NEW YORK (Reuters) - More than a million people in New York's Times Square hailed the arrival of 2016 early Friday with kisses, cheers and a measure of relief as America's biggest New Year's Eve celebration unfolded without a hitch under a blanket of unprecedented security.
The transition to the new year was marked by the descent of the traditional lighted crystal ball from atop a skyscraper amid fireworks and a blizzard of confetti at the center of the famed Manhattan crossroads, the climax of an annual rite of winter dating back to 1904.
With memories of the deadly attacks in Paris and California still fresh, police took extraordinary measures to ensure security at a gathering that has come to define the New York experience for many visitors to the largest U.S. city.
But the event, broadcast live on national television, went off without a hint of trouble, as a festive mood prevailed despite - or perhaps because of - the heavy police presence.
"This is the center of the world on New Year's Eve," said Rick Milley, 60, who traveled from Boston with his wife, Debbie, 59, to ring in the new year in Times Square.
"This was on our bucket list," Debbie Milley said as the couple took pictures of themselves using a selfie stick.
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The pair have spent the holiday in New York before but never before
in Times Square, a year-round tourist draw, filled with chain stores,
family restaurants and flashy advertising displays.About 6,000 uniformed and undercover police officers, 500 more than last year, patrolled the area, with the force bolstered by mounted patrols, bomb-sniffing dogs, radiation detectors and hundreds of surveillance cameras.
As of 1 a.m. (0600 GMT), there were no reports of trouble at the event or any arrests, according to a New York City Police Department spokesman, Sergeant Brendan Ryan.
For the first time on a New Year's Eve, the city deployed its new Critical Response Command, which includes more heavily armed officers. The unit is trained to detect and respond to attacks, such those in Paris that killed 130 people on Nov. 13, or the rampage in San Bernardino, California, in which 14 were slain.
A member of the New York Police Department looks on during New Year celebrations in Times Square in the Manhattan …
PENNED IN FOR THE PARTY
The famous New Year's Eve ball, which is 12 feet (3.6 meters) in diameter and weighs nearly 6 tons, descended on a pole mounted on top of One Times Square, a narrow wedge of a building along 42nd Street at the southern end of the square.
Mayor Bill de Blasio pushed the button that began the descent, leading to the 60-second countdown to midnight, when a giant illuminated "2016" sign flashed on, signaling the beginning of the new year.
Crowds began assembling in Times Square hours before the official start of the festivities at 6 p.m. Thursday (2300 GMT). The revelers were organized into neat pens formed by police barricades that stretched for many blocks up Seventh Avenue and Broadway north of One Times Square.
From a vantage point about 20 floors above, the revelers appeared to be tucked into block-long honeycombs encircled by uniformed officers and support workers dressed in bright red coveralls.
This image provided by EarthCam shows a New Year's Eve scene in Times Square on Broadway on Thursday, Dec. 31, …
Gomez came to Times Square even though he said he was concerned about the area being targeted in an attack. "I'm scared," he said.
In the hours before midnight, musical artists such as Carrie Underwood and Jessie J performed on stages set up in the area.
More than 100 million Americans and 1 billion people worldwide were expected to watch the festivities on television.
In Rochester, New York, a 25-year-old man accused of planning to attack a restaurant on New Year's Eve was arrested on Wednesday and charged with attempting to provide support to Islamic State, the U.S. Justice Department said.
Afterwards, Rochester, about 330 miles (530 km) northwest of New York City, canceled its New Year's Eve fireworks display.
Before entering Times Square,
visitors were required to pass through tight security checkpoints, with
police stopping anyone from carrying backpacks and large bags while
searching smaller bags and scanning people with metal detectors.
The tradition of gathering in
Times Square to celebrate the new year began in 1904, according to the
Times Square Alliance, the area's business-development association.
That was the year that the New
York Times opened a new headquarters building at One Times Square and
the city officially renamed the square after the newspaper.
(Additional reporting by Steve
Gorman from Los Angeles and Frank McGurty in New York; Writing by Frank
McGurty; Editing by Jonathan Oatis, Robert Birsel)
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