This is the part of Manhattan that allegedly needed to be sawed off, fifty years after the hoax. Note that it still hasn't sunk by this point. One of the better known hoaxes in the history of New York City is the famous “sawing off” of the lower end of Manhattan. The story goes that a ship’s carpenter, a man known simply as Lozier, got to talking with a number of lower Manhattan tradesmen one day in 1824 about how built-up the island was getting. The story goes that it was widely feared that lower Manhattan would get so heavy with buildings that it would tip over and sink into the harbor. A solution was proposed: cut the lower part of the island off, float it out into the harbor, spin it around 180 degrees, and reattach it, thus balancing out Manhattan and preventing it from sinking. Lozier gathered a number of workers who met at where the Bowery and Broadway split, and another group to meet at the corner of the Bowery and Spring Street. They were to be ready to wo