From the blackout to the .44 caliber killer, these photos of New York City in the summer of 1977 reveal a city on the brink of collapse.
On the evening of July 13, 1977, two lightning strikes just north of New York City led to a massive blackout that plunged the city into darkness.
The lights went out, elevators stalled, and subways ground to a halt. Looting and arson broke out, over a thousand fires were reported, and more than 1,600 stores were damaged or ransacked. The Mets-Cubs game at Shea Stadium ended in the bottom of the sixth inning. The light-filled city became a black pit.
Elsewhere in New York’s summer of 1977, a sweltering heatwave, financial downturn, rising poverty and inequality levels, paranoia about the Son of Sam murders, and the shining lights of Studio 54 took hold of the city.
Likewise, as fires burned down much of the Bronx, hip hop began to rise from the ashes. In fact, the looting of music stores during the blackout enabled people who couldn’t afford turntables and mixers to gather the equipment they needed to become DJs.
Check out some compelling photos from that uneasy summer in New York City:
Young boys play in a fire hydrant in the Lower East Side's Avenue C. Camilo J. Vergara/ Library of Congress 45th Street in Midtown. Wikimedia CommonsA woman sits along the streets.Camilo J. Vergara/ Library of Congress Residents of Brooklyn's Bushwick neighborhood sit in folding chairs, July 21, 1977. Allan Tannenbaum/Getty ImagesA child passes a blazing can in Harlem. National Archives and Records AdministrationGeorge "Human Fly" Willig climbing the South Tower of the World Trade Center. Carmine Donofrio/NY Daily News Archive/Getty ImagesYankees manager Billy Martin, and the team's strutting superstar, Reggie Jackson, nearly come to blows.NY Daily News Archive/Getty ImagesA group dancing at Studio 54.Waring Abbott/Getty ImagesStevie Wonder (at piano) jams with Stephen Stills (with drum), Stephanie Mills, and Teddy Pendergrass (behind Wonder) for New York secretary Mary Ann Cummings and 300 guests on her birthday at Studio 54.Richard Corkery/NY Daily News Archive/ Getty ImagesCurtis Mayfield poses inside Studio 54.Richard E. Aaron/RedfernsFront page of the Daily News following the blackout.NY Daily NewsAt dawn on July 14, the Manhattan skyline shows no lights due to the blackout. Allan Tannenbaum/Getty ImagesNew Yorkers jam the Brooklyn Bridge on their way home after the blackout shut down the subway system.Underwood Archives/Getty ImagesIn Brooklyn, pedestrians stand on a street corner in the wake of the blackout.Robert R. McElroy/Getty ImagesIn the midst of the blackout, a restaurant owner writes a sign to advise customers that there is no food or lights inside, but lots of liquor. Bryan Alpert/Hulton Archive/Getty ImagesPolice officers and passersby stand in front of a damaged storefront, looted in the wake of the New York City blackout.Robert R. McElroy/Getty ImagesCops contain suspected looters at Grand Concourse and Fordham Road in the Bronx during blackout. NY Daily News Archive/Getty ImagesAerial view of a building burning following the blackout in Brooklyn.Robert R. McElroy/Getty ImagesLooters young and old leave an A&P supermarket at Ogden Avenue and 166th Street in the Bronx through a broken window. Authorities arrested thousands of looters in at least three boroughs of the city.Serial killer David "Son of Sam" Berkowitz being taken into police custody on August 11, 1977. Fred R. Conrad/New York Times Co./Getty ImagesIn the summer of 1977, the NYPD discovered a handwritten letter near the bodies of Esau and Suriani, addressed to NYPD Captain Joseph Borrelli. With this letter, Berkowitz revealed the name "Son of Sam" for the first time.
The press had previously dubbed him "the .44 Caliber Killer" because of his signature weapon. The letter was initially withheld from public view, but some of its contents leaked to the press, and the name "Son of Sam" rapidly eclipsed the old name.
Mugshot of "Son of Sam."Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Next, taking some more stunning trips back in time to New York in the summer of 1969, then to the desolate 1970s, and finally to the drug-addled 1980s.