St. Mark's Place (Manhattan)
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The street has long hosted alternative retailers, appealing in recent years particularly to suburban teenagers. Venerable institutions lining St. Mark’s Place include the Yaffa Café, Sock Man, St. Mark's Hotel, Trash & Vaudeville, and a handful of open front markets that sell sunglasses, and silver jewelry. There are also a number of authentic Japanese restaurants and bars, as well as many record stores with rare and competitively priced merchandise.
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[edit] History: cultural and countercultural
The Led Zeppelin album Physical Graffiti features a front and back cover design that depicts the carved face buildings 98 & 96. This is the same building Keith Richards and Mick Jagger are in front of in the Rolling Stones music video "Waiting on a Friend". The front cover of Physical Graffiti displays an inexplicably centered and full daytime view of the buildings but the back-cover displays the same two buildings at night. The view is inexplicable in the sense that if you stand on the opposing north side of the street, you will be much too close and low to obtain the view captured on the cover. Furthermore, the actual building has five visible stories (discounting the basement level) whereas on the album cover, it only has four, the result of photo touching up. The original album jacket for the LP included die-cut windows on the building shown on the cover; as the inner sleeves for the discs were inserted in different orientations, various objects and people would appear in the windows. Number 98 currently houses the Physical Graffiti boutique and number 96 has Starfish & Jelli, clothing, accessories and gifts. Prior to this, number 96 was the home of the Anarchist Switchboard, a 1980s punk activist group. In Lou Reed's song Sally Can't Dance, Sally walks down and lives on St. Mark's Place (in a rent controlled apartment).
The street has also figured in the more mainstream culture and in the history of New York charity. Number 4 was home to James Fenimore Cooper from 1834 to 1836, and the Pearl Theater (number 80) was the site of the premiere of You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown. The New York Cooking School at number 8, founded by Juliet Corson in 1876, was the country's first cooking school. Number 27 was the Children's Aid Society's Girls' Lodging House and number 52 was part of the Hebrew National Orphan Home, whose main entrance was on 7th Street. Number 60 was St. Mark's Hospital of New York City.
St. Mark's Place has some far seedier history than merely being home to countercultural figures and institutions: Number 8 was the site of one of mid-19th-century New York's leading abortionists, and also figured prominently in the city's first known Mafia hit in Manhattan: the 1888 killing of Antonio Flaccomio (the killer dined there with his victim, then stabbed him a few blocks away). Numbers 19–25, as Arlington Hall, were the site of a 1914 shootout between "Dopey" Benny Fein's Jewish gang and Jack Sirocco's Italian mob, an event that marked the beginning of the predominance of the Italian American gangsters over the Jewish American gangsters; the same building was later the Electric Circus, home to Andy Warhol's Exploding Plastic Inevitable.
In August 1988, 200 protesters marched down St. Mark's Place and into Tompkins Square Park in the East Village of Manhattan to protest a newly-passed curfew for the park. A riot erupted when police (who eventually numbered 450) charged the crowd. Bystanders, artists, residents, homeless people and political activists were caught up in the police action that took place on the night of August 6 and the early morning of August 7, 1988. The event has become known as the Tompkins Square Park Police Riot.[2]
[edit] Traffic
Vehicular traffic runs east along this one-way street. The city narrowed the sidewalks to improve vehicular travel[citation needed], but this resulted in most of the pedestrians walking on the street at night when the area is most active. For years retailers and residents have petitioned the city government to re-widen the sidewalk.
[edit] References
- ^ A Short History of Sin-e, accessed December 21, 2006
- ^ "Melee in Tompkins Sq. Park: Violence and Its Provocation," by Todd Purdham, The New York Times, August 14, 1988, Section 1; Part 1, Page 1, Column 4; Metropolitan Desk
[edit] Sources
- 8th Street/St Marks Place: New York Songlines – A history of buildings and establishments along 8th Street.

