
Overview
"Order and Disorder: 1825-1865" recalls a period of tremendous growth and ferment. Most of the new arrivals were Irish immigrants (100,000 by 1842—and that was before the potato famine), and the subsequent overcrowding led to the construction of Central Park (1857-58). But that didn't quell the ferment, which exploded in 1863 with the racially charged draft riots. "It was the largest incident of civil disorder in U.S. history," notes historian Mike Wallace.
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12 - 1New York (1): The Country and the City November 14, 1999
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12 - 2New York (2): Order and Disorder November 15, 1999
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12 - 3New York (3): Sunshine and Shadow November 16, 1999
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12 - 4New York (4): The Power and the People November 17, 1999
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12 - 5New York (5): Cosmopolis November 18, 1999
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12 - 6Eleanor Roosevelt January 10, 2000
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12 - 7Houdini January 24, 2000
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12 - 8Nixon's China Game January 31, 2000
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12 - 9The Duel February 14, 2000
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12 - 10John Brown's Holy War February 28, 2000
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12 - 11George Wallace: Settin' the Woods on Fire (1) April 23, 2000
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12 - 12George Wallace: Settin' the Woods on Fire (2) April 24, 2000
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12 - 13Jubilee Singers: Sacrifice and Glory May 01, 2000
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12 - 14Joe DiMaggio: The Hero's Life May 08, 2000
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12 - 15The Wizard of Photography May 23, 2000