Gay Street (Manhattan)
Gay Street, northward to Christopher Street | |
Location | Greenwich Village, Manhattan, New York City |
---|---|
Postal code | 10014 |
Coordinates | 40°44′01″N 74°00′01″W / 40.73362°N 74.0004°WCoordinates: 40°44′01″N 74°00′01″W / 40.73362°N 74.0004°W |
North end | Christopher Street |
South end | Waverly Place |
Gay Street is a short, crooked street that marks off one block of Greenwich Village in the New York City borough of Manhattan.
The street's name does not refer to the LGBT character of Greenwich Village, or to any other LGBT issues for that matter. The name may have come from a classified ad for one R. Gay, whose name was mentioned in a newspaper dated May 11, 1775 and who advertised a gelding for sale.
“ | This street, originally a stable alley, was probably named for an early landowner, not for the sexuality of any denizens, who coincidentally reside in Greenwich Village, a predominantly homosexual community. Nor is it likely, as is sometimes claimed,[1] that its namesake was Sidney Howard Gay, editor of the National Anti-Slavery Standard;[2] he would have been 19 when the street was christened in 1833. The mistaken association with an abolitionist is probably because the street's residents were mainly black, many of them servants of the wealthy white families on Washington Square. Later it became noted as an address for black musicians, giving the street a bohemian reputation.[3] | ” |
Since it was once too narrow to be a full-fledged street, the City of New York widened it in 1833. As a result, Federal houses of 1826-1833 line the west side of the street, while on the east side, following a hiatus caused by the Panic of 1837, the houses are of 1844-1860, with remnants of Greek Revival detailing in doorways and window surrounds.[4]
The street extends from Christopher Street one block south to Waverly Place, between and roughly parallel to Sixth and Seventh Avenues. It runs through the site of a brewery owned by Wouter van Twiller, who succeeded Peter Minuit as Governor of New Netherland in 1633. The name first appeared officially in the Common Council minutes for April 23, 1827, which record a health inspector's complaint against a privy belonging to one A. S. Pell of Gay Street.
The 1943 movie A Night to Remember portrays 13 Gay Street as the address of the building where most of the action, including a murder, occurs. In 1996, Sheryl Crow made a video on Gay Street for the song "A Change Would Do You Good".
See also
- Doyers Street, another historically short and crooked street in Manhattan
References
Notes
- ↑ Archived August 16, 2004, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ National Anti-Slavery Standard
- ↑ "New York Songlines". Home.roadrunner.com. Retrieved 2013-12-04.
- ↑ Joyce Gold, From Trout Stream to Bohemia: A Walking Guide to Greenwich Village History (1988:86f); Gold notes that though it is the second shortest street in Greenwich Village, one cannot see its full length because of the angle at the center.
Bibliography
- Moscow, Henry (1978), The Street Book: An Encyclopedia of Manhattan's Street Names and Their Origins, New York: Hagstrom, ISBN 0823212750
External links
Media related to Gay Street (Manhattan) at Wikimedia Commons