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The Bronx
The Bronx
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The Bronx (/brɒŋks/ BRONKS) is the northernmost of the five boroughs of New York City, coextensive with Bronx County, in the U.S. state of New York. The borough shares a land border with Westchester County, New York to its north; to its south and west, the New York City borough of Manhattan lies across the Harlem River; and to its south and east is the borough of Queens, across the East River. The Bronx, the only New York City borough located primarily on the U.S. mainland, has a land area of 42 square miles (109 km2) and a population of 1,472,654 at the 2020 census.[2] It has the fourth-largest area, fourth-highest population, and third-highest population density of the boroughs.[5]

Key Information

The Bronx is divided by the Bronx River into a hillier section in the west, and a flatter eastern section. East and west street names are divided by Jerome Avenue. The West Bronx was annexed to New York City in 1874, and the areas east of the Bronx River in 1895.[6] Bronx County was separated from New York County (modern-day Manhattan) in 1914.[7] About a quarter of the Bronx's area is open space,[8] including Woodlawn Cemetery, Van Cortlandt Park, Pelham Bay Park, the New York Botanical Garden, and the Bronx Zoo in the borough's north and center. The Thain Family Forest at the New York Botanical Garden is thousands of years old and is New York City's largest remaining tract of the original forest that once covered the city.[9] These open spaces are primarily on land reserved in the late 19th century as urban development progressed north and east from Manhattan. The Bronx is also home to Yankee Stadium of Major League Baseball.

The word "Bronx" originated with the probably Swedish-born Jonas Bronck, who established the first European settlement in the area as part of the New Netherland colony in 1639.[10][11][12] European settlers displaced the native Lenape after 1643. In the 19th and 20th centuries, the Bronx received many immigrant and migrant groups as it was transformed into an urban community, first from European countries particularly Ireland, Germany, Italy, and Eastern Europe, and later from the Caribbean region (particularly Puerto Rico, Trinidad, Haiti, Guyana, Jamaica, Barbados, and the Dominican Republic), and immigrants from West Africa (particularly from Ghana and Nigeria), African American migrants from the Southern United States, Panamanians, Hondurans, and South Asians.[13]

The Bronx contains what had been the poorest of all 435 U.S. congressional districts, New York's 15th, until redistricting following the 2020 census.[14] The borough also features upper- and middle-income neighborhoods, such as Riverdale, Fieldston, Spuyten Duyvil, Schuylerville, Pelham Bay, Pelham Gardens, Morris Park, and Country Club.[15][16][17] Parts of the Bronx saw a steep decline in population, livable housing and quality of life starting from the mid-to-late 1960s, continuing throughout the 1970s and into the 1980s, ultimately culminating in a wave of arson in the late 1970s,[18] a period when hip hop music evolved.[19] The South Bronx, in particular, experienced severe urban decay. The borough began experiencing new population growth starting in the late 1990s and continuing to the present day.[20]

Etymology and naming

[edit]

Early names

[edit]
A map of southern Westchester County in 1867. This, along with the southern part of the former Town of Yonkers, became the Bronx.

The Bronx was called Rananchqua[21] by the native Siwanoy[22] band of Lenape, also known historically as the Delawares. Other Native Americans knew the Bronx as Keskeskeck.[23] It was divided by the Aquahung River (now known in English as the Bronx River).

The Bronx was named after Jonas Bronck (c. 1600–1643), a European settler whose precise origins are disputed. Documents indicate he was a Swedish-born immigrant from Komstad, Norra Ljunga parish in Småland, Sweden, who arrived in New Netherland during the spring of 1639.[12][24][25][26][27][28] Bronck became the first recorded European settler in the present-day Bronx and built a farm named "Emmaus" close to what today is the corner of Willis Avenue and 132nd Street in Mott Haven.[29]

He leased land from the Dutch West India Company on the neck of the mainland immediately north of the Dutch settlement of New Haarlem (on Manhattan Island), and bought additional tracts from the local tribes. He eventually accumulated 500 acres (200 ha) between the Harlem River and the Aquahung, which became known as Bronck's River or the Bronx [River]. Dutch and English settlers referred to the area as Bronck's Land.[24]

The American poet William Bronk was a descendant of Pieter Bronck, probably Jonas Bronck's nephew or cousin, as there was an age difference of 16 years.[30] Much work on the Swedish claim has been undertaken by Brian G. Andersson, former Commissioner of New York City's Department of Records, who helped organize a 375th Anniversary celebration in Bronck's hometown in 2014.[31]

Use of definite article

[edit]

The Bronx is referred to with the definite article as "the Bronx" or "The Bronx", both legally and colloquially.[32][33] The "County of the Bronx" also takes "the" immediately before "Bronx" in formal references, like the coextensive "Borough of the Bronx". The United States Postal Service uses "Bronx, NY" for mailing addresses.[34] The region was apparently named after the Bronx River and first appeared in the "Annexed District of The Bronx", created in 1874 out of part of Westchester County.[35][36]

It was continued in the "Borough of The Bronx", created in 1898, which included a larger annexation from Westchester County in 1895.[37] The use of the definite article is attributed to the style of referring to rivers.[35][36] A time-worn story purportedly explaining the use of the definite article in the borough's name says it stems from the phrase "visiting the Broncks", referring to the settler's family.[38]

The capitalization of the borough's name is sometimes disputed. Generally, the definite article is lowercase in place names ("the Bronx") except in some official references. The definite article is capitalized ("The Bronx") at the beginning of a sentence or in any other situation when a normally lowercase word would be capitalized.[39] Some people and groups refer to the borough with a capital letter at all times, such as Bronx Borough Historian Lloyd Ultan,[40] The Bronx County Historical Society, and the Bronx-based organization Great and Glorious Grand Army of The Bronx, arguing the definite article is part of the proper name.[41][42] In particular, the Great and Glorious Grand Army of The Bronx is leading efforts to make the city refer to the borough with an uppercase definite article in all uses, comparing the lowercase article in the Bronx's name to "not capitalizing the 's' in 'Staten Island'".[42]

History

[edit]
The first published book of Bronx history: History of Bronx Borough, City of New York by Randall Comfort

Originally, the area was part of the Lenape's Lenapehoking territory inhabited by Siwanoy of the Wappinger Confederacy.[43] European colonization of the Bronx began in 1639.[44] Over time, European colonists converted the borough into farmlands. The Bronx was originally part of Westchester County, but it was ceded to New York City in two major parts (West Bronx in 1874 and East Bronx in 1895) before it became Bronx County.

Before 1914

[edit]

The Bronx's development is directly connected to its strategic location between New England and New York (Manhattan). Control over the bridges across the Harlem River plagued the period of British colonial rule. The King's Bridge, built in 1693 where Broadway reached the Spuyten Duyvil Creek, was a possession of Frederick Philipse, lord of Philipse Manor.[45] Local farmers on both sides of the creek resented the tolls, and in 1759, Jacobus Dyckman and Benjamin Palmer led them in building a free bridge across the Harlem River.[46] After the American Revolutionary War, the King's Bridge toll was abolished.[45][47]

The territory now contained within Bronx County was originally part of Westchester County, one of the 12 original counties of the English Province of New York. The present Bronx County was contained in the town of Westchester and parts of the towns in Yonkers, Eastchester, and Pelham. In 1846, a new town was created by division of Westchester, called West Farms. The town of Morrisania was created, in turn, from West Farms in 1855. In 1873, the town of Kingsbridge was established within the former borders of the town of Yonkers, roughly corresponding to the modern Bronx neighborhoods of Kingsbridge, Riverdale, and Woodlawn Heights, and included Woodlawn Cemetery.

Among the famous people who settled in the Bronx during the 19th and early 20th centuries were author Willa Cather, tobacco merchant Pierre Lorillard, and inventor Jordan L. Mott, who established Mott Haven to house the workers at his iron works.[48]

The consolidation of the Bronx into New York City proceeded in two stages. In 1873, the state legislature annexed Kingsbridge, West Farms, and Morrisania to New York, effective in 1874; the three towns were soon abolished in the process.[49][50]

In 1895, the whole territory east of the Bronx River was annexed to the city three years before New York's consolidation with Brooklyn, Queens, and Staten Island. This included the Town of Westchester, which had voted against consolidation in 1894, and parts of Eastchester and Pelham.[6][49][51][52][53] The maritime community of City Island voted to join the city in 1896.[54]

Following these two annexations, the Bronx's territory had moved from Westchester County into New York County, which already included Manhattan and the rest of pre-1874 New York City.

On January 1, 1898, the consolidated City of New York was born, including the Bronx as one of the five distinct boroughs. It remained part of New York County until Bronx County was created in 1914.[55]

On April 19, 1912, those parts of New York County which had been annexed from Westchester County in previous decades were newly constituted as Bronx County, the 62nd and last county to be created by the state, effective in 1914.[49][56] Bronx County's courts opened for business on January 2, 1914, the same day that John P. Mitchel started work as Mayor of New York City.[7] Marble Hill, Manhattan, was now connected to the Bronx by filling in the former waterway, but it is not part of the borough or county.[57]

After 1914

[edit]

The history of the Bronx during the 20th century may be divided into four periods: a boom period during 1900–1929, with a population growth by a factor of six from 200,000 in 1900 to 1.3 million in 1930. The Great Depression and post World War II years saw a slowing of growth leading into an eventual decline. The mid to late century were hard times, as the Bronx changed during 1950–1985 from a predominantly moderate-income to a predominantly lower-income area with high rates of violent crime and poverty in some areas. The Bronx has experienced an economic and developmental resurgence starting in the late 1980s that continues into today.[58]

New York City expands

[edit]
The Grand Concourse and 161st Street as they appeared around 1900
The Simpson Street elevated station was built in 1904. It was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.

The Bronx was a mostly rural area for many generations, with small farms supplying the city markets. In the late 19th century, it grew into a railroad suburb. Faster transportation enabled rapid population growth in the late 19th century, involving the move from horse-drawn street cars to elevated railways and the subway system, which linked to Manhattan in 1904.[58]

The South Bronx was a manufacturing center for many years, and was noted as a center of piano manufacturing in the early part of the 20th century. In 1919, the Bronx was the site of 63 piano factories employing more than 5,000 workers.[59]

At the end of World War I, the Bronx hosted the rather small 1918 World's Fair at 177th Street and DeVoe Avenue.[6][60]

The Bronx underwent rapid urban growth after World War I. Extensions of the New York City Subway contributed to the increase in population as thousands of immigrants came to the Bronx, resulting in a major boom in residential construction.[61] Among these groups, many Irish Americans, Italian Americans, and especially Jewish Americans settled here. French, German, Polish, and other immigrants moved into the borough. As evidence of the change in population, by 1937, 592,185 Jews lived in the Bronx (43.9% of the borough's population),[62] while only 54,000 Jews lived in the borough in 2011. Many synagogues still stand in the Bronx, but most have been converted to other uses.[63]

Change

[edit]

Bootleggers and gangs were active in the Bronx during Prohibition, between 1920 and 1933. Irish, Italian, Jewish, and Polish gangs smuggled in most of the illegal whiskey, and the oldest sections of the borough became poverty-stricken.[64] Police Commissioner Richard Enright said that speakeasies provided a place for "the vicious elements, bootleggers, gamblers and their friends in all walks of life" to cooperate and to "evade the law, escape punishment for their crimes, [and] to deter the police from doing their duty".[65]

Between 1930 and 1960, moderate and upper income Bronxites, predominantly non-Hispanic Whites, began to relocate from the borough's southwestern neighborhoods. This migration has left a mostly poor African American and Hispanic, largely Puerto Rican, population in the West Bronx. A significant factor that shifted the racial and economic demographics was the construction of Co-op City, built to house middle-class residents in family-sized apartments. The high-rise complex played a significant role in draining middle-class residents from older tenement buildings in the borough's southern and western fringes. Most predominantly non-Hispanic White communities today are in the eastern and northwestern sections of the borough.[66]

President Jimmy Carter and New York Mayor Abraham Beame tour the South Bronx in 1977

From the mid-1960s to the early 1980s, the quality of life changed for some Bronx residents. Historians and social scientists have suggested many factors, including the theory that Robert Moses' Cross Bronx Expressway destroyed existing residential neighborhoods and created instant slums, as put forward in Robert Caro's biography The Power Broker.[67] Another factor in the Bronx's decline may have been the development of high-rise housing projects, particularly in the South Bronx.[68] Yet another factor may have been a reduction in the real estate listings and property-related financial services offered in some areas of the Bronx, such as mortgage loans or insurance policies—a process known as redlining. Others have suggested a "planned shrinkage" of municipal services, such as fire-fighting.[69][70][71] There was also much debate as to whether rent control laws had made it less profitable (or more costly) for landlords to maintain existing buildings with their existing tenants than to abandon or destroy those buildings.[citation needed]

In the 1970s, parts of the Bronx were plagued by a wave of arson. The burning of buildings was predominantly in the poorest communities, such as the South Bronx. One explanation of this event was that landlords decided to burn their low property-value buildings and take the insurance money, as it was easier for them to get insurance money than to try to refurbish a dilapidated building or sell a building in a severely distressed area.[72] The Bronx became identified with a high rate of poverty and unemployment, which was mainly a persistent problem in the South Bronx.[73] There were cases where tenants set fire to the building they lived in so they could qualify for emergency relocations by city social service agencies to better residences, sometimes being relocated to other parts of the city.

Out of 289 census tracts in the Bronx borough, 7 tracts lost more than 97% of their buildings to arson and abandonment between 1970 and 1980; another 44 tracts had more than 50% of their buildings meet the same fate. By the early 1980s, the Bronx was considered the most blighted urban area in the country, particularly the South Bronx which experienced a loss of 60% of the population and 40% of housing units. However, starting in the 1990s, many of the burned-out and run-down tenements were replaced by new housing units.[73]

In May 1984, New York Supreme Court justice Peter J. McQuillan ruled that Marble Hill, Manhattan, was simultaneously part of the Borough of Manhattan (not the Borough of the Bronx) and part of Bronx County (not New York County)[74] and the matter was definitively settled later that year when the New York Legislature overwhelmingly passed legislation declaring the neighborhood part of both New York County and the Borough of Manhattan and made this clarification retroactive to 1938, as reflected on the official maps of the city.[75][76][77]

Revitalization

[edit]
four-story houses along a city street
Row houses on a location where there was once burnt rubble. The Bronx has since seen revitalization.

Since the late 1980s, significant development has occurred in the Bronx, first stimulated by the city's "Ten-Year Housing Plan"[78][79] and community members working to rebuild the social, economic and environmental infrastructure by creating affordable housing. Groups affiliated with churches in the South Bronx erected the Nehemiah Homes with about 1,000 units. The grass roots organization Nos Quedamos' endeavor known as Melrose Commons[80][81][82] began to rebuild areas in the South Bronx.[83] The IRT White Plains Road Line (2 and ​5 trains) began to show an increase in riders. Chains such as Marshalls, Staples, and Target opened stores in the Bronx. More bank branches opened in the Bronx as a whole (rising from 106 in 1997 to 149 in 2007), although not primarily in poor or minority neighborhoods, while the Bronx still has fewer branches per person than other boroughs.[84][85][86][full citation needed][87]

The Bronx – All-America City sign
The Bronx – All-America City sign

In 1997, the Bronx was designated an All America City by the National Civic League, acknowledging its comeback from the decline of the mid-century.[88] In 2006, The New York Times reported that "construction cranes have become the borough's new visual metaphor, replacing the window decals of the 1980s in which pictures of potted plants and drawn curtains were placed in the windows of abandoned buildings."[89] The borough has experienced substantial new building construction since 2002. Between 2002 and June 2007, 33,687 new units of housing were built or were under way and $4.8 billion has been invested in new housing. In the first six months of 2007 alone total investment in new residential development was $965 million and 5,187 residential units were scheduled to be completed. Much of the new development is springing up in formerly vacant lots across the South Bronx.[90]

In addition there came a revitalization of the existing housing market in areas such as Hunts Point, the Lower Concourse, and the neighborhoods surrounding the Third Avenue Bridge as people buy apartments and renovate them.[91] Several boutique and chain hotels opened in the 2010s in the South Bronx.[92]

New developments are underway. The Bronx General Post Office[93][94] on the corner of the Grand Concourse and East 149th Street is being converted into a market place, boutiques, restaurants and office space with a USPS concession.[95] The Kingsbridge Armory, often cited as the largest armory in the world, is currently slated for redevelopment. Under consideration for future development is the construction of a platform over the New York City Subway's Concourse Yard adjacent to Lehman College. The construction permitted approximately 2,000,000 square feet (190,000 m2) of development and cost US$350–500 million.[96]

Despite significant investment compared to the post war period, many exacerbated social problems remain including high rates of violent crime, substance abuse, overcrowding, and substandard housing conditions.[97][98][99][100] The Bronx has the highest rate of poverty in New York City, and the greater South Bronx is the poorest area.[101][102]

Geography

[edit]
The location of the Bronx (red) within New York City

Location and physical features

[edit]

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Bronx County has a total area of 57 square miles (150 km2), of which 42 square miles (110 km2) is land and 15 square miles (39 km2) (27%) is water.[103]

The Bronx is New York City's northernmost borough, New York State's southernmost mainland county and the only part of New York City that is almost entirely on the North American mainland, unlike the other four boroughs that are either islands or located on islands.[104] The bedrock of the West Bronx is primarily Fordham gneiss, a high-grade heavily banded metamorphic rock containing significant amounts of pink feldspar.[105] Marble Hill – politically part of Manhattan but now physically attached to the Bronx – is so-called because of the formation of Inwood marble there as well as in Inwood, Manhattan, and parts of the Bronx and Westchester County.

The Hudson River separates the Bronx on the west from Alpine, Tenafly and Englewood Cliffs in Bergen County, New Jersey. The Harlem River separates it from the island of Manhattan to the southwest. The East River separates it from Queens to the southeast. To the east, Long Island Sound separates it from Nassau County in western Long Island. Directly north of the Bronx are (from west to east) the adjoining Westchester County communities of Yonkers, Mount Vernon, Pelham Manor and New Rochelle. There is also a short southern land boundary with Marble Hill in the Borough of Manhattan, over the filled-in former course of the Spuyten Duyvil Creek; Marble Hill's postal ZIP code, telephonic area codes and fire service, however, are shared with the Bronx and not Manhattan.[57]

An aerial view of the Bronx from the east at night

The Bronx River flows south from Westchester County through the borough, emptying into the East River; it is the only entirely freshwater river in New York City.[106] It separates the West Bronx from the schist of the East Bronx. A smaller river, the Hutchinson River (named after the religious leader Anne Hutchinson, killed along its banks in 1641), passes through the East Bronx and empties into Eastchester Bay.

The Bronx includes several small islands in the East River and Long Island Sound, such as City Island and Hart Island. Rikers Island in the East River, home to the large jail complex for the entire city, is also part of the Bronx.

The Bronx's highest elevation at 280 feet (85 m) is in the northwest corner, west of Van Cortlandt Park and in the Chapel Farm area near the Riverdale Country School.[107] The opposite (southeastern) side of the Bronx has four large low peninsulas or "necks" of low-lying land that jut into the waters of the East River and were once salt marsh: Hunt's Point, Clason's Point, Screvin's Neck and Throggs Neck. Further up the coastline, Rodman's Neck lies between Pelham Bay Park in the northeast and City Island. The Bronx's irregular shoreline extends for 75 square miles (194 km2).[108]

Parks and open space

[edit]
An 1896 New York Times map of parks and transit in the newly annexed Bronx. Marble Hill is in pink, cut off by water from the rest of Manhattan in orange. Van Cortlandt, Pelham Bay and Crotona Parks are light green, as is Bronx Park (now home to the New York Botanical Garden and Bronx Zoo). Woodlawn Cemetery is medium green, sports facilities are dark green. The not-yet-built Jerome Park Reservoir light blue, St. John's College (now Fordham University) is violet, and the city limits of the newly expanded New York are red.[109]
Sample of open spaces and parks in the Bronx
Acquired Name acres sq. mi. hectares
1863 Woodlawn Cemetery 400 0.6 162
1888 Pelham Bay Park 2,772 4.3 1,122
Van Cortlandt Park 1,146 1.8 464
Bronx Park 718 1.1 291
Crotona Park 128 0.2 52
St. Mary's Park 35 0.05 14
1890 Jerome Park Reservoir 94 0.15 38
1897 St. James Park 11 0.02 4.6
1899 Macombs Dam Park 28 0.04 12
1909 Henry Hudson Park 9 0.01 4
1937 Ferry Point Park 414 0.65 168
Soundview Park 196 0.31 79
1962 Wave Hill 21 0.03 8.5
Land area of the Bronx in 2000 26,897 42.0 10,885
Water area 9,855 15.4 3,988
Total area[103] 36,752 57.4 14,873
closed in 2007 to build a new park & Yankee Stadium[110]
Main source: New York City Department of Parks & Recreation[111]

Although Bronx County was the third most densely populated county in the United States in 2022 (after Manhattan and Brooklyn),[112] 7,000 acres (28 km2) of the Bronx—about one fifth of the Bronx's area, and one quarter of its land area—is given over to parkland.[8][113] The vision of a system of major Bronx parks connected by park-like thoroughfares is usually attributed to John Mullaly.

Woodlawn Cemetery, located on 400 acres (160 ha) and one of the largest cemeteries in New York City, sits on the western bank of the Bronx River near Yonkers. It opened in 1863, in what was then the town of Yonkers, at the time a rural area. Since the first burial in 1865, more than 300,000 people have been interred there.[114]

The borough's northern side includes the largest park in New York City—Pelham Bay Park, which includes Orchard Beach—and the third-largest, Van Cortlandt Park, which is west of Woodlawn Cemetery and borders Yonkers.[115] Also in the northern Bronx, Wave Hill, the former estate of George W. Perkins—known for a historic house, gardens, changing site-specific art installations and concerts—overlooks the New Jersey Palisades from a promontory on the Hudson in Riverdale.[115]

Nearer the borough's center, and along the Bronx River, is Bronx Park. Its northern end houses the New York Botanical Gardens, which preserve the last patch of the original hemlock forest that once covered the county, and its southern end the Bronx Zoo, the largest urban zoological gardens in the United States.[116] In 1904, the Chestnut Blight pathogen (Cryphonectria parasitica) was found for the first time outside of Asia, at the Bronx Zoo.[117] Over the next 40 years it spread throughout eastern North America and killed back essentially every American Chestnut (Castanea dentata), causing ecological and economic devastation.[117]

Just south of Van Cortlandt Park is the Jerome Park Reservoir, surrounded by 2 miles (3 km) of stone walls and bordering several small parks in the Bedford Park neighborhood; the reservoir was built in the 1890s on the site of the former Jerome Park Racetrack.[118] Further south is Crotona Park, home to a 3.3-acre (1.3 ha) lake, 28 species of trees, and a large swimming pool.[119] The land for these parks, and many others, was bought by New York City in 1888, while land was still open and inexpensive, in anticipation of future needs and future pressures for development.[120]

Some of the acquired land was set aside for the Grand Concourse and Pelham Parkway, the first of a series of boulevards and parkways, thoroughfares lined with trees, vegetation and greenery. Later projects included the Bronx River Parkway, which developed a road while restoring the riverbank and reducing pollution, Mosholu Parkway and the Henry Hudson Parkway.

In 2006, a five-year, $220-million program of capital improvements and natural restoration in 70 Bronx parks was begun (financed by water and sewer revenues) as part of an agreement that allowed a water filtration plant under Mosholu Golf Course in Van Cortlandt Park. One major focus is on opening more of the Bronx River's banks and restoring them to a natural state.[121]

Adjacent counties

[edit]

The Bronx adjoins:[122]

Divisions of the Bronx

[edit]

Regional divisions

[edit]
An aerial view of the Bronx, Harlem River, Harlem, Hudson River and George Washington Bridge

There are two primary systems for dividing the Bronx into regions, which do not necessarily agree with one another. One system is based on the Bronx River, while the other strictly separates South Bronx from the rest of the borough.

The Bronx River divides the borough nearly in half, putting the earlier-settled, more urban, and hillier sections in the west and the newer, more suburban coastal sections in the east. It is an accurate reflection on the Bronx's history considering that the towns that existed in the area prior to annexation to the City of New York generally did not straddle the Bronx River.[citation needed] In addition, what is today the Bronx was annexed to New York City in two stages: areas west of the Bronx River were annexed in 1874, while areas to the east of the river were annexed in 1895.[41]

  • West Bronx: all parts of the Bronx west of the Bronx River (as opposed to Jerome Avenue – this street is simply the "east-west" divider for designating numbered streets as "east" or "west". As the Bronx's numbered streets continue from Manhattan to south, on which the street numbering system is based, Jerome Avenue actually represents a longitudinal halfway point for Manhattan, not the Bronx.)[123]
  • East Bronx: all parts of the Bronx east of the Bronx River (as opposed to Jerome Avenue)[123][124]

Under this system, the Bronx can be further divided into the following regions:

  • Northwest Bronx: the northern half of the West Bronx; the area north of Fordham Road and west of the Bronx River
  • Southwest Bronx: the southern half of the West Bronx; the area south of Fordham Road and west of the Bronx River
  • Northeast Bronx: the northern half of the East Bronx; the area north of Pelham Parkway and east of the Bronx River
  • Southeast Bronx: the southern half of the East Bronx; the area south of Pelham Parkway and east of the Bronx River

A second system divides the borough first and foremost into the following sections:

  • North Bronx: all areas not in the South Bronx (Southwest Bronx) – i.e. the Northwest Bronx, Northeast Bronx, and Southeast Bronx
  • South Bronx: the Southwest Bronx – south of Fordham Road and west of the Bronx River. This includes the areas traditionally considered part of the South Bronx.

Neighborhoods

[edit]

The number, locations, and boundaries of the Bronx's neighborhoods (many of them sitting on the sites of 19th-century villages) have become unclear with time and successive waves of newcomers. Even city officials do not necessarily agree. In a 2006 article for The New York Times, Manny Fernandez described the disagreement:

According to a Department of City Planning map of the city's neighborhoods, the Bronx has 49. The map publisher Hagstrom identifies 69. The borough president, Adolfo Carrión Jr., says 61. The Mayor's Community Assistance Unit, in a listing of the borough's community boards, names 68.[125]

Major neighborhoods of the Bronx include the following.

East Bronx

[edit]

(Bronx Community Districts 9 [south central], 10 [east], 11 [east central] and 12 [north central])[126]

The neighborhood of Co-op City is the largest cooperative housing development in the world.

East of the Bronx River, the borough is relatively flat and includes four large low peninsulas, or 'necks,' of low-lying land which jut into the waters of the East River and were once saltmarsh: Hunts Point, Clason's Point, Screvin's Neck (Castle Hill Point) and Throgs Neck. The East Bronx has older tenement buildings, low income public housing complexes, and multifamily homes, as well as single family homes. It includes New York City's largest park: Pelham Bay Park along the Westchester-Bronx border.

Neighborhoods include: Clason's Point, Harding Park, Soundview, Castle Hill, Parkchester (Community District 9); Throggs Neck, Country Club, City Island, Pelham Bay, Edgewater Park, Co-op City (Community District 10); Westchester Square, Van Nest, Pelham Parkway, Morris Park (Community District 11); Williamsbridge, Eastchester, Baychester, Edenwald and Wakefield (Community District 12).

City Island and Hart Island

[edit]
A sunken boat off the shore of City Island

(Bronx Community District 10)

City Island is east of Pelham Bay Park in Long Island Sound and is known for its seafood restaurants and private waterfront homes.[127] City Island's single shopping street, City Island Avenue, is reminiscent of a small New England town. It is connected to Rodman's Neck on the mainland by the City Island Bridge.

East of City Island is Hart Island, which is uninhabited and not open to the public. It once served as a prison and now houses New York City's potter's field for unclaimed bodies.[128]

West Bronx

[edit]
Grand Concourse at East 165th Street in 2008

(Bronx Community Districts 1 to 8, progressing roughly from south to northwest)

The western parts of the Bronx are hillier and are dominated by a series of parallel ridges, running south to north. The West Bronx has older apartment buildings, low income public housing complexes, multifamily homes in its lower income areas as well as larger single family homes in more affluent areas such as Riverdale and Fieldston.[129] It includes New York City's third-largest park: Van Cortlandt Park along the Westchester-Bronx border. The Grand Concourse, a wide boulevard, runs through it, north to south.

Northwestern Bronx

[edit]

(Bronx Community Districts 7 [between the Bronx and Harlem Rivers] and 8 [facing the Hudson River] – plus part of Board 12)

Neighborhoods include: Fordham-Bedford, Bedford Park, Norwood, Kingsbridge Heights (Community District 7), Kingsbridge, Riverdale (Community District 8), and Woodlawn Heights (Community District 12). (Marble Hill, Manhattan is now connected by land to the Bronx rather than Manhattan and is served by Bronx Community District 8.)

South Bronx

[edit]
Morris Heights, a Bronx neighborhood of over 45,000

(Bronx Community Districts 1 to 6 plus part of CD 7—progressing northwards, CDs 2, 3 and 6 border the Bronx River from its mouth to Bronx Park, while 1, 4, 5 and 7 face Manhattan across the Harlem River)

Like other neighborhoods in New York City, the South Bronx has no official boundaries. The name has been used to represent poverty in the Bronx and is applied to progressively more northern places so that by the 2000s, Fordham Road was often used as a northern limit. The Bronx River more consistently forms an eastern boundary. The South Bronx has many high-density apartment buildings, low income public housing complexes, and multi-unit homes. The South Bronx is home to the Bronx County Courthouse, Borough Hall, and other government buildings, as well as Yankee Stadium. The Cross Bronx Expressway bisects it, east to west. The South Bronx has some of the poorest neighborhoods in the country, as well as very high crime areas.

Neighborhoods include: The Hub (a retail district at Third Avenue and East 149th Street), Port Morris, Mott Haven (Community District 1), Melrose (Community District 1 & Community District 3), Morrisania, East Morrisania [also known as Crotona Park East] (Community District 3), Hunts Point, Longwood (Community District 2), Highbridge, Concourse (Community District 4), West Farms, Belmont, East Tremont (Community District 6), Tremont, Morris Heights (Community District 5), University Heights. (Community District 5 & Community District 7).

Demographics

[edit]
Historical population
CensusPop.Note
17901,781
18001,755−1.5%
18102,26729.2%
18202,78222.7%
18303,0238.7%
18405,34676.8%
18508,03250.2%
186023,593193.7%
187037,39358.5%
188051,98039.0%
189088,90871.0%
1900200,507125.5%
1910430,980114.9%
1920732,01669.8%
19301,265,25872.8%
19401,394,71110.2%
19501,451,2774.1%
19601,424,815−1.8%
19701,471,7013.3%
19801,168,972−20.6%
19901,203,7893.0%
20001,332,65010.7%
20101,385,1083.9%
20201,472,6546.3%
2024 (est.)1,384,724[3]−6.0%
Sources: 1790–1990;[130]
Jurisdiction Population Land area Density of population GDP
Borough County Census
(2020)
square
miles
square
km
people/
sq. mile
people/
sq. km
billions
(2022 US$) 2
Bronx
1,472,654 42.2 109.2 34,920 13,482 51.574
Kings
2,736,074 69.4 179.7 39,438 15,227 125.867
New York
1,694,251 22.7 58.7 74,781 28,872 885.652
Queens
2,405,464 108.7 281.6 22,125 8,542 122.288
Richmond
495,747 57.5 149.0 8,618 3,327 21.103
8,804,190 300.5 778.2 29,303 11,314 1,206.484
20,201,249 47,123.6 122,049.5 429 166 2,163.209
Sources:[131][132][133][134] and see individual borough articles.

Race, ethnicity, language, and immigration

[edit]
Race 2021[135] 2020[136] 2010[137] 1990[138] 1970[138] 1950[138]
White 14.3% 14.1% 27.9% 35.7% 73.4% 93.1%
—Non-Hispanic 9.0% 8.9% 10.9% 22.6% N/A N/A
Black or African American 33.8% 33.1% 36.5% 37.3% 24.3% 6.7%
Hispanic or Latino (of any race) 56.4% 54.8% 53.5% 43.5% 27.7%[139] N/A
Asian 4.7% 4.7% 3.6% 3% 0.5% 0.1%
Two or more races 3.8% 13.0% 5.3% N/A N/A N/A
Ethnic origins in the Bronx

2018 estimates

[edit]

The borough's most populous racial group, White, declined from 99.3% in 1920 to 14.9% in 2018.[138]

The Bronx has 532,487 housing units, with a median value of $371,800, and with an owner-occupancy rate of 19.7%, the lowest of the five boroughs. There are 495,356 households, with 2.85 persons per household. 59.3% of residents speak a language besides English at home, the highest rate of the five boroughs.

In the Bronx, the population is 7.2% under 5, 17.6% 6–18, 62.4% 19–64, and 12.8% over 65. 52.9% of the population is female. 35.3% of residents are foreign born.

The per capita income is $19,721, while the median household income is $36,593, both being the lowest of the five boroughs. 27.9% of residents live below the poverty line, the highest of the five boroughs.

2010 census

[edit]

According to the 2010 Census, 53.5% of Bronx's population was of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin (they may be of any race); 30.1% non-Hispanic Black or African American, 10.9% of the population was non-Hispanic White, 3.4% non-Hispanic Asian, 1.2% of two or more races (non-Hispanic), and 0.6% from some other race (non-Hispanic).

As of 2010, 46.29% (584,463) of Bronx residents aged five and older spoke Spanish at home, while 44.02% (555,767) spoke English, 2.48% (31,361) African languages, 0.91% (11,455) French, 0.90% (11,355) Italian, 0.87% (10,946) various Indic languages, 0.70% (8,836) other Indo-European languages, and Chinese was spoken at home by 0.50% (6,610) of the population over the age of five. In total, 55.98% (706,783) of the Bronx's population age five and older spoke a language at home other than English.[140] A Garifuna-speaking community from Honduras and Guatemala also makes the Bronx its home.[141]

Map of racial distribution in New York, 2010 U.S. Census. Each dot is 25 people: White, Black, Asian, Hispanic, or Other (yellow)

2009 community survey

[edit]

The Bronx is the only New York City borough with a Hispanic majority,[142] many of whom are Puerto Ricans and Dominicans.[143] According to the 2009 American Community Survey, Black Americans were the second largest racial/ethnic group in the Bronx. Black people of both Hispanic and non-Hispanic origin represented over one-third (35.4%) of the Bronx's population. Black people of non-Hispanic origin made up 30.8% of the population. Over 495,200 Black people resided in the borough, of whom 87% were non-Hispanic. Over 61,000 people identified themselves as Sub-Saharan African in the survey, making up 4.4% of the population.[144]

Multiracial Americans are also a sizable minority in the Bronx. People of multiracial heritage number over 41,800 individuals and represent 3.0% of the population. People of mixed African American and European American heritage number over 6,850 members and form 0.5% of the population. People of mixed Native American and European heritage number over 2,450 members and form 0.2% of the population. People of mixed Asian and European heritage number over 880 members and form 0.1% of the population. People of mixed African American and Native American heritage number over 1,220 members and form 0.1% of the population.[144]

Out of all five boroughs, the Bronx has the lowest number and proportion of white residents. As of 2009, White Americans of both Hispanic and non-Hispanic origin represented over one-fifth (22.9%) of the Bronx's population, or 320,640 people. Non-Hispanic White people accounted for one-eighth of the population (12.1%, or 168,570 12.1%). This is in contrast to a century ago, when almost all Bronx residents were white (99.3% in 1920). That share fell to about one-third by 1980 (34.4%).[145] As of 2009, White Americans of both Hispanic and non-Hispanic origin represented one-fifth (22.9%) of the Bronx's population, but counting non-Hispanic White people the proportion was under one-eighth (12.1%). The majority of the non-Hispanic European American population is of Italian and Irish descent. People of Italian descent numbered over 55,000 individuals and made up 3.9% of the population. People of Irish descent numbered over 43,500 individuals and made up 3.1% of the population. German Americans and Polish Americans made up 1.4% and 0.8% of the population respectively. The Bronx has the largest Albanian community in the United States.[146] As of 2018, non-Hispanic White people account for about one in seven residents (14.9% in 2018).[138]

Older estimates

[edit]

The census of 1930 counted only 1.0% (12,930) of the Bronx's population as Negro (while making no distinct counts of Hispanic or Spanish-surname residents).[147]

Foreign or overseas birthplaces of Bronx residents, 1930 and 2000
1930 United States census[147] 2000 United States census[148]
Total population of the Bronx 1,265,258   Total population of the Bronx 1,332,650  
      All born abroad or overseas 524,410 39.4%
      Puerto Rico 126,649 9.5%
Foreign-born Whites 477,342 37.7% All foreign-born 385,827 29.0%
White persons born in Russia 135,210 10.7% Dominican Republic 124,032 9.3%
White persons born in Italy 67,732 5.4% Jamaica 51,120 3.8%
White persons born in Poland 55,969 4.4% Mexico 20,962 1.6%
White persons born in Germany 43,349 3.4% Guyana 14,868 1.1%
White persons born in the Irish Free State 34,538 2.7% Ecuador 14,800 1.1%
Other foreign birthplaces of Whites 140,544 11.1% Other foreign birthplaces 160,045 12.0%
† now the Republic of Ireland ‡ beyond the 50 states and Washington, D.C.

Population and housing

[edit]
Poverty concentrations within the Bronx, by Census Tract

As of the 2010 census, there were 1,385,108 people living in the Bronx, a 3.9% increase since 2000.

As of the 2000 United States census,[137] there were 1,332,650 people, 463,212 households, and 314,984 families residing in the borough. The population density was 31,709.3 inhabitants per square mile (12,243.0 inhabitants/km2). There were 490,659 housing units at an average density of 11,674.8 units per square mile (4,507.7 units/km2).[137] Census estimates place total population of Bronx county at 1,392,002 as of 2012.[149]

There were 463,212 households, out of which 38.1% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 31.4% were married couples living together, 30.4% had a female householder with no husband present, and 32.0% were non-families. 27.4% of all households were made up of individuals, and 9.4% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.78 and the average family size was 3.37.[137]

The age distribution of the population in the Bronx were as follows: 29.8% under the age of 18, 10.6% from 18 to 24, 30.7% from 25 to 44, 18.8% from 45 to 64, and 10.1% 65 years of age or older. The median age was 31 years. For every 100 females, there were 87.0 males.[137]

Individual and household income

[edit]

The 1999 median income for a household in the borough was $27,611, and the median family income was $30,682. Men had a median income of $31,178 versus $29,429 for women. The per capita income for the borough was $13,959. About 28.0% of families and 30.7% of the population were below the poverty line, including 41.5% of those under age 18 and 21.3% of those age 65 or over. More than half of the neighborhoods in the Bronx are high poverty or extreme poverty areas.[150][151]

From 2015 census data, the median income for a household was (in 2015 dollars) $34,299. Per capita income in past 12 months (in 2015 dollars): $18,456 with persons in poverty at 30.3%. Per the 2016 Census data, the median income for a household was $35,302. Per capita income was cited at $18,896.[152][153]

Culture and institutions

[edit]

Sports

[edit]
Babe Ruth, often considered the greatest baseball player of all time, is seen retiring from the Yankees in a Pulitzer prize-winning photograph in the Bronx's original Yankee Stadium (current field at right).

The Bronx is the home of the New York Yankees—nicknamed "the Bronx Bombers"—of Major League Baseball.[154] The Yankees have won 27 World Series titles, more than any other team, and their roster has featured players like Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio, and Mickey Mantle.[155][156]

When the team's original Yankee Stadium opened in 1923, it was the largest baseball park.[157] The field also hosted college football games, and was the home of two National Football League teams, the New York Yankees (1926–1929) and the New York Giants (1956–1973).[158] In 2008, the park was replaced with the current Yankee Stadium.[159]

The Bronx additionally hosts the only Major League Soccer team in the five boroughs, the New York City FC, which also plays in Yankee Stadium.[160] Part of the New York City Marathon travels through the Bronx, including the notoriously difficult Mile 20.[161] From 1889 to 1904, the borough used to have a horse racing facility, the Morris Park Racecourse.[162] In its later years, the course was used for motor racing: a new land speed record was reached on the track.[163] College teams in the Bronx include the Fordham Rams and the Lehman Lightning.[164][165]

Music

[edit]
DJ Kool Herc in 1999

The Bronx has had a long association with music. In the early 20th century, it was a center for the evolution of Latin jazz.[166][167][168] The Bronx Opera was established in 1967.[169]

In the 1970s, The Bronx was strongly associated with the development of hip hop music.[170][171] One of the genre's pioneers, DJ Kool Herc, held parties in the community room of an apartment building at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue, where he experimented with turntablist techniques such as mixing and scratching of funk records, as well as rapping during extended instrumentals.[172][173][174] Other significant Bronx DJs from this period include Grandmaster Flash and Afrika Bambaataa.[175] In addition, The Bronx was important for drill culture by raising rappers such as Kay Flock, Sha EK and many others.

Off-Off-Broadway

[edit]

The Bronx is home to several Off-Off-Broadway theaters, many staging new works by immigrant playwrights from Latin America and Africa. The Pregones Theater, which produces Latin American work, opened a new 130-seat theater in 2005 on Walton Avenue in the South Bronx. Some artists from elsewhere in New York City have begun to converge on the area, and housing prices have nearly quadrupled in the area since 2002. However, rising prices directly correlate to a housing shortage across the city and the entire metro area.

Arts

[edit]

The Bronx Academy of Arts and Dance, founded in 1998 by Arthur Aviles and Charles Rice-Gonzalez, provides dance, theatre and art workshops, festivals and performances focusing on contemporary and modern art in relation to race, gender and sexuality. It is home to the Arthur Aviles Typical Theatre, a contemporary dance company, and the Bronx Dance Coalition. The academy was formerly in the American Bank Note Company Building before relocating to a venue on the grounds of St. Peter's Episcopal Church.[176]

The Bronx Museum of the Arts, founded in 1971, exhibits 20th century and contemporary art through its central museum space and 11,000 square feet (1,000 m2) of galleries. Many of its exhibitions are on themes of special interest to the Bronx. Its permanent collection features more than 800 works of art, primarily by artists from Africa, Asia and Latin America, including paintings, photographs, prints, drawings, and mixed media. The museum was temporarily closed in 2006 while it underwent an expansion designed by the architectural firm Arquitectonica that would double the museum's size to 33,000 square feet (3,100 m2).[177]

The Bronx has also become home to a peculiar poetic tribute in the form of the "Heinrich Heine Memorial", better known as the Lorelei Fountain. After Heine's German birthplace of Düsseldorf had rejected, allegedly for antisemitic motives, a centennial monument to the radical German-Jewish poet (1797–1856), his incensed German-American admirers, including Carl Schurz, started a movement to place one instead in Midtown Manhattan, at Fifth Avenue and 59th Street. However, this intention was thwarted by a combination of ethnic antagonism, aesthetic controversy and political struggles over the institutional control of public art.[178] In 1899, the memorial by Ernst Gustav Herter was placed in Joyce Kilmer Park, near the Yankee Stadium. In 1999, it was moved to 161st Street and the Concourse.

Maritime heritage

[edit]
The Bronx Zoo is the largest zoo in New York City, and among the largest in the country.

The peninsular borough's maritime heritage is acknowledged in several ways. The City Island Historical Society and Nautical Museum occupies a former public school designed by the New York City school system's turn-of-the-last-century master architect C. B. J. Snyder. The state's Maritime College in Fort Schuyler (on the southeastern shore) houses the Maritime Industry Museum.[179] In addition, the Harlem River is reemerging as "Scullers' Row"[180] due in large part to the efforts of the Bronx River Restoration Project,[181] a joint public-private endeavor of the city's parks department. Canoeing and kayaking on the borough's namesake river have been promoted by the Bronx River Alliance. The river is also straddled by the New York Botanical Gardens, its neighbor, the Bronx Zoo, and a little further south, on the west shore, Bronx River Art Center.[182]

Community celebrations

[edit]

"Bronx Week", traditionally held in May, began as a one-day celebration. Begun by Bronx historian Lloyd Ultan and supported by then borough president Robert Abrams, the original one-day program was based on the "Bronx Borough Day" festival which took place in the 1920s. The following year, at the height of the decade's civil unrest, the festival was extended to a one-week event. In the 1980s the key event, the "Bronx Ball", was launched. The week includes the Bronx Week Parade as well as inductions into the "Bronx Walk of Fame".[183]

Various Bronx neighborhoods conduct their own community celebrations. The Arthur Avenue "Little Italy" neighborhood conducts an annual Autumn Ferragosto Festival that celebrates Italian culture.[184] Hunts Point hosts an annual "Fish Parade and Summer Festival" at the start of summer.[185] Edgewater Park hosts an annual "Ragamuffin" children's walk in November.[186] There are several events to honor the borough's veterans.[187] Albanian Independence Day is also observed.[188]

There are also parades to celebrate Dominican, Italian, and Irish heritage.[189][190][191]

Press and broadcasting

[edit]

The Bronx is home to several local newspapers and radio and television studios.

Newspapers

[edit]

The Bronx has several local newspapers, including The Bronx Daily, The Bronx News,[192] Parkchester News, City News, The Norwood News, The Riverdale Press, Riverdale Review, The Bronx Times Reporter, and Co-op City Times. Four non-profit news outlets, Norwood News, Mount Hope Monitor, Mott Haven Herald and The Hunts Point Express serve the borough's poorer communities. The editor and co-publisher of The Riverdale Press, Bernard Stein, won the Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing for his editorials about Bronx and New York City issues in 1998. (Stein graduated from the Bronx High School of Science in 1959.)

The Bronx once had its own daily newspaper, The Bronx Home News, which started publishing on January 20, 1907, and merged into the New York Post in 1948. It became a special section of the Post, sold only in the Bronx, and eventually disappeared from view.

Radio and television

[edit]

One of New York City's major non-commercial radio broadcasters is WFUV, a National Public Radio-affiliated 50,000-watt station broadcasting from Fordham University's Rose Hill campus in the Bronx. The radio station's antenna was relocated to the top of an apartment building owned by Montefiore Medical Center, which expanded the reach of the station's signal.[193]

The City of New York has an official television station run by NYC Media and broadcasting from Bronx Community College, and Cablevision operates News 12 The Bronx, both of which feature programming based in the Bronx. Co-op City was the first area in the Bronx, and the first in New York beyond Manhattan, to have its own cable television provider. The local public-access television station BronxNet originates from Herbert H. Lehman College, the borough's only four year CUNY school, and provides government-access television (GATV) public affairs programming in addition to programming produced by Bronx residents.[194]

Economy

[edit]

Shopping malls and markets in the Bronx include:

Shopping districts

[edit]
The Hub on Third Avenue
Renovated Prow Building, part of the original Bronx Terminal Market

Prominent shopping areas in the Bronx include Fordham Road, Bay Plaza in Co-op City, The Hub, the Riverdale/Kingsbridge shopping center, and Bruckner Boulevard. Shops are also concentrated on streets aligned underneath elevated railroad lines, including Westchester Avenue, White Plains Road, Jerome Avenue, Southern Boulevard, and Broadway. The Bronx Terminal Market contains several big-box stores, which opened in 2009 south of Yankee Stadium.

The Bronx has three primary shopping centers: The Hub, Gateway Center and Southern Boulevard. The Hub–Third Avenue Business Improvement District (B.I.D.), in The Hub, is the retail heart of the South Bronx, where four roads converge: East 149th Street, Willis, Melrose and Third Avenues.[195] It is primarily inside the neighborhood of Melrose but also lines the northern border of Mott Haven.[196] The Hub has been called "the Broadway of the Bronx", being likened to the real Broadway in Manhattan and the northwestern Bronx.[197] It is the site of both maximum traffic and architectural density. In configuration, it resembles a miniature Times Square, a spatial "bow-tie" created by the geometry of the street.[198] The Hub is part of Bronx Community Board 1.

The Bronx Terminal Market, in the West Bronx, formerly known as Gateway Center, is a shopping center that encompasses less than one million square feet of retail space, built on a 17 acres (7 ha) site that formerly held a wholesale fruit and vegetable market also named Bronx Terminal Market as well as the former Bronx House of Detention, south of Yankee Stadium. The $500 million shopping center, which was completed in 2009, saw the construction of new buildings and two smaller buildings, one new and the other a renovation of an existing building that was part of the original market. The two main buildings are linked by a six-level garage for 2,600 cars. The center's design has earned it a LEED "Silver" designation.[199]

Government and politics

[edit]

Local government

[edit]

Since New York City's consolidation in 1898, the New York City Charter that provides for a "strong" mayor–council system has governed the Bronx. The centralized New York City government is responsible for public education, correctional institutions, libraries, public safety, recreational facilities, sanitation, water supply, and welfare services in the Bronx.

Borough Presidents of the Bronx
Name Party Term †
Louis F. Haffen Democratic 1898 – Aug. 1909
John F. Murray Democratic Aug. 1909–1910
Cyrus C. Miller Democratic 1910–1914
Douglas Mathewson Republican-
Fusion
1914–1918
Henry Bruckner Democratic 1918–1934
James J. Lyons Democratic 1934–1962
Joseph F. Periconi Republican-
Liberal
1962–1966
Herman Badillo Democratic 1966–1970
Robert Abrams Democratic 1970–1979
Stanley Simon Democratic 1979 – April 1987
Fernando Ferrer Democratic April 1987 – 2002
Adolfo Carrión, Jr. Democratic 2002 – March 2009
Rubén Díaz, Jr. Democratic May 2009 – 2021
Vanessa Gibson Democratic 2022 – 
† Terms begin and end in January
where the month is not specified.

The office of Borough President was created in the consolidation of 1898 to balance centralization with local authority. Each borough president had a powerful administrative role derived from having a vote on the New York City Board of Estimate, which was responsible for creating and approving the city's budget and proposals for land use. In 1989 the Supreme Court of the United States declared the Board of Estimate unconstitutional on the grounds that Brooklyn, the most populous borough, had no greater effective representation on the Board than Staten Island, the least populous borough, a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause pursuant to the high court's 1964 "one man, one vote" decision.[200]

Since 1990 the Borough President has acted as an advocate for the borough at the mayoral agencies, the City Council, the New York state government, and corporations.

Until March 1, 2009, the Borough President of the Bronx was Adolfo Carrión Jr., elected as a Democrat in 2001 and 2005 before retiring early to direct the White House Office of Urban Affairs Policy. His successor, Democratic New York State Assembly member Rubén Díaz, Jr. — after winning a special election on April 21, 2009, by a vote of 86.3% (29,420) on the "Bronx Unity" line to 13.3% (4,646) for the Republican district leader Anthony Ribustello on the "People First" line,[201][202] — became Borough President on May 1, 2009. In 2021, Rubén Díaz's Democratic successor, Vanessa Gibson was elected (to begin serving in 2022) with 79.9% of the vote against 13.4% for Janell King (Republican) and 6.5% for Sammy Ravelo (Conservative).

All of the Bronx's currently elected public officials have first won the nomination of the Democratic Party (in addition to any other endorsements). Local party platforms center on affordable housing, education and economic development. Controversial political issues in the Bronx include environmental issues, the cost of housing, and annexation of parkland for new Yankee Stadium.[203]

Since its separation from New York County on January 1, 1914, the Bronx, has had, like each of the other 61 counties of New York State, its own criminal court system[7] and District Attorney, the chief public prosecutor who is directly elected by popular vote. Darcel D. Clark has been the Bronx County District Attorney since 2016. Her predecessor was Robert T. Johnson, the District Attorney from 1989 to 2015. He was the first African-American District Attorney in New York State.[204]

The Bronx also has twelve Community Boards, appointed bodies that advise on land use and municipal facilities and services for local residents, businesses and institutions.

Politics

[edit]
United States presidential election results for Bronx County, New York[205][206][207][208]
Year Republican Democratic Third party(ies)
No.  % No.  % No.  %
2024 98,174 26.97% 261,670 71.88% 4,217 1.16%
2020 67,740 15.88% 355,374 83.29% 3,579 0.84%
2016 37,797 9.46% 353,646 88.52% 8,079 2.02%
2012 29,967 8.08% 339,211 91.45% 1,760 0.47%
2008 41,683 10.93% 338,261 88.71% 1,378 0.36%
2004 56,701 16.53% 283,994 82.80% 2,284 0.67%
2000 36,245 11.77% 265,801 86.28% 6,017 1.95%
1996 30,435 10.52% 248,276 85.80% 10,639 3.68%
1992 63,310 20.73% 225,038 73.67% 17,112 5.60%
1988 76,043 25.51% 218,245 73.22% 3,793 1.27%
1984 109,308 32.76% 223,112 66.86% 1,263 0.38%
1980 86,843 30.70% 181,090 64.02% 14,914 5.27%
1976 96,842 28.70% 238,786 70.77% 1,763 0.52%
1972 196,754 44.60% 243,345 55.16% 1,075 0.24%
1968 142,314 32.02% 277,385 62.40% 24,818 5.58%
1964 135,780 25.16% 403,014 74.69% 800 0.15%
1960 182,393 31.76% 389,818 67.88% 2,071 0.36%
1956 257,382 42.81% 343,823 57.19% 0 0.00%
1952 241,898 37.34% 392,477 60.59% 13,420 2.07%
1948 173,044 27.80% 337,129 54.17% 112,182 18.03%
1944 211,158 31.75% 450,525 67.74% 3,352 0.50%
1940 198,293 31.77% 418,931 67.11% 6,980 1.12%
1936 93,151 17.61% 419,625 79.35% 16,042 3.03%
1932 76,587 19.15% 281,330 70.35% 42,002 10.50%
1928 98,636 28.68% 232,766 67.67% 12,545 3.65%
1924 79,583 36.73% 72,840 33.62% 64,234 29.65%
1920 106,050 56.61% 45,741 24.42% 35,538 18.97%
1916 40,938 42.55% 47,870 49.76% 7,396 7.69%

After becoming a separate county in 1914, the Bronx has supported only two Republican presidential candidates. It voted heavily for the winning Republican Warren G. Harding in 1920, but much more narrowly on a split vote for his victorious Republican successor Calvin Coolidge in 1924 (Coolidge 79,562; John W. Davis, Dem., 72,834; Robert La Follette, 62,202 equally divided between the Progressive and Socialist lines).

Since then, the Bronx has always supported the Democratic Party's nominee for president, starting with a vote of 2–1 for the unsuccessful Al Smith in 1928, followed by four 2–1 votes for the successful Franklin D. Roosevelt. (Both had been Governors of New York, but Republican former Gov. Thomas E. Dewey won only 28% of the Bronx's vote in 1948 against 55% for Pres. Harry Truman, the winning Democrat, and 17% for Henry A. Wallace of the Progressives. It was only 32 years earlier, by contrast, that another Republican former Governor who narrowly lost the Presidency, Charles Evans Hughes, had won 42.6% of the Bronx's 1916 vote against Democratic President Woodrow Wilson's 49.8% and Socialist candidate Allan Benson's 7.3%.)[209] Donald Trump improved on the Republican Party's performance from a historic low of 8% in 2012 to 27% in 2024 over the course of his three runs for president, the highest for Republicans since 1984.

Federal Representatives

[edit]

As of 2025, four Democrats represented the Bronx in the United States House of Representatives:[210]

Elections for Mayor of New York

[edit]

The Bronx has often shown striking differences from other boroughs in elections for Mayor. The only Republican to carry the Bronx since 1914 was Fiorello La Guardia in 1933, 1937, and 1941 (and in the latter two elections, only because his 30% to 32% vote on the American Labor Party line was added to 22% to 23% as a Republican).[211] The Bronx was thus the only borough not carried by the successful Republican re-election campaigns of Mayors Rudy Giuliani in 1997 and Michael Bloomberg in 2005. The anti-war Socialist campaign of Morris Hillquit in the 1917 mayoral election won over 31% of the Bronx's vote, putting him second and well ahead of the 20% won by the incumbent pro-war Fusion Mayor John Purroy Mitchel, who came in second (ahead of Hillquit) everywhere else and outpolled Hillquit citywide by 23.2% to 21.7%.[212]

The Bronx County vote for Mayor since 1953
Year Candidate carrying
the Bronx
Elected Mayor
2021 Eric Adams,
D
Eric Adams,
D
2017 Bill de Blasio,
D-Working Families
Bill de Blasio,
D-Working Families
2013 Bill de Blasio,
D-Working Families
Bill de Blasio,
D-Working Families
2009 Bill Thompson,
D-Working Families
Michael Bloomberg,
R–Indep'ce/Jobs & Educ'n
2005 Fernando Ferrer, D Michael Bloomberg, R/Lib-Indep'ce
2001 Mark Green,
D-Working Families
Michael Bloomberg,
R-Independence
1997 Ruth Messinger, D Rudy Giuliani, R-Liberal
1993 David Dinkins, D Rudy Giuliani, R-Liberal
1989 David Dinkins, D David Dinkins, D
1985 Ed Koch, D-Indep. Ed Koch, D-Independent
1981 Ed Koch, D-R Ed Koch, D-R
1977 Ed Koch, D Ed Koch, D
1973 Abraham Beame, D Abraham Beame, D
1969 Mario Procaccino,
D-Nonpartisan-Civil Svce Ind.
John Lindsay, Liberal
1965 Abraham Beame,
D-Civil Service Fusion
John Lindsay,
R-Liberal-Independent Citizens
1961 Robert F. Wagner Jr.,
D-Liberal-Brotherhood
Robert F. Wagner Jr.,
D-Liberal-Brotherhood
1957 Robert F. Wagner Jr.,
D-Liberal-Fusion
Robert F. Wagner Jr.,
D-Liberal-Fusion
1953 Robert F. Wagner Jr., D Robert F. Wagner Jr., D

Education

[edit]

Education in the Bronx is provided by a large number of public and private institutions, many of which draw students who live beyond the Bronx. The New York City Department of Education manages the borough's public noncharter schools.[213] In 2000, public schools enrolled nearly 280,000 of the Bronx's residents over three years old (out of 333,100 enrolled in all pre-college schools).[214][needs update] There are also several public charter schools. Private schools range from elite independent schools to religiously affiliated schools run by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York and Jewish organizations.

A small portion of land between Pelham and Pelham Bay Park, with 35 houses, is a part of the Bronx, but is cut off from the rest of the borough due to the county boundaries; the New York City government pays for the residents' children to go to Pelham Union Free School District schools, including Pelham Memorial High School, since that is more cost effective than sending school buses to take the students to New York City schools. This arrangement has been in place since 1948.[215]

Educational attainment

[edit]

In 2000, according to the United States census, out of the nearly 800,000 people in the Bronx who were then at least 25 years old, 62.3% had graduated from high school and 14.6% held a bachelor's or higher college degree. These percentages were lower than those for New York's other boroughs, which ranged from 68.8% (Brooklyn) to 82.6% (Staten Island) for high school graduates over 24, and from 21.8% (Brooklyn) to 49.4% (Manhattan) for college graduates. (The respective state and national percentages were [NY] 79.1% & 27.4% and [US] 80.4% & 24.4%.)[216][needs update]

High schools

[edit]
The Bronx High School of Science

In the 2000 Census, 79,240 of the nearly 95,000 Bronx residents enrolled in high school attended public schools.[214][needs update]

Many public high schools are in the borough including the elite Bronx High School of Science, Celia Cruz Bronx High School of Music, DeWitt Clinton High School, High School for Violin and Dance, Bronx Leadership Academy 2, Bronx International High School, the School for Excellence, the Morris Academy for Collaborative Study, Wings Academy for young adults, The Bronx School for Law, Government and Justice, Validus Preparatory Academy, The Eagle Academy For Young Men, Bronx Expeditionary Learning High School, Bronx Academy of Letters, Herbert H. Lehman High School and High School of American Studies. The Bronx is also home to three of New York City's most prestigious private, secular schools: Fieldston, Horace Mann, and Riverdale Country School.

High schools linked to the Catholic Church include: St. Raymond Academy for Girls, All Hallows High School, Fordham Preparatory School, Monsignor Scanlan High School, St. Raymond High School for Boys, Cardinal Hayes High School, Cardinal Spellman High School, The Academy of Mount Saint Ursula, Aquinas High School, Preston High School, St. Catharine Academy, Mount Saint Michael Academy, and St. Barnabas High School.

The SAR Academy and SAR High School are Modern Orthodox Jewish Yeshiva coeducational day schools in Riverdale, with roots in Manhattan's Lower East Side.

In the 1990s, New York City began closing the large, public high schools in the Bronx and replacing them with small high schools. Among the reasons cited for the changes were poor graduation rates and concerns about safety. Schools that have been closed or reduced in size include John F. Kennedy, James Monroe, Taft, Theodore Roosevelt, Adlai Stevenson, Evander Childs, Christopher Columbus, Morris, Walton, and South Bronx High Schools.

Colleges and universities

[edit]
The Bronx hosts Fordham University and the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, among others.

In 2000, 49,442 (57.5%) of the 86,014 Bronx residents seeking college, graduate or professional degrees attended public institutions.[214] Several colleges and universities are in the Bronx.

Fordham University was founded as St. John's College in 1841 by the Diocese of New York as the first Catholic institution of higher education in the northeast. It is now officially an independent institution, but strongly embraces its Jesuit heritage. The 85-acre (340,000 m2) Bronx campus, known as Rose Hill, is the main campus of the university, and is among the largest within the city (other Fordham campuses are in Manhattan and Westchester County).[116]

Three campuses of the City University of New York are in the Bronx: Hostos Community College, Bronx Community College (occupying the former University Heights Campus of New York University)[217] and Herbert H. Lehman College (formerly the uptown campus of Hunter College), which offers both undergraduate and graduate degrees.

The College of Mount Saint Vincent is a Catholic liberal arts college in Riverdale under the direction of the Sisters of Charity of New York. Founded in 1847 as a school for girls, the academy became a degree-granting college in 1911 and began admitting men in 1974. The school serves 1,600 students. Its campus is also home to the Academy for Jewish Religion, a transdenominational rabbinical and cantorial school.

Manhattan University is a Catholic college in Riverdale which offers undergraduate programs in the arts, business, education, engineering, and science. It also offers graduate programs in education and engineering.

Albert Einstein College of Medicine, part of the Montefiore Medical Center, is in Morris Park.

The coeducational and non-sectarian Mercy University—with its main campus in Dobbs Ferry—has a Bronx campus near Westchester Square.

The State University of New York Maritime College in Fort Schuyler (Throggs Neck)—at the far southeastern tip of the Bronx—is the national leader in maritime education and houses the Maritime Industry Museum. (Directly across Long Island Sound is Kings Point, Long Island, home of the United States Merchant Marine Academy and the American Merchant Marine Museum.) As of 2017, graduates from the university earned an average annual salary of $144,000, the highest of any university graduates in the United States.[218]

In addition, the private, proprietary Monroe College, focused on preparation for business and the professions, started in the Bronx in 1933 and now has a campus in New Rochelle (Westchester County) as well the Bronx's Fordham neighborhood.[219]

Transportation

[edit]

Roads and streets

[edit]
Bronx–Whitestone Bridge

Surface streets

[edit]

The Bronx street grid is irregular. Like the northernmost part of upper Manhattan, the West Bronx's hilly terrain leaves a relatively free-style street grid. Much of the West Bronx's street numbering carries over from upper Manhattan, but does not match it exactly; East 132nd Street is the lowest numbered street in the Bronx. This dates from the mid-19th century when the southwestern area of Westchester County west of the Bronx River, was incorporated into New York City and known as the Northside.

The East Bronx is considerably flatter, and the street layout tends to be more regular. Only the Wakefield neighborhood picks up the street numbering, albeit at a misalignment due to Tremont Avenue's layout. At the same diagonal latitude, West 262nd Street in Riverdale matches East 237th Street in Wakefield.

Three major north–south thoroughfares run between Manhattan and the Bronx: Third Avenue, Park Avenue, and Broadway. Other major north–south roads include the Grand Concourse, Jerome Avenue, Sedgwick Avenue, Webster Avenue, and White Plains Road. Major east-west thoroughfares include Mosholu Parkway, Gun Hill Road, Fordham Road, Pelham Parkway, and Tremont Avenue.

Most east–west streets are prefixed with either East or West, to indicate on which side of Jerome Avenue they lie (continuing the similar system in Manhattan, which uses Fifth Avenue as the dividing line).[220]

The historic Boston Post Road, part of the long pre-revolutionary road connecting Boston with other northeastern cities, runs east–west in some places, and sometimes northeast–southwest.

Mosholu and Pelham Parkways, with Bronx Park between them, Van Cortlandt Park to the west and Pelham Bay Park to the east, are also linked by bridle paths.

As of the 2000 Census, approximately 61.6% of all Bronx households do not have access to a car. Citywide, the percentage of autoless households is 55%.[221]

Highways

[edit]
The Cross Bronx Expressway (I-95/US 1) is typically clogged with traffic

Several major limited access highways traverse the Bronx. These include:

Bridges and tunnels

[edit]
An aerial view of the Throgs Neck Bridge

Thirteen bridges and three tunnels connect the Bronx to Manhattan, and three bridges connect the Bronx to Queens. These are, from west to east:

To Manhattan: the Spuyten Duyvil Bridge, the Henry Hudson Bridge, the Broadway Bridge, the University Heights Bridge, the Washington Bridge, the Alexander Hamilton Bridge, the High Bridge, the Concourse Tunnel, the Macombs Dam Bridge, the 145th Street Bridge, the 149th Street Tunnel, the Madison Avenue Bridge, the Park Avenue Bridge, the Lexington Avenue Tunnel, the Third Avenue Bridge (southbound traffic only), and the Willis Avenue Bridge (northbound traffic only).

To both Manhattan and Queens: the Robert F. Kennedy Bridge, formerly known as the Triborough Bridge.

To Queens: the Bronx–Whitestone Bridge and the Throgs Neck Bridge.

Mass transit

[edit]
Middletown Road subway station on the 6 and <6>​ trains

The Bronx is served by seven New York City Subway services along six physical lines, with 70 stations in the Bronx:[222]

There are also many MTA Regional Bus Operations bus routes in the Bronx. This includes local and express routes as well as Bee-Line Bus System routes.[223]

Two Metro-North Railroad commuter rail lines (the Harlem Line and the Hudson Line) serve 11 stations in the Bronx. (Marble Hill, between the Spuyten Duyvil and University Heights stations, is actually in the only part of Manhattan connected to the mainland.) In addition, some trains serving the New Haven Line stop at Fordham Plaza. As part of Penn Station Access, the 2018 MTA budget funded construction of four new stops along the New Haven Line to serve Hunts Point, Parkchester, Morris Park, and Co-op City.[224]

In 2018, NYC Ferry's Soundview line opened, connecting the Soundview landing in Clason Point Park to three East River locations in Manhattan. On December 28, 2021; the Throgs Neck Ferry landing at Ferry Point Park in Throgs Neck was opened providing an additional stop on the Soundview line.[225] The ferry is operated by Hornblower Cruises.[226]

Climate

[edit]
Climate data for The Bronx
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Mean daily maximum °F (°C) 39.7
(4.3)
42.6
(5.9)
50.3
(10.2)
61.4
(16.3)
72.3
(22.4)
80.9
(27.2)
86.1
(30.1)
84.1
(28.9)
77.1
(25.1)
65.8
(18.8)
54.1
(12.3)
44.8
(7.1)
63.3
(17.4)
Mean daily minimum °F (°C) 27.3
(−2.6)
28.7
(−1.8)
34.6
(1.4)
44.4
(6.9)
54.6
(12.6)
64.3
(17.9)
70.6
(21.4)
69.1
(20.6)
62.1
(16.7)
50.7
(10.4)
41.3
(5.2)
33.1
(0.6)
48.4
(9.1)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 3.74
(95)
3.19
(81)
4.37
(111)
3.95
(100)
4.06
(103)
4.55
(116)
4.37
(111)
4.82
(122)
4.55
(116)
4.13
(105)
3.45
(88)
4.67
(119)
49.85
(1,266)
Average snowfall inches (cm) 8.4
(21)
8.9
(23)
4.3
(11)
0.5
(1.3)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0.4
(1.0)
4.1
(10)
26.6
(68)
Source: NOAA[227]
[edit]

Film and television

[edit]

Mid-20th century

[edit]

Mid-20th century movies set in the Bronx portrayed densely settled, working-class, urban culture. From This Day Forward (1946), set in Highbridge, occasionally delved into Bronx life. The most notable examinations of working class Bronx life were Paddy Chayefsky's Academy Award-winning Marty[228] and his 1956 film The Catered Affair. Other films that portrayed life in the Bronx are: the 1993 Robert De Niro/Chazz Palminteri film, A Bronx Tale, Spike Lee's 1999 movie Summer of Sam, which focused on an Italian-American Bronx community in the 1970s, 1994's I Like It Like That which takes place in the predominantly Puerto Rican neighborhood of the South Bronx, and Doughboys, the story of two Italian-American brothers in danger of losing their bakery thanks to one brother's gambling debts.

The Bronx's gritty urban life had worked its way into the movies even earlier, with depictions of the "Bronx cheer", a loud flatulent-like sound of disapproval, allegedly first made by New York Yankees fans. The sound can be heard, for example, on the Spike Jones and His City Slickers recording of "Der Fuehrer's Face" (from the 1942 Disney animated film of the same name), repeatedly lambasting Adolf Hitler with: "We'll Heil! (Bronx cheer) Heil! (Bronx cheer) Right in Der Fuehrer's Face!"[229][230]

Symbolism

[edit]

Starting in the 1970s, the Bronx often symbolized violence, decay, and urban ruin. The wave of arson in the South Bronx in the 1960s and 1970s inspired the observation that "The Bronx is burning": in 1974 it was the title of both an editorial in The New York Times and a BBC documentary film.[231] The line entered the pop-consciousness with Game Two of the 1977 World Series, when a fire broke out near Yankee Stadium as the team was playing the Los Angeles Dodgers. As the fire was captured on live television, announcer Howard Cosell is wrongly remembered to have said something like, "There it is, ladies and gentlemen: the Bronx is burning". Historians of New York City often point to Cosell's remark as an acknowledgement of both the city and the borough's decline.[232] A feature-length documentary film by Edwin Pagán called Bronx Burning chronicled what led up to the many arson-for-insurance fraud fires of the 1970s in the borough.[233][234]

Bronx gang life was depicted in the 1974 novel The Wanderers by Bronx native Richard Price and the 1979 movie of the same name. They are set in the heart of the Bronx, showing apartment life and the then-landmark Krums ice cream parlor. In the 1979 film The Warriors, the eponymous gang go to a meeting in Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx, and have to fight their way out of the borough and get back to Coney Island in Brooklyn. A Bronx Tale (1993) depicts gang activities in the Belmont "Little Italy" section of the Bronx. The 2005 video game adaptation features levels called Pelham, Tremont, and "Gunhill" (a play off the name Gun Hill Road). This theme lends itself to the title of The Bronx Is Burning, an eight-part ESPN TV mini-series (2007) about the New York Yankees' drive to winning baseball's 1977 World Series. The TV series emphasizes the team's boisterous nature, led by manager Billy Martin, catcher Thurman Munson and outfielder Reggie Jackson, as well as the malaise of the Bronx and New York City in general during that time, such as the blackout, the city's serious financial woes and near bankruptcy, the arson for insurance payments, and the election of Ed Koch as mayor.

The 1981 film Fort Apache, The Bronx is another film that used the Bronx's gritty image for its storyline. The movie's title is from the nickname for the 41st Police Precinct in the South Bronx which was nicknamed "Fort Apache". Also from 1981 is the horror film Wolfen making use of the rubble of the Bronx as a home for werewolf type creatures. Knights of the South Bronx, a true story of a teacher who worked with disadvantaged children, is another film also set in the Bronx released in 2005. The Bronx was the setting for the 1983 film Fuga dal Bronx, also known as Bronx Warriors 2 and Escape 2000, an Italian B-movie best known for its appearance on the television series Mystery Science Theater 3000. The plot revolves around a sinister construction corporation's plans to depopulate, destroy and redevelop the Bronx, and a band of rebels who are out to expose the corporation's murderous ways and save their homes. The film is memorable for its almost incessant use of the phrase, "Leave the Bronx!" Many of the movie's scenes were filmed in Queens, substituting as the Bronx. Rumble in the Bronx, filmed in Vancouver, was a 1995 Jackie Chan kung-fu film, another which popularized the Bronx to international audiences. Last Bronx, a 1996 Sega game played on the bad reputation of the Bronx to lend its name to an alternate version of post-Japanese bubble Tokyo, where crime and gang warfare is rampant. The 2016 Netflix series The Get Down is based on the development of hip hop in 1977 in the South Bronx.[235]

Literature

[edit]

Books

[edit]

The Bronx has been featured significantly in fiction literature. All of the characters in Herman Wouk's City Boy: The Adventures of Herbie Bookbinder (1948) live in the Bronx, and about half of the action is set there. Kate Simon's Bronx Primitive: Portraits of a Childhood (1982) is directly autobiographical, a warm account of a Polish-Jewish girl in an immigrant family growing up before World War II, and living near Arthur Avenue and Tremont Avenue.[236] In Jacob M. Appel's short story, "The Grand Concourse" (2007),[237] a woman who grew up in the iconic Lewis Morris Building returns to the Morrisania neighborhood with her adult daughter. Similarly, in Avery Corman's book The Old Neighborhood (1980),[238] an upper-middle class white protagonist returns to his birth neighborhood (Fordham Road and the Grand Concourse), and learns that even though the folks are poor, Hispanic and African-American, they are good people.

By contrast, Tom Wolfe's Bonfire of the Vanities (1987)[239] portrays a wealthy, white protagonist, Sherman McCoy, getting lost off the Bruckner Expressway in the South Bronx and having an altercation with locals. A substantial piece of the last part of the book is set in the resulting riotous trial at the Bronx County Courthouse. However, times change, and in 2007, The New York Times reported that "the Bronx neighborhoods near the site of Sherman's accident are now dotted with townhouses and apartments." In the same article, the Reverend Al Sharpton (whose fictional analogue in the novel is "Reverend Bacon") asserts that "twenty years later, the cynicism of The Bonfire of the Vanities is as out of style as Tom Wolfe's wardrobe."[240]

Don DeLillo's Underworld (1997) is also set in the Bronx and offers a perspective on the area from the 1950s onward.[241]

Poetry

[edit]

In poetry, the Bronx has been immortalized by one of the world's shortest couplets:

The Bronx?
No Thonx
Ogden Nash, The New Yorker, 1931

Nash repented 33 years after his calumny, penning the following poem to the dean of faculty at Bronx Community College in 1964:[242]

I wrote those lines, "The Bronx? No thonx";
I shudder to confess them.

Now I'm an older, wiser man
I cry, "The Bronx? God bless them!"[89]

In 2016, W. R. Rodriguez published Bronx Trilogy—consisting of the shoe shine parlor poems et al., concrete pastures of the beautiful bronx, and from the banks of brook avenue. The trilogy celebrates Bronx people, places, and events. DeWitt Clinton High School, St. Mary's Park, and Brook Avenue are a few of the schools, parks, and streets Rodriguez uses as subjects for his poems.[243]

Nash's couplet "The Bronx? No Thonx" and his subsequent blessing are mentioned in Bronx Accent: A Literary and Pictorial History of the Borough, edited by Lloyd Ultan and Barbara Unger and published in 2000. The book, which includes the work of Yiddish poets, offers a selection from Allen Ginsberg's Kaddish, as his Aunt Elanor and his mother, Naomi, lived near Woodlawn Cemetery. Also featured is Ruth Lisa Schecther's poem, "Bronx", which is described as a celebration of the borough's landmarks. There is a selection of works from poets such as Sandra María Esteves, Milton Kessler, Joan Murray, W. R. Rodriguez, Myra Shapiro, Gayl Teller, and Terence Wynch.[244]

"Bronx Migrations" by Michelle M. Tokarczyk is a collection that spans five decades of Tokarczyk's life in the Bronx, from her exodus in 1962 to her return in search of her childhood tenement.[245][246]

Bronx Memoir Project

[edit]

Bronx Memoir Project: Vol. 1 is a published anthology by the Bronx Council on the Arts and brought forth through a series of workshops meant to empower Bronx residents and shed the stigma on the Bronx's burning past.[247] The Bronx Memoir Project was created as an ongoing collaboration between the Bronx Council on the Arts and other cultural institutions, including the Bronx Documentary Center, the Bronx Library Center, the (Edgar Allan) Poe Park Visitor Center, Mindbuilders, and other institutions and funded through a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts.[248][249] The goal was to develop and refine memoir fragments written by people of all walks of life that share a common bond residing within the Bronx.[248]

Songs

[edit]

Theater

[edit]

Clifford Odets's play Awake and Sing! is set in 1933 in the Bronx. The play, first produced at the Belasco Theater in 1935, concerns a poor family living in small quarters, the struggles of the controlling parents and the aspirations of their children.[254]

René Marqués' The Oxcart (1959) concerns a rural Puerto Rican family who immigrate to the Bronx for a better life.[255]

A Bronx Tale is an autobiographical one-man show written and performed by Chazz Palminteri. It is a coming-of-age story set in the Bronx. It premiered in Los Angeles in the 1980s and then played on Off-Broadway. After a film version involving Palminteri and Robert De Niro, Palminteri performed his one-man show on Broadway and on tour in 2007.[256]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Bronx is the northernmost of 's five boroughs, coextensive with Bronx County in the U.S. state of New York and the only one located primarily on the North American mainland. Named for , a Swedish settler who arrived in 1639 and from whom the Bronx River derives its name, the borough covers 42 square miles of land area. Its population was estimated at 1,356,476 as of July 2023, reflecting a diverse demographic with approximately 55 percent identifying as Hispanic or Latino, 29 percent as Black, and smaller proportions as non-Hispanic White and Asian. As an industrial center in the early , The Bronx later endured profound in the 1970s and 1980s, marked by widespread arson, a 57 percent population decline in the , and tripling murder rates amid economic stagnation and . It is the birthplace of hip-hop, pioneered at a 1973 block party in the Morris Heights neighborhood by . Notable landmarks include , the Bronx Zoo, and the , while recent state investments exceeding $20 million target downtown revitalization amid ongoing challenges like below-average median household incomes around $49,000 and persistent poverty.

Etymology

Name origins

The Bronx derives its name from , a Swedish-born settler who arrived in the Dutch colony of in 1639 and purchased approximately 500 acres of land from indigenous people north of the , establishing a tobacco farm there. This property became known as Broncksland (Bronck's Land) in Dutch records, reflecting the possessive form of his . The adjacent , a originating in Westchester County and flowing south through the area into the , was named Broncks Rivier (Bronck's River) shortly after his settlement, as it bordered his land and served as a key geographical marker. Over time, under English colonial influence following the takeover of , the Dutch Broncks evolved phonetically and orthographically into "Bronx," with the river's name extending to the surrounding region by the late . Bronck himself died in 1643, leaving the land to heirs, but the toponym persisted independently of his family's continued presence, as subsequent Dutch and English patents and maps referenced "Bronx" or variants for the river and adjacent tracts by the early . Some historical accounts debate Bronck's precise nationality, citing records of his baptism in alongside Swedish origins, though primary settler manifests confirm his Scandinavian roots and 1639 arrival via . The name's adoption for the modern borough solidified during 19th-century annexation to , with the area informally called "the Bronx" by the 1870s to distinguish it from other districts.

Definite article usage

The definite article "the" in the name "The Bronx" derives from early colonial references to the Bronx River as "Bronck's River," named after Swedish settler , who purchased land along its banks in 1639. This phrasing evolved into "the Broncks," a colloquial term for the area or visits to Bronck's farm, embedding the article in local usage by the . When Westchester County was divided in 1874 and the annexed portion became a New York City borough in 1898, residents selected "The Bronx" to honor the river bisecting the territory, deliberately retaining the definite article typical of English river names like "the Hudson" or "the Thames." Official nomenclature formalized this as "Borough of The Bronx," with the initial "T" capitalized, distinguishing it from the other boroughs—Manhattan, , , and [Staten Island](/page/Staten Island)—which lack the article despite some also tracing names to waterways. The retention reflects linguistic persistence rather than grammatical innovation, as English place names occasionally preserve articles from possessive or descriptive origins, such as "" from Dutch "den Haag." In modern style guides, "The Bronx" is standard for the , though informal speech may omit it; capitalization of "the" remains debated but aligns with historical precedent in legal and municipal documents.

Geography

Topography and boundaries

The Bronx comprises Bronx County and covers a land area of 42.03 square miles (109 square kilometers), making it the fourth-largest borough of by area and the only one located primarily on the North American mainland. Its boundaries include the to the south, separating it from ; Westchester County to the north; the along portions of its northwestern edge; and the and to the east and southeast, which separate it from the borough of . These waterways define approximately 75 miles of waterfront, influencing historical development patterns and modern infrastructure such as bridges and tunnels. Topographically, the Bronx features undulating terrain characterized by north-south oriented ridges and intervening valleys, a legacy of glacial activity and underlying formations. The highest reaches 280 feet (85 meters) in the northwest corner, west of and near the Chapel Farm area in Riverdale. Average elevations range from 70 to 80 feet (21 to 24 meters) across the borough, with steeper slopes in the west and relatively flatter expanses east of the Bronx River. This varied has shaped , resulting in extensive staircases for access in hilly neighborhoods and influencing the alignment of major roadways like the , which follows natural valleys. The borough's geology includes Manhattan and Fordham in the west, transitioning to softer sediments eastward, contributing to differential erosion and the prominence of features like Woodlawn Hill.

Hydrology and natural features

The Bronx's hydrology is dominated by tidal straits and short rivers originating in adjacent Westchester County. The Harlem River, an 8-mile tidal strait, forms the southwestern boundary with Manhattan, connecting the Hudson River to the East River and facilitating navigation while influencing local tidal dynamics. The Bronx River, spanning 23 miles, flows southward through the borough's center from the Kensico Reservoir area, draining a watershed of urbanized terrain before discharging into the Harlem River; as the city's only major non-tidal waterway, it supports distinct freshwater habitats amid surrounding impervious surfaces. The Hutchinson River, approximately 10 miles long, originates in Westchester, crosses the northeastern Bronx, and empties into Eastchester Bay, contributing to localized estuarine conditions. Spuyten Duyvil Creek, a narrow tidal about 1 mile long, links the to the Ship Canal at the borough's northwestern extremity, historically treacherous due to swift currents and now straightened for shipping. These waterways, once fringed by marshes and meadows, have experienced significant alteration from channelization, filling, and pollution, reducing historic wetlands by over 90 percent in the Bronx River watershed alone. and overflows continue to affect , though restoration efforts have improved segments for fish passage and . Natural features include varied shaped by glacial processes and underlying . The Bronx River divides the borough into a hillier western section with elevations reaching 250-300 feet and a flatter eastern plain, reflecting differential of metamorphic formations. Geologically, the area exposes Precambrian , , and of the Fordham Group, intruded by and overlain by thin glacial from the last , which ended around 12,000 years ago and left moraines and drumlins influencing current drainage patterns. Residual forests and tidal flats persist in protected areas, hosting species adapted to brackish environments, though extensive has fragmented these habitats.

Parks, open spaces, and environmental conditions

The Bronx contains New York City's largest concentration of parkland, comprising approximately 24% of the borough's area, more than any other borough. Major parks include , spanning 2,772 acres in the northeast Bronx and featuring 13 miles of shoreline, Orchard Beach, bridle paths, and two golf courses. covers 1,146 acres in the northwest, with woodlands, wetlands, Van Cortlandt Lake, the city's oldest public golf course established in 1895, and the historic Van Cortlandt House built in 1748. , at 718 acres, houses the 265-acre , home to over 6,000 animals across 265 acres, and the adjacent 250-acre , which maintains extensive plant collections and research facilities. Other notable open spaces encompass (343 acres with lakes and recreational fields), River Park (197 acres along the ), and smaller sites like State Park (25 acres with waterfront access). These parks provide critical recreational amenities, including hiking trails, sports fields, and biodiversity hotspots, but distribution varies; northern and coastal areas have abundant access while denser southern neighborhoods face shortages. The borough averages 18 square meters of per capita, exceeding Manhattan's 11 square meters but trailing less urbanized regions. Combined, these spaces support ecological functions such as stormwater absorption and habitat preservation, with retaining native oak-hickory forests and Pelham Bay hosting salt marshes. Environmental conditions in the Bronx reflect a mix of natural assets and urban stressors. Air quality fluctuates, with current AQI often in the "good" range (e.g., PM2.5 at 6 µg/m³), but the experiences elevated pollution from truck traffic, power plants, and industry, contributing to rates as high as 25% among children in areas like Mott Haven-Port Morris—double the citywide average. Waterways like the Bronx River suffer from overflows during rainfall, releasing untreated and floatables; an estimated 21 billion gallons of such enter city waterways annually, exacerbating . Flooding risks are heightened by aging infrastructure and impervious surfaces, with events mobilizing toxins from legacy sites like the former Pelham Bay Landfill, closed in 1983 amid discoveries. Despite these challenges, parks mitigate urban heat islands and improve local air , though causal factors like high vehicle dependency and industrial perpetuate disparities.

Climate

Seasonal weather patterns

The Bronx exhibits four distinct seasons typical of New York City's , with cold, occasionally snowy winters; transitional springs marked by variable weather; warm, humid summers prone to thunderstorms; and mild, drying autumns. Average annual totals approximately 49 inches, distributed relatively evenly but with peaks in spring and summer due to convective activity, while snowfall accumulates primarily from through March, averaging 25 to 30 inches seasonally. Winter (December through ) features average daily high temperatures of 39°F to 44°F and lows of 27°F to 32°F, with mean temperatures around 34°F to 35°F based on 1991-2020 normals from nearby observations, which closely align with Bronx conditions due to urban proximity. Nor'easters and from the contribute to variable snowfall, with monthly averages of 7 to 10 inches in and ; freezing rain and ice storms occur several times per season, exacerbating urban hazards like potholes and transit delays. Precipitation totals about 3.5 to 4 inches per month, often falling as a mix of , sleet, and under prevailing westerly winds. Spring (March through May) brings warming trends, with average highs rising from 50°F in to 71°F in May and lows from 36°F to 55°F, yielding mean temperatures of about 45°F to 60°F. This period sees increasing daylight and occasional late-season frosts, with the last freeze typically by mid-; precipitation averages 3.5 to 4.5 inches monthly, including frequent showers that support budding vegetation in parks like Pelham Bay. Winds shift southerly, moderating temperatures but introducing and pollen counts that peak in and May. Summer ( through ) is the warmest season, with average highs of 79°F to 85°F and lows of 64°F to 69°F, resulting in mean temperatures near 75°F amid high levels often exceeding 70%. Heat indices can surpass 100°F during , driven by southerly flows and effects amplified in densely built areas; afternoon thunderstorms provide relief, contributing 4 to 5 inches of monthly , about 30% of which falls on 8 to 10 rainy days per month. risks are low, but tropical systems occasionally influence late summer patterns. Fall ( through ) cools progressively, with average highs dropping from 76°F in to 53°F in and lows from 61°F to 40°F, for mean temperatures of roughly 55°F to 45°F. Foliage changes in wooded areas like the Bronx River corridor peak in under drier conditions, with averaging 3.5 to 4 inches monthly and decreasing ; early frosts may arrive by late , signaling the transition to winter.
SeasonAvg. High (°F)Avg. Low (°F)Mean Temp (°F)Avg. Precip (in)Avg. Snowfall (in)
Winter (Dec-Feb)39-4427-3234-3510-12 (total)25-30 (total)
Spring (Mar-May)50-7136-5545-6011-13 (total)Trace
Summer (Jun-Aug)79-8564-69~7512-15 (total)0
Fall (Sep-Nov)53-7640-6145-5510-12 (total)0
derived from 1991-2020 normals; snowfall concentrated in winter months. The Bronx, sharing New York City's humid subtropical climate, has experienced various events, including rare , severe flooding from tropical systems, heavy snowfalls, and intense . A notable tornado, rated EF1, struck on July 25, 2010, traveling approximately 1 mile through the and causing structural damage amid . Flooding events have been particularly destructive; Tropical Storm Ida in September 2021 produced record flash floods, with over 3 inches of rain per hour overwhelming drainage systems, leading to drownings in apartments and widespread urban inundation across the Bronx. Similarly, Superstorm Sandy on October 29, 2012, generated storm surges up to 14 feet in nearby areas, causing power outages affecting over 8,000 Bronx households and exacerbating along the Hutchinson River. Major snowstorms, such as the March 1993 , deposited up to 27 inches of snow in the region, paralyzing transportation and contributing to infrastructure strain. Heat waves have also posed risks; historical data indicate over 1,500 heat-related deaths citywide in 1896 alone, with the registering temperatures up to 8°F higher than wealthier neighborhoods due to the effect and limited green space. Long-term climate trends in the Bronx mirror broader New York patterns, with average temperatures rising nearly 2.5°F since the early , driven primarily by anthropogenic . This warming has manifested in fewer extreme cold days and more frequent heat episodes, with records (representative of the metro area) showing a 0.2°F per decade increase in annual mean temperature from 1895 to present. trends indicate a shift toward heavier events, with the frequency of days exceeding 2 inches of rain increasing by about 70% since 1950, heightening risks in the borough's impervious surfaces and aging . Winter has trended wetter with more rain than snow, reducing snowpack duration by roughly 2 weeks since the mid-, while overall annual totals have risen modestly by 5-10%. These changes, corroborated by NOAA analyses, amplify vulnerabilities in low-lying areas like Hunts Point, where combined (about 1 foot since 1900) and intensified storms threaten chronic flooding.

History

Indigenous and colonial periods

The Bronx region was inhabited for millennia by indigenous peoples, primarily the (also spelled Wiechquaeskeck or Weckquaesgeek), a Munsee-speaking band affiliated with the broader () confederacy. These groups maintained semi-permanent villages such as Keskeskeck along the and utilized the area's woodlands, rivers, and fertile soils for hunting, fishing, gathering, and small-scale agriculture, including the cultivation of corn, beans, and squash in association with dwellings. The referred to the Bronx River as Aakwaaxunung, reflecting its role in their seasonal migrations and resource exploitation across the Hudson's east bank from present-day northward into Westchester County. Population estimates for these bands in the early are imprecise but suggest several hundred individuals in the immediate Bronx vicinity, sustained by a that emphasized mobility and kinship-based rather than fixed territorial ownership. European contact began in the early 1600s through Dutch exploration under the colony, sponsored by the , which sought and agricultural expansion. In 1639, , a Swedish immigrant employed by Dutch interests, purchased roughly 500 acres from sachems near the confluence, establishing the first documented European farmstead and introducing plowed-field cultivation that altered local ecosystems. This tract, dubbed Bronck's Land (later evolving into "the Bronx"), served as a tobacco and outpost, though Bronck died in 1643 amid escalating tensions, including (1640–1645), a series of Dutch- conflicts driven by trade disputes, livestock incursions, and retaliatory raids that decimated indigenous populations through violence and introduced diseases. Additional Dutch acquisitions, such as Adriaen van der Donck's 1646 purchase of the expansive Colen Donck plantation encompassing northern Bronx lands, formalized European claims via deeds that interpreted indigenous permissions for use as outright conveyance, facilitating further settlement but sparking disputes over overlapping land rights. The English seizure of New Netherland in August 1664, achieved without major resistance through naval blockade and negotiated surrender, transferred the Bronx area to British provincial authority as part of Yorkshire (later Westchester County), preserving much of its rural character under manorial grants. Early English patentees like the Morris family established Morrisania in 1676 as a 1,900-acre estate focused on wheat milling, dairying, and tenant farming with enslaved labor, exemplifying patroon-like holdings that consolidated arable lowlands while indigenous remnants were marginalized or displaced northward. Similarly, the Van Cortlandt family's 1697 acquisition of 1,000 acres in the northwest Bronx developed into a plantation economy reliant on grain export to Manhattan, with fieldstone manors housing overseers and laborers; by the mid-18th century, such estates dominated, producing surplus for New York City's growth amid a landscape of scattered hamlets and minimal urban nucleation. Through the colonial era to 1776, the Bronx remained agrarian, with population growth tied to English immigration and trade, though Revolutionary War skirmishes in 1776 devastated farms during the Battle of Pell's Point.

19th-century rural to urban transition

In the early , the area that would become the Bronx remained predominantly rural, characterized by scattered farms, estates, and small villages such as West Farms, Morrisania, and , all part of Westchester County. These settlements supplied agricultural produce to , with the landscape dominated by open farmland recovering from Revolutionary War destruction and supporting a sparse population. Transportation advancements began eroding this isolation. The New York and Harlem Railroad extended service across the into the Bronx following a charter amendment permitting operations in Westchester County, facilitating freight and passenger movement from . Bridges over the , including early structures like the 1814 Macombs Dam and later swing bridges, improved connectivity, though navigability challenges persisted until late-century modifications. These links drew initial commuters and speculators, converting some estates into suburban lots. The pivotal shift occurred with the 1874 annexation of the —lands west of the Bronx River, encompassing the towns of West Farms, Morrisania, and —into as the 23rd and 24th wards. This incorporation, driven by 's expansion needs and local growth pressures, integrated the area under municipal governance, enabling systematic street planning and services like Croton water distribution. Affluent residents increasingly relocated for spacious homes, boosting property values and subdividing farms into residential plots. By the 1880s and 1890s, accelerated with elevated rail expansions, such as the Third Avenue line in , and electrified streetcars by 1892, which spurred construction booms near stations. Farmland rapidly yielded to city lots, with property values doubling between 1890 and 1895; the 1895 annexation of territories further embedded the region in New York City's framework. This era marked the causal pivot from agrarian periphery to burgeoning urban extension, propelled by infrastructural integration rather than isolated local initiative.

Annexation to New York City and early 20th-century expansion

In 1874, the towns of , West Farms, and Morrisania—comprising the area west of the Bronx River—were annexed from Westchester County to , forming the initial "Annexed District" and marking the first expansion of the city beyond . This annexation addressed the pressures of 's population overflow and the need for coordinated urban infrastructure, including , sewers, and roads, as rural Westchester lacked the capacity to support rapid suburban development spurred by rail connections like the New York and Railroad. The annexation of the in 1895 incorporated the remaining towns east of the Bronx River, completing the territorial unification of the modern under New York City's jurisdiction ahead of the 1898 consolidation that created the five- . Driven by similar imperatives of growth and administrative efficiency, this step facilitated the extension of and planning, such as the development of grand boulevards and parks under the influence of figures like John Mullaly, who advocated for open spaces to counter . The combined annexations shifted from fragmented townships to centralized city control, enabling large-scale investments in connectivity, including bridges over the like the Washington Bridge (completed 1889) and later the Broadway Bridge (1900). These annexations laid the groundwork for explosive early 20th-century expansion, as subway extensions—such as the IRT's White Plains Road Line in 1904 and the Jerome Avenue Line in 1918—dramatically improved access from , catalyzing residential and commercial development. Population surged from 200,379 in 1900 to 732,016 by 1920 and 1,265,258 by 1930, reflecting influxes of European immigrants seeking in new apartment blocks and row houses along emerging corridors like the Grand Concourse. This era saw the transformation from semi-rural enclaves to dense urban fabric, with infrastructure like elevated rail spurs and streetcar lines supporting industrial pockets in areas such as Hunts Point, though uneven development left some eastern sections slower to urbanize due to and limited transit. The growth underscored causal links between transit investment and density: each major line opening correlated with immediate spikes in land values and construction, as proximity to reduced commuting barriers and attracted working-class families priced out of .

Post-World War II prosperity and initial decline

Following , the Bronx benefited from New York's broader postwar economic expansion, characterized by surging employment in and consumer goods production, which supported a growing . Apartment construction boomed in the , with high-rise developments like Parkchester offering affordable housing that embodied the "" for working-class families, particularly Jewish, Italian, and Irish communities. The borough's population reached its historical peak of approximately 1.45 million by , reflecting influxes of returning veterans and migrants seeking urban opportunities. This prosperity was underpinned by stable infrastructure and cultural landmarks, including the New York Yankees' dominance in , which drew crowds to and reinforced the borough's identity as a hub of American success. However, early fissures emerged in the late as began to wane due to and relocation, straining local jobs. Suburbanization accelerated via federal highway funding and low-interest mortgages, enabling white middle-class residents to depart for areas like Westchester County, initiating demographic shifts toward higher proportions of and Puerto Rican newcomers. The construction of the Cross-Bronx Expressway, initiated in 1948 under , exacerbated these trends by demolishing vibrant neighborhoods like East Tremont, displacing over 60,000 residents and businesses by the early . This project fragmented communities, depressed property values in adjacent areas, and facilitated further out-migration, as , and severed social ties eroded quality of life. Landlords, facing rising vacancies and maintenance costs amid fleeing tenants, increasingly neglected tenements, setting the stage for physical deterioration. Government policies prioritizing expressway development over neighborhood preservation contributed causally to this initial unraveling, prioritizing automobile access for suburban commuters over urban cohesion.

1970s-1980s urban decay and fiscal crisis

The New York City fiscal crisis peaked in 1975, when the municipal government neared bankruptcy after years of overspending, high debt, and declining tax revenues amid economic stagnation. The Bronx, already burdened by higher poverty rates and weaker economic base than other boroughs, suffered disproportionately from resulting austerity measures, including layoffs of 61,000 public-sector workers citywide and sharp cuts to services like fire protection and policing. These reductions exacerbated physical deterioration, as response times for emergencies lengthened in under-resourced areas. Deindustrialization accelerated job losses in the Bronx, a former hub, with the city overall shedding approximately 500,000 positions between 1969 and 1975 due to global competition, , and to lower-cost regions. in the soared above the city average, reaching levels that trapped residents in while middle-class families—predominantly white and upwardly mobile—fled to suburbs, contributing to a population drop from 1,472,216 in 1970 to 1,203,789 in 1980, a decline of over 18 percent. This exodus left behind a concentrated , straining remaining and fostering vacancy in multi-family housing. Widespread abandonment and ravaged the , where over 40 percent of housing stock was burned or derelict by 1980, displacing around 250,000 people. Forty-four census tracts lost more than half their buildings, and seven tracts saw over 97 percent destruction, often in fires set by landlords seeking payouts on unprofitable properties burdened by rent controls and unpaid taxes—though official data indicate accounted for less than 7 percent of total fires, concentrated in already vacant structures. Crime rates in the Bronx escalated dramatically, with murders rising from 141 in 1967 to 390 in 1972, and the borough recording the city's highest per-capita violent offenses by the late 1970s amid gang activity and drug trade precursors. Federal attention, such as President Jimmy Carter's 1977 tour of charred ruins alongside Mayor Abraham Beame, highlighted the crisis but yielded limited aid, as national priorities shifted away from urban bailouts. Recovery stalled until the 1990s, when policy shifts like stricter policing began addressing root causes of disorder.

Late 20th-century to present revitalization efforts

Revitalization efforts in the Bronx gained momentum in the late 1980s through targeted housing and public safety initiatives. Mayor Ed Koch's Ten-Year Housing Plan, launched in 1982, focused on rehabilitating derelict properties and constructing new affordable units, laying groundwork for recovery in areas like the . By 1994, over $1 billion in public investments had refurbished 19,000 apartments and built more than 2,500 new housing units in the , replacing many fire-damaged structures from prior decades. Policing reforms under Mayor and NYPD Commissioner , including data-driven management and broken windows enforcement, drove a sustained decline starting in the mid-1990s. in the Bronx fell by nearly 75 percent from 1990 levels, with homicides reaching 91 in 2018—the lowest since the 1960s. These measures, emphasizing proactive enforcement against minor offenses to prevent major crimes, contrasted with earlier permissive approaches and correlated with broader by restoring public order and attracting investment. Community-led efforts also earned the the National Civic League's in 1997, recognizing collaborative projects in , , and . The 2000s saw population stabilization and growth after decades of net loss, with the borough adding residents amid improved safety and housing stock. Major projects like the new , opened in 2009 adjacent to the original site, generated construction jobs, boosted local commerce, and anchored revitalization in the neighborhood through associated developments. Initiatives such as delivered over 2,000 mixed-income homes by the , emphasizing community involvement to avoid displacement. In the 2010s and 2020s, expanded significantly, with projects like (completed 2012) introducing 222 sustainable mixed-income units on a former brownfield, promoting health-focused design and . Economic diversification included craft breweries—such as Bronx Brewery (2013)—and retail hubs under the Bronx Overall Corporation, fostering job creation in and services. The borough's grew by about 6 percent from 2000 to 2014, reflecting these gains, though challenges persist in high poverty rates and uneven post-pandemic recovery, with some areas lagging in income growth.

Administrative Divisions

Borough governance structure

The Bronx operates within New York City's centralized governance framework, where borough-level administration supports but does not supersede citywide executive and legislative authority vested in the and City Council. The Borough President, elected borough-wide for a four-year term coinciding with mayoral elections, holds a primarily advisory role focused on local advocacy and coordination. Vanessa L. Gibson, a Democrat, has served as Bronx Borough President since January 1, 2022, following her election in November 2021; she secured the Democratic nomination for re-election in the June 24, 2025, primary. Under Chapter 4 of the , the Borough President's powers include commenting on land-use matters before the City Planning Commission, participating in the annual to prioritize borough needs, chairing the Board, and appointing community board members. These responsibilities, however, were curtailed by 1989 charter amendments that eliminated the presidents' over City Council and reduced their budgetary discretion to a small allocation—approximately $1.3 million annually as of recent fiscal years—for discretionary grants. The office also issues an annual strategic statement assessing borough conditions and recommending improvements. The Borough Board, chaired by the Borough President, consists of the president, all City Council members from the Bronx (15 as of 2025), and the chairs of the borough's 12 community boards. This body holds public hearings at least quarterly to review city services, capital projects, and community needs, submitting reports and recommendations to the and City Council. At the neighborhood level, 12 community boards—each aligned to a city-defined —serve as advisory bodies on issues like variances, service complaints, and budget priorities. Membership, limited to 50 volunteers per board, is appointed by the Borough President, with at least half selected from nominations by the relevant City Council member; residents aged 16 or older who live, work, or own property in the district are eligible. While boards review liquor licenses and land-use applications, their input is non-binding, relying on influence through public advocacy and city agency engagement. City Council members from the Bronx's 15 districts handle legislative representation, enacting local laws and allocating funds through committees, while executive functions like policing, sanitation, and fall under mayoral-appointed agencies with borough-specific offices. This promotes uniformity across but has drawn criticism for diluting local responsiveness, as evidenced by historical pushes to restore greater .

Major neighborhoods and subregions

The Bronx encompasses over 50 distinct neighborhoods, informally grouped into the West Bronx west of the Bronx River and the East Bronx to its east, with further subdivisions into 12 community districts administered by for local planning and services. These districts aggregate smaller neighborhoods, such as Community District 8 in the northwest, which includes Riverdale, , Fieldston, Spuyten Duyvil, Marble Hill, and Van Cortlandt Village, characterized by a mix of single-family homes, apartments, and green spaces near . Riverdale, in particular, stands out for its higher median household income of approximately $120,000 as of 2020 census data, attracting families due to top-rated schools and waterfront views along the Hudson. In the central West Bronx, Community District 5 covers Morris Heights, University Heights, and parts of Fordham, areas historically marked by dense multi-family housing and proximity to institutions like , though facing challenges with vacancy rates exceeding 10% in some blocks per 2020 assessments. Further south, the Southwest Bronx includes industrial-heavy zones like Mott Haven and Port Morris in Community District 1, where and wholesale dominate , with over 20% of used for industry as of 2015 NYC planning reports, alongside recent drawing artists and tech startups. Adjacent Hunts Point in Community District 2 hosts the city's largest food distribution center, processing 60% of New York metro's produce and supporting 20,000 jobs, but grapples with high poverty rates above 30%. The East Bronx features expansive residential areas, including Co-op City in Community Districts 9 and 11, a 320-acre development built in 1968-1973 housing about 55,000 people in 35 high-rises and 7,450 townhouses, representing one of the densest yet low-rise planned communities in the U.S. Nearby, Pelham Bay and offer suburban-style living with access to , New York City's largest at 2,772 acres, while City Island, a subregion, maintains a small-town maritime vibe with restaurants and clubs despite its urban borough context. In the southeast, Soundview and Castle Hill consist primarily of 1960s-era projects managed by NYCHA, accommodating over 40% of local residents and reflecting concentrated low-income demographics with median incomes under $30,000. Central hubs like The Hub at East 149th Street, spanning parts of Community Districts 1 and 2, serve as a commercial nexus with retail density supporting daily foot traffic of tens of thousands, though plagued by elevated indices double the city average in recent NYPD statistics. Belmont, known as the "Little Italy of the Bronx," in Community District 6, thrives on Italian-American heritage with Arthur Avenue's markets drawing 1.5 million visitors annually pre-pandemic, sustaining family-owned businesses amid broader borough revitalization. These neighborhoods illustrate the Bronx's patchwork of socioeconomic conditions, from revitalizing industrial corridors to stable middle-class enclaves.

East Bronx vs. West Bronx distinctions

The Bronx is informally divided into East and West sections by the Bronx River, which serves as the primary geographical boundary running north-south through the borough. The West Bronx encompasses areas west of the river, including neighborhoods such as Riverdale, Fordham, and Mott Haven, while the covers territories to the east, such as Pelham Bay, Throgs Neck, and Co-op City. This division reflects historical annexation patterns, with the West Bronx incorporated into New York City in 1874 and the following in 1895. Geographically, the West Bronx features hillier terrain associated with its proximity to the Palisades, contributing to varied topography and earlier settlement patterns, whereas the consists of flatter coastal plains along , fostering more expansive residential developments. Urban form differs markedly: the developed as denser, more industrial and commercial hubs during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, with street grids oriented around as a north-south divider for naming conventions. In contrast, the underwent significant post-World War II suburbanization, exemplified by large-scale cooperative housing projects like Co-op City, completed in 1971 and housing over 55,000 residents in high-rise and units, which emphasized planned communities over traditional row houses. Demographically and socioeconomically, the tends toward more stable, middle-class enclaves with lower population densities—averaging around 20,000 residents per square mile in areas like the Northeast Bronx compared to over 40,000 in central districts—and higher homeownership rates in suburban pockets such as City Island. Neighborhoods in the , including those along the coast, exhibit relatively lower rates; for instance, Pelham Bay reported 4.2 violent crimes per 1,000 residents in recent NYPD data, versus 7.5 in precincts like the 44th, which fall within the West. stock in the includes more single-family homes and mid-rise apartments, supporting median household incomes around 50,00050,000-60,000 in districts like CD 11, exceeding the borough average of $43,000 from 2020 figures, while areas like Highbridge struggle with higher poverty concentrations above 30%. These distinctions stem from differential access to waterfront amenities, investments, and migration patterns, with the East attracting families seeking quieter environments amid the borough's overall urbanization pressures.

Demographics

The Bronx experienced rapid population growth during the early 20th century following its annexation to New York City in 1874 and 1895, expanding from approximately 200,507 residents in 1900 to a peak of 1,451,277 in 1950, driven by immigration, subway development, and affordable housing construction. This surge reflected broader urbanization trends, with the borough's population more than doubling between 1910 and 1930 alone. Post-1950, the population declined steadily through the late , falling to 1,169,115 by 1990 amid high rates, , and white outmigration to suburbs, which reduced the resident base by over 20% from its midpoint peak. Stabilization and modest rebound occurred from the onward, with the population reaching 1,332,650 in 2000 and climbing to 1,472,654 by the 2020 census, fueled by Hispanic and limited new housing amid constrained supply. Between 2000 and 2023, annual growth averaged 0.08%, though fluctuations included a 3% rise from 2019 to 2020.
Census YearPopulation
1900200,507
1920732,016
19401,394,711
19501,451,277
19701,472,781
19901,169,115
20101,385,108
20201,472,654
At 1,472,654 residents over 42 square miles of land area, the Bronx maintains one of the highest population densities in the United States, approximately 35,060 persons per square mile as of 2020, exceeded only by Manhattan and Brooklyn among New York City boroughs. This density, sustained despite historical depopulation, stems from multi-family housing stock and limited green space, contributing to infrastructure strain but also urban vitality in areas like Co-op City. Recent trends show density holding steady around 33,000–35,000 per square mile, with growth concentrated in eastern and northern sections.

Racial, ethnic, and linguistic composition

As of the , the racial composition of Bronx County (constituting the borough of the Bronx) included 32.1% identifying as Black or African American alone, 14.9% as alone, 4.2% as Asian alone, 0.6% as American Indian and Alaska Native alone, 0.1% as Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander alone, and 3.6% as two or more races. Separately, 56.4% of the population identified as or Latino of any race, the highest proportion among New York City's boroughs, reflecting substantial immigration from . comprised 9.0% of residents. Among Hispanic residents, form the largest subgroup, historically concentrated in areas like the due to mid-20th-century migration waves from the island. Dominicans represent a growing segment, particularly in neighborhoods such as Fordham and Tremont, driven by chain migration from the onward. Other Hispanic groups include , , and , though each constitutes under 5% borough-wide; these populations often cluster in specific enclaves, contributing to localized ethnic economies like bodegas and Latin American restaurants. The Black population is predominantly non-Hispanic African American (around 29%), with significant ancestry from , , and , evident in communities around Morrisania and East Tremont. Asian residents, mainly from (e.g., Bangladeshi in Parkchester) and , remain a small but increasing minority at 4%. Linguistically, the Bronx is characterized by widespread use of non-English languages, particularly Spanish, reflecting its majority. Approximately 53% of residents aged 5 and older speak a other than English at home, with Spanish accounting for the vast majority of these cases—over 60% of households in some estimates—often alongside English in bilingual settings. Other languages include Indo-European tongues like Bengali and in immigrant pockets, alongside African languages from migrants, though English remains the dominant public . affects about 30% of the population, correlating with recent and lower socioeconomic outcomes in certain neighborhoods.
Demographic Group (2020 Census)Percentage
Hispanic or Latino (any race)56.4%
Black or African American alone32.1%
White alone14.9%
Asian alone4.2%
Two or more races3.6%
Non-Hispanic White9.0%

Socioeconomic metrics: income, poverty, and family structure

The median household income in the Bronx County was $49,036 for the period 2019–2023, reflecting a 4.25% increase from the prior year but remaining approximately 39% below the New York City median of $79,480. Per capita income during the same period stood at $24,010, underscoring persistent economic disparities relative to national figures. Poverty affected 26.9% of the in 2023, a slight 0.119% rise from the previous year and over double the U.S. rate of 12.5%, with the Bronx exhibiting the highest rate among New York City boroughs at 26.5%. This rate equates to roughly 380,000 individuals living below the federal line, concentrated in areas with limited access to high-wage employment sectors. Family structure metrics reveal a predominance of single-parent households, with 59.2% of households containing children under 18 headed by a in 2023, based on five-year estimates. This configuration, largely female-headed (over 80% nationally for single-parent groups), correlates with heightened poverty risks due to reliance on one income source amid high living costs. Overall, the Bronx comprised 530,067 in 2019–2023, averaging 2.57 persons per household, lower than the citywide norm and indicative of smaller units often tied to economic pressures.
MetricBronx County (2023)Comparison (U.S./NYC)
Median Household Income$49,036U.S.: ~$75,000; NYC: $79,480
Poverty Rate26.9%U.S.: 12.5%; NYC: ~17–18%
Single-Parent Households with Children59.2%(No direct comparison; national single-parent family groups ~80% female-headed)
These indicators highlight structural economic vulnerabilities, with income growth lagging inflation-adjusted needs and family fragmentation exacerbating dependency on public assistance programs.

Immigration waves and integration challenges

The Bronx experienced significant early 20th-century immigration from , including Irish, Italian, German, and Eastern European Jewish populations, who contributed to industrial growth and neighborhood development amid rapid . These groups often integrated through work and homeownership, though initial challenges included overcrowding and ethnic tensions in emerging enclaves. Post-World War II marked the onset of substantial Puerto Rican migration, with the "Great Migration" peaking in the 1950s as economic opportunities drew over a million from the island, many settling in the South Bronx. By 1966, Puerto Ricans comprised a majority in the South Bronx, transforming demographics but straining housing and infrastructure amid deindustrialization. Subsequent waves from the and other nations accelerated in the 1970s and 1980s, with the Bronx hosting nearly half of New York City's Dominican immigrants by the late 2010s. Dominicans, now forming 64% of the Bronx's Latinx immigrant population, concentrated in areas like Fordham and Tremont, bolstering small businesses but reinforcing ethnic enclaves. Overall, foreign-born residents reached 33.7% of the borough's 1.4 million population by 2023, predominantly from (76%), followed by smaller African and Asian cohorts. Integration has been hindered by persistent socioeconomic barriers, including high rates—21% among Dominican immigrants versus 12% for natives nationally—and concentration in low-wage service and jobs averaging under $12,000 annually for Dominican families in earlier decades. Language barriers and exacerbate educational gaps, with schools facing influxes of requiring bilingual support and , contributing to lower graduation rates in immigrant-heavy districts. Cultural enclaves have slowed assimilation, fostering reliance on mutual aid networks amid economic uncertainty rather than broad economic mobility, while correlations between poverty, family instability, and localized crime in immigrant neighborhoods underscore policy shortcomings in skills training and family support. These dynamics, evident in elevated welfare dependency and youth justice involvement, reflect causal links from disrupted family structures during migration and inadequate pre-arrival preparation, rather than inherent cultural deficits.

Economy

Traditional industries and employment sectors

The Bronx's traditional industries, dominant from the mid-19th to mid-20th centuries, centered on and waterfront , leveraging the borough's proximity to the and . Iron foundries and led this development, with the J. L. Mott Iron Works—founded by inventor Jordan L. Mott in 1828 and expanded into the Mott Haven area—producing cast-iron stoves, bathtubs, plumbing fixtures, and architectural ornaments. The firm secured over 50 patents between 1832 and 1857 for innovations like coal-fired cooking stoves and furnaces, employing hundreds and spurring residential growth in what became an industrial hub. Brewing emerged as another key sector, fueled by German immigration, with clusters of operations along . Establishments like the Henry Zeltner Brewing Company (1860–1909) and (from 1856) produced and ales, drawing on local water sources and immigrant labor; by 1900, at least seven breweries operated within a 20-block radius near Franklin and Eagle Avenues, providing steady employment in production, distribution, and related trades. Maritime activities, including ship and boat building, concentrated on City Island and Port Morris, where yards constructed smaller vessels and yachts. The David Carll Shipyard, established in 1862, transitioned post-Civil War to commercial boatbuilding, supporting repair, outfitting, and construction jobs tied to New York Harbor's trade. Warehousing and shipping along the borough's 80-plus miles of waterfront complemented these, handling goods for regional distribution. These industries shaped employment sectors dominated by blue-collar labor in (encompassing , as a beverage subset, and light assembly), transportation, and wholesale trade. In 1950, manufacturing represented nearly 33 percent of New York City's total jobs, with the Bronx's factories and foundries absorbing a comparable share of local workers before and relocation eroded the base. , including and early meat handling, played a supporting role, though secondary to until later wholesale markets developed.

Modern economic challenges: unemployment and welfare dependency

The Bronx has experienced persistently high rates compared to and national averages, exacerbating economic stagnation. In August 2025, the unemployment rate in Bronx County stood at 7.8%, significantly above the city's approximate 5% and the U.S. rate of around 4.1%. This figure reflects a labor force participation rate of about 57.7% among residents aged 16 and older, lower than the citywide 59.4%, indicating a substantial portion of the working-age population is neither employed nor actively seeking work. Limited local job opportunities in high-skill sectors, coupled with skill gaps from lower —where only about 20% of adults hold a or higher—contribute to structural . Welfare dependency remains acute, with public assistance programs sustaining a large share of households amid elevated poverty. The poverty rate reached 27.9% in 2023, the highest among NYC boroughs and more than double the national average of 11.5%, affecting over 370,000 residents. Approximately 7.5% of households received public assistance income between 2019 and 2023, while reliance on SNAP (food stamps) is widespread, with usage rates exceeding 30% in South Bronx neighborhoods like Mott Haven-Port Morris. This dependency is intergenerational in many cases, as single-parent households—comprising over 50% of families with children—face barriers to workforce entry due to childcare costs and limited vocational training, perpetuating cycles of reliance on programs like TANF and Section 8 housing vouchers. These challenges hinder self-sufficiency, as low labor force engagement correlates with chronic underinvestment in and policy incentives that can disincentivize through benefit cliffs. Median lagged at $48,610 in 2023, roughly 39% below the citywide $79,480, underscoring the borough's divergence from broader economic recovery post-COVID. Despite federal and state expansions of aid during the , which temporarily masked through enhanced benefits, reversion to pre-stimulus levels has revealed underlying frailties, with exceeding 15% in some tracts. Addressing this requires targeted interventions beyond redistribution, such as apprenticeships and family-stabilizing reforms, to break dependency patterns rooted in decades of and educational shortfalls.

Gentrification, real estate, and revitalization projects

The Bronx has experienced accelerated development since the early , positioning it as the leading for new by 2023, with substantial investments in and commercial properties driving property value increases. Average home values rose 4.0% year-over-year to $496,754 as of late 2025, while median sale prices reached $649,000, up 3.8% from the prior year. However, these trends have sparked concerns over displacement in areas like the , where rising rents—such as a 3.61% increase for studios to $2,150 in select neighborhoods by mid-2025—threaten long-term residents. Revitalization efforts emphasize affordable housing and infrastructure, exemplified by the Fordham Landing South project, which received $55 million in state funding in October 2025 to develop over 900 affordable units along the Harlem River, including a pedestrian bridge and public space enhancements. Similarly, the Bronx Point mixed-use initiative on the waterfront incorporates residential units, job creation, open spaces, and cultural facilities like the Universal Hip Hop Museum, transforming underutilized industrial land. In June 2025, a $81 million senior housing development with 117 units, including 37 supportive apartments, was completed under state-backed programs. The Melrose Commons master plan, initiated in the 1990s and ongoing, has produced inclusive housing through community-driven zoning and design, yielding thousands of units while preserving neighborhood character. Commercial real estate saw a rebound in the first half of 2025, with increased investment sales volume and transactions, bolstered by infrastructure like Metro-North expansions in areas such as Co-op City and Morris Park. A $20 million state investment in April 2025 targeted Greater Morris Park for economic transformation, including commercial upgrades. Zoning reforms under the City of Yes for Housing Opportunity, agreed upon in late 2024, aim to enable over 80,000 new homes borough-wide over 15 years by easing density restrictions. The Reimagine the plan, finalized in March 2025, proposes community reconnection and safety improvements to mitigate historical infrastructure divides. Despite these advances, challenges persist, including a 7% drop in some home prices by October 2025 and financial strains on affordable stock, with over 20% of citywide units at risk of insolvency.

Recent developments in housing and commercial investment

In 2024, the Bronx recorded the construction of over 6,500 new units, contributing to New York City's highest annual housing production since 1965, with a focus on affordable and mixed-income developments supported by city subsidies and public-private partnerships. This surge included numerous projects targeting low- and moderate-income households, such as the completion of Bronx Point at 575 Exterior Street, which delivered 542 affordable units in two buildings totaling 530,000 square feet, finished in 2023 but marking ongoing momentum into subsequent years. Similarly, the YP Senior Residence in Morris Heights added 117 units dedicated to low-income and formerly homeless seniors aged 55 and older, completed in June 2025 through state and city funding. Major waterfront and mixed-use initiatives advanced in 2024–2025, including Fordham Landing South along the , where Phase 1 provided 542 affordable units and a 2.8-acre public as part of a $349 million project unveiled in August 2025, with plans for over 900 total homes. The development, spanning five acres on former industrial land, progressed through three phases to deliver 740 affordable units alongside open space and a health center, emphasizing transformation of underutilized sites. In the area near , the 19-story 1159 River Avenue project introduced 245 mixed-use units in a building incorporating ground-floor retail. A proposed rezoning of a 46-block corridor in the , announced in August 2024, aims to enable approximately 7,000 new housing units near Morris Park, Van Nest, and Parkchester, prioritizing density increases along transit corridors to address supply shortages. Bronx assembly districts led citywide in affordable unit creation during this period, with over 27,000 such units produced across in 2024, a 10% rise from prior years, though reliant heavily on public incentives. Commercial real estate in the Bronx totaled $1.23 billion in for 2024 across 220 transactions, reflecting a 33% decline from 2023 but with development site rising 39% to $363.1 million, indicating sustained interest in ground-up opportunities amid recovering market conditions. The first half of 2025 saw a rebound, with reaching $1.07 billion, driven by multifamily properties; for instance, Q2 multifamily activity hit $497 million across 34 deals, a 389% quarter-over-quarter increase. Transaction surged 79% in Q1 2025 compared to the prior year, encompassing multifamily, retail, and industrial assets, while building trades numbered 71 in Q2 alone, signaling robust confidence in rental income potential despite broader economic pressures. These trends align with mixed-use revitalization efforts, such as the ongoing of sites like 1600 Macombs Road in Morris Heights, blending commercial activation with to leverage proximity to hubs and transit. Overall, while expansions emphasize affordability mandates, commercial inflows highlight opportunistic plays in undervalued properties, tempered by high costs and regulatory hurdles.

Crime and Public Safety

Historical surges in violence and property crime

The Bronx experienced significant surges in violent crime beginning in the late 1960s, with homicide counts rising from 141 in 1967 to 390 by 1972, nearly tripling over five years amid broader urban decay and population exodus. This escalation continued into the 1970s, fueled by factors including widespread arson that destroyed thousands of buildings, landlord abandonment, and a reduced police presence following the city's fiscal crisis and "planned shrinkage" policies, which cut the NYPD force to 22,000 officers by 1980. Property crimes, particularly burglaries and robberies, proliferated in abandoned structures, contributing to a cycle of neighborhood collapse, especially in the South Bronx where over 80% of the area was burned or vacated between 1970 and 1980. By the 1980s, violence intensified further with the crack cocaine epidemic, leading to heightened drug-related disputes and handgun proliferation; homicide totals reached 693 borough-wide in 1990, including 44 in the 41st Precinct alone, while reported robberies numbered 17,862 that year. The Bronx consistently recorded the highest rates of and among New York City's boroughs from 1985 onward, with these peaks reflecting not only interpersonal conflicts but also the breakdown of social controls in projects and territories. Property crime mirrored this trend, as economic desperation and depopulation—evident in a 57% population drop in core districts from 1970 to 1980—enabled rampant theft and vandalism in derelict properties. These surges abated post-1990, with declining nearly 75% by the 2010s, returning levels to 91 in 2018, comparable to 1960s figures before the uptick. However, the historical peaks underscored the borough's vulnerability to policy-driven neglect, including under-policing and failed initiatives that exacerbated abandonment and illicit economies.

Contemporary crime statistics and geographic hotspots

In 2024, the Bronx recorded 119 murders, reflecting an 8.4% decrease from 2022 but a rate of 81 per million residents, a 42% increase over pre-pandemic levels and the highest among New York City boroughs. Overall major index crimes in the Bronx rose 1.79% through mid-December 2024 compared to 2023, driven by increases in felony assaults and shootings, while citywide crime declined nearly 3%. Year-to-date through October 19, 2025, Bronx major crimes totaled 24,691, a slight 0.53% increase from the same period in 2024, with murders down 13.9% to 87 but rapes up 26.5% to 429 and felony assaults up 4.8% to 7,083. The Bronx maintains the highest rate among the five boroughs, at approximately 8.9 per 1,000 residents as of recent years, compared to the citywide average of 5.1 per 1,000. , encompassing violent and property offenses, stood at 20.1 per 1,000 residents in 2024, exceeding the citywide rate of 13.6. These figures remain elevated relative to historical lows from the 1990s, with total major crimes 62.1% below 1990 peaks but 12.3% above 2001 levels.
Major Crime Category2025 YTD (Jan-Oct 19)2024 Same Period% Change
87101-13.9%
429339+26.5%
3,9064,022-2.9%
Felony Assault7,0836,756+4.8%
2,2512,387-5.7%
Grand Larceny7,3817,550-2.2%
Grand Larceny Auto3,5543,407+4.3%
Total24,69124,562+0.53%
Geographic hotspots for concentrate in precincts, with six of New York City's top 10 violent crime areas located there in 2024. University Heights precinct reported the highest rate among these, while Highbridge and Fordham saw elevated shootings. Neighborhoods such as Hunts Point and Longwood exhibit violent crime rates of 13.6 per 1,000 residents, far exceeding borough and city averages, alongside Tremont, Morrisania, and East Tremont, which feature prominently in analyses of danger due to persistent , , and gang-related incidents. These areas account for disproportionate shares of assaults and robberies, with variations tied to precinct-level enforcement and socioeconomic factors.

Causal factors: policy failures, family breakdown, and gang activity

Government policies in the mid-20th century contributed significantly to the socioeconomic decay in the Bronx that enabled crime surges. The construction of the Cross-Bronx Expressway, completed in phases through the 1960s, displaced thousands of residents and disrupted stable communities, accelerating and disinvestment in areas like the . projects and high-rise concentrated , while and inadequate municipal responses to widespread in the 1970s—destroying over 80% of housing stock between 1970 and 1980—left vast areas abandoned, creating environments conducive to illegal activities. These policy shortcomings, including remote bureaucratic decision-making detached from local needs, fostered a cycle of neglect that correlated with rising property crimes and violence as economic opportunities evaporated. Family structure breakdown has exacerbated vulnerability to criminal involvement in the Bronx, where approximately 59% of households with children under 18 were headed by single parents as of the latest five-year estimates ending in 2023. Empirical data indicate that children from father-absent homes face elevated risks, including four times higher rates and up to 20 times greater likelihood of incarceration compared to those from intact families. This pattern aligns with broader correlations observed in the late 20th-century crime wave, where single-parent households were linked to increased and adult offending, independent of income controls in some analyses. In the Bronx, high single-parent prevalence, often tied to and urban policy-induced instability, has supplied a steady pool of at-risk prone to antisocial absent paternal guidance or stable supervision. Gang activity emerged as a direct response to these intertwined failures, organizing opportunistic crime in the power vacuum of the and . By , over 130 s operated there, responsible for more than 30 murders, 22 attempted homicides, 300 assaults, and numerous robberies, establishing the area as a hub of teenage gang dominance with at least 85 active groups. Groups like the recruited heavily from broken families and deindustrialized neighborhoods, perpetuating violence through territorial control, drug trafficking precursors, and extortion amid job losses and policy-driven abandonment. This gang proliferation intensified property and violent crimes, as unsupervised youth filled roles in rackets born from economic despair and familial voids, with broken homes providing fertile ground for gang affiliation over legitimate paths.

Policing strategies, reforms, and their outcomes

The New York Police Department (NYPD) introduced in 1994 as a computerized crime-tracking system emphasizing accountability, rapid deployment to hotspots, and , which precincts in the Bronx utilized to address persistent violence in areas like Mott Haven and Hunts Point; this approach correlated with a citywide 75% drop in overall crime from 1990 to 2016, including substantial reductions in Bronx homicides from 456 in 1990 to 122 by 2000. Broken windows policing, formalized under Mayor and Police Commissioner , directed Bronx officers to enforce quality-of-life violations such as public drinking and alongside serious offenses, yielding empirical declines in disorder and felonies; for instance, Bronx felony assaults fell 65% between 1994 and 2013, attributed by analysts to deterrence of escalation from minor infractions. Gang-focused initiatives supplemented these tactics, notably Operation Crew Cut launched in 2012, which used surveillance and raids to dismantle crews like the Bronx's "120" and "Taylor Avenue" groups, resulting in 103 initial indictments by for crimes including eight murders, 25 shootings, and drug trafficking, with subsequent phases charging 50 more members with and assaults. Outcomes included temporary disruptions to operations, though critics noted high rates and limited long-term violence reduction without addressing underlying socioeconomic drivers. A federal court ruling deemed NYPD stop-and-frisk practices unconstitutional due to , mandating reforms such as officer training, stop documentation audits, and a federal monitor; stops in the Bronx plummeted from over 50,000 in 2012 to under 5,000 by 2015, but compliance reports through 2024 highlighted persistent unconstitutional stops and minimal officer discipline, with only 1% of violations leading to penalties. Post-2020 reforms under Mayor , including 2020 budget cuts reducing NYPD funding by $1 billion (partially restored) and 2019 bail law changes eliminating cash bail for most misdemeanors and nonviolent felonies, aligned with a Bronx surge: murders rose 41% from 2019 to 2022, reaching 140 annually by 2021, while robberies and assaults increased over 40% in hotspots like Fordham and Highbridge. Under Mayor from 2022, strategies shifted toward "precision policing" with neighborhood safety teams and reinstated anti-gang units, prompting declines by mid-2025: Bronx shootings hit record lows with a 30% drop in incidents through June, homicides fell 20% year-to-date, and overall major crimes decreased 10% in January 2025 alone, though the borough's rate remained 8.9 per 1,000 residents in 2022—higher than the citywide 5.1—indicating uneven recovery amid ongoing challenges like from reduced . These results underscore that data-driven, enforcement-heavy tactics empirically lowered crime rates in prior decades, while reform-induced constraints on proactive stops and detention correlated with reversals, necessitating balanced approaches to sustain gains without eroding public safety.

Government and Politics

Local borough administration

The Bronx, as one of New York City's five boroughs, maintains a local administrative structure centered on the elected Bronx Borough President, who serves a four-year term and oversees borough-specific operations within the framework of the . The office, established under the 1989 Charter revision that curtailed some historical powers in favor of centralized city authority, focuses on advisory, planning, and community coordination roles rather than executive control. The Borough President appoints staff, recommends capital projects to the and City Council, holds public hearings on local issues, and comments on land-use applications and the annual budget. This structure emphasizes collaboration with the and City Council, with the Borough President lacking veto power or direct fiscal authority. Vanessa L. Gibson, a Democrat, has held the position since January 1, 2022, becoming the first woman and first African American to serve as Bronx Borough President; her term extends through December 31, 2025. Prior to her election, Gibson represented the 16th City Council District from 2014 to 2021 and worked as a legislative aide and district manager in the state assembly. Under her administration, the office maintains bureaus for borough operations, budget analysis, planning, and development, with a and general counsel supporting initiatives like economic growth recommendations and public safety enhancements outlined in the 2025 State of the Borough address. A key component of borough administration involves the 12 community boards, each comprising up to 50 volunteer members appointed by the Borough President—half nominated by local City Council members—who advise on land-use matters, , service delivery, and budget priorities without binding authority. The Borough President chairs the Borough Board, which includes community board chairs and City Council members, and the Borough Services Cabinet, facilitating coordination on across the borough's 1.4 million residents. These boards handle resident complaints, review development proposals, and represent local interests in city planning, though their influence remains advisory amid critiques of limited enforcement power in high-density urban challenges. The Bronx County , Darcel D. , elected in 2015 and reelected since, operates semi-independently as the chief local prosecutor, handling felony cases and working alongside the Borough President's office on community safety initiatives, but falls outside the core borough presidency structure. Overall, this administration model prioritizes localized input within New York City's unitary government, with ongoing debates over potential Charter amendments that could further consolidate powers at the mayoral level.

Federal, state, and city representation

The Bronx is represented in the primarily by the members of New York's 14th and 15th congressional districts. The 14th Congressional District, encompassing parts of the Bronx along with , is held by , a Democrat serving since 2019. The 15th Congressional District, which covers the majority of the Bronx, is represented by , a Democrat elected in 2020. Both districts have delivered overwhelming Democratic majorities in recent elections, with Torres securing 89% of the vote in 2022. In the New York State Senate, the Bronx spans four districts—32, 33, 34, and 36—all currently held by Democrats. Senator Gustavo Rivera represents the 33rd District, which includes areas like Highbridge and Morris Heights, while Senator Nathalia Fernandez holds the 34th District covering Co-op City and parts of Westchester County bordering the Bronx. These districts reflect the borough's consistent Democratic dominance, with no Republican incumbents as of 2025. The delegation from the Bronx consists of 13 members from districts 76 through 78, 80 through 85, and 86, uniformly Democrats. Notable representatives include Michael Benedetto (82nd District, Throgs Neck) and Chantel Jackson (79th District, though adjusted post-redistricting). This all-Democratic assembly bloc has prioritized local issues like and funding but faced criticism for limited innovation amid persistent socioeconomic challenges. At the city level, Vanessa L. Gibson serves as Bronx Borough President, a position she has held since winning election on November 2, 2021, with 70% of the vote; she sought re-election in the November 4, 2025, general election following a primary victory on June 24, 2025. The borough's nine districts (8, 11–18) are also exclusively Democratic, represented by figures such as Rafael Salamanca Jr. (17th District, , serving as Committee Chair) and Pierina Ana Sanchez (14th District, including Fordham). Council members advocate for reforms and public safety investments, though outcomes have varied amid borough-wide critiques.

Dominant political affiliations and policy impacts

The Bronx has maintained overwhelming Democratic dominance in and electoral outcomes for decades, with registered Democrats outnumbering Republicans by a ratio of approximately 10 to 1 as of November 2024. This affiliation traces back to the early , when Democratic machine politics under figures like Edward J. Flynn solidified control through patronage networks, enabling consistent victories in local, state, and federal races. All 15 Bronx City Council seats, the borough presidency, and congressional districts remain held by Democrats, reflecting minimal partisan competition. In presidential elections, this translates to lopsided margins, though recent cycles show erosion. secured 71.3% of the Bronx vote in 2020, compared to Donald Trump's 27.1%. By 2024, won the borough but with a reduced share, as Trump gained ground among working-class voters citing dissatisfaction with , , and local governance. Isolated Republican breakthroughs, such as Kristy Marmorato's 2023 assembly win—the first GOP victory in the Bronx in nearly two decades—highlight pockets of discontent, particularly in immigrant-heavy areas. Long-term Democratic policy priorities, including expansive social welfare programs and progressive reforms, have coincided with persistent socioeconomic challenges. The borough's rate stood at 27.9% in 2023, the highest in and more than double the national average, despite decades of federal and state aid funneled through Democratic-led initiatives. Major felony crimes in Bronx congressional districts rose 70% from 2019 to 2025, exceeding citywide increases, amid reforms like cashless enacted under Democratic state control in 2019, which critics link to elevated rates. policies emphasizing rent controls and public subsidies have sustained affordability for some but contributed to maintenance neglect and a shortage of new units, exacerbating at 1 in 45 residents as of 2023. These outcomes reflect causal patterns from one-party rule: entrenched has fostered scandals, as exposed in 2024 investigations revealing undisclosed spending by Bronx Democratic organizations, undermining . Economic policies prioritizing redistribution over incentives have not reversed structural declines, with median household income at $48,610 in 2023—39% below the city median—despite trillions in national antipoverty spending since the . While proponents attribute disparities to external factors like , empirical data show that Democratic strongholds like the Bronx lag comparable areas with diversified governance, suggesting policy inertia perpetuates dependency and underinvestment in formation.

Key controversies: corruption and electoral dynamics

The Bronx has experienced multiple high-profile scandals involving elected officials and party operatives, often linked to the borough's entrenched Democratic , which has dominated local governance for decades with minimal electoral competition. In 1987, former Bronx Borough President Stanley Simon was convicted of federal racketeering charges as part of the , which involved accepting bribes from the Wedtech Corporation in exchange for political favors, leading to his resignation and a prison sentence alongside other officials like U.S. Rep. . Similarly, in 2012, Bronx City Councilman Larry Seabrook was convicted on nine of 12 corruption counts for diverting over $1 million in public and nonprofit funds to personal associates and sham organizations, resulting in a five-year federal prison sentence in 2013. These cases exemplified patterns of and in Bronx politics, where control over discretionary funds and contracts facilitated self-enrichment amid limited oversight from rival parties. More recent controversies have intersected corruption with electoral processes, highlighting vulnerabilities in the borough's election administration. In August 2024, Bronx Democratic District Leader Jason Torres and New York City Board of Elections employee Nicole Torres were charged with bribery, extortion, fraud, and identity theft for a scheme from 2019 to 2024, in which they allegedly demanded kickbacks from individuals seeking temporary election-day jobs like poll workers, pocketing thousands while falsifying payroll records. Nicole Torres pleaded guilty in April 2025 to conspiracy charges, facing up to 40 years, while Jason Torres received a two-year sentence in September 2025 for related extortion and fraud; prosecutors noted the scheme exploited the Board's hiring process to reward political allies. This incident, investigated by the FBI and Department of Investigation's Public Corruption Unit, underscored how party insiders could manipulate electoral staffing for personal gain, potentially undermining public trust in vote administration. Electoral dynamics in the Bronx have fueled additional controversies, particularly allegations of and machine-style control by the Democratic , which endorses candidates in low-turnout primaries that effectively decide outcomes given the borough's 85-90% Democratic . A 2013 special Assembly election in the 80th District devolved into claims of ballot tampering and absentee vote irregularities, with the margin narrowing to 72 votes amid accusations that Democratic operatives stuffed boxes and pressured voters, though courts upheld the result after recounts. The party's recent endorsement of candidates with histories, such as a physician facing scam allegations, has drawn criticism for prioritizing loyalty over scrutiny, perpetuating a cycle where incumbents face little primary challenge—evident in turnout below 20% in many contests—and accountability relies heavily on federal intervention rather than local competition. Such dynamics, rooted in gerrymandered districts and networks, have historically insulated officials from reform, as seen in recurring federal probes into Bronx pols like Assemblyman William Boyland Jr., arrested in 2013 for bribery tied to election-related favors.

Education

K-12 public schools: enrollment and performance metrics

Public schools in the Bronx, operated by the Department of Education, enrolled 186,663 students in the 2023–24 school year, representing a significant portion of the borough's youth population amid ongoing demographic shifts and migration patterns. This figure reflects a slight decline from prior years, consistent with broader enrollment trends in high-poverty urban districts influenced by factors such as family mobility and competition from alternatives. Performance on standardized assessments remains low compared to citywide and statewide averages. In grades 3–8, proficiency rates on the 2022–23 New York State English Language Arts exams averaged 43.6% across Bronx traditional public schools, trailing charter schools in the borough by over 25 percentage points and highlighting persistent gaps in foundational literacy skills. Math proficiency for the same cohort and grade band similarly underperformed, with district-level data from areas like District 11 showing rates below 40% in many schools, attributable to high chronic absenteeism rates exceeding 40% in some facilities and socioeconomic challenges rather than instructional deficits alone. These metrics, derived from state-administered tests aligned to Next Generation Learning Standards, underscore a proficiency crisis where fewer than half of students meet grade-level expectations, contrasting with New York State's overall rates of around 48% in ELA and 52% in math. High school outcomes show modest improvement but lag behind benchmarks. The four-year adjusted cohort graduation rate for Bronx public high schools averaged 83% for recent classes, lower than the state average of 89% and reflecting elevated dropout risks in districts like District 7 (72%) due to issues such as accumulation failures and transfers to alternative programs. Borough-wide, about 78% of students in select cohorts graduated on time, with disparities evident for subgroups including learners (below 60%) and students with disabilities (around 68%), per NYC Department of Education audits. These rates incorporate local diplomas and waivers, potentially inflating figures amid debates over rigor, as evidenced by rising reliance on recovery rather than mastery-based advancement.
MetricBronx Public Schools (2022–23/2023–24)NYC AverageNYS Average
Enrollment186,663~1,000,000~2,240,000
Grades 3–8 ELA Proficiency43.6%~50%48%
Grades 3–8 Math Proficiency~40% (district est.)~46%52%
4-Year HS Graduation Rate83%83%89%
Data aggregated from NYSED and NYC DOE sources; proficiency varies by district, with lower-performing areas like District 10 showing steeper declines.

Charter schools, private options, and alternatives

Charter schools in the Bronx have expanded significantly, with enrollment rising 33% from the 2019-20 to 2023-24 school years amid stagnant or declining district school populations. As of 2023-24, these publicly funded but independently managed institutions served over 20,000 students across approximately 40 Bronx campuses, often prioritizing high-needs areas with long waitlists reflecting parental demand. Networks like Success Academy and Public Prep exemplify this growth, emphasizing extended school days, rigorous curricula, and data-driven instruction, which correlate with outcomes surpassing local district averages. Performance metrics underscore charter efficacy in the Bronx context. On 2024 state exams, Bronx students outperformed district peers by 25 percentage points in both math and reading proficiency, with networks like Public Prep achieving 33% higher pass rates in English language arts and compared to surrounding zoned schools. Four-year high school graduation rates reached 81.3% for charters versus 76.8% for traditional publics, alongside near-100% high school matriculation for middle school graduates from select Bronx charter networks. These gains persist after controlling for demographics, attributable to operational flexibility rather than selective admissions, as charters maintain open lotteries and serve similar proportions of low-income and English learner populations. Private schools offer limited alternatives in the Bronx, enrolling roughly 5,000-6,000 students borough-wide as of recent estimates, predominantly in Catholic and parochial institutions. Elite options like , a coeducational spanning nursery through grade 12, serve about 1,300 students with selective admissions and tuition exceeding $50,000 annually, yielding high placement but accessibility constrained by cost and geography. Smaller parochial schools, such as St. Ignatius School with 76 students and a 100% minority enrollment, provide faith-based at lower costs but face enrollment pressures from demographic shifts. Unlike charters, private options lack public funding mandates, leading to variable outcomes without standardized . Other alternatives include , which New York State permits under a notice-of-intent process, though Bronx-specific data remains sparse with citywide filings under 2,000 annually; supplemental online programs can integrate into homeschool plans but do not confer state-recognized diplomas independently. Transfer high schools and Young Adult Borough Centers cater to overage/undercredited students, emphasizing remediation with graduation rates around 50-60%, serving as last-resort options for those disengaged from mainstream settings. No broad programs exist in New York as of 2025, limiting portability of public funds to non-district providers despite advocacy for expansion to enhance choice in underperforming areas.

Higher education institutions and vocational training

The Bronx hosts a range of higher education institutions, predominantly public colleges within the (CUNY) system, alongside private universities emphasizing liberal arts, professional, and STEM programs. These institutions serve a diverse body, with significant enrollment from local and Black populations, reflecting the borough's demographics. , a CUNY senior college established in 1968 from earlier extension programs dating to 1931, functions as a key academic hub promoting through bachelor's and master's degrees in fields like , , and . , a private Jesuit institution founded in 1841, operates its Rose Hill campus in the Bronx, offering undergraduate and graduate programs to approximately 11,000 undergraduates across its schools, with strengths in law, , and sciences. Other notable colleges include Bronx Community College (BCC), a CUNY two-year institution founded in 1957 with a fall 2023 enrollment of 6,465 students focused on associate degrees and transfer pathways in health sciences, engineering, and liberal arts. Hostos Community College, another CUNY community college opened in 1970 to address bilingual education needs, provides associate degrees and certificates emphasizing allied health and liberal studies. Manhattan College, a private Lasallian Catholic school in Riverdale founded in 1853, specializes in engineering, education, and business with a campus serving undergraduates in a suburban Bronx setting. The University of Mount Saint Vincent, a private liberal arts college established in 1847, offers bachelor's and master's programs in nursing, education, and humanities from its Riverdale campus overlooking the Hudson River. Monroe College, a private institution with a Bronx campus, delivers career-oriented associate, bachelor's, and master's degrees in culinary arts, health, and IT.
InstitutionTypeFoundedApproximate EnrollmentPrimary Focus Areas
Public (CUNY)19576,465 (fall 2023)Associate degrees, workforce prep
Private Jesuit184111,000 undergrads totalLiberal arts, business, sciences
Public (CUNY senior)1968Not specified in recent reportsBachelor's/master's in education, health
Manhattan CollegePrivate Catholic1853Not specified in recent reports, business, education
Private liberal arts1847Not specified in recent reports, humanities, teacher prep
Vocational training in the Bronx emphasizes practical skills for entry-level employment, often through tuition-free or low-cost programs targeting underserved populations. The SUNY Bronx Educational Opportunity Center (EOC), located in the Bathgate Industrial Park, delivers no-cost vocational certificates in patient care technician, certified nursing assistant, medical assistant, and barbering, alongside high school equivalency preparation. Bronx Community College's Workforce Development and Continuing Education division offers affordable training in building trades, computer technology, healthcare, EMT certification, and food safety to support job placement. The South Bronx Job Corps Center provides free residential training for youth aged 16-24 in areas like healthcare, construction, and culinary arts, including GED attainment and career counseling. Organizations like BronxWorks and Commonpoint Queens (with Bronx programs) run sector-specific initiatives in construction, CDL licensing, and allied health for opportunity youth and adults, often integrating job referrals and financial coaching. These programs address local labor demands but face challenges from high dropout rates and limited articulation to degree programs, as evidenced by broader CUNY community college persistence data.

Systemic issues: funding, outcomes, and reform debates

New York City public schools, including those in the Bronx, receive substantial through a combination of city, state, and federal sources, with the Department of Education's total reaching $41.2 billion for the 2024-2025 school year. Per-pupil spending in NYC is projected at $42,168 for the same period, the highest , exceeding the national average by a wide margin despite ongoing enrollment declines. The Fair Student Funding formula, implemented in 2007, allocates resources based on student needs such as learners and requirements, directing higher amounts to high-poverty districts like the Bronx. However, critics argue that this system perpetuates inefficiencies, as only about 65-67% of school derive from the formula, with the remainder tied to centralized operations and contracts that limit flexibility at the school level. Despite elevated funding, student outcomes in Bronx public schools lag significantly. The four-year high school graduation rate for the Bronx class of 2023 stood at 79.4%, below the citywide average of 82.9% and trailing pre-pandemic levels. On the (NAEP), NYC fourth-grade math proficiency recovered to 33% in 2023 from 23% in 2022 but remains below national benchmarks, with reading scores holding steady at similarly low levels amid persistent racial and socioeconomic gaps. Bronx district schools show even weaker performance on state assessments, where proficiency rates trail counterparts by up to 25 percentage points in math and reading, highlighting disparities attributable to differences in instructional practices and accountability rather than funding alone. Reform debates center on expanding amid evidence that charter schools in the Bronx achieve superior results with comparable or less per-pupil funding, prompting calls for greater autonomy from district constraints. Proponents, including parents on waitlists exceeding 16,000, advocate for more co-locations and lifted enrollment caps to address district school failures, arguing that drives improvement. Opponents, often aligned with the , contend that charters "siphon resources" from traditional schools and exacerbate segregation, leading to legislative pushes to restrict expansions and prioritize unionized district models. These tensions reflect broader causal factors in underperformance, such as rigid tenure protections insulating low-effectiveness teachers and bureaucratic allocations diverting funds from classrooms, as high spending correlates poorly with gains when reforms prioritize inputs over measurable results.

Healthcare and Social Services

Major hospitals and public health infrastructure

NYC Health + Hospitals operates several key facilities in the Bronx as part of the largest municipal health system in the United States, providing safety-net care to underserved populations. NYC Health + Hospitals/Jacobi, a 457-bed teaching hospital affiliated with Albert Einstein College of Medicine, serves as a major trauma center with 121,176 emergency department visits and 335,169 clinic visits annually, alongside 1,559 births. NYC Health + Hospitals/Lincoln, featuring 362 beds, manages over 168,000 emergency visits and more than 600,000 clinic visits per year, with 1,509 births recorded. NYC Health + Hospitals/North Central Bronx, a 213-bed community hospital emphasizing women's and children's services, reports 52,099 emergency visits and 171,357 clinic visits, including 888 births. Private and voluntary hospitals supplement this network, including , the largest not-for-profit provider in the South and Central Bronx with 859 beds and over 4,500 employees focused on inpatient and teaching services. Montefiore Einstein Medical Center, an academic system, operates its Moses Campus with 1,521 staffed beds, supporting extensive , tertiary care, and affiliations across divisions like Weiler and Wakefield. St. Barnabas Hospital, under SBH Health System, maintains approximately 422 beds as a level II delivering acute and to the Belmont area and beyond. Calvary Hospital provides specialized for advanced cancer patients in a dedicated 200-bed facility. Public health infrastructure includes a web of community health centers, notably under /Gotham Health, which deliver , adult and pediatric physical exams, vaccinations, and chronic disease management at sites like Gun Hill and Belvis, addressing preventive needs amid high local demand. Additional federally qualified health centers, such as those from the Institute for Family Health at multiple Bronx locations and Morris Heights Health Center offering behavioral health and dental services, extend outpatient access and wellness programs. The Bronx Community Health Network coordinates school-based and campus clinics for integrated care, including at sites like Adlai E. Stevenson Campus. These resources collectively handle high volumes of outpatient encounters, with public facilities bearing a significant share of uninsured and patients.

Health disparities: life expectancy, obesity, and chronic diseases

The Bronx faces pronounced health disparities relative to other New York City boroughs, particularly in life expectancy, where residents born in the borough have an average lifespan of 78.7 years, the lowest among the five boroughs and second-lowest in New York State. This figure trails Manhattan's 83.7 years by over five years, contributing to a persistent gap even as the citywide average rebounded to 81.5 years by 2023 following pandemic declines. Factors such as high poverty rates, concentrated in areas like the South Bronx, correlate with elevated premature mortality from preventable causes, including violence and substance abuse, rather than solely medical access issues. Obesity prevalence among Bronx adults reaches 37.1%, the highest in New York City and surpassing Staten Island's 29.4% and ' 24.7%. This rate, approximately 85% higher than in , aligns with broader patterns of food insecurity and limited nutritious food availability in low-income neighborhoods, where reliance on processed, calorie-dense options exacerbates amid sedentary urban living and economic constraints on . Nearly 40% of residents contend with one or more chronic conditions tied to , including and , underscoring how sustained caloric surplus from suboptimal diets drives metabolic dysfunction independently of genetic predispositions alone. Chronic diseases amplify these disparities, with affecting 15% of adults—the highest borough rate in the city and nearly double that in low-poverty areas citywide. Heart disease mortality stands at 189.7 per 100,000 population, exceeding the average of 176.2, while overall cardiovascular death rates reach 215.4 per 100,000 when adjusted for age. These elevated incidences stem from cumulative risks like uncontrolled , poor glycemic management, and use, prevalent in environments of and that hinder preventive behaviors and consistent medical follow-up.

Social welfare programs and dependency patterns

The Bronx exhibits high participation in federal and state social welfare programs, reflecting its elevated poverty rate of 27.9% in 2023, compared to the average of approximately 17%. Key programs include the (SNAP), which provided benefits to 490,283 recipients in Bronx County as of 2022, equating to roughly 35% of the borough's of 1.42 million. enrollment stands at 912,703 individuals, covering about 64% of residents and exceeding citywide averages due to the concentration of low-income households. Cash assistance under New York's Family Assistance program, akin to (), supports eligible families with minor children, though borough-specific recipient counts remain proportionally elevated amid broader welfare expenditures of $2.5 billion for over 720,000 recipients in 2023. Housing subsidies like CityFHEPS and Section 8 vouchers are densely concentrated in Bronx neighborhoods, with certain areas hosting disproportionate shares of voucher households amid rapid program spending growth to $578 million citywide in recent years. Dependency patterns in the Bronx feature persistent, multi-generational reliance on these programs, correlating with structural factors such as low median household income of $48,610 in 2023—39% below the city median—and limited upward mobility. Nearly 70% of households with children reported economic hardships in post-pandemic surveys, including food insecurity and housing instability, sustaining high program uptake despite welfare reforms since the 1990s that imposed work requirements and time limits. Senior poverty reaches 25%, the highest in New York State, often entrenching family-level dependency as older adults forgo retirement and younger members enter low-wage cycles. Critics, including analyses from policy outlets, argue that concentrated aid in areas like the South Bronx fosters behavioral disincentives to employment, with historical data showing the borough as a hub of entrenched welfare use predating 1990s reforms that reduced caseloads citywide but left residual long-term participation. Empirical trends indicate slower poverty declines in the Bronx relative to other boroughs, with child poverty estimates at 112,212 individuals in 2023, underscoring intergenerational transmission amid debates over program design's role in perpetuating self-reinforcing poverty traps.

Responses to epidemics and public health crises

The Bronx experienced significant (TB) outbreaks in the late 1980s and early 1990s, exacerbated by , , and the concurrent epidemic, with childhood case rates rising to over 8 per 10,000 in severely crowded areas. New York City's Bureau of TB Control responded with intensified contact investigations, outbreak management, and directly observed therapy programs, contributing to a decline in citywide cases from peaks exceeding 3,000 annually in the mid-1990s to 895 by 2008, though Bronx neighborhoods remained hotspots due to persistent housing density. During the HIV/AIDS crisis of the 1980s and 1990s, the Bronx, alongside other low-income areas, saw elevated infection rates linked to intravenous drug use and sexual transmission, prompting state-level infrastructure development including anonymous testing sites, partner notification, and early antiretroviral access through the New York State AIDS Institute established in the mid-1980s. Community-based organizations in the Bronx expanded needle exchange and education programs by the early 1990s, reducing new infections amid federal delays in comprehensive funding, though systemic underreporting delayed full impact assessment. The opioid crisis prompted targeted interventions in the Bronx, where overdose deaths aligned with citywide trends involving fentanyl-laced heroin, rising to contribute 85% of drug fatalities by 2021. NYC Health + Hospitals launched a South Bronx hotspotting program in April 2025 to coordinate addiction services, overdose reversal training, and emergency department diversions, aiming to cut nonfatal overdoses and hospitalizations. The Bronx Opioid Collective, a harm-reduction network, distributed naloxone and supported medication-assisted treatment access to mitigate fatalities in high-risk communities. The disproportionately affected the Bronx, with age-adjusted death rates reaching 470 per 100,000—highest among NYC boroughs—driven by comorbidities, dense housing, and essential worker exposure, alongside initial hospitalization rates of 1,752 per 100,000. responses included expanded testing at sites like , ventilator allocations prioritizing severe cases, and campaigns that improved from 36% initial uptake amid hesitancy to broader coverage by 2022, yielding better second-wave outcomes across demographics through therapies and hospital surge capacity. Despite these measures, persistent disparities in confidence highlighted challenges in trust-building within underserved populations.

Culture

Sports teams and venues

Yankee Stadium, located in the neighborhood of the Bronx, serves as the primary venue in the borough. Opened on April 16, 2009, the stadium replaced the original built in 1923 and has a seating capacity of 46,537 for baseball games. It features modern amenities including a museum dedicated to Yankees history and hosts various events beyond sports, such as concerts and games. The New York Yankees, a Major League Baseball franchise founded in 1901 as the Orioles and relocated to New York in 1903, play their home games at . The team has won 27 championships, the most in MLB history, with notable eras including the lineup of the and the dynasty under manager from 1996 to 2000. The stadium's design incorporates elements from the original, such as the copper facade, and is situated adjacent to the 161st Street–Yankee Stadium subway station for accessibility. New York City FC, a Major League Soccer club established in 2013 and commencing play in 2015, also uses as its home field under a shared agreement with the Yankees, who hold a minority ownership stake. The soccer-specific pitch configuration accommodates MLS matches, with NYCFC achieving playoff appearances in multiple seasons, including a 2021 victory. The club plans to relocate to Etihad Park in by 2027, marking the end of its Bronx tenure. Beyond these professional teams, the Bronx hosts amateur and collegiate sports at facilities like Fordham University's Jack Coffey Field, but no other major league franchises are based there. The stadium's role underscores the Bronx's significance in New York City's sports landscape despite the borough's limited number of teams compared to Manhattan.

Origins of hip-hop and musical contributions

Hip-hop culture emerged in the Bronx during the early 1970s amid economic decline, urban decay, and social challenges in neighborhoods like the South Bronx, where block parties provided an outlet for youth expression through music, dance, and verbal improvisation. On August 11, 1973, Jamaican immigrant Clive Campbell, known as DJ Kool Herc, hosted a back-to-school party at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue in the west Bronx's Morris Heights section, where he pioneered the "breakbeat" technique by isolating and looping the percussive "breaks" in funk and soul records using two turntables and a mixer. This innovation extended danceable instrumental sections, encouraging crowds—primarily Black and Latino teenagers—to respond with rhythmic chants and boasts, laying the groundwork for MCing as a core element of hip-hop. The practice spread through Bronx block parties and community centers, evolving into hip-hop's foundational elements: DJing, MCing, (or b-boying), and art, which served as creative responses to limited resources and high rates exceeding 40% in some areas by the mid-. Pioneers like , who in the late developed and precise record-cutting techniques in the Bronx's Hollis and sections, refined DJing into a performative art form, while founded the Zulu Nation in 1973 to unite rival gangs through hip-hop, promoting messages of and . Bambaataa's 1982 track "Planet Rock," recorded in the Bronx and fusing hip-hop with electronic elements from Kraftwerk, exemplified the genre's experimental growth and global influence. Bronx artists drove hip-hop's commercialization and lyrical depth, with the Sugarhill Gang's "Rapper's Delight" (1979)—though recorded in —drawing from Bronx party styles and becoming the first rap single to reach mainstream charts, selling over 2 million copies. Later Bronx natives like (Lawrence Parker), whose released the politically charged in 1987 addressing street violence and education, and (Christopher Rios), whose 1998 debut achieved platinum status as the first Latino rap album to do so, expanded hip-hop into conscious and hardcore subgenres. These contributions underscore the Bronx's role in transforming regional party music into a multibillion-dollar industry, with over 80% of early hip-hop recordings tracing roots to the borough's innovations by the .

Visual arts, theater, and literature

The Bronx Museum of the Arts, established in 1971 by local community advocates, focuses on contemporary works by artists from underrepresented groups, particularly those of Latin American, African, and Asian descent, within its 33,000-square-foot facility on the Grand Concourse. The museum relocated there in 1982 from its initial site in the Bronx County Building rotunda and has since emphasized curatorial programs connecting local audiences to global art traditions amid the borough's demographic shifts. In 2022, it announced expansion plans including public enhancements to mark its 50th anniversary, reinforcing its role in fostering through art access. The borough's extend to and murals, originating from 1970s graffiti practices tied to hip-hop's emergence in areas like the . Community-driven murals, such as those along Simpson Street, evolved from tagging and lettering to larger works addressing social themes, transforming blighted spaces into expressions of resilience and . These artworks, often created by local artists, reflect the Bronx's history of and revival, with sites like Whitlock Avenue preserving early landmarks. Theater in the Bronx features community-oriented groups like Pregones Theater, which specializes in Puerto Rican and Latino productions, and the Bronx Opera Company, presenting operas since its founding. The Poor Mouth Theatre Company, formed in 2010, delivers Irish-influenced plays at venues like An Beal Bocht Cafe, while the Riverdale Children's Theatre provides youth education programs emphasizing performance arts. Historic sites such as the Paradise Theater, originally a movie palace, now host diverse performances, underscoring the borough's ongoing efforts to sustain live arts amid limited large-scale venues. Literature from the Bronx draws on its immigrant and working-class narratives, with early figures like Edgar Allan Poe residing in the area during 1846 and incorporating local macabre elements into works like poems composed at his Fordham cottage. Twentieth-century authors such as Sholom Aleichem, James Baldwin, and Nicholasa Mohr depicted Yiddish, African American, and Puerto Rican experiences in Bronx settings, capturing themes of migration and urban struggle. Contemporary Bronx-born writers, including Sonia Sotomayor in her 2013 memoir My Beloved World and Raven Leilani in novels exploring identity, continue this tradition, often highlighting personal resilience against socioeconomic challenges. Don DeLillo's 1997 novel Underworld, featuring Bronx locales, exemplifies the borough's influence on broader American literary explorations of history and decay.

Ethnic festivals, cuisine, and community traditions

The Bronx's ethnic diversity, with residents comprising over 56% of the as of the 2020 , alongside significant African American, Italian American, and smaller West African and communities, manifests in annual festivals celebrating immigrant heritages through music, , and processions. These events often occur in neighborhoods like Belmont for Italian traditions and the for Latin American and Caribbean customs, drawing thousands to public spaces such as and Father Gigante Plaza. Prominent festivals include the 152nd Street Cultural Festival, held annually since 1995 in the Mott Haven area and organized by the National , which features salsa dancing, live performances, and family-oriented activities emphasizing Puerto Rican heritage in a neighborhood dubbed "El Condado de la Salsa." The Ferragosto Festival in Belmont's , a mid-August event rooted in Italian summer harvest traditions, includes street fairs with live , games, and processions honoring Catholic saints, attracting over 10,000 visitors to . Similarly, the Cultural Festival in , held each August since at least 2025 iterations, showcases West African and Indigenous drumming, dancing, and hudut (coconut fish soup) tastings, preserving the heritage of descendants from St. Vincent's Black Caribs. The Culture Festival, a three-day May event at Father Gigante Plaza, integrates , , and youth performances, fostering community ties amid the borough's 29% African American demographic. Religious feasts like the June Feast of St. Anthony in Belmont feature processions, lottery games, and Italian , continuing 19th-century immigrant customs. Cuisine reflects these groups' staples, with Arthur Avenue's Italian enclave offering handmade pastas, , and from delis established by early 20th-century immigrants, such as Mike's Deli since 1940. In the , Dominican and Puerto Rican influences dominate bodegas and eateries, serving (plantain mash with pork), (root vegetable stew), and empanadas, adapted from home cooking and available at spots like City Island's shacks blending Latin flavors. African immigrant communities contribute , (spiced grilled skewers), and (cassava dough) at establishments like Mama G's African Kitchen, introduced by West African migrants since the 1990s. Oaxacan Mexican venues, such as La Morada opened in 2004, specialize in seven-chili mole negro and tlayudas (crispy tortillas with beans and meat), drawing from Indigenous recipes amid growing Mexican populations. Community traditions emphasize familial and neighborhood bonds, including block parties and Halloween parades like the 40th Annual Bronx Halloween Parade on October 25 along Simpson Street, featuring costumes and candy distribution rooted in Irish and Puerto Rican customs. Italian American families maintain gravies (slow-cooked sauces with meatballs) and Easter processions, while groups host parrandas (door-to-door caroling with aguinaldos songs and ). These practices, often tied to Catholic or Afro- spirituality, reinforce social cohesion in high-density areas, though participation varies with urban challenges like rates exceeding city averages.

Infrastructure and Transportation

Road networks, bridges, and tunnels

The Bronx's road network centers on a series of interstate highways and parkways designed for high-volume , reflecting mid-20th-century priorities that prioritized vehicular mobility over neighborhood cohesion. The (Interstate 95) traverses 6.4 miles eastward from the over the to the Bruckner Interchange, accommodating up to 140,000 vehicles daily as of recent counts. Initiated in 1948 and completed in phases through 1972 under Robert Moses's oversight, its construction razed 1,500 housing units and displaced around 5,000 families, severing cohesive communities like East Tremont and exacerbating isolation in the by funneling , and through-traffic into residential zones. Complementing this are the Major Deegan Expressway (I-87), a 8.5-mile north-south route opened fully in 1956 that parallels the Harlem River and serves Yankee Stadium with daily traffic exceeding 100,000 vehicles; the Bruckner Expressway (I-278), hugging the borough's eastern edge along the East River for about 5 miles before linking to Queens; and the shorter Sheridan Expressway (I-895), a 1.3-mile stub connecting I-95 to the Bruckner since 1963. These arterials, managed largely by the New York State Department of Transportation, integrate with older parkways like the Hutchinson River Parkway, originally built in the 1930s for recreational driving but now handling commuter loads. Bridges provide essential crossings to and , compensating for the borough's island-like position bounded by rivers. The complex, dedicated in 1936 as the Triborough Bridge and renamed in 2008, links the Bronx's eastern end to via a 2,000-foot vertical-lift span over the and to across the , encompassing 14 miles of viaducts, ramps, and three principal bridges that carry over 250,000 vehicles daily. The (I-278), opened in 1961, spans 1,800 feet to over the , while the connects the northern tip to since 1936. bridges include the fixed Broadway Bridge (built 1912, rebuilt 1959) and the movable Willis Avenue Bridge (opened 1901, swing-span design for navigation), both facilitating local traffic volumes of 50,000–80,000 vehicles per day. Vehicular tunnels are scarce in the Bronx, with no major public road bores comparable to those in ; connectivity relies predominantly on surface-level highways and elevated spans, though minor underpasses exist beneath expressways for local streets and rail lines. Utility and freight tunnels, such as those under the for water mains, support infrastructure but do not serve general automotive use. This bridge-heavy , while efficient for inter-borough links, has historically amplified congestion and maintenance costs, with agencies like the overseeing toll collections on key spans to fund upkeep exceeding $100 million annually per structure.

Public transit systems: subways, buses, and rail

The provides the primary service in the Bronx, operated by the (MTA) through its IRT and IND divisions. Several lines terminate or run through the borough, connecting it to and other areas. The 1 train operates along the Broadway-7th Avenue Line, serving stations from Van Cortlandt Park-242 Street in the northwest Bronx to 242nd Street. The 2 train follows the 7th Avenue Express, extending from Wakefield-241 Street in the northeast Bronx. The 4 train runs on the Lexington Avenue Express, reaching Woodlawn in the north Bronx. The 5 train splits into branches to Eastchester-Dyre Avenue and Nereid Avenue. The 6 train serves the Lexington Avenue Local to . Additionally, the B and D trains on the connect to Bedford Park Boulevard and Norwood-205 Street, respectively. These lines include key transfer points such as (served by 4, B, and D) and 149th Street-Grand Concourse (2, 4, 5). Subway service in the Bronx originated with elevated lines in the , transitioning to underground segments over time, with the last new stations opening on the Dyre Avenue Line in 1941. MTA bus service in the Bronx encompasses over 40 local and express routes, providing feeder and crosstown connections to and rail. Local routes like the Bx1 (Riverdale to Mott Haven), Bx6 (crosstown via Westchester Avenue), and Bx41 (to Harding Avenue) cover residential and commercial areas. Express buses, such as the BxM1 (Riverdale to ) and BxM11 (Baychester Avenue to ), offer peak-hour service to for commuters. The Bronx bus network is mapped comprehensively by the MTA, with ongoing redesign efforts as of 2023 introducing route changes, new services, and stop adjustments to improve efficiency. Bus ridership in the Bronx remains significantly below pre-pandemic levels, at approximately 38% of 2019 figures in 2024, amid citywide recovery challenges including and slower speeds. Metro-North Railroad provides commuter rail service via the Harlem and Hudson Lines, linking the Bronx to upstate New York and Connecticut. Harlem Line stations in the Bronx include Woodlawn, Botanical Garden, and Fordham, facilitating transfers to subways. Hudson Line stops feature Morris Heights, University Heights, and Spuyten Duyvil. As of August 2024, plans for four new Metro-North stations in the Parkchester/Van Nest, Morris Park, and other areas were approved by the New York City Council, aiming to enhance access in underserved neighborhoods. Metro-North ridership on Bronx segments showed increases, with Harlem Line usage up 11.6% in 2024 compared to prior years, reflecting partial post-pandemic rebound. Integration across these modes occurs at hubs like Fordham Road, where subway, bus, and rail converge, though service reliability varies due to infrastructure age and maintenance demands.

Airports, ports, and recent upgrades

The Bronx contains no major commercial airports within its boundaries, with residents and visitors primarily accessing air travel through nearby facilities such as (LGA) in , approximately 5 miles to the south across the . Smaller aviation infrastructure includes Evers Seaplane Base (FAA identifier 6N6), a public facility located at 1470 Outlook Avenue near City Island, supporting operations on local waterways. Port facilities in the Bronx are predominantly recreational and small-scale, centered around City Island along , which hosts multiple marinas and yacht clubs catering to enthusiasts. Notable examples include Minneford Marina, offering slips for vessels up to 70 feet with transient dockage, and the City Island , which provides berthing for over 100 members' boats alongside sailing programs. These operations focus on leisure activities rather than commercial cargo handling, contrasting with larger ports elsewhere in . Historic remnants like the Port Morris Gantries in the , four-story structures from the early , underscore past industrial maritime use but are now largely inactive. Recent upgrades emphasize waterfront revitalization and emerging freight capacity. In June 2025, New York City announced plans for the Hunts Point Marine Terminal on the site of a former jail barge in the South Bronx, aiming to develop a barge-based freight hub to divert goods from roadways, projected to generate 400 construction jobs, 100 permanent positions, and $3.9 billion in economic impact over 30 years. Complementing this, the Mott Haven-Port Morris Waterfront Plan, advanced in 2024, seeks to open over 1.5 miles of currently inaccessible shoreline to public use through green infrastructure, enhanced mobility links, and environmental remediation to address pollution from legacy industrial sites. These initiatives reflect efforts to leverage the Bronx's 15-mile waterfront for sustainable transport amid broader New York Harbor constraints, though full implementation remains pending funding and regulatory approvals.

Utility services and urban maintenance challenges

Electricity and natural gas services in The Bronx are provided by (ConEd), which distributes power to approximately 481,928 customers in Bronx County as of recent tracking data. The Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) manages and sewer systems borough-wide, sourcing water from upstate reservoirs and maintaining over 6,000 miles of mains citywide, though Bronx-specific segments suffer from age-related deterioration. Urban maintenance challenges persist due to aging and high demand strains, exemplified by frequent ConEd outages; in June 2025, crews restored service to over 34,700 Bronx customers amid a , while a prior incident affected 57,900 customers in the between the and 174th Street. Water main breaks are recurrent, with a 48-inch rupture on Webster Avenue under on December 17, 2024, flooding Bedford Park, submerging vehicles, and requiring ongoing repairs; similar contractor-induced breaks occurred on June 25 and 26, 2025, disrupting traffic and necessitating shutoffs. Sanitation issues compound these, as the Department of Sanitation (DSNY) grapples with garbage collection delays and infestations fueled by curbside piles; while citywide rat sighting complaints via 311 dropped nearly 17% in an eight-month period ending August 2025 due to containerization mandates, the Bronx's dense residential areas and exacerbate persistence. Road maintenance lags, with potholes and crumbling streets contributing to vehicle damage and safety risks, as noted in analyses of declining NYC . These problems stem from deferred capital investments, population pressures in low-income neighborhoods, and coordination gaps among agencies, leading to elevated service complaints relative to other boroughs.

Film, television, and symbolism of decay vs. resilience

The Bronx has been prominently featured in films and television from the 1970s onward, often symbolizing characterized by widespread , violence, drug epidemics, and infrastructural abandonment during the fiscal crisis era. In (1981), directed by and starring as a veteran detective, the 41st Precinct in the is depicted as a war zone of rampant , corrupt officers, and societal breakdown, reflecting real conditions where over 40,000 fires were reported borough-wide between 1970 and 1980, many deliberately set for or demolition. Similarly, 1990: The Bronx Warriors (1982), an Italian post-apocalyptic thriller, portrays the borough as a lawless territory ceded by the state, exaggerating but drawing from the era's 77% rise in from 1965 to 1980, which media amplified as emblematic of failed urban policies. Television reinforced this imagery; the miniseries (2007) interweaves the New York Yankees' 1977 season with footage of actual fires visible during a televised game on July 19, 1977, coining the phrase "" as a shorthand for municipal neglect and over 30,000 cases annually by the late 1970s. These portrayals, while rooted in empirical realities like the abandonment of 100,000 housing units and a population drop of 200,000 residents from to 1980 due to and economic , often prioritized dramatic over , attributing to individual pathologies rather than policy failures such as rent controls incentivizing neglect and welfare expansions correlating with family breakdown. Critics note that , influenced by institutional biases toward , underemphasized resident agency or external factors like the 1975 New York City fiscal collapse, which slashed services and left blocks resembling war zones. Yet, even in decay-focused narratives, glimmers of resilience emerge; (1993), adapted from Chazz Palminteri's autobiographical one-man show and directed by , contrasts mob influence and racial tensions in 1960s-1970s Little Italy sections with familial moral guidance, illustrating community bonds enduring amid homicide rates peaking at 2,000 citywide annually. This duality underscores the borough's role as a microcosm of American urban struggles, where media fixation on pathology obscured pockets of cultural vitality. Shifts in later depictions highlight resilience, portraying revival through community-driven renewal and policy shifts like aggressive policing post-1994, which halved by 2000. Netflix's The Get Down (2016-2017), created by , dramatizes 1970s youth pioneering hip-hop amid "broken down and beaten up" streets, framing the genre's birth on August 11, 1973, at DJ Kool Herc's Sedgwick Avenue party as a creative response to collapse, with over 5,000 block parties annually fostering innovation from adversity. Documentaries like HBO's The Bronx, USA (2019), following producer George Shapiro's return, celebrate the borough's "singularity" through interviews with natives, emphasizing post-1980s rebounds including a 30% stabilization by 2010 and initiatives reclaiming lots, countering earlier dystopian tropes with evidence of adaptive grit. Such works, while occasionally romanticizing hardship, align with data on the Bronx's designation as an All-America City in 2018 for community-led anti- efforts, signaling a narrative pivot from symbol of to exemplar of rebound, though persistent challenges like 2023 poverty rates above 25% temper unqualified optimism.

Literature, poetry, and memoirs

The Bronx has served as a setting and inspiration for a diverse body of literature, poetry, and memoirs, reflecting its history of immigration, urban grit, and cultural vibrancy from the 19th century onward. Early poetic works celebrated the area's pre-urban natural features, such as Joseph Rodman Drake's 1825 poem "The Bronx," which extols the serene beauty of the Bronx River amid woodlands and wildlife. Edgar Allan Poe's residence in Fordham (now part of the Bronx) from 1846 to 1849 produced several poems, including "Ulalume" and "The Bells," amid his personal struggles and observations of the then-rural landscape. Novels set in the Bronx often explore themes of crime, social upheaval, and ethnic enclaves. Tom Wolfe's (1987) depicts a Wall Street bond trader's downfall triggered by a hit-and-run in the , highlighting racial divisions and media sensationalism in 1980s New York. E.L. Doctorow's (1989) follows a teenage boy's immersion in the 1930s gangster world of , drawing on the author's Bronx roots to evoke Prohibition-era neighborhoods. Don DeLillo's (1997) incorporates Bronx vignettes, such as a graffiti artist's aid to the impoverished amid 1950s industrial decay. Avery Corman's The Old Neighborhood (1980) chronicles a Jewish family's pre-World War II life of stickball and corner stores, contrasted with later demographic shifts. Memoirs frequently recount personal ascents from Bronx hardships. Justice Sonia Sotomayor's My Beloved World (2013) details her Puerto Rican family's struggles in , including her father's diabetes-related decline and her own determination amid . Actress Sonia Manzano's Becoming Maria: Love and Chaos in the (2015) portrays a Latina girl's aspirations for acting escape within a dysfunctional household during the and . Jerome Charyn's Bronx Boy (1997) reflects on multiracial gang dynamics around a candy store in mid-20th-century immigrant communities. Eve Pell's We Used to Own the Bronx (1999) contrasts upper-class Jewish life in early-20th-century Riverdale with broader borough changes. Poetry and verse novels capture the Bronx's spoken-word traditions and youth experiences. Nikki Grimes's Bronx Masquerade (2002), a novel in , follows high school students sharing poems in a , addressing identity, , and dreams in a diverse urban school. Contemporary spoken-word artist Stephanie Pacheco's 2024 poem "where you from?" serves as an ode to the borough's nurturing yet tough environment, performed as . These works collectively underscore the Bronx's role in American letters, often prioritizing raw realism over romanticization.

Songs, music references, and global influence

The Bronx is recognized as the birthplace of hip-hop music, with hosting the genre's foundational on August 11, 1973, at , where he pioneered the technique by extending instrumental "breaks" in records to energize dancers. This innovation, born from Jamaican sound system influences and Bronx youth culture amid economic decline, laid the groundwork for DJing, MCing, , and as interconnected elements of hip-hop. Pioneering Bronx artists shaped early hip-hop's sound and lyrical focus on urban struggle. , originating from the , developed techniques like cutting and scratching, featured in tracks such as "The Message" (1982) by and the Furious Five, which vividly depicted borough hardships like poverty and crime through lines referencing "broken glass everywhere" and rat-infested environments. , also Bronx-based, formed Zulu Nation in the 1970s to channel gang energy into creative outlets, influencing socially conscious rap with songs like "Planet Rock" (1982), which fused electro-funk and hip-hop rhythms. , led by from the , released "South Bronx" in 1987 on the album , asserting the borough's primacy in hip-hop origins with lyrics countering rival claims from other New York areas. Subsequent Bronx rappers extended this legacy, with Big Pun's debut album Capital Punishment (1998) achieving platinum status and tracks like "Twinz (Deep Cover '98)" showcasing rapid-fire flows rooted in local street narratives, while emerged in the 1990s with Terror Squad, blending hardcore rap and Latin influences in songs addressing Bronx resilience. The Bronx's hip-hop innovations exerted profound global influence, evolving from local parties into a multibillion-dollar industry that reshaped music, , and worldwide by the 1980s. Early exports like the Sugarhill Gang's (1979), involving Bronx DJs, introduced the genre commercially, while Bambaataa's Zulu Nation principles of unity spread anti-violence messages internationally, inspiring hip-hop scenes in , , and Asia. By the 1990s, Bronx techniques influenced global artists, from French rap collectives to South African fusions, with the borough's raw storytelling and foundations underpinning hip-hop's adaptation as a vehicle for marginalized voices across cultures.

References

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