Bowery
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Bowery (IPA: /ˈbaʊɚi/ or /ˈbaʊri/) is the name of a street and a small neighborhood in the southern portion of the New York City borough of Manhattan. The neighborhood's boundaries are East 4th Street and the East Village to the north, Canal Street and Chinatown to the South, Allen Street and the Lower East Side to the east and Bowery (the street) and Little Italy to the west (citidex.com 2006) (Fodor's 1991). As a street, the Bowery was known as Bowery Lane prior to 1807 (Brown, 1922) and was the road leading to Peter Stuyvesant's farm or bouwerij. Today it runs from Chatham Square in the south to Cooper Square in the north.
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Bouwerij was the old Dutch word for farm, (today boerderij). Stuyvesant retired to his farm in 1667. After his death in 1672, he was buried in his private chapel. His mansion burned down in 1778 and his great-grandson sold the remaining chapel and graveyard, now the site of the Episcopal church of St Mark's Church in-the-Bowery (Fodor's 2004).
The Bull's Head Tavern is noted for George Washington having stopped there to refresh himself before riding down to the waterfront to witness the departure of British troops in 1783.
By the end of the 18th century the Bowery became New York's most elegant street, lined with fashionable shops and the mansions of prosperous residents.[citation needed] Lorenzo Da Ponte, the Librettist for Mozart's Don Giovanni, Marriage of Figaro, and Cosi Fan Tutte, ran one of the shops - a fruit and vegetable store - after he emigrated to New York City in 1806. But by the time of the Civil War, the mansions and shops had given way to brothels, beer gardens, and flophouses, like the one at #15 in which the composer Stephen Foster lived in 1864[1]. It had also become the turf of one of America's earliest street gangs, the nativist Bowery Boys. One notable religious and social welfare institution during this period was The Bowery Mission or more formally The Bowery Mission and Young Men's Home, which began in 1880 at 36 Bowery when it was founded by Rev. Albert Gleason Ruliffson. The mission had relocated along the Bowery throughout its lifetime. From 1909 to the present, the mission has remained at 227-229 Bowery.
Home of many music halls in the 19th century, the Bowery later became notable for its economic depression. In the 1920s and 1930s, it was regarded as an impoverished area. The "Dead End Kids" (aka the "Bowery Boys") of film were from the Bowery. In the 1940s through the 1970s, the Bowery was New York City's "Skid Row," notable for "Bowery Bums" (alcoholics and homeless persons).
In the 1960s and 1970s, the Bowery was viewed as a high-crime, low-rent area. However, since the 1990s the entire Lower East Side has been reviving. As of July 2005, gentrification is contributing to ongoing change along the Bowery. In particular, the number of high-rise condominiums is growing.
In 2006, AvalonBay Communities opened its first luxury apartment complex on the Bowery. Avalon Bowery Place was quickly followed with the development of Avalon Bowery Place II in 2007.
Michael Dominic's documentary film Sunshine Hotel (2001) follows the lives of the denizens of one of the few remaining Bowery flophouses.
In 1985, a book of photographs of the entire Bowery by Carin Drechsler-Marx, a German photographer, was published in German under the title BOWERY.
Major streets that intersect the Bowery include Canal Street, Delancey Street, Houston Street, and Bleecker Street. A New York City Subway station named Bowery on the BMT Nassau Street Line (J, M, and Z services) is located at the Bowery's intersection with Delancey Street.
CBGB, a club initially opened to play country, bluegrass & blues (as the name CBGB stands for), began to book Television, Patti Smith, and the Ramones as house bands in the mid-1970s. This spawned a full-blown scene of new bands (Talking Heads, Blondie, edgy R&B-influenced Mink DeVille, rockabilly revivalist Robert Gordon, and others) performing mostly original material in a mostly raw and often loud and fast attack. The label of punk rock was applied to the scene even if not all the bands that made their early reputations at the club were punk rockers, strictly speaking, but CBGB became known as the American cradle of punk rock as a result and brought a new national fame to the Bowery. CBGB closed on October 31, 2006, after a long battle by club owner Hilly Kristal to extend its lease. Fittingly, Patti Smith—the first of the CBGB-supported performers to sign a major recording contract three decades earlier—played the club's final show on October 15.
The Bowery Poetry Club is a New York City poetry performance space. Located at Bowery and Bleecker Street in Lower Manhattan, the BPC provides a home base for established and upcoming artists. It was founded by Bob Holman, owner of the building and former Nuyorican Poets Cafe Poetry Slam MC (1988-1996). The BPC features regular shows by Amiri Baraka, Anne Waldman, Jim Carroll, along with open mic, queer poets, a weekly poetry slam, and an Emily Dickinson Marathon, amongst other events.
Among other famous residents,Quentin Crisp, lived on Second Ave., near the Bowery for the last two decades of his life. Bela Bartok lived in 350 Bowery at the corner of Great Jones St. during the 1940's. The artist, Cy Twombly, lived on the 3rd floor of 356 Bowery during the '60's. The professional wrestler Raven is also introduced as a resident of the Bowery, though in reality, he was born in New Jersey and resides in Georgia.
New York School poet Ted Berrigan mentions the Bowery several times in his seminal work, "The Sonnets."
The Bowery is also the setting for Stephen Crane's first novel, Maggie: A Girl of the Streets (published in 1893), about a poor Irish family living in the neighborhood, and of Siri Hustvedt's novel, What I Loved (2003), about the friendship and lives of an artist and an art historian.
Punk singer Joey Ramone resided around here, and in 2003, a part of Second Street at the intersection Bowery and Bleecker Street was renamed Joey Ramone Place.[2][3]
- Mentioned in the Jim Croce song Don't Mess Around With Jim (1972) -- "Uptown's got its hustlers/The Bowery's got its bums/42nd Street got big Jim Walker"
- Professional Wrestler Scott Levy, who wrestles under the name Raven, is announced as being from The Bowery during his ring entrance.
- English pop band Saint Etienne makes a reference to The Bowery and perhaps even Jim Croce's "Don't Mess Around with Jim" in their song "Erica America" on their 1998 album Good Humor. The lyrics are "Hang around by the stadium/Drinking wine like a Bowery bum"
- In the 1979 film, The Warriors, the all-female gang The Lizzies and The Punks hail from Bowery.
- Fodor's flashmaps New York, 1991
- Fodor's See It New York City, 2004, [ISBN 1-4000-1387-9]
- Valentine's Manual of Old New York / No. 7, Ed. Henry Collins Brown, Pub. Valentine's Manual Inc. 1922
- ^ "The Street Book"; an encyclopedia of Manhattan's street names and their origins. By Henry Moscow.
- ^ "He Had the Beat -- and Now Has a Street", The Washington Post, December 7, 2003. Accessed August 2, 2007. "Now there is Joey Ramone Place.... The sign bearing Ramone's name recently went up on the corner of East Second Street and the Bowery, near CBGB, the group's musical home."
- ^ Gamboa, Glenn. "THE FOLD: BATTLE OVER PUNK BIRTHPLACE - Rock & rent, Newsday, August 10, 2005. Accessed August 2, 2007. "Reminders of the bands who have passed through CBGB remain all around the club, from the corner of the Bowery and 2nd Street - now renamed Joey Ramone Place - to the countless band names scrawled on the bathroom walls."
- New York Songlines: 4th Avenue
- Dave Ranney, or Thirty Years on the Bowery - autobiography of a Bowery dweller, published in 1910, from Project Gutenberg
- The Bowery at forgotten-ny.com - images, descriptions, and history
- Bowery Storefronts - photographs of Bowery stores and buildings.
- Avalon Bowery Place
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