Tuesday, February 14, 2023
RIP Travis 'Grim' Durkin
[Updated] The archives of The East Village Eye now at the New York Public Library
After numerous discussions and negotiations with the world's leading research institutions, we are thrilled to announce that the East Village Eye archive, consisting of documents, manuscripts, artworks, videos, ephemera and a complete run of the original printed publication, has been acquired by the New York Public Library.
NYPL's acquisition of the East Village Eye archive is the perfect outcome of our years-long search for the best home for these materials. I can't think of another institution with the breadth and depth of interest, the institutional strength and the dedication to the common good that compares to the New York Public Library – not to mention where it lives. New York deserves to keep this essential trove of materials. It covers a time when it wasn't always easy to love New York City, but we always knew how important it was to bring these voices to the public and to preserve them, even if it meant dragging them from one storage space to another for some 35 years.
Golia explained to us what would happen next: when the library acquires a collection, it is inspected for pests and water damage. When necessary, materials are isolated and treated in the Disaster Recovery room. Once they've been cleared, the collection moves into the archival-processing queue and the items are rehoused in acid-free folders and boxes.
The library's staff begins to make the finding aid, essentially an index of the collection. This inventorying can be time-consuming, depending on the scale of the collection, which can vary widely — the Eye archive arrived in fewer than twenty containers, which is relatively small. The library's New Yorker archive, on the other hand, is stored in more than two thousand containers.Golia says the East Village Eye archives will arrive at the basement stacks in about a year. The finding aid will go live on the N.Y.P.L.'s Web site, and researchers will officially be able to view the materials.
As Golia explained the process, Abrams was visibly moved, yet characteristically irreverent. "I don't care what order they’re in!" he insisted, when Golia told us it was library policy to preserve the way donors had grouped their own collections. "Leonard organized them in a certain way, because that's the way his mind worked, and part of what we're trying to preserve is the way his mind works." Abrams waved his hands dismissively, the journalist both flattered and uncomfortable with attention turned his way. Before we left the library's processing center, he had a question: Would they let him throw a party?
Q-and-A with Leonard Abrams, publisher of the East Village Eye
The squash court at Hamilton Fish Park has been demolished
This was the initiative of the Public Squash Foundation, which aims to offer free access to squash in public places.We're bringing squash outdoors! Check out the @Public_Squash Court at Hamilton Fish Park, the first of its kind in the world! It's FREE to use and now open to the public. https://t.co/cIohG6a9eu pic.twitter.com/5qHPanCa5H
— NYC Parks (@NYCParks) April 17, 2018
And nearly four years of "closed for repairs" status, we're told that Parks employees recently removed the remaining glass walls... and that the squash court will not be replaced.This is the outdoor squash court at Hamilton Fish Park, Manhattan, New York
— Phillip Marlowe: BetterSquash (@bettersquash) April 4, 2021
It is currently closed for repairs, and they are looking for donations.https://t.co/k8IXzYp382
No. 29 in my beautiful squash courts series.
#Squash#BeautifulSquashCourt pic.twitter.com/T6dRiO1zna
Village Happy House Convenience coming to Second Avenue
Monday, February 13, 2023
Monday's parting shot
Updated: Sunny's is open after all!
A 2nd Avenue sidewalk now and then
On 2nd Avenue, historic Isaac T. Hopper House hits the market for the first time in 149 years
This three-and-a-half-story Greek Revival structure is a rare surviving house from the period when this section of Second Avenue was one of the most elite addresses in Manhattan. Additionally, it is also a rare surviving nineteenth-century institutional presence in this ever-changing neighborhood.The house at 110 Second Avenue was constructed as one of four houses built for brothers Ralph, Staats, and Benjamin Mead and designed in the Greek Revival style. Although the only one remaining of the original four houses, 110 Second Ave. retains much of its original details characteristic of a Greek Revival row house. The façade is clad in machine-pressed red brick laid in stretcher bond, tall parlor-level windows with a cast iron balcony, a denticulated cornice, and a brownstone portico with ionic columns supporting an entablature.In 1839 David H. Robertson, a shipbroker and tradesman, bought the house for his widowed mother, Margaret. Three years later, however, he declared bankruptcy. The house was foreclosed, and in 1844 it was auctioned and transferred to Ralph Mead. Mead was the proprietor of Ralph Mead and Co., a wholesale grocery business. He and his second wife, Ann Eliza Van Wyck, lived at 110 Second Avenue (then No. 108) from 1845-1857. After that, they leased the house but retained ownership until 1870. It was sold in 1872 to George H. and Cornelia Ellery, who then sold it in 1874 to the Women's Prison Association ...
Openings: Union Square Travel Agency: A Cannabis Store
Baya Bar bringing the açai bowls to Union Square
Sunday, February 12, 2023
Sunday's parting shot
Week In Grieview
Suspects accused of assault outside Ray's Candy Store remain in jail
“Ray, do you want to post about it?”
— Ray's Candy Store (@RaysCandyStore) February 12, 2023
“No, no. I don’t want to put anything negative out there. Only positive.”
So, here’s one of our favorite photos of Ray.
Thank you to EVERYONE who has stopped into @RaysCandyStore to check on him. pic.twitter.com/XnRvSUD6jO
Saturday, February 11, 2023
Saturday's parting shot
Revealed! Avenue A ghost signage!
Have you seen these banana roller skates?
Dearest neighbors, I’m an idiot and left my roller skates outside in a Citibike basket at the intersection of East 7th and Ave C. They are banana yellow with mermaid scale tips, purple stoppers and pinky gummy wheels. PERFECT in every way.Did you find them? If I found them I’d probably take them as my own or sell them, but maybe you’re one of the rare goodies that took them to try to find their forgetful owner. If so, please advise! I miss them so much!I won’t pay you a million dollars for them, come on they’re mine, but I’ll give you something for your trouble.
A tribute to Tom Verlaine on the Bowery
Life in the hive puckered up my nightA kiss of death, the embrace of lifeOoh, there I stand neath the Marquee MoonBut I ain't waiting...
Saturday's opening shot
Friday, February 10, 2023
Ring in the new year
6 Avenue B, long-abandoned, has a new owner
About the 3rd & B'zaar Valentine's Market this weekend
We have over 25 local small businesses participating and will be selling vintage, locally designed clothing and accessories, infused chocolates, art, cards and much more.Also, we are very excited to announce that we will be debuting our special collection of Fashion Brand Company clothing and accessories! We've been obsessed with their amazing creations for so long ... and are beyond happy to offer Fashion Brand Company in person in NYC!
The market is open from noon to 9 p.m. today (with a special sip and shop from 7-9 p.m.) and ... and noon to 7 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday.











































