Eldridge Street Synagogue Eddie Cantor's Birthplace Manhattan Bridge Excelsior Engine Company 9 Firehouse Vanessas Dumplings Hua Du Dumpling Shop Prosperity Dumpling C & L Dumpling House
Samuel F O'Reilly's Tattoo Shop Edward Mooney House Bulls Head Inn Wolfert Webber’s Tavern Shearith Israel's 2nd Cemetery The Dump McKeon's Saloon The Morgue Old Tree House The Farmers Inn Branch Hotel Atlantic Gardens Black Horse Inn Owney Geoghegan's Burnt Rag Al's Bar Steve Brodie's Bar The Pig and Whistle Tavern Hauser Beer Garden Upper Bull's Head DeLancey Arms Dog and Duck Tavern Comanche Club The Fleabag Sailors Snug Harbor The Mug The Duck and the Frying Pan Tavern The Gotham Inn Volksgarten Beer Hall McGurk's Suicide Hall Palace Bar Great Gildersleeves Paresis Hall / Columbia Hall Bowery Theatre Volks Garten Music Hall London Theatre Bowery Concert Hall Bouwerie Lane Theatre Big Tim Sullivan's Clubhouse Zoological Institute Catiemuts Castle / Indian Lookout / Jasper's Windmill P.T. Barnum's First Exhibition Space The Church of St. James Alfred E Smith Home Chinese Food Fried Dumplings
Chatham Theatre Tea Water Pump Kissing Bridge Five Points Whyó Gang Columbus Park Murderers Alley Bottle Alley Ragpickers Row Bandits Roost Pete Williams Place Old Brewery (Coulter's Brewery) Cow Bay Rosanna Peers Grog Shop African Methodist Episcopal Church Collect Pond Fried Dumpling Tasty Dumpling
Civic Fame Statue Rhinelander Sugar House Memorial St. Andrew's Church African American Burial Ground Aaron Burr's Law Office Chambers Street Wall Hall of Records Rotunda Manhattan Company City Hall Park Almshouse New York Institution Palmo Opera House Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank Tweed Courthouse
City Hall Park Soldier's Upper Barracks Bridewell Debtors Prison Dugdale and Searle's Rope Walk Jan de Wit and Denys Hartogveldt's Windmill Brom Martling's Tavern Company Farmhouse Astor House Hotel American Hotel Tiffany & Company Bixby's Hotel Liberty Tree / Liberty Pole De La Montagne's Tavern The Third City Hall Peale's Museum Alfred Ely Beach's Pneumatic Subway Barden's Tavern First NYC Sidewalks A.T. Stewart's Marble Palace Broadway-Chambers Building Irving House Hotel Washington Hotel Bread and Cheese Club Carlton House White Conduit House Byram’s Garden / Mount Vernon Garden New York Garden Christopher Colles' 1st Log Pipeline
Unitarian Church Chambers Street Savings Bank Zion African Methodist Episcopal Church Italian Opera House / National Theatre Hudson Terminal Tom Riley's Liberty Pole
Vauxhall Gardens Bear Market Canvas Town / Topsail Town / Fire of 1776 Washington Market Comfort's Tea Water John Hughson's Tavern Bogardus Building West Street Building
Brooklyn Bridge Horace Greeley Statue New Gaol Mould Fountain City Hall Post Office Woolworth Building St Paul's Church Loew's Bridge Barnum's American Museum Hampden Hall Park Theatre Windust's Restaurant Scudder's Museum Ah Ken's Cigar Stand Mercantile Library Brick Presbyterian Church Tammany Museum Monkey Hill The Lantern Club New York Eye Infirmary Beekman Street Clinton Hotel Pewter Mug
Beekman's Swamp Black Ball Line Pier Cornelius Dircksen's Ferry Walton House Harper and Brothers Washington's 1st Presidential Mansion Cow Foots Hill Samuel Leggett's House
Previously called Charlotte Street, Pike Street was re-named after Lamberton, New Jersey-born Zebulon Montgomery Pike Jr. in the 1810s. Pike became famous for his 1806 Pike expedition (similar to the Lewis and Clark Expedition) to the south and west parts of the Louisiana Purchase property. The 14,110-foot Pike's Peak in Colorado was named after Pike, who oddly never set foot on the peak named for him. An 1818 map based on the work of explorer Stephen Long calls the mountain Pike’s Peak, and John C. Fremont popularized the name Pike’s Peak after 1844, but the appellation was not based Pike ever being there. Pike actually climbed either the 11,409-foot Mount Rosa (to the southeast) or the 9,000-foot Cheyenne Peak in Colorado. Pike gave up the climb when he ended up in waist-deep snow for two days without food.
Pike grew to adulthood in frontier posts and married Clarissa Harlow Brown in 1801. In 1805, the governor of the Upper Louisiana Territory, General James Wilkinson, ordered Pike to find the source of the Mississippi River, Arkansas River and Red River. Spanish authorities captured Pike, and his documents were confiscated on February 26th, 1807, in northern New Mexico, now part of Colorado. While in custody Pike had access to various maps of the southwest before he was released on July 1st, 1807, at the Louisiana border. "The Expeditions of Zebulon Montgomery Pike to Headwaters of the Mississippi River" was published in 1810. Pike's account of his expedition became famous to all the 19th century American explorers who came after him to explore the southwest and follow the Santa Fe Trail.
Pike was promoted to colonel in 1812 and brigadier general in 1813. On his last military campaign, on April 27th, 1813, Pike commanded a successful attack on York (Toronto). The British garrison blew up its ammunition while retreating, and Pike was killed by debris. He was buried in Sackets Harbor, New York.
Captain William Henry Allen, the youngest skipper in the Navy during the War of 1812, was a hero who commanded the brig Argus and captured 20 British ships. Allen brought the captured British ship Macedonian into NYC harbor on New Year’s Day, 1813, and received a hero’s welcome. Allen was killed by cannon fire at the age of 29 while roaming the English Channel for enemy ships. After capturing 20 British vessels in a month, the crew celebrated a bit too hard. A wine ship named Pelican caught up and attacked on August 14th, 1813. A cannonball took off his leg, and Captain William Henry Allen died a day later on August 15th.
Allen Street’s notorious red light district was the area’s biggest industry, featuring NYC's largest strip of prostitutes who regularly paid off the police and Tammany Hall to exist. The other sections of the red light district were on Chrystie and Forsyth Streets. Fifty feet on the west side of Allen Street was part of the original Allen Street. The Second Avenue elevated railway that began in Chatham Square once ran above it from 1878 until it was taken down in 1942 in an unsuccessful attempt to fix its urban blight. The 138 feet on the east side of Allen Street was added in 1932 at a cost of $8 million, and almost all of it went into the pockets of the real estate interests that owned the destroyed tenements and businesses. The neighborhood was populated by Romanian and Sephardic Jews from Syria, Egypt, Greece, and Turkey. One of the old powerhouses from the Second Avenue El still stands on the NW corner of Allen and Division Streets; its old letters still attached to the building now used as a Chinese food warehouse for Tay Shing Corp.
The middle malls of Allen Street and Pike Street are now in the midst of an artistic renovation by the Art Commission. A 6-foot wide path will soon go past historic references identifying famous people who came from the area. The path will also go past colored concrete, glass pavers, giant stones, and plants on both sides. It was going to have 1939 World’s Fair benches, but plans changed to newly designed benches instead.
Sons of Israel
13-15 Pike Street
(40.713598, -73.992303)
The old Congregation Sons of Israel (B'nai Israel Kalwarie) at 13-15 Pike Street, just south of East Broadway was built in 1903-1904. This Classic Revival-styled landmark synagogue designed by Alfred E Badt is where Eddie Cantor had his Bar Mitzvah in 1905. Its religious orientation since 1994 as the Sung Tak Buddist Temple has changed like the neighborhood. No longer home to rabbis and cantors (and Eddie Cantor), it has been replaced by the Cantonese.
Billy the Kid's Home
The old NE corner of Allen and Grand Streets, which is now by the pedestrian walkway in the middle of Allen Street
(40.717444, -73.99123)
Before being shot to death in 1881 by Sheriff Pat Garrett, Billy the Kid led a Western gang of cattle thieves. William Bonney left his Allen Street apartment (No. 70 by Grand Street) where he was born in 1859 to escape out West after killing a man in a street fight. This poor Irish neighborhood where he was raised lost a whole strip of buildings when Allen Street was widened, including Bonney’s birthplace.
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