33 Historical Aerial Photos Of The World's Great Cities
These historical aerial images of New York, Paris, London, and others reveal the planet's most astounding cities like you've never seen them before.
The Hindenburg flies over New York City, just hours before meeting its fateful end. 1937.The Metropolitan Museum of ArtA view of Giza and the Great Pyramids. 1904.Wikimedia CommonsThe first pieces of the unfinished Golden Gate Bridge sit along the San Francisco coast. 1934.Wikimedia CommonsThe sun sets over the smog, clouds, and skyscrapers of New York. 1932.Wikimedia CommonsAn aerial photo of the Colosseum in Rome. Date unspecified.Library of CongressThis image — taken of Boston in 1860 — is widely believed to be the oldest surviving aerial photo ever taken.Library of CongressBoston, as seen from a hot air balloon. Circa 1860.The Metropolitan Museum of ArtA view of the Eiffel Tower and the surrounding parts of Paris. 1889.Library of CongressAerial images of Hiroshima before and after the atomic bombing, with ground zero noted by bullseye. 1945.U.S. Department of DefenseAn aerial view of the Palace of Westminster and Big Ben on the banks of the Thames River in London. Circa 1900.Jack Benton/Archive Photos/Getty ImagesBuildings still in shambles following the San Francisco earthquake of 1906.Wikimedia CommonsThe Carnegie Hill section of New York, long before skyscrapers. 1882.The New York Historical SocietyThe Mississippi River snakes through New Orleans. 1951.Wikimedia CommonsTokyo lies in ruins after the bombings of World War II. Circa 1945.Wikimedia CommonsSmog envelops Louisville, Ky. in this photo taken as part of the Documerica project to document pollution in the U.S. 1972.U.S. National ArchivesSmog obscures New York's Chrysler Building. 1952.Library of CongressAerial view of Los Angeles at night, as seen from the Griffith Observatory. Circa 1962.Archive Photos/Getty ImagesAerial photographs of housing developments, some of the very first of their kind, in Levittown, Pa. 1957.Margaret Bourke-White/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesAerial view of Manhattan from New York Harbor, with the then-new World Trade Center's Twin Towers looming above Wall Street buildings. Circa 1970.Henry Groskinsky/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesAerial view from Upper New York Bay, looking north over Battery Park and the lower Manhattan skyline. 1923.FPG/Getty ImagesApartment buildings in Berlin. Circa 1900.ullstein bild/Getty ImagesCrowds enjoy the boardwalk and beach at New York's Coney Island on a hot 4th of July. 1946.Sam Shere/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesView of the 1939 New York World's Fair.The Metropolitan Museum of ArtA Canadian plane flies over New York's George Washington Bridge as it makes its way up the Hudson River en route to Montreal, Canada. 1939.Photo by Margaret Bourke-White/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesAn aerial view of Toronto, Canada. 1967. Norman James/Toronto Star via Getty ImagesA view of the Prudential building in Boston, Mass. Circa 1964.Library of CongressNew York's Woolworth tower pokes through the clouds. 1928.Library of CongressThe Jefferson Memorial in Washington, D.C., just two years after its completion in 1943. Library of CongressView of Cincinnati, Ohio. Circa 1934.Library of CongressOverview of the city and harbor of Constantinople. Date unspecified.Bettmann/Getty ImagesAn aerial view of the Brooklyn Bridge. Circa 1912.Library of Congress
When we're stuck down here on the ground, even the most exciting cities can eventually seem dull. But, when we look at these same cities from high above, they can seem like totally different places.
Throughout history, aerial photography has served to showcase these new and exciting perspectives, as well as something else: change. Cities are in a state of constant evolution. It seems that almost every year a new building makes its mark and changes the skyline.
Take New York City for example. Historical aerial photos from the mid-1800s through even the 1920s show an unremarkable plot of land. This undeveloped New York had few buildings taller than 10 stories and virtually no skyscrapers. Today, the New York skyline obviously looks quite different.
Even cities that are a fraction of the size of New York both in the U.S. and around the world are of course still remarkable when seen from above — even if you'd never think so from the ground.
See for yourself in the gallery of historical aerial photos of cities above.