Greenwich Village Celebrities

During my Village walk, I rarely make any reference to “celebrities,” aka cinema and television actors. Founding fathers such as Hamilton and Paine. My favorite celebrities are artists such as Franz Kline, the sculptor Isomu Naguci, and even the polka dot painter Kusoma. Also, Woody Guthrie, Richie Havens, and writers such as Poe, Edith Wharton, and Louisa May Alcott. Alcott lived with her uncle on Macdougal St. in a townhouse that still stands.

In the 20th century, other famous people were Eugene O’Neill, Ezra Pound, and Norman Mailer. I worked for Norman Mailer’s campaign, collating papers during the week he was running for mayor.  I knew people like Allen Ginsberg, the poet, who visited my mother when I was a child and would eat the food off my plate. All these and many more made the Village a sanctuary for free thinkers and those brave enough to speak truth to power.

Halloween Party at MacDougal Alley in the 1920’s.

National League Origin

The oldest sports associaton in the World the National Association founded in 1871 was reformed here in Greenwich Village into the National League in 1876. Twenyfive years later the American started also called the “junior Circuit”.

Nztioanl League c. 1876

Bank Street

How Bank Street got its name. Along with the exodus from lower Manhattan after the 1820 outbreak of yellow fever two banks moved up to Greenwich Village. Both set up on the same road now called Bank St.

Bank of America on Bank Street early 19 c.

Artist on Horatio Street

Almost every street in the Village has had some kind of creative person living there. On my street, Horatio Street, alone there have been many, such as: the sculptor Chaim Gross (#48) and painter Jackson Pollack (#47). Then there are writers like: James Baldwin (#81), and John Cheever (#51. Also folk singer Richie Havens (#53) and pop star Tod Rundgren (#51) have made this street their home.

Poe in Greenwich Village

In 1847 27 year old Poe came to New York City with his bride of 13. Here on Bleeker St. he was living when his first work was published, The Raven in the Evening Mirror. Poe then left the city for about a decade returning with his wife now in the last stages of tuberculosis. He then went to the country side of the Bronx for her health where she passed and Poe left New York never to return.

Poe residence on Bleeker Street

Marc’s Childood

As a little boy I played with Wendy Lambert in Abingdon Square Park . I was the scruffy one while she was the little princess. Her Father was David Lambert of the Jazz singing group of Lambert, Hendrix and Ross. When my mom visited them Wendy and I would sit in there organ box reading comics. Hear exactly what a organ box is when on my Village walk.

Marc and Wendy Lambert in Abington Square Park in 1951. “Scruffy me with the princess.”

Jefferson Market Court House

The courthouse was built in 1877. There was a fire tower there in circa 1833 and the Jefferson Market. It is now a library Jefferson Market Library – Wikipedia.

Jefferson Market Courthouse was a night court for the next 70 years. Arraigned there defendants such as Boss Tweed, head of Tammany Hall and embezzler of hundreds of millions of dollars during his regime in NYC; Harry Thaw, who killed the architect Stamford White; and May West for lewdness on stage in her production “Sex.”

Jefferson Market