skin of an ox of tremendous size." Members of the Mechanics' Institute "carried a beautiful working model of a steam engine." Along with Mayor Robert Morris, Governor William Henry Seward addressed a throng of celebrants gathered outside City Hall. Seward referred to the day's events as the "sublime spectacle" of "a vast community uniting in one common emotion." At four o'clock in the afternoon, Samuel Colt's harbor defense system, the Colt Sub-Marine Battery, joined in the celebration by blowing up a small brig offshore. In the evening, fireworks exploded over a new Croton-fed water fountain in Union Square (Croton Water Celebration 1842).2
The Croton celebration is the kind of public moment historian David Nye describes as an example of the "American technological sublime." Nye explains that in a physical world "increasingly desacralized, the sublime represents a way to reinvest the landscape and the works of men with transcendent significance." Expressions of the technological sublime are phenomena that have both "awed the public" and "attracted maximum national attention" (1994, xvi). In America, says Nye, "sublime technological objects were assumed to be active forces working for democracy" (33). The Old Croton...