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Photo Credit: Newsday / Cliff De Bear -
Photo Credit: Newsday / Jim O’Rourke -
Photo Credit: Newsday / Dick Kraus -
Photo Credit: Newsday / Dick Kraus -
Photo Credit: Newsday / Dick Kraus -
Photo Credit: Newsday / Dick Kraus -
Photo Credit: Newsday / Dick Kraus -
Photo Credit: Newsday / Cliff De Bear -
Photo Credit: Newsday / Cliff De Bear -
Photo Credit: Newsday / Cliff De Bear -
Photo Credit: Newsday / Dick Kraus -
Photo Credit: Newsday / Tom Maguire -
Photo Credit: Newsday / Tom Maguire -
Photo Credit: Newsday / Tom Maguire -
Photo Credit: Newsday / Tom Maguire -
Photo Credit: Newsday / Ernest Brouillard -
Photo Credit: Newsday / Ernest Brouillard -
Photo Credit: Newsday / Ernest Brouillard -
Photo Credit: Newsday / Jim Nightingale -
Photo Credit: Newsday/ Jim Nightingale -
Photo Credit: Newsday / Cliff De Bear
When the original Pennsylvania Station officially opened in Manhattan to the public on Nov. 27, 1910, it was hailed as a monumental work of architecture.
Designed in the Beaux Arts style, millions of travelers would ultimately pass through the cavernous station that spanned two city blocks. The station was seen as a symbol of the awe-inspiring engineering achievement of building rail tunnels under the Hudson and East rivers which had helped to link the entire Northeast.
The station, though, was cleared away despite protests and a fight to preserve it. On Oct. 28, 1963, workers set about taking the building down. In its place, Madison Square Garden and a high-rise office complex would rise.
Even today, the decision to demolish the old station has been called one of the greatest failures of architectural preservation in NYC history.
Here are 21 heartbreaking photos showing how the old station was taken down and replaced.