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Broadway1926: Advertisements and signs for the Central and the Mark Strand theaters lit up at night on Broadway in New York City. (Photo by Edwin Levick/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
circa 1929: A high-angle view of the Lexington Hotel on Lexington Avenue, with the Chrysler Building (R) under construction in the background. (Photo by Edwin Levick/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
Broadway By Nightcirca 1925: View of marquees for the Plymouth Laurette Taylor, the Music Box, the Imperial, and the Klaw Theaters along 45th Street, looking west from Broadway at night, Times Square, New York City
circa 1925: A view of a group of automobiles and wagons parked in the snow at the Fulton Street Fish Market, in downtown Manhattan, New York City
Walking Down Fifthcirca 1925: A high-angle street scene of people walking down Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, New York City. Automobiles drive down the street as pedestrians crowd the sidewalks
Police On Fifthcirca 1925: A view looking north down Fifth Avenue from East 53rd Street, Manhattan, New York City. A policemen stands in the street, conducting traffic
Tribune Buildingcirca 1920: Street view of The Tribune Building on Park Row, New York City, known as Newspaper Row. Designed by Richard Morris Hunt in 1873
Breaking The Icecirca 1925: Three New Jersey Central tugboats attempt to cross the ice filled Hudson River in the winter, New York City. Spectators watch from the docks
High Bridge AqueductCirca 1925, High Bridge across the Harlem River, New York City, 1920s. High Bridge is part of the Croton Aqueduct which brings water to the city from the Croton River
Construction Work In NYCConstruction workers on Park Avenue in New York City, USA, circa 1920. (Photo by Archive Photos/Getty Images)
Lambert Pharmaceutical CompanyRail lines run across the front of the headquarters of the Lambert Pharmaceutical Company, manufacturers of Listerine products, in St. Louis, Missouri, USA, circa 1920
Shaw In The StrandMay 1927: Irish dramatist and social critic George Bernard Shaw (1856 - 1950) walking along the Strand in London. (Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)
An LNER Pacific class locomotive pulling The Flying Scotsman, December 1929December 1929: An LNER Pacific class locomotive pulling The Flying Scotsman express which travels 393 miles non-stop from Kings Cross station in London to Edinburgh in Scotland every day
Flying Scotsman LNER Pacific locomotive used to pull the train of the same nameThe 150 ton Flying Scotsman LNER Pacific locomotive used to pull the train of the same name. Alongside it is the 8 ton Typhoon of the Romney
Gresley Pacific locomotives at Kings Cross station, London, circa 1926.. Left to right; Class A1 No 2544 Lemberg ; unidentified; Class A1 No 2578 Bayardo ; Class A1 No 4476 Royal Lancer
Charles Lindbergh29th May 1927: American aviator Charles Lindbergh arriving at Croydon from America. Lindbergh is the first man to fly from America to England. (Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)
Spirit Of St Louis21st May 1927: US aviator Charles Lindberghs monoplane Spirit of St Louis landing at Le Bourget Paris after his non-stop solo transatlantic flight from New York City. (Photo by H. F)
Paris Parade For LindberghA huge crowd gathers to watch a parade in honor of American pilot Charles A. Lindberghs successful trans-Atlantic flight, non-stop from New York to Paris, Paris, France, May 22, 1927
Ticker-Tape ParadeThe tickertape parade in New York following Charles Lindberghs arrival after his solo flight across the Atlantic. (Photo by Central Press/Getty Images)
Parade For LindberghJune 1927: A tickertape parade on Broadway, New York, to welcome home US aviator Charles Lindbergh following his non-stop solo Atlantic flight from New York to Paris
Lindberghs ReturnJune 1927: New York City celebrates Charles Lindberghs return with a ticker-tape parade, after his non-stop one-man transatlantic flight from New York to Paris
Lindberghs Plane29th May 1927: US aviator Charles Lindberghs aeroplane flying above welcoming crowds at Croydon aerodrome, following his record-setting non-stop solo transatlantic crossing from New York to Paris
Spirit of St. Louis Landing In Croydon29th May 1927: Charles Lindbergh flying into Croydon after his record breaking flight across the Atlantic. (Photo by Keystone/Getty Images)
Lindbergh Arrives In CroydonAerial view of a huge crowd of people as they surround Charles A. Lindbergh and his plane upon his arrival at Croydon airfield, Croydon, England, May 29, 1927
Ava In Flight1926: The new Ava bomber descending after its public maiden flight at the Royal Airforce display and pageant at Hendon Aerodrome, London. (Photo by Topical Press Agency/Getty Images)
ShenandoahThe christening of the US Airship USS Shenandoah (American Indian name, Daughter Of The Stars ) at Lakehurst, New Jersey. The first helium filled rigid airship
Airship NorgeThe airship Norge, piloted by Italian Umberto Nobile and commissioned by explorer Roald Amundsen for his failed attempt to reach the North Pole
The Schwabencirca 1925: A German airship, the Schwaben which was destroyed by an explosion. (Photo by General Photographic Agency/Getty Images)
Airship R33April 1925: British airship R33 leaving Pulham aerodrome, Norfolk. (Photo by MacGregor/Topical Press Agency/Getty Images)
R 101 MooredOctober 1929: Airship R101 moored to a control tower at Cardington. (Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)
ZR3August 1924: The enormous German built Zeppelin ZR3, re-christened the Los Angeles, in a hangar in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Topical Press Agency/Getty Images)
German Airshipcirca 1920: German airship Bodensee. (Photo by General Photographic Agency/Getty Images)
American AirshipOctober 1923: The ZR-1 renamed Shenandoah. Largest airship of her time and the first to be filled with helium. (Photo by Topical Press Agency/Getty Images)
Zeppelin AirshipAugust 1924: Zeppelin Airship ZR3, later called Los Angeles, Gas bags after 3 hours of inflation. (Photo by Topical Press Agency/Getty Images)
Experimental Flight2nd April 1925: The R33 airship making an experimental flight from Bedfordshire to Pulham, the first trip of its kind for four years. (Photo by MacGregor/Topical Press Agency/Getty Images)
Airship C5circa 1925: American airship C5 leaving Montauk Point, New York for a journey to Newfoundland. (Photo by Central Press/Getty Images)
Ill Fated R-1011929: The airship R101 at its mooring mast at Cardington, Bedfordshire. It crashed on its maiden voyage to India while over northern France. (Photo by Central Press/Getty Images)
Great 20th Century ExplorersThe semi-rigid N-class airship Norge (Norwegian for Norway ), which was used by the Amundsen-Ellsworth-Nobile Expedition to fly over the North Pole, lands on a snowy field, Teller, Alaska, May 13
Great 20th Century ExplorersThe ill-fated semi-rigid N-class airship N1 (aka Italia ) makes a stopover at an airfield before continuing on with Italian general Umberto Nobiles second expedition to overfly the North Pole, Stolp
Gare Du NordA crowded platform at Gare du Nord train station in Paris. (Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)
Hoisting LocomotiveJune 1927: A steam locomotive being hoisted on a ship at Newcastle, bound for India. (Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)
Loading LocomotiveJune 1927: A steam locomotive being hoisted by a crane onto a ship at Newcastle, bound for India. (Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)
LNER TrainOctober 1929: An LNER locomotive at full steam ahead. (Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)
Flying Scotsman1st May 1928: The 150 ton LNER Pacific class locomotive Flying Scotsman, pulling the train of the same name, leaving Kings Cross Station in London at 10am on its first non-stop run to Edinburgh
LNER Train1st May 1925: An express train travelling south from Peterborough in Cambridgeshire. (Photo by Davis Jr/Topical Press Agency/Getty Images)
Pendennis Castle22nd April 1925: Great Western engine Pendennis Castle pulling a London North East Railway train from Kings Cross Station on its way to Peterborough
Engine At Charing CrossA South Eastern & Chatham Railways locomotive at Charing Cross Station, London, January 1924. (Photo by Topical Press Agency/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
GWR Goods WagonsA steam locomotive hauling a train of 50 of the newly-introduced 20-ton open goods wagons of the Great Western Railway (GWR), UK, August 1924. (Photo by J. B)