New York Songlines: Macdougal Street

Macdougal Street is named for Alexander McDougall (whose father, oddly enough, spelled his name MacDougal). Born in the Hebrides, McDougall started out as a British privateer before becoming a New York merchant. A founder of the Sons of Liberty, he spent time in jail in 1770 for writing an anti-British pamphlet. He was a major general in the Revolutionary War, represented New York in the Continental Congress and was the first president of the Bank of New York.






W <===       WEST EIGHTH STREET       ===> E

West:

179: Splendid Cleaners

177: Manhattan Theatre Source; resources for stage productions. Dog Wash in basement.

175: Monk Thrift Shop

171: Tenth Church of Christ Scientist was built in 1890 as a Romanesque factory building designed by Renwick, Aspinwall and Russell. In 1921 it was acquired by the Christian Scientists and in 1966 the church gave it its current virtually windowless Modernist facade. May be restored to its original state--I'm not sure that's a great idea.


Corner (103 Waverly Place): C3 restaurant (C3 = 103); affiliated with Washington Square Hotel.

M
A
C
D
O
U
G
A
L

S
T

East:

Corner (32 W 8th): Versailles clothing was 8th Street Bookshop, classic Beat bookstore; Bob Dylan was introduced to Allen Ginsberg here in 1964.

Yvonne's Laundromat

176: Was the Jumble Shop, Prohibition-era tearoom; later Shakespeare's.

MACDOUGAL ALLEY

Created 1833 as stables for the houses on Washington Square North; Jackson Pollock stayed in No. 9 in 1949-50. 10-10 1/2 was playwrights salon in 1960s; 15 1/2-17 1/2 were the first site of the Whitney Museum. In front of No. 15 is one of New York's last gaslights.

Corner (27 Washington Square North): This building has been the home of Matthew Broderick and Uta Hagen.


W <===       WAVERLY PLACE / WASHINGTON SQ N       ===> E

West:

29 (corner): Eleanor Roosevelt took an apartment here in 1942; it was her main residence from FDR's death in 1945 until 1949.




32 (corner):


S <=== WASHINGTON PL

33 (corner): NYU's Hayden Hall, built in 1957 as a resident for law students, incorporates the Holley Chambers Hotel, formerly at No. 36, where you could spend the night for $2.50 in 1939. (''HC'' can still be seen over the door.) Theodore Roosevelt is claimed as a former guest here, but the building dates back only to 1929, when it was built as the Knott Apartment Hotel.

37 (corner): Notable terra cotta on this 1928 building.

W
A
S
H
I
N
G
T
O
N

S
Q
U
A
R
E

W

East:

Washington Square Park

Originally a marsh surrounding Minetta Brook, in the early years of New York this area was used as a graveyard for slaves and yellow fever victims, a dueling ground and a place of execution. Near the northwest corner can be found the Hanging Tree, perhaps the oldest tree in Manhattan. It's apparently not true that the Marquis de Lafayette on his 1824 visit to New York witnessed the festive hanging of 20 highwaymen here, but Rose Butler was hanged here in 1820, the last person in New York State to be executed for arson.

In 1826 this area was designated the Washington Military Parade Grounds, which soon was transformed into a public park. Washington Square was at one point the center of New York society, later becoming the unofficial quadrangle of NYU. In 1961 it was the site of protests over a police crackdown on folksinging, and in 1963, local activists kicked cars out of the park. The present landscaping of the park dates to 1971.

In the southwest corner of the park the chess players can be found who were featured in Searching for Bobby Fischer. Playing them for money is a bad idea.


W <===         W 4TH ST / WASHINGTON SQ W         ===> E

West:

Washington Square Park

137: NYU School of Law Lawyering Program is on the site of Polly's Restaurant, run by Evanston-born anarchist Paula Holladay. Upstairs was home to the Liberal Club (1913-19), whose membership seems to have been a who's who of radical writers and intellectuals: Emma Goldman, Max Eastman, Margaret Sanger, Jack London, Upton Sinclair, Lincoln Steffens, Sinclair Lewis, Sherwood Anderson and Theodore Dreiser have all been claimed as members. Also the meetingplace of Heterodoxy, which Mabel Dodge described as a club for "unorthodox women, women who did things and did them openly." Earlier, the building was the home of Nathaniel Currier (partner of Ives).

135: NYU tried to force six elderly tenants out of this building in 2007.

Provincetown Playhouse

133: Pioneering off-Broadway theater that featured the talents of Eugene O’Neill, Edna St. Vincent Millay, e.e. cummings, Djuna Barnes, Paul Robeson, Tallulah Bankhead, etc. Bette Davis made her stage debut here. Now does children's theater.

131: This building was not, as legend has it, built for Aaron Burr, but was, like 127 and 129, built about 1829 in the Federal style.

129: La Lanterna di Vittorio, NYU hangout with nice garden. In the basement is The Bar Next Door, an intimate jazz room. Was Eve's Hangout (1925-26), tearoom and speakeasy run by Eve Addams, "Queen of the Third Sex"; "Men Admitted But Not Welcome" was the sign. Closed by police; Addams was convicted of obscenity and deported for writing a story collection called Lesbian Love.

Note pineapples on railing--an old symbol of hospitality.

127: Macdougal Copy Center

125 (corner): Groove, "The Home of Rhythm & Blues and Funk"

M
A
C
D
O
U
G
A
L

S
T
R
E
E
T

East:

Corner (40 Washington Square South): NYU School of Law's Vanderbilt Hall (1951). Rico Fonseca, "The Artist of Greenwich Village NYC," can often be found here with his psychedelic works.

Eugene O'Neill had a room in a boarding house formerly on the corner here (at No. 38 Washington Square South) in 1916, when he was having an affair with Louise Bryant--Mrs. John Reed.









146: Replaced a building that housed The Calypso, a Caribbean restaurant (noted for its curry) where author James Baldwin worked as a waiter. His friends would often drop by to see him--like Paul Robeson, Marlon Brando, Eartha Kitt and Henry Miller.

144: Another building replaced by the law school was used by Anais Nin as a print shop--she self-published her first three books here.









138: Was the address of The Bat, an Italian restaurant noted in the 1939 WPA Guide.






W <===                 WEST THIRD STREET                 ===> E

The block from 3rd Street to Bleecker was known as the Auction Block because of its heavy gay cruising.

West:

Corner: Ben's Pizzeria, opened 1966

Cafe Reggio

121: Authentically charming since 1927. Featured in Godfather II, Serpico, Next Stop Greenwich Village, and the original Shaft. JFK gave a speech out front in 1959.

119: Mamoun’s Falafel, opened in 1971, is said to be the first (of many) falafel joint in town.

117: Olive Tree Cafe, launched 1969, Mediterranean joint where you can write on the tables with chalk. Used to be the Cock and Bull; before that it was Swing Rendezvous, a 1940s lesbian bar. Became The Underground in 1967, noted for its psychedelic light screen. Now The Comedy Cellar, which boasts talent like Colin Quinn, Jerry Seinfeld and Jon Stewart.

115: Cafe Wha?, a long-running Greenwich Village club where Bob Dylan had his first NYC gig, and Jimi Hendrix gained fame.

MINETTA LANE

See a 360 degree panorama of this corner.

Minetta Tavern

113: An Italian restaurant founded in 1937, it was a meeting place for Ezra Pound, e.e. cummings, Ernest Hemingway, etc. Joe Gould worked on his Oral History of the World here; murals depict Village history. Until 1929 was The Black Rabbit, a speakeasy run by Eve Adams before Eve’s Hangout; Eugene O'Neill and Max Bodenheim were customers. Reader’s Digest was founded in the basement in 1923. The restaurant appears in the movie Jimmy Blue Eyes as La Trattoria, a mob-run joint--which is not so far-fetched, given that the owner was busted for running an Ecstasy ring in 2000.

109: Off the Wagon Bar & Grill; formerly The Derby

107: Village Ma Thai was Rienzi's coffeehouse, a James Dean hangout. "If a couple meets at Rienzi's they break up at Figaro's and vice versa"--New York Unexpurgated.

99: Hummus Place was Kati Roll Company, Indian street food. Before that the Samurai Bar, aka The Smallest Bar in New York.

95: Tenement from 1888

Butterfly Grill

93 (corner): It's easier to find the painted-over old name, Carpo's Cafe. But it's most notable as the former site of the San Remo, famous bohemian hangout of William Burroughs, Allen Ginsberg, Gregory Corso, Miles Davis, Jackson Pollock, W.H. Auden, Dylan Thomas, James Baldwin, William Styron, James Agee, Frank O'Hara, Village character Maxwell Bodenheim, photographer Weegee, etc. Gore Vidal once picked up Jack Kerouac here. Lost popularity because the bartenders beat up the customers once too often. The setting of beat novel Go, it also appears as The Masque in Kerouac's The Subterraneans. Dawn Powell in The Golden Spur cited it as one of the four bars that defined the boundaries of New York.

M
A
C
D
O
U
G
A
L

S
T
R
E
E
T

East:

Corner (110 W. 3rd): NYU law school's D'Agostino Hall (1986). "A fine work," says the AIA Guide.

130-132: Louisa May Alcott wrote Little Women in this 1852 house.

128: Whatever Body Piercing Tattoo. What would Louisa think?

126: Silver World; Ali Baba Kabab House

124: Meskerem, tasty Ethiopian-- "You can even eat the dishes!"

122: Macdougal Ale House is in a Romanesque tenement.

120: C'est Magnifique antiques and custom jewelry

118: Mexican Village

116: Below Frequency ("body piercing/watches") and Spring Gallery (Chinese gifts) is the storied space of Alibi. It was previously the Wreck Room and before that Scrap Bar, a punkish bar with post-industrial decor. In the 1970s, it had been El Cafe, a lesbian bar. In the 1950s it was the Gas Light Cafe, the "quintessential Beat hangout"; it launched the Village poetry-reading craze with readings by Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Kerouac, Ginsberg, Corso, LeRoi Jones et al.; Bob Dylan played here and stayed in a room upstairs. Before that it was Louis' Luncheon, hangout for writers, Ziegfield Follies chorus girls, gays and lesbians.




114: Esperanto Café ("always open") was the Kettle of Fish (now on Christopher Street), hangout of Village characters like Joe Gould and photographer Weegee. Bob Dylan had a fight here with Andy Warhol over Edie Sedgwick.




112: Just Do It

110: Nails by Barneys; Cover Up boutique. In 1957, this was Izzy Young's Folklore Center, center of the folk explosion.

108: New Souvenir Cottage; Macdou Cleaners

106: Baraka Sterling Silver Jewelry; Excellent Photo

104: Yatagan Kabab House is recommended by the Voice's Robert Sietsema as a cheap, friendly meat fix. Silver Express shares the address.

102: Slane, Irish bar/restaurant, was Brazil Grill





Ciao! Vineria con Cucina

100 (corner): Replaced Cafe Borgia when its owners retired after 60 years. In a beaux arts tenement that went up in 1904.


W <===         BLEECKER STREET         ===> E

West:

Caffe del Marre

Corner (89 Macdougal): Formerly Mac Dougal's Cafe, before that a funeral parlor.

87: Focacceria

85: CamaJe; French-American bistro offers hands-on cooking classes in the kitchen.

79-81: Cafe Dante, with trattotia and gelateria. Established 1915.

77: New York Rifle Club, an Italian shooting society better known as Tiro a Segno, or "Hit the Target." Members have included Fiorella Laguardia, Enrico Caruso and Garibaldi.

69: Villa Mosconi

William F. Passannante Playground

Named for a speaker pro tem of the New York State Assembly, a lifelong Villager and a champion of the neighborhood.

M
A
C
D
O
U
G
A
L

S
T

East:

Figaro Cafe

98 (corner): Resurrected as a cafe after spending a time in purgatory as a Blimpie's. Now trying to pass itself off as a bar as well. At some point it was The Hep Bagel. Al Pacino hangs with Penelope Ann Miller here in Carlito's Way.

Macdougal-Sullivan Gardens

74-96: These 1844 buildings, which had become slums by the early 20th Century, were renovated in 1921 by William Sloane Coffin Sr.'s Hearth and Home Corporation. A private garden is in the center of the development.

No. 92-94 was owned by Bob Dylan in 1966-68.



72: Chez Jacqueline, nice French place

Corner (146 W. Houston): Nellie's, a tony lounge; formerly Aggie’s, a pleasant breakfast spot


W <===         WEST HOUSTON STREET         ===> E

West:

51 (corner): Something Special, a coffeeshop and mail drop used by numerous nearby notables, including Patti Smith, the Beastie Boys, Matthew Broderick and Sarah Jessica Parker (who also used to work here). The building to the north, demolished for the widening of Houston Street, is said to have housed a bar that was part of Joseph Kennedy's rumrunning business.




M
A
C
D
O
U
G
A
L

East:

60: St. Anthony School (K-8)

56: 12 Chairs, cafe featuring tasty "Soviet food" (according the Voice)

54: Rosenberg Jewelry store was blown up in the movie Men in Black.

38: Provence, noted for its Bastille Day celebrations





        PRINCE STREET         ===> E

N <===         SIXTH AVENUE         ===> S








Is your favorite 34th Street spot missing? Write to Jim Naureckas and tell him about it.

New York Songlines Home.

Sources for the Songlines.

Macdougal Street has been visited at least times.