What a tourist saw on a trip to New York in 1970
In March 1970, a traveler now living in Rotterdam paid a visit to New York City.
Jaap Breedveld was in his 40s at the time. Like many tourists, he took photos that reflect the typical itinerary of a sightseer from overseas, like Times Square (above, with the old Howard Johnson’s at 46th Street on the left).
But Breedveld also captured images of New Yorkers at work, like this pretzel vendor on an unknown street, above. (Were pretzel carts really so low-key in 1970?)
During a foray into Chinatown, Breedveld immortalized these two men slicing fish on a barrel.
His photos also reflect a changed cityscape. In this image above, the Chrysler Building dominates the skyline, as it does today.
But Roosevelt Island—in 1970, still officially Welfare Island—has yet to be developed into a residential enclave, and the tramway wouldn’t start operating until 1976.
Midnight Cowboy fans will recognize the lovely Beaux-Arts building on the left in this image of Times Square.
It’s the Hotel Claridge, where Joe Buck gets a room after he arrives in New York. Opened in 1911 as luxury accommodations, the old hotel was torn down in 1972 to make way for an office building.
This photo appears to be taken from Battery Park and looks toward State Street; that must be the Elizabeth Ann Seton shrine and James Watson House in the center.
Today, the shrine and 18th century house are surrounded by boxy towers, one of which is going up in the photo.
This breathtaking view of Lower Manhattan contains no Twin Towers, and no Battery Park City. Both would be on maps by the end of the decade.
[Breedveld shared these previously unpublished images with Ephemeral New York. Special thanks to Peter van Wijk. ©Jaap Breedveld]
Tags:1970s New York City, Hotel Claridge NYC, Howard Johnson’s Times Square, Midnight Cowboy New York City, New York in 1970, Pretzel Vendor 1970s NYC, Times Square 1970Posted in Lower Manhattan, Midtown, Sketchy hotels | 10 Comments »
Is this the last OTB parlor in New York City?
May 15, 2017
In 2010, Off Track Betting went the way of the Automat and checker cabs—shut down by the state thanks to financial issues caused by waning interest in betting on horses.
But in Chatham Square in Chinatown, amazingly, the ghost of one OTB remains. Its doors are locked but the sign (and a Chinese translation!) is in place, a forgotten relic of a grittier 1970s and 1980s city.
New Yorkers of a certain age will remember OTB parlors (like the one below, in Times Square in 1971), each with its own cast of colorful, often sad-sack regulars placing bets or just hovering around the entrance.
A 2013 article from Daily Racing Forum recalled the Chatham Square OTB in all of its grimy glory.
“It was always crowded, and until the citywide ban you could barely see through clouds of cigarette smoke,” wrote Ryan Goldberg. “Before the races, Chinese men used to sit at the counter of the greasy dim-sum restaurant next door, examining the entries while eating Frisbee-sized pork buns.”
“Flyers notifying patrons where to cash their remaining tickets are still stuck on the dirty windows. Standing there, you half expect somebody to walk up and unlock the door, open the register and begin taking bets.”
[Second photo: NYPost/Getty Images; third photo: Bay Ridge OTB, 1977, via Flickr by Anthony Catalano]
Tags:1970s New York City, Chatham Square, Horseracing New York City, Off Track Betting Parlors, Old New York 1980s, OTB, Times Square 1970sPosted in Brooklyn, Lower Manhattan, Midtown, Politics | Leave a Comment »
RIP New York’s elevated West Side Highway
October 24, 2016
If you pine for the days of an edgier New York, then you would have loved the city’s “express highway,” as the back of the 1940s postcard below called it.
This was the elevated West Side Highway, which ran above West Street and 12th Avenue from Lower Manhattan to Riverside Drive.
But most drivers hated it. Built between 1929 and 1951, the freeway officially called the Miller Highway was supposed to make the avenues below safer for pedestrians and less congested.
Unfortunately it was poorly designed, too narrow for trucks and with sharp turns at exit ramps. It was also poorly maintained.
Weakened by years of salt and pigeon poop, a chunk of the highway (left) actually fell into Gansevoort Street in 1973. (Above, at 14th Street, with a piece missing)
Today, a few sections of the elevated remain, but most of it was dismantled in the 1980s—to the dismay of some sun worshippers, bicyclists, and urban adventurers, who enjoyed having the crumbling roadway all to themselves in New York’s grittier days.
[Top photo, Wikipedia; third photo: Preservenet]
Tags:1970s New York City, driving in New York, Elevated West Side Highway, Miller Highway, New York City highway, New York Urban Planning, West Side New York CityPosted in Disasters and crimes, Transit, West Village | 4 Comments »
Taking a field trip back to the 1970s
May 1, 2009
There’s just something about a mid-1970s class picture—the kids are so adorably goofy in those wide collars and bright colors, you can’t not look.
Before it began billing itself as “The Greenwich Village School,” it was plain-old P.S. 41 on West 11th Street and Sixth Avenue. And in the cash-strapped 1970s, a kindergarten class with 32 kids and one teacher was perfectly acceptable.