Bleecker Street


Bleecker Street is an east–west street in Lower Manhattan, New York City. It is most famous today as a Greenwich Village nightclub district. The street connects a neighborhood popular today for music venues and comedy as well as an important center of LGBT history and culture and bohemian tradition. The street is named after the family name of Anthony Lispenard Bleecker, a banker, the father of Anthony Bleecker, a 19th-century writer, through whose family farm the street once ran.
Bleecker Street connects Abingdon Square in the West Village, to the Bowery in the East Village and NoHo.

History

Bleecker Street was named after the Bleecker family because the street ran through the family's farm. In 1808, Anthony Lispenard Bleecker and his wife deeded to the city a major portion of the land on which Bleecker Street sits.
Originally, Bleecker Street extended from Bowery to Broadway, along the north side of the Bleecker farm, later as far west as Sixth Avenue. In 1829, it was joined with Herring Street, extending Bleecker Street north-northwest to Abingdon Square.

LeRoy Place

LeRoy Place is the former name of a block of Bleecker Street between Mercer and Greene Streets. This was where the first palatial "winged residences" were built. The effect was accomplished by making the central houses taller and closer to the street, while the other houses on the side were set back. The central buildings also had bigger, raised entrances and lantern-like roof projections. The houses were built by Isaac A. Pearson on both sides of Bleecker Street. To set his project apart from the rest of the area, Pearson convinced the city to rename this block of the street after the prominent international trader Jacob LeRoy.

Transportation

Bleecker Street is served by the at Bleecker Street/Broadway–Lafayette Street station. The serve the Christopher Street–Sheridan Square station one block north of Bleecker Street.
No bus route runs on Bleecker Street. The following routes intersect with it:
  • at Hudson Street/8th Avenue uptown and 7th Avenue South downtown.
  • at West 10th Street eastbound and Christopher Street westbound.
  • at 6th Avenue uptown and Broadway downtown.
  • Full-route trips at Lafayette Street uptown and Broadway downtown.
  • at Bowery.
Traffic on the street is one-way, going southeast. In early December 2007, a bicycle lane was marked on the street.

Notable places

Landmarks

In addition, there are several Federal architecture-style row houses at 7 to 13 and 21 to 25 Bleecker Street on easternmost block of Bleecker Street, in NoHo between Lafayette Street and the Bowery. 21 and 29 Bleecker Street were also once the home of the National Florence Crittenton Mission, providing a home for "fallen women". 21 Bleecker Street's entrance now bears the lettering "Florence Night Mission", described by The New York Times in 1883 as "a row of houses of the lowest character". The National Florence Crittenton Mission was an organization established in 1883 by Charles N. Crittenton. It attempted to reform prostitutes and unwed pregnant women through the creation of establishments where they were to live and learn skills.
The building at 58 Bleecker Street was built in 1823 for James Roosevelt, great-grandfather of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. It was there that Elizabeth Blackwell, America's first female physician, established a clinic with her sister Emily.
Across the street from the former home of the National Florence Crittenton Mission is both the headquarters of Planned Parenthood and the Catholic Sheen Center, immediately adjacent to it. Bleecker Street now features the Margaret Sanger Square, at the intersection with Mott Street. Bleecker Street was the original home of Sanger's Birth Control Clinical Research Bureau, which operated in another building from 1930 to 1973. The street features in the 2020 drama film Never Rarely Sometimes Always, written and directed by Eliza Hittman.

Night spots

Literature

  • Valenti Angelo's 1949 novel The Bells of Bleecker Street is set in the Italian American community in that neighborhood.
  • Nobel laureate Derek Walcott wrote a poem about Bleecker Street entitled "Bleecker Street, Summer".
  • In Marvel Comics, 177A Bleecker Street is the location of Doctor Strange's Sanctum Sanctorum.
  • "The Repairer of Reputations"—the first short story in Robert W. Chambers 1895 collection The King in Yellow—includes a storyline featuring an armourer on Bleecker Street.

    Film and television

  • The Kate & Allie television show from the 1980s depicted two single mothers living on Bleecker in a basement apartment.
  • In the original Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles movie from 1990, the corner of 11th and Bleecker is where April O'Neil lives and runs her father's old antique store known as The Second Time Around.
  • Much of the film No Reservations, starring Catherine Zeta-Jones and Aaron Eckhart, is set in a restaurant on the corner of Bleecker and Charles Streets. The name of their fictitious restaurant is 22 Bleecker.
  • In The WB series What I Like About You, Holly and Valerie live in an apartment on Bleecker Street.
  • The Matthews family in Girl Meets World lives near Bleecker Street and frequents the Bleecker subway station.
  • New Andy Warhol Garrick Theatre at 152 Bleecker Street.
  • Akin to the comics, the New York Sanctum is located on 177A Bleecker Street in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. It appeared in the films Doctor Strange, Thor: Ragnarok, Avengers: Infinity War, Avengers: Endgame, Spider-Man: No Way Home, and Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness ; as well as the Disney+ series Loki.
  • In the 2002 film Gangs of New York, there is a scene where a man mentions Bleecker Street whilst singing the sea shanty New York Girls.
  • Bleecker Street, a film distribution company, is named after the street.
  • The corner of Bleecker and Mott Streets, site of Planned Parenthood features in the 2020 drama film Never Rarely Sometimes Always, written and directed by Eliza Hittman.

    Music

  • Gian-Carlo Menotti wrote an opera The Saint of Bleecker Street
  • Simon & Garfunkel wrote the song "Bleecker Street", released on their album Wednesday Morning, 3 A.M..
  • Japanese pop star Ayumi Hamasaki visited Bleecker Street during recording of her understood album. The pictures were later published in Hamasaki's famous "Deji Deji Diary" that is published in each issue of ViVi Magazine.
  • Iggy Pop discusses dying on Bleecker Street in his song "Punk Rocker".
  • "Growing Old on Bleecker Street" is a song featured on American pop trio AJR's debut album, Living Room.
  • "Downtown Bleecker" is a modern instrumental jazz piece for saxophone which appears on the digital EP Midnight Sun, produced by independent artist Simon Edward.
  • "Country Boy and Bleecker Street" is a song which appears on the 1967 album H.P. Lovecraft, by the folk-rock band H.P. Lovecraft.
  • Fred Neil has mentioned Bleecker Street in multiple works in his career, most notably on two of his album covers.
  • Peter Paul and Mary mentioned Bleecker Street in their song "Freight Train" on the album In the Wind
  • Joni Mitchell mentioned Bleecker Street in her song "Tin Angel" on her 1969 album Clouds, and later in "Song for Sharon" on the album Hejira.
  • Lloyd Cole mentioned Bleecker Street in his song "What Do You Know About Love?" on his 1990 album Lloyd Cole
  • Led Zeppelin's Robert Plant sings that he is on the 'corner of Bleecker and nowhere' in the song 'Hots on for Nowhere'
  • "77 Bleeker Street" is a song by Jill Jones, written, composed and produced by Prince. It was a b-side to the single "Mia Bocca" from the album Jill Jones.
  • Paolo Nutini mentioned Bleecker Street in his song "Better Man" on his 2014 album Caustic Love.
  • Marcy Playground's 1997 song "The Vampires of New York" alludes to the more sordid aspects of the street's history.
  • Connor Oberst of Bright Eyes mentions Bleecker Street in their 2024 single "Bells and Whistles"
  • The New Pornographers mention Bleecker Street in their song "Myriad Harbour"