Cancel

    Open app

    Search

    Castle Clinton

    3.8 (44 reviews)
    Closed 7:45 am - 5:00 pm

    Castle Clinton Photos

    Recommended Reviews - Castle Clinton

    Your trust is our priority, so businesses can't pay to alter or remove their reviews. Learn more about reviews.
    Yelp app icon
    Browse more easily on the app
    Review Feed Illustration

    Reviews With Photos

    Alisa J.

    Interesting place to check out in battery park. Not crowded like the rest of the area which is nice as well.

    Castle Clinton National Monument Plaque
    Travis T.

    This circular sandstone fort in Battery Park has served many purposes since it was built in the early 1800's. Even tough it was built to protect the New York City Harbor, Castle Clinton has never been used for war. It was an immigration station before Ellis Island became one. Since then, it has been an aquarium and an event center before becoming a National Monument. Today it is a visitor center and departure point for ferries to the Statue of Liberty. I walked around Castle Clinton for a little bit after spending some time at the Statue of Liberty. People were lined up inside to buy ferry tickets to the Statue. There is some literature about this fort that you can read as you walk around,. There are also some old cannons near the windows and other artifacts that you can check out. Even though there isn't a whole lot to do or see, I am glad they didn't demolish this historic place. Spend some time in Battery Park if you want to see more things.

    CASTLE CLINTON.
    Theodosios C.

    LANDMARK: A National Monument which was completed in 1811. Originally known as WEST BATTERY it was later used as an Immigration Processing Center between 1855-1890 prior to ELLIS ISLAND. The former Fort is a popular Tourist destination. WORTH VISITING.

    Outside
    Kevin B.

    Castle Clinton has had an amazingly interesting history. It started out as a fort protecting NYC harbor during the War of 1812 and it was separate from Manhattan at that time. It also served as the first immigration site (before Ellis Island) and more than 7 million people immigrated through it. The land around it was filled in to form Battery Park over the years and it also served as an aquarium. Today it's where you either get tickets/disembark for The Statue of Liberty/Ellis Island tour. It was restored to the original fort appearance and it's a nice historical site to visit. There's a bit of information inside in an exhibit and I would spend about 30 minutes here. I'm really glad they never tore it down given it's historical significance and I recommend checking it out if you're in the area!

    Denise W.

    Castle Clinton is located inside Battery Park. It is also part of the immigration system to get to Statue Island or Ellis Island through Statue Ferry Cruise. Currently the Castle is closed for renovation. It is nice to see and take picture at the moment. The castle from the outside looks big and it looks like it is only one floor. It is built in a round shape.

    Wall
    Steve A.

    Castle Clinton is the large old building in the middle of The Battery. It has a lot of history from times of war to immigration. The building looks to be fairly well taken care of. If only it had more going on it could be a good attraction. This is now used for getting Statue of Liberty tickets. It was first used as a fortress. It protected New York during the war of 1812 and maybe some others. When that was over, it became the site where immigrants registered. It was so until the center on Ellis Island opened. It has some great history but it gets lost among the Statue of Liberty ticket pickups. This is certainly the busier of the two statue ferry areas, especially when it's peak season. If you are coming or going on the ferry take a look. It has some information but not much. This is a pleasant diversion while waiting for the ferry or if you want to learn more immigration stories.

    Main entrance with workman trailers.
    Vicki E.

    Such a historic sight and where you purchase tickets for the Statue of Liberty Cruise. I wish the work crews trailers were parked on the side of the building rather than right at the front entrance. They are very unappealing.

    Front entrance
    Yonnie C.

    We came here to get our tickets to Statue of Liberty! Pretty easy to find, although we had to ask for directions from a local police officer who directed us to this place. Looks like a tiny castle from the outside.

    Huge queue for Statue Tickets
    Christopher C.

    Over the years Castle Clinton has been many things. Initially CC was known as West Battery and was built to help defend NY Harbor. Construction of the sandstone structure was completed in 1811 and the name changed to Castle Clinton in 1815 after NYC Mayor DeWitt Clinton. It never saw any action from The War of 1812 and the Army abandoned it in 1821. In 1824 the structure got a new name in Castle Garden and a new purpose of beer garden, exhibition hall, theatre and opera house. In 1855 it became the official immigration processing facility for NY State (The first such entity in US history) and over the next thirty-five years saw over eight million immigrants processed until the Federal Government took over the job in 1890. In 1896 the Castle again had new life as the New York Aquarium until 1941 when Park Commissioner Robert Moses closed it down out of spite when he lost a battle to build a Battery-Brooklyn Bridge which would have demolished CC and all of Battery Park. Finally in 1950 NY State ceded ownership of the structure to the Federal Government and in 1975 after being fully renovated CC was reopened and today serves as the NY departure point for The Statue of Liberty which nets The Castle around three million visitors a year. Now with the history lesson out of the way let's talk about practicalities. Compared to facilities and loading area over in NJ for The Statue this place is a dump. Especially on weekends the rangers here are very overwhelmed as their job is not to interpret or impart the history of the structure to you because their only job is 100% good ol' fashioned crowd control. People trying to queue up in every possible angle, ropes & chains are constantly getting reworked and what it equals is a sea of humanity with rangers yelling to move up or move this way or not to push, etc. The building does have a very small "museum" which consists of three dopey dioramas and a mishmashed collection of I guess dead local sea life. From a Junior Ranger Program prospective, CC does have one but it's a poorly copied small booklet without a staple and Ranger Steve was more than happy/too busy to wait around so he gave the kids the badges with the booklets and off he went. To me the building is not designed to do what it is currently doing, I question whether it should even be under the NPS umbrella and 99% of the people who come here have no clue about the history of the building/nor do they care and even if they wanted to know there's no much here to tell them about it.

    George H.

    It was easy enough to find! Had to go to the Will Call window to pick up our crown tickets. The lady at the booth asks that you put on the band in front of her at the window. I suppose this is to deter the others from selling their bands off as we require to submit an ID when you purchase tickets for the crown. Blessed with beautiful weather, we were very fortunate!

    Wayne Y.

    This is a nice historical site if you happen to be passing by, but definitely not worth a separate trip especially if you're pressed for time in New York. They've converted this fortress to a place where they sell tickets to go to the Statue of Liberty. The cool aspect of this place is that being in the middle of the fort allows you to see the tall buildings of downtown framed in an interesting way. There are some educational signs along the periphery regarding the history, but overall a touristy kind of place.

    View of Manhattan from Castle Clinton
    Katie S.

    Castle Clinton, initially built as a fort to defend New York Harbor, has been used over time as a performance hall, immigration processing center (pre-dating Ellis Island), the NY aquarium... and now it's used as the location to buy tickets for the Statue of Liberty. I visited as part of a project to go to all the National Parks Service sites in Manhattan. This one is comparatively underwhelming, as there's only one room with information about the site's history (and the history is interesting!) and a gift shop. We had to ask the park rangers how to get our NPS passports stamped -- turns out they keep the stamp in a back office, which just goes to show that the percentage of visitors to CC who are NOT there to go to the Statue of Liberty is quite small. I wish there were some way for the history to shine through a little more for the thousands of people who are in and out each week to buy Statue of Liberty tickets, and given its current use, it feels a little strange that CC is part of the NPS system. That being said, it's worth a quick visit if you're in the area.

    Nice little "fort" at the ferry terminal for the Statue of Liberty. This is going through the much needed renovation right now so it has scaffolding all around it, and anything inside is closed due to the pandemic. However, it is a nice place to look around and see what it was like back in the day with a little history!

    See all

    Photo of Jenn J.
    264
    491
    4787

    6 days ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Monique W.
    4662
    2848
    23246

    11 months ago

    Helpful 16
    Thanks 4
    Love this 15
    Oh no 0

    5 months ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Alisa J.
    243
    2009
    7036

    1 year ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    2 years ago

    Helpful 9
    Thanks 1
    Love this 9
    Oh no 0

    2 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    2 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Tyler L.
    772
    1953
    3283

    3 years ago

    Helpful 3
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    4 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0

    3 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Steve A.
    4749
    5576
    8499

    8 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Vicki E.
    0
    321
    302

    4 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    7 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    12 years ago

    Helpful 3
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0

    9 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Wayne Y.
    2698
    1943
    8360

    10 years ago

    Helpful 7
    Thanks 0
    Love this 3
    Oh no 0

    9 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    5 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    11 years ago

    Helpful 2
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Dominik D.
    320
    5949
    11113

    5 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0

    14 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0

    11 years ago

    Helpful 9
    Thanks 0
    Love this 9
    Oh no 0

    16 years ago

    Helpful 6
    Thanks 0
    Love this 8
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Jeff C.
    1259
    1261
    33

    18 years ago

    Helpful 3
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0

    5 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Ry T.
    667
    2206
    7254

    14 years ago

    Helpful 2
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Jay Y.
    746
    1026
    1836

    12 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0

    15 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Dewan A.
    762
    2157
    2469

    11 years ago

    Helpful 2
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    17 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Paul N.
    293
    1484
    4275

    10 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Ellen L.
    656
    2425
    2337

    14 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    14 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Oliver M.
    12
    105
    0

    13 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Troy H.
    251
    929
    1410

    10 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    7 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    7 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    14 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    7 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    13 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    Page 1 of 2

    Castle Clinton Reviews in Other Languages

    Ask the Community - Castle Clinton

    Review Highlights - Castle Clinton

    t. Named for DeWitt Clinton, governor of the empire state, thrice mayor of the city, and like Hillary, even senato

    Mentioned in 3 reviews

    Read more highlights

    Verify this business for free

    People searched for Landmarks & Historical Buildings 6,124 times last month within 5 miles of this business.

    Verify this business

    Bowery Savings Bank Building

    Bowery Savings Bank Building

    5.0(3 reviews)
    6.3 kmMidtown East, Murray Hill

    Tour historic buildings and designated landmarks of New York. Bowery Savings Bank building is one…read moreof many historic. Any history buff or avid amateur architecture enthusiasts would have a full appreciation and admiration of this stone building as old world architectural craft is no longer in use. This building still stands with the passage of time and nature's elements. The correct location of Bowery Savings Bank Building is in Chinatown, Lower Manhattan- NOT Midtown East, Murray Hill. https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=132531

    You might find a few Bowery Bums in the doorway of the Bowery Savings Bank Building, but it's New…read moreYork, and more to the point it's the USA, and that goes with the territory. This building is very special to me because when I needed to get my citizenship it was here that my awesome lawyer (whose office is in the upper reaches of this magnificent building) helped me through the process and got me over the line - and I will always be grateful for that. He's David Gottfried of Gottfried & Gottfried, by the way. I would recommend him to anyone as the perfect immigration lawyer for my situation and I wish nothing but the best for him. As for the building it's a typical old rustic early 20th century New York stunner, and it seems haunted. They do make you go through a security check to get up inside here but then so does Barbie with her clients.

    Photos
    Bowery Savings Bank Building - Exterior

    Exterior

    Bowery Savings Bank Building - Lil Bowery Wow

    Lil Bowery Wow

    Bowery Savings Bank Building

    See all

    Van Gogh's Ear - Van Gogh's Ear, a public art sculpture by Elmgreen & Dragset

    Van Gogh's Ear

    5.0(3 reviews)
    6.9 kmMidtown East, Midtown West

    Don't look for this work of art. It's not there. If you were lucky enough to see it, write a…read morereview. It's pretty cool if you stare and stare. Then all of a sudden you realize what you're looking at! My photos are from April 14, 2016. It was a beautiful Spring Day. I am enjoying reminiciing about today during the Arctic Blast!

    "Van Gogh's Ear", a public art sculpture by Elmgreen & Dragset, is in place at 30 Rockefeller…read morePlaza, right across the street from the entrance to Sak's 5th Ave. The sculpture, by the same duo that brought us the Prada Marfa Store in the middle of the Texas desert, is a tribute to the ready-made style of Marcel Duchamp. The sculpture is a 30 foot tall swimming pool, taken out of its normal context and displayed in its side with a diving board built in at the top. One of my favorite elements are the working lights on the inside left and right of the pool sculpture. Being that it's out of context - a recreational object in the middle of a commercial center - it creates a sense of longing and desire for recreation over industry and gives you an off-kilter feeling (why am I going to work when I could be swimming!). Overall a great piece of colorful public art at placed I a great spot for the perfect season. The piece is on display from April 13th though June 3rd, 2016. Catch it while you can!

    Photos
    Van Gogh's Ear - The sign for Elmgreen & Dragset's piece "Van Gogh's Ear"

    The sign for Elmgreen & Dragset's piece "Van Gogh's Ear"

    Van Gogh's Ear - Van Gogh's Ear beautifully backlit by NYC last night.

    Van Gogh's Ear beautifully backlit by NYC last night.

    Van Gogh's Ear - They removed the street-side barricades.

    See all

    They removed the street-side barricades.

    Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Plaque

    Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Plaque

    5.0(1 review)
    6.5 kmMidtown East

    "Don't know much about history Don't know much biology…read moreDon't know much about a science book Don't know much about the French I took" (Sam Cooke) I guess you can call me a history nerd. After all, I did major in history and rarely walk past a plaque or memorial or marker that I don't stop to read and more than likely Yelp. So when we were walking out to the street from Grand Central Station's Park Avenue/East 42nd Street entry and saw a wall plaque with the portrait of a familiar woman, I just had to stop and check it out. The portrait was of Jackie Kennedy Onassis. Those of my generation will always remember the traumatic and terribly sad photographs of her from Dallas on November 22, 1963 with her pink pill box hat and her blood splattered pink dress. Twelve years after JFK's assassination the former First lady was engaged in a high stakes 1975 battle to save one of her hometown's iconic landmarks. At issue was a plan to take the wrecking ball to New York City's Grand Station Terminal and demolish it, just as Penn Station has been demolished and rebuilt in 1964. She became outraged when she learned of the plan and led a coalition of New Yorkers and the the Municipal Art Society to stop it. She was the star of a famous press conference from Grand Central and declared "If we don't care about our past we can't have very much hope for our future, we've all heard that it's too late, or that it has to happen, that it's inevitable. But I don't think that's true. Because I think if there is a great effort, even if it's the eleventh hour, then you can succeed and I know that's what we'll do." She also wrote an eloquent letter to NYC 's Mayor Beame and asked him "...is it not cruel to let our city die by degrees, stripped of all her proud moments, until there is nothing left of all her history and beauty to inspire our children? If they are not inspired by the past of our city, where will they find the strength to fight for her future? Americans care about their past, but for short term gain they ignore it and tear down everything that matters..." The plaque was dedicated on June 24, 2014 to mark renovations to the station's main entrance. The renovations honor her legacy with photographs, a video display, and the plaque. The entry itself was renamed "The Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Foyer".

    Photos
    Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Plaque

    See all

    Empire State Building - Photo opportunity with King Kong himself

    Empire State Building

    4.0(2.4k reviews)
    5.7 kmKoreatown, Midtown West

    Wow! What an amazing and immersive experience! The Empire State Building is a 102-story Art Deco…read moreskyscraper in Midtown Manhattan, famous for its iconic design, rapid construction, and its status as the world's tallest building for nearly 40 years. My wife was a bit reluctant to go on this tour (she's scared of heights, obviously), but somehow I managed to convince her (with my charm of course). And she was so happy I did. The Empire State Building remains a defining global symbol of New York City. Its total height reaches 1,454 feet (now that's tall). I'd be lying if I didn't say that was a bit intimidating. But when we got to the 86th floor (observation deck), there was an apparent stillness and quietness in the air. Kind of peaceful! Looking down from above, everything seemed minuscule- like the world below us was built with little tiny Legos. It truly was quite the experience!

    Monday 6th July 2026 Rainy cool 65°F…read more Midtown East, NYC Fun fact: Did you know that the Empire State building was built in 1931, but did not become fully occupied with tenants until 1956? The Empire State building was called the "Empty State" building in its early years and did not become profitable until the 1950s. The year 1931, the country was going through a major Depression era after the stock market crashed in 1929. However, in the 1950s, after WWII, the economy skyrocketed and the tallest NYC building became quite successful and a popular tourist attraction. It remained the tallest skyscraper in New York City until 1973, when the Twin Towers were built in lower Manhattan. Thank you for reading, and have a great day!

    Photos
    Empire State Building - King Kong poster

    King Kong poster

    Empire State Building - Ahhhh godzilla got me

    Ahhhh godzilla got me

    Empire State Building - Empire State Building image 2023

    See all

    Empire State Building image 2023

    Castle Clinton - landmarks - Updated July 2026

    Loading...
    Loading...
    Loading...