"New Street looking toward Wall Street, Blizzard of 1888."
The Blizzard of 1888 was a catastrophic snowstorm that blanketed large parts of the East Coast. New York had 85 mph wind gusts and snow drifts that reached the second stories of some buildings. The wind and snow combined to create a dangerous situation with overhead electrical and telegraph wiring (as can be seen in this photograph). Just walking down the street was dangerous as the ice and snow made the tall poles and wires ready to fall at any time. A number of people, including Senator Roscoe Conkling, New York’s Republican Party leader, collapsed in the snow. He ended up with pneumonia and died a few weeks later. In all more than 200 people died in New York City alone.
In the aftermath of the storm, city officials realized that above ground electrical, gas, telegraph, and water lines were dangerous in these types of natural events. In the ensuing decades the infrastructure that once loomed over the streets on utility poles was moved underground in Manhattan.