South:
Site of Richmond Hill
Corner: Richmond Hill, the colonial mansion that served as a
military headquarters for General George Washington and as
a residence for both John Adams and Aaron Burr, was moved
to this spot when John Jacob Astor bought the estate, leveled
the hill and subdivided the property. The mansion became a
theater in 1831, which featured the wild animal acts of Isaac Van
Amburgh, reputedly the first person to put his head in a lion's
mouth. The building was demolished in 1849.
The original location of the mansion is in some dispute; some
say it was near this intersection, others place it a block to the west.
42: Starting with this house, a
line of Federal-style rowhouses is part
of a south-of-the-Village historic district,
dating from the 1820s and 1840s.
40: Opened in 1941 as a
secondary extension of the Little Red School
House, this
progressive private school is named for
its founder (who also started Little Red), an educational
pioneer who worked with John Dewey to create
a style of teaching for "the whole child."
As Nation editor
Victor Navasky (an EIHS
graduate) has noted, its alums are a varied
lot, including radicals like Angela Davis
and Kathy Boudin, neocons Elliott Abrams
and Ronald Radosh, and actor Robert DeNiro.
20: The last house protected on the
south side of the street.
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