New York Songlines: Greenwich Avenue

When Greenwich Street, the direct route to Greenwich Village when it was a suburb of New York, was flooded, as it often was, this was the alternate route. It was originally part of an Indian trail that also included Astor Place; the Dutch called it Strand Road, and it's also been called Monument Lane, named for an obelisk erected to General James Wolfe, who captured Quebec for the British.







W <===     8TH AVENUE     ===> E

West:

Jackson Square

This 1826 park was apparently named for President Andrew Jackson, a big hero for New York Democrats at the time.












G
R
E
E
N
W
I
C
H

A
V
E

East:



















W <===     HORATIO ST / W 13TH ST     ===> E

West:

123-125: Mxyplyzyk; kooky housewares store (say "Mix-y-Plisk") named for Superman's enemy, an elf-like creature who had to be tricked into saying his name backwards to return him to his own dimension.

115 (corner): At this corner in the 1940s was Jane Street Chemists, a drugstore/luncheonette that was a hangout for folksingers like Richard Dyer-Bennet and Millard Lampell, a co-founder of the Almanac Singers who was blacklisted during the McCarthy Era. Now the Soy Luck Club, which serves lactose-free sandwiches and coffee.


W <===         JANE ST

113 (corner): Benny's Burritos, tasty local mini-chain



103 (corner): Day-O, island-themed tavern

G
R
E
E
N
W
I
C
H

A
V
E
N
U
E

East:









118: Cafe de Bruxelles, longstanding Belgian

112: Benny's Burritos takeout; A Salt & Battery, fish and chips mini-chain

108: Tea & Sympathy, Anglophile cafe

96: Flight 001, air travel paraphernalia

94: Barocco Hots, Italian chain

90: Johnny's Bar

Corner (225 W 12th): The Village Den, diner here since the 1950s.


W <===             WEST 12TH STREET             ===> E

West:

Art Greenwich Twin

93: Tacqueria de Mexico

91: The address from 1913 until 1917 of The Masses, a radical magazine edited by Max Eastman that published John Reed, Carl Sandburg, Upton Sinclair, Sherwood Anderson, Dorothy Day, Helen Keller and Amy Lowell--along with art by the likes of John Sloan and Robert Henri. It was shut down by the government over its opposition to World War I.

89: good, New American food with a Latin accent


W <===         BANK ST

81: Artepasta, Italian

77: Chez Brigitte, a tiny restaurant that has served French home-cooking since 1958, when it was founded by by Marseilles-born Brigitte Catapano. Perhaps the cheapest French restaurant around.

75: Greenwich Cafe is open 24 hours.

Corner (201 W 11th): Two Boots To Go West, part of a great mini-chain of Cajun pizza parlors--the boots being Italy and Louisiana.


W <===         W 11TH ST

Corner (192 7th Ave): Fantasy World, mildly naughty sex shop

G
R
E
E
N
W
I
C
H

A
V
E
N
U
E

East:

86: Was the site of the Greenwich Theater cinema. Earlier was the address of James & Susan Light's 17-room apartment, where many leading artists and intellectual stayed in the 1910s--including writer Djuna Barnes, photographer Berenice Abbott and poet Malcolm Cowley. Dorothy Day was a downstairs neighbor. The building was known as Maison Clemenceau, because French statesman Georges Clemenceau had lived on the site from 1866-69, writing for the Paris Temps--he described this as the three happiest years of his life.






















This end of the block was the site of Loew's Sheridan, where writer Ruth McKenney and her sister Eileen would go to from their apartment when they wanted privacy. Later a garden, the Village Green. Now the St Vincent's Material Handling Center.


W <===         7TH AVE S         ===> E

West:

Mulry Square

Corner: This triangular parking lot was formerly the site of a wedge-shaped diner that is said to have been the inspiration for Edward Hopper's painting Nighthawks. The diner's tiling can still be seen on the one remaining wall. The parking lot's fencing supports Tiles for America, a September 11 memorial consisting of some 6,000 tiles created across the country. There's a proposal to turn Mulry Square into a small park.



59: LaBella Pompeii Pizza; also Our Name Is Mud, paint-your-own pottery place that started the Tiles for America memorial.

57 (corner): Matador was Sapore Due, an expansion of the restaurant down the street; before that Dew Drop Inn, Southernish bar.


W <===         PERRY ST

55 (corner): Sapore, affordable Italian

45: Author William Styron lived here in 1951.

43: Fetch, designer pet accessories

41: Bouchon, little French bistro

39 (corner): Wogies Bar & Grill--pub food, specializing in Philly cheese steaks.


W <===         CHARLES ST









35: The address of William Dunlap, called the Father of the American Theater--the first American who tried (not very successfully) to make a living writing for the stage

23 (corner): Saint Germaine apartments, an unfortunate 15-story white-brick building put up in 1962

G
R
E
E
N
W
I
C
H

A
V
E
N
U
E

East:

St Vincent's Hospital

Corner: Founded in 1849 by the Sisters of Charity. Poet Edna St. Vincent Millay was given her middle name because her uncle's life was saved here. Poet Kahlil Gibran died here in 1931, as did Dylan Thomas on November 9, 1953, several days after his famous night at the White Horse. Survivors of the Titanic disaster taken here for treatment. This was the main hospital used for treating victims of the September 11 World Trade Center attack in 2001.


W 11TH ST ===> E

74 (corner): West Village Florist is on the apex of this pointy block.

70: Bagels and Much More; Dalton Coffee

68: Elephant & Castle, longstanding British pub, named for a London district. Before c. 1973, it was The Belly Button, noted for exotic condiments.

62: Zutto, sushi

60: Gusto Ristorante e Bar Americano

58A: The Original Sandwich Shoppe

54-58: Fiddlesticks, Irish-y pub; until the mid-1990s was the infamous Uncle Charlie's bar.

52: Gottino Enoteca E Salumeria, wine bar. (The name means "Small Glass Wine Cellar and Sausage Shop." Was Ezekiel's, run by the non-profit Covenant House to train at-risk youth for restaurant jobs.

46: Caffe dell'Artista; downstairs is Village Natural.

44: Partners & Crime Mystery Bookseller; James Gandolfini is said to be a fan.

28: Lassi was Thali Vegetarian, where everyone got the same meal.

26: Lafayette Bakery, specializing in French pastries. Formerly on Bleecker.

24: Funayama sushi was the Peacock Caffe.

22: The Village Voice was founded at this address.

20 (corner): Village Paper and Party is in a 1954 building. Sutter's French Bakery, an esteemed pastry shop, was here until 1972.


W <===             WEST 10TH STREET             ===> E

West:

21: Grano Trattoria, Italian noted for wild game on menu

19: Olde Good Things, an antique store linked to the cult-like Church of Bible Understanding. They were lampooned on Seinfeld as the ''Carpet-Cleaning Cult.''

15: Empire Szechuan Greenwich is at the address of William Dunlap, called the first American playwright.

9: Zachary's Smile, named "best vintage spot" by Time Out


W <===   CHRISTOPHER ST

3: Go Sushi; mini-chain

G
R
E
E
N
W
I
C
H

A
V
E

East:

Jefferson Market Greening

Garden on site of former Women's House of Detention. Inmates included black activist Angela Davis, Catholic radical Dorothy Day, labor organizer Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, accused spy Ethel Rosenberg, East Side madame Bea Garfield, Warhol shooter Valerie Solanas and (in an earlier co-ed jail) Mae West. Demolished 1973. Miranda got married here on Sex in the City.












W <===             6TH AVENUE             ===> E

South:















W

8
T
H

S
T

||
||
||
V

North:


















Is your favorite Greenwich Avenue spot missing? Write to Jim Naureckas and tell him about it.

New York Songlines Home.

Sources for the Songlines.