The Bowery Boys: New York City History

#481 How The West Village Became A Neighborhood (The Streets of the West Village Part 2)

11 snips
Mar 13, 2026
A stroll through how the West Village became a lively, layered neighborhood. Stories of Irish longshoremen, waterfront life, and tenement conversions paint its working‑class roots. The straightening of Seventh Avenue and the tiny Hess Triangle show urban upheaval. Prohibition-era speakeasies, Jazz Age clubs, and off‑Broadway theaters reveal the area’s bohemian cultural boom.
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ANECDOTE

The Tiny Hess Triangle Defied Demolition

  • The Voorhees apartment was demolished for the 7th Avenue cut, but surveyors missed a tiny wedge of its lot.
  • The Hess family tiled a 25-inch triangle in the sidewalk reading 'property of the Hess estate' that still exists as the Hess Triangle.
INSIGHT

How The Waterfront Shaped Neighborhood Demographics

  • The West Village became ethnically divided: wealthier blocks east of Hudson Street and Irish working-class blocks by the river.
  • Irish immigrants filled waterfront jobs from the 1820s–post-Famine, living in carved-up row houses and boardinghouses near the docks.
INSIGHT

PATH Reached Christopher Street Before The City Subway

  • Early mass transit shaped the Village: PATH arrived in 1908 while the IRT initially bypassed it.
  • The Hudson and Manhattan (now PATH) connected Christopher Street to Hoboken and uptown before the city subway reached the area.
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