Nova York - Estados Unidos
Fotografia - Cartão Postal
Originally
known as Long Acre (also Longacre) Square after London’s carriage district,
Times Square served as the early site for William H. Vanderbilt’s American Horse
Exchange. In the late 1880s, Long Acre Square consisted of a large open space
surrounded by drab apartments. Soon, however, the neighborhood began to change.
Electricity, in the form of theater advertisements and street lights,
transformed public space into a safer, more inviting environment. Likewise, the
construction of New York’s first rapid transit system, the Interborough Rapid
Transit Company (IRT), gave New Yorkers unprecedented mobility in the city.
The
announcement of the IRT spurred real estate speculation by shrewd businessmen
who believed that increased foot traffic in the area would generate profits.
Adolph S. Ochs, owner and publisher of The New York Times from 1896 to 1935,
saw an opportunity and selected a highly visible location to build the Times
Tower, which was the second tallest building in the city at the time. In
January 1905, the Times finally moved into their new headquarters, built
between Broadway and Seventh Avenue and 42nd and 43rd Streets. The previous
spring, Mayor George B. McClellan signed a resolution that renamed the
intersection of Broadway and Seventh Avenue from Long Acre Square to Times
Square.
Ochs told the
Syracuse Herald, “I am pleased to say that Times Square was named without any
effort or suggestion on the part of The Times.” Yet, he clearly felt proud: the
new building represented “the first successful effort in New York to give
architectural beauty to a skyscraper,” he said. Within a decade, the Times
outgrew their space and moved to a new location, but not before starting a
tradition that continues today: the New Year’s Eve spectacular. Ochs staged the
first event to commemorate the new building and crowds still gather today to
bring in the new year.
Although the
Times moved to a new location, the tower still stands as a focal point in Times
Square. Similarly, two statues have remained prominent monuments in the area.
Father Duffy Square encompasses the northern triangle of Times Square. In 1909,
a temporary eight-ton statue entitled Purity (Defeat of Slander) by Leo
Lentelli dominated the space. Now, statues of Father Duffy and George M. Cohan
grace the scene. Born in Canada, Father Francis Patrick Duffy (1871-1932)
eventually moved to New York City. He served as a military chaplain in both the
Spanish-American War and World War I. Upon his return to the city, he became
pastor of Holy Cross Church, located at 237 West 42nd Street. His statue,
designed by Charles Keck (1875 – 1951) faces his former church. The bronze
statue of George M. Cohan (1878 – 1942), a composer, playwright, and actor,
sits at the park’s southern end. He is best known for his hit song, Give my
regards to Broadway: “Give my regards to Broadway / Remember me in Herald
Square / Tell all the gang at 42nd Street that I will soon be there.”
George M.
Cohan’s position in Times Square re-emphasizes the district’s long association
with theater. By World War I, most legitimate theaters had moved to Times
Square from former entertainment districts further downtown. Respected
restaurants and high-end hotels, like the Astor and the Knickerbocker,
established themselves in the neighborhood, thus contributing to a thriving
environment. While popular bars, restaurants, and theaters attracted people to
the area, it was the development of public transportation that facilitated
Times Square’s dramatic growth. For example, in 1905, the first year of
operation, the IRT Times Square station serviced almost five million
passengers. By the late 1920s, subway lines, elevated lines, and bus routes all
stopped at West 42nd Street. It thus became an irrefutable hub of the city,
transporting not only city dwellers, but also affluent suburbanites and
visitors.
Sadly, the
Great Depression hampered this growth. As theaters struggled to survive during
this period, many became cheap ‘grinder’ houses that showed sexually explicit
films. Soon, other lower forms of entertainment arrived in the area: burlesque
shows, cheap restaurants, peep shows, dance halls, and penny arcades. Then,
commercialized sex proliferated throughout the neighborhood as both male and
female prostitutes began lingering along 42nd Street. The advent of World War
II did little to improve Times Square’s reputation. Soldiers on leave, in
search of erotic entertainment, further catalyzed the neighborhood into a zone
for vice. Likewise, construction restrictions during the war worsened
conditions by halting the city’s building boom of the 1920s. Times Square had
begun a descent into disrepair and depravity.
World War II
had another, very visible effect on Times Square. In May of 1942, Mayor La
Guardia announced a dimout. Interior and exterior lighting, in addition to
illuminated advertising and building lights, were required to be turned off or
directed downward. The order sought to protect pedestrians silhouetted against
the horizon from enemy submarines in coastal waters. The dimout was so
extensive that the WPA announced that they would place blackout masks on 90,900
traffic lights throughout the city. Likewise, the electric news sign belting
the Times Tower went dark for the first time since its debut in 1928. For
nearly fourteen years, the sign attracted billions of spectators with the most
news-worthy headlines. Frank Powell, one of three electricians tasked with the
sign’s maintenance, stated on the night of the dimout: “All I want is to start
it up again the night Hitler gets killed. That would tickle me to death.”
The negative
impacts of the Great Depression and World War II on Times Square solidified
over time. In the 1950s, attempts to stop the growth of disreputable businesses
through zoning rules met with few results. Then the 1960s arrived. As one
scholar notes, “the libertarianism of the sixties” changed the meaning of
“obscene,” thereby opening a space for the public sale of adult allurements. For
example, the success of the twenty-five cent peep show, introduced in 1966,
spurred other small businesses to follow the trend by selling adult films and
erotic merchandise. Profits rose, the cost of leases sky rocketed, and then the
mob “muscled in around 1968.” On the streets, prostitution by all genders, open
drug trade, alcoholism, and con games, like three-card monte and clio, became
commonplace. Inside, crime thrived in the underground corridors of the subway
and the passages at the Port Authority Bus Terminal despite the abundance of
police. By the late 1970s, the Times Square area recorded the most felony and
net crime complaints in the city. That said, not all activity in the
neighborhood was bad; in 1973, the first TKTS booth opened to provide affordable
theater admission with the hope of increasing Broadway attendance.
Nevertheless, Times Square’s reputation ranked very low in the public
consciousness. In 1981, Rolling Stone declared West 42nd Street the “sleaziest
block in America.” Likewise, one scholar wrote, “The Great White Way is now a
byword for ostentatious flesh-peddling in an open-air meat rack.”
Indeed, male
“hustling” became pervasive in the area as people exchanged money, illegal
drugs, or other forms of payment for sexual favors. Time Square’s central
location, which once allowed the district to flourish as a prominent locale for
high-end entertainment, now facilitated the sex market. The influx of
commuters, especially during rush hours, made male prostitution fairly easy and
relatively frequent. The flow of human traffic during these periods allowed
clients to solicit sex without attracting much attention.
In addition to
the sex market, the drug trade also profoundly affected Times Square. Efforts
to address the increase in prostitution, especially by juveniles, were derailed
by the arrival of crack cocaine to Times Square in 1986. As a result, crime
rates spiked and continued to increase through 1989. The addictiveness of crack
made it an especially insidious drug, as users focused their energy and
resources on scoring the next ‘hit’. Crack dealers, junkies, and the cardboard
encampments of the homeless took over the streets.
Despite Times
Square’s notorious reputation, it managed to maintain its powerful symbolism,
in part because of its “chaotic action, dense and diverse pedestrian activity,
[and] continuous role as the key entertainment district.” It also remained a
central transit hub and offered a “unique physical ‘experience of place,’ which
derived from its small-scale buildings, open space, and illuminated lights.”
Times Square’s symbolic meaning, therefore, ignited debate and opposition with
any proposed plan for renewal.
In addition to
the district’s symbolism, efforts at redevelopment also proved challenging, in
part, because the adult industry made huge profits. For example, CUNY
researchers estimated that the weekly gross of peep shows ranged from $74,000
to $106,000 in 1978.
Likewise,
property ownership was convoluted as landlords sought to create distance
between themselves and those who ran the porno shops and peep shows on their
property. The redevelopment project focused on revitalizing 42nd street as a
theater and entertainment center. After tremendous time, money, and effort,
Times Square slowly began to transform as adult stores and sleazy theaters were
replaced by child-oriented stores and successful musicals. As tourist activity
increased, Times Square continued to improve. A new TKTS sales center was
installed. Further construction stopped vehicular traffic and made the plaza
area more inviting to pedestrians. In 2008, the newly designed Duffy Square was
re-opened to the public. Times Square has experienced flourishes of creative
vibrancy and periods of great depravity, and yet it remains “the crossroads of
the world.”
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