PolicyDriftLive desk
Today 
HomeAll newsTrending India
BreakingWorld NewsIndiaSportsBusinessBanking & EconomicsPoliticsMarketsCrypto
BreakingWorld NewsIndiaSportsBusinessBanking & EconomicsPoliticsMarketsCrypto

PolicyDrift

Policy & world briefs

Curated desks, clear headlines, and sources on every story. Built for readers who want context without noise.

Desks

  • Breaking
  • World News
  • India
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Banking & Economics
  • Politics
  • Markets
  • Crypto

Site

  • All news
  • Sitemap

Legal

  • Terms of use
  • Privacy
  • Cookies
  • Editorial standards

© 2026 PolicyDrift. Headlines and media belong to their respective publishers; we link to originals.

PrivacyTermsCookies
News
Home/News/Breaking
Breaking
Apr 1, 2026, 11:15 PM·5 views

Hidden NYC tunnel tied to Underground Railroad at risk of ‘significant damage,’ advocates warn

An Underground Railroad passageway in New York City was recently identified — and is now under potential threat from proposed commercial development, according to advocates. The passage, found in the Merchant's House…

Hidden NYC tunnel tied to Underground Railroad at risk of ‘significant damage,’ advocates warn

An Underground Railroad passageway in New York City was recently identified — and is now under potential threat from proposed commercial development, according to advocates. 

The passage, found in the Merchant's House Museum in the NoHo neighborhood of Manhattan, is believed to have been part of a secret network of routes that helped enslaved Black Americans escape to freedom.

The structure is described as "about 2 feet square and secreted beneath a built-in chest of drawers on the second floor, [and] descends 15 feet to the ground floor," according to a statement from the Merchant's House Museum.

MASSIVE INDUSTRIAL SITE UNCOVERED IN UNLIKELY LOCATION AS ARCHAEOLOGISTS CITE 'ENORMOUS' POTENTIAL

Though the home dates to 1832, it's unclear when the passageway was built. 

The house, however, was built by an abolitionist, Joseph Brewster — and the hidden passage "serves no known domestic purpose," according to the museum.

The passageway was first found in the 1930s. Historians did not know until recently that Brewster was an abolitionist.

Museum officials said the analysis of the site took two years of "extensive research" — and now the site is at risk. The building is on the National Register of Historic Places. 

TEST YOURSELF WITH OUR LATEST LIFESTYLE QUIZ

The concern is connected to the proposed development of a nine-story mixed-use building that could possibly damage the walls and foundation of the Merchant's House Museum, according to The Associated Press.

Emily Hill-Wright, the museum's director of operations, recently told AP that engineers have raised concerns about potential structural damage.

"What our engineers are saying is that there really is no way that a building of that size is built immediately next door to the museum without causing significant structural damage to our historic building," she said.

Museum officials also said the discovery has brought in more visitors in recent months.

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTER

New York City's Landmarks Preservation Commission is set to make a decision on the development, but members of the community are raising concerns.

In a statement last week, Rev. Al Sharpton warned the site is at risk of "irreversible damage."

"When engineers tell me that an African American heritage site is in danger of structural compromise or any other sort of irreversible damage, I listen," Sharpton said in a statement.

The private developer, Kalodop II Park Corp., wants to replace the one-story garage it owns at 27 East 4th St. with a nine-story office building that includes ground-floor space likely to be used for a restaurant or art gallery, as The New York Post reported of the details. 

The developer had two earlier applications for construction on the lot; the most recent was approved in 2023, the Post also said. But Kalodop never began the construction — and in December submitted new plans for a building that would have two more stories.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE LIFESTYLE STORIES

Helping enslaved people would have come at a great cost to Brewster, Harlem Historical Society director Jacob Morris told The Associated Press.

"Bounty hunters were all over the place in New York City. They made their living on catching freedom-seeking Blacks," he said.

Morris added, "If you got caught helping Blacks escape from slavery, a mob could come and burn down your house and beat you up. And maybe even tar and feather you, or worse."

The passageway discovery is one of many recent archaeological finds involving African American history.

Last June, a South Carolina tourist found "historically significant" remains on Edisto Island, once home to a community of African American sharecroppers.

Also, last summer, archaeologists in Williamsburg, Virginia, dug up artifacts from the oldest surviving schoolhouse for Black children.

The Associated Press contributed reporting.

Text above is from the syndicated RSS feed (sanitized for safe display). For the latest version, updates, and full context, use the publisher link.

Open originalAll news

More in Breaking

Same desk, different stories

All Breaking →
  • Breaking

    'Bob's Burgers' voice actor Eugene Mirman hospitalized with 'serious injuries' after fiery New Hampshire crash

    "Bob's Burgers" voice actor, Eugene Mirman, has been hospitalized after he was rescued from a fiery crash on Tuesday, March 31 in New Hampshire . According to a press release from the New Hampshire Police Department,…

    Apr 2, 2026, 12:51 AM
  • Breaking

    WATCH: Artemis II crew lifts off for the Moon

    Artemis II has launched, taking four astronauts around the moon for the first time in more than 50 years.

    Apr 2, 2026, 12:45 AM
  • Breaking

    Celtics score 53 points in 1st quarter at Miami, setting club record for opening period

    The Boston Celtics had a first quarter like none other in their storied history

    Apr 2, 2026, 12:44 AM
  • Breaking

    NBA fines Trail Blazers $100K, suspend assistant GMs for breaking rules scouting Chinese center

    The NBA has fined the Portland Trail Blazers $100,000 for scouting Chinese center Yang Hansen in 2023, breaking a league rule regarding players ineligible for the draft

    Apr 2, 2026, 12:44 AM
  • Breaking

    WATCH: Crowd cheers Artemis II launch in Florida

    A crowd gathered in Titusville, Florida, to watch NASA's Artemis II mission blast off from Kennedy Space Center.

    Apr 2, 2026, 12:44 AM
  • Breaking

    Carol Kirkwood: Why the time is right for me to retire - and what's next

    The weather forecast stalwart tells BBC News she's experienced loss in her life recently, but she's looking forward to what's to come.

    Apr 2, 2026, 12:42 AM

Markets

Loading…

Green / red = day move · Hover row for detail · Delayed dataDay move · Tap a row for detail · Delayed quotes