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khoảng 2 giờ trước
00Just a stone's throw from the bustling streets of Manhattan and the Bronx lies one of New York City's best-kept and most haunting secrets: North Brother Island. Abandoned for over 60 years, this small island in the East River was once a bustling hub of human activity, home to a quarantine hospital, war veteran housing, and a rehabilitation center. Today, it stands as a silent, decaying monument to the past, where nature has completely reclaimed concrete structures, creating an eerie yet breathtakingly beautiful post-apocalyptic landscape.
Originally designated as the site for Riverside Hospital in the late 19th century, North Brother Island was used to isolate patients suffering from highly contagious diseases like smallpox, typhus, and yellow fever. It is perhaps most famous for being the final home of Mary Mallon, famously known as 'Typhoid Mary,' who spent her final years in forced quarantine on the island. After the hospital closed, the island was briefly used to house World War II veterans and later as a treatment facility for troubled youth before being completely abandoned in the 1960s. Since then, the island has been closed to the public, transforming into a protected sanctuary for colonial waterbirds.
This exclusive photo gallery offers a rare, authorized look inside the decaying ruins of North Brother Island. Sunlight filters through collapsed roofs, thick ivy wraps around abandoned hospital beds, and wild trees grow directly out of old classrooms. For urban explorers, history buffs, and lovers of gothic aesthetics, these images provide a fascinating glimpse into a forgotten chapter of New York's history, showcasing the poetic beauty of a world without humans where nature reigns supreme.
#NorthBrotherIsland, #AbandonedPlaces, #NewYorkHistory, #UrbanExploration, #HauntedHistory, #NatureReclaims
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