Home > Tax Photos
TAX PHOTOGRAPHS
Between 1939 and 1941, and again in the mid-1980s, the city photographed every
house and building in the five boroughs. Photographic prints of these unique
images are now available for purchase.
HISTORY
OF THIS COLLECTION:
During the 1930s, local governments began to use photography as a tool for
appraising real property for taxation purposes. New York City was the largest
municipality to adopt this technology. The result was 720,000 35mm black-and-white
pictures of every building in the five boroughs. By the time the Municipal
Archives accessioned the collection, the original nitrate negatives had begun
to deteriorate and exhibit signs of "redox" blemishes (which look
like giant snowflakes). With grant funds from federal, state, and private sources,
the Archives duplicated the original negatives so that new prints can be produced
and copied them to microfilm so that patrons can easily and safely view the
entire collection.
By the early 1980s, the City’s Department of Finance, the agency responsible
for appraising property for real estate tax purposes, determined that the
1940s photographs needed to be updated. From 1983 to 1988, again using 35mm
cameras,
their staff fanned out in the five Boroughs photographing every property,
including vacant lots and tax-exempt buildings. They used color film stock
resulting
in over 800,000 photographs in both print and negative formats.
VISIT MUNICIPAL ARCHIVES TO VIEW THE PHOTOS:
Researchers can view photographs in all of the boroughs from the 1940s collection
on microfilm in the Municipal Archives reference room. Low-resolution copies
of the 1980s tax photographs have been digitized for viewing on computer monitors
at the Archives (currently, only Manhattan is viewable but photographs can
be ordered from all boroughs).
In order to view the 1940s tax photograph of a particular house or building
it is necessary to determine the official block and lot number of the property.
If the block and lot numbers are not known, researchers can use the Archives’ historical
map collection to look them up. Once the block and lot numbers have been determined,
researchers must consult an index to find the film roll number; with this number
the appropriate microfilm roll can be selected and placed on the microfilm
reader machine to view the picture. Photographic prints may be ordered in person
or through the online forms below. It is possible to make paper print-outs
of the photographs from the microfilm (at $.50 per copy), although the quality
is often very poor.
The 1980s tax photographs can be easily researched by entering an address,
or block and lot numbers into the image-management software. Low-quality
black and white paper printouts are also available for the 1980s photographs
(at
$.25 per copy).
HOW TO ORDER A COPY FROM THE COLLECTION:
It is not necessary to visit the Municipal Archives to order a copy of the
tax photographs of your house or building. You can order a copy online or by
mail using the forms below. If the official block and lot number of the property
is not known, the Municipal Archives will research it for an additional $5.00
fee. If the Municipal Archives does not find a tax photograph of the property,
or for some other reason cannot produce a print, your payment will be returned.
ORDER ONLINE
ORDER BY MAIL -
(Adobe Acrobat
Requred)
GENERAL INFORMATION:
-
Allow
4 to 6 weeks for completion of order.
-
The
building block and lot number will appear in the photograph.
- In the 1940s collection, vacant lots (as well as some public, non-taxable
buildings) were not photographed.
- There is only one photo per building. Buildings with multiple street facings
or addresses do not generally have multiple photographs.
- Please provide the Block & Lot number from 1940, the current block & lot
for that address may be inaccurate, especially if the building is no longer
extant.
-
The
quality of the "Tax" photographs varies considerably;
every effort will be made to provide an acceptable print.
-
Photographic
prints are provided for personal use only and may not
be transferred to another individual or institution without
permission (home decoration and prints as gifts are permissible).
If you wish to publish or re-duplicate a photograph in
any way, or use it for any commercial purpose, you must
obtain permission and pay the appropriate license fee.
PRINT PRICES:
- 1940s: $35
- 8"x10" black & white print
- 1940s: $50 - 11"x14" black & white print
- 1980s: $45 - 8"x10" color print
- 1980s: $60 - 11"x14" color print
- $4 shipping and handling
(up to 6 prints).
- ADD $5 PER ADDRESS IF BLOCK & LOT NUMBER
IS NOT INCLUDED.
- If photograph is not found, payment will
be refunded.
|