South:
Corner (32-34 2nd Ave): A great place to see obscure films.
The building used to be a courthouse.
59: The seat of the Orthodox diocese of New
York and New Jersey. It was obtained in 1943
to replace a cathedral on 97th Street that was taken
over by the Soviet Union in a legal battle.
Previously it was Mt. Olivet Memorial Church,
built in 1867 by architect
Josiah Cady, who
designed the Museum of Natural History and
the Old Metropolitan Opera House.
65: Apartments were formerly the rectory
of Mt. Olivet. Note fancy fire escapes on this Italianate 1860 building.
67: In 1969 this was the hideout of Sam Melville, who bombed a series of targets
"in support of the NLF, legalized marijuana, love,
Cuba, legalized abortion, and all the American
revolutionaries and GIs who are winning the war
against the Pentagon. Nixon, surrender now!" He hit the
U.S. Induction Center on Whitehall Street, the
Marine Midland Bank on Broadway and
the Criminal Courts Building at 100 Centre Street, as
well as several targets in the Midwest--all without
killing anyone. On November 11, 1969, he had bombs go off simultaneously
on upper floors of the RCA Building, the General
Motors Building and the Chase Manhattan Bank,
causing panic throughout the city. He tried
to bomb the National Guard Armory on Lexington,
but one of his accomplices was an FBI informant
and turned him in. He was sentenced to
18 years and was killed in the 1971 Attica prison massacre.
Corner (29 1st Ave): Gringer & Sons,
respected appliance store since 1918.
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