Showing posts with label NYC history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NYC history. Show all posts

Monday, July 6, 2026

East Village-based director brings July 9, 1776, to the big screen with the doc 'By George'

"Pulling Down the Statue of George III," 1859 painting by Johannes Adam Simon Oertel 
Image courtesy of H. Paul Moon 

An East Village filmmaker's new documentary about one of the most dramatic moments in New York City's Revolutionary history will premiere Thursday night — exactly 250 years to the day after it happened. 

H. Paul Moon's "By George" will screen outdoors at The Battery, just steps from Bowling Green, where an angry crowd toppled the equestrian statue of King George III on July 9, 1776, after hearing the Declaration of Independence publicly read for the first time in New York. 

The hourlong documentary traces the story of the monument's destruction and what became of it afterward. Much of the statue was melted down into musket balls for the Continental Army, while its severed head was reportedly smuggled back to England, where it may still be hidden. 

The film also explores how public monuments shape civic memory, drawing connections between the Revolutionary era and contemporary conversations about history and public space.

Following the screening, Moon will join Ivan Schwartz of StudioEIS and Abby Suckle of cultureNOW for a discussion.

The free event begins at 8 p.m. as part of Big Screen at The Battery, though organizers recommend registering in advance due to limited seating.

 

Friday, January 20, 2017

When there was a bank building in the middle of East Houston at Avenue A



EVG reader Steph Romeo was watching "The Naked City" from 1948 when she spotted this...



...and a view from East Houston near Norfolk looking west to Essex and Avenue A... a thin building in what is now the middle of East Houston...



On the left, you can spot the Provident Loan Society Building, which is still there today (not for long, though) on the southwest corner of Houston and Essex...



Steph look further, and found this image from the comprehensive digital collections at the NYPL... here's a shot of the building's front entrance circa 1929 ... showing the Community State Bank (not another bank branch!) and a dental office in the address that is listed as 2-4 Avenue A aka 240 1/2 E. Houston. ...


[Via NYPL]

I didn't have a chance to do any further research to find out when the building was razed ... it's also a good reminder to rewatch "The Naked City" and the subsequent TV series inspired by the film, which has many Lower East Side locations. I've haven't watched any of that in more than 10 years.