Today we did a walking tour of Wall Street, caught the Staten Island ferry (free tourism, which leads to massive crowds), visited the 911 World Trade Centre memorial (special, attractive) and the supporting museum and finished up catching the subway (Metro) home to eat Italian back near our hotel.
The 911 memorial museum is impressive. The memorial fountains outside are very impressive too and the new One World Trade Centre building is up (albeit with teething troubles) and you are left with the feeling that the local attitude is 'knock us down and we get right back up, better than before'.
I imagine that New York makes far more now from tourism around the World Trade Centre than any other business or rent collected on the properties! This was surely an unintended consequence for Al Qaeda.
Wall Street though is rather unimpressive as a pokey small street which I know most financial firms have departed from. The bank I worked for (Credit Suisse) is in mid town with many others, the mighty Goldman Sachs has moved to New Jersey and the computers that we all trade on now are also in New Jersey. Wall Street is now just another American brand, little more. It has an interesting history from George Washington's early Presidency and early financial trading days but it's only contemporary value is tourism.
Trinity church is on Broadway at the end of Wall Street.
Regardless of what Nicholas Cage would have you believe it seems unlikely that the Templars stored their National Treasure under the Trinity Church on Broadway.