West 4th Street (Manhattan)

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West 4th St. and Bank St.
West 4th St. and Bank St.
West 4th St. at West 12th St., which runs left-right.
West 4th St. at West 12th St., which runs left-right.

West 4th Street is a narrow one lane street in New York City that runs east-west through most of eastern Manhattan and then turns north at 6th Avenue to intersect with West 10th, 11th, 12th, and 13th Streets in Greenwich Village. The approximate three block section of West 4th on the southern border of Washington Square Park is also called Washington Square South. The north/south portion was formerly called Asylum Street.

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Located near Washington Square Park's south-west corner, between Macdougal Street and Sixth Avenue, The Washington Square Methodist Church (135 W. 4th) is an early Romanesque Revival marble edifice designed by Gamaliel King and built in 1859-60.[1] Dubbed the "Peace Church" for its support of Vietnam War protesters, Washington Square Church long provided a neighborhood base for activist groups such as the Black Panthers and Gay Men's Health Crisis. The church was sold in 2005 to a developer for conversion into residential units.[2]

Judson Memorial Church, located at the corner of Thompson Street and Washington Square South, designed by architect Stanford White, and stained glass master John La Farge.

The West 4th Street subway station at Sixth avenue is one of the major transfer points in the NYC transit system.

The street is also home to the "Cage" basketball and handball courts, a hangout for some of New York's best basketball players and the site of a city-wide streetball tournament.[3]

West 4th Street has always been a center of the Village's bohemian lifestyle. The Village's first tearoom, The Mad Hatter, was located at 150 W. 4th St. and served as a meeting place for intellectuals and artists.

The intersection of West 4th and West 12th Streets
The intersection of West 4th and West 12th Streets

The infamous Golden Swan bar (known as the "Hell Hole"), at the corner of Sixth avenue, was a famous haunt of Eugene O'Neill and the setting and inspiration for his play The Iceman Cometh. Writer Willa Cather's first NY residence was at 60 Washington Square South (4th Street between LaGuardia Place and Thompson Place) and radical journalists John Reed and Lincoln Steffens lived nearby at 42 Washington Square South. Reed later worked in a room in the Studio Club building to complete the series of articles that became his account of the Bolshevik Revolution, Ten Days that Shook the World, later the source for the movie Reds.[4]

Sculptor and art patron Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney established the Whitney Studio Club in a brownstone at 147 W. 4th Street in 1918 as a place for young artists to gather and show their work. The facility operated for ten years and was the second incarnation of what would later become the Whitney Museum of American Art.[5] It started the careers of such artists as Ashcan school painter John Sloan, Edward Hopper, whose first one-man exhibit was held there in 1920, and social realists Reginald Marsh and Isabel Bishop. Sloan lived at 240 W. 4th St and painted locations on the street including the Golden Swan.

The street was later home to the famous folk club Gerde's Folk City (11 W. 4th St.), which hosted the NY debuts of Bob Dylan in 1961 and Simon & Garfunkel. Dylan also lived from early-1962 until late-1964 in a small $80-per-month studio apartment at 161 W. 4th Street[6] and the street may have inspired his 1965 hit song "Positively 4th Street".

  1. ^ New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission, Guide to New York City Landmarks, John Wiley and Sons: 2003, Pg. 50.
  2. ^ Albert Amateau, "Washington Square church is sold", The Villager, Vol. 75, Num. 10, July 27, 2005 Online version
  3. ^ Wight Martindale Jr., Inside the Cage : A Season at West 4th Street's Legendary Tournament, Simon Spotlight Entertainment: 2005.
  4. ^ Patrick Bunyan, All Around the Town: Amazing Manhattan Facts and Curiosities, Fordham Univ Press: 1999, Pp. 143, 147.
  5. ^ Janet Wolff, "Women at the Whitney, 1910-1930" in Bettina Messias Carbonell, editor, Museum Studies: An Anthology of Contexts, Blackwell Publishing: 2003, Pg. 485.
  6. ^ Howard Sounes, Down the Highway: The Life of Bob Dylan, Grove Press: 2002, Pp. 108, 164.

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