Greenwich Village

JLK100
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Greenwich Village

  • March 21, 2025
  • Rated 5 of 5 by Dutchnatasja from Etten-Leur, Netherlands

The Village of Greenwich has certainly got its charm! Today it is a joy to walk through the streets of Greenwich Village. It has quiet streets with beautiful homes, so it was almost like staying in another city. Greenwich Village offers a great respite with its calmer, more manageable feel, and Greenwich Village's shorter buildings allow more sunshine to reach the streets. There are many secret courtyards and small gardens nestled between townhouses in the residential blocks of Greenwich Village. Manhattan's Greenwich Village offers visitors an escape from the skyscrapers. I highly recommend a walk through this area.

From journal New York: New energy, new experiences every time!

Editor Pick

A Walking Tour of Greenwich Village

  • November 9, 2025
  • Rated 4 of 5 by ssullivan from Atlanta, Georgia

Greenwich Village was my first destination in New York. I set out for the Village first thing on Saturday morning, after arriving in the city the evening before. After getting off the subway at the Christopher St./Sheridan Square station, I ascended into what would soon become my favorite part of New York (or at least my favorite of the parts I’ve seen so far). The Village is a vibrant area of old row houses, shaded narrow residential streets, hidden alleys and carriage houses, classic architecture, funky antiques shops, and great restaurants and coffee houses. It’s also a hub for the city’s large gay and lesbian community. I recommended visiting the Village both during the day and at night; you’ll see dramatically different scenes in doing so. Daytime is best for viewing the unique houses and visiting the shops; nighttime visitors can take in the jazz clubs, bars, and restaurants. But no matter when you visit, in my opinion, you can’t visit New York without spending some time in Greenwich Village.

My walking tour started with Sheridan Square and Christopher St., a location famous for its pivotal place in the gay rights movement. Here is the location of the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar where, in late June, 1969, bar patrons fought back against the police busting the bar simply because it was a gathering place for gay men (legend has it the bar’s customers were already quite made over the death of Judy Garland the night before). Across the street from the bar, a series of sculptures in a pocket park commemorate the GLBT community’s influence on the neighborhood.

A few blocks east of Sheridan Square is Gay St. (it is not named after the sexual orientation of some of the neighborhood residents). This short, curved street features some charming Federal houses. Along this street, I saw a film crew with a group of actors filming either a movie or television show; I did not recognize anyone in the group as being someone famous, and I’m unsure as to what they were filming, but maybe one of these days I’ll see a scene in a movie or on TV and realize I was there when it was filmed. These houses, along with Grove Court, a cluster of 19th-century townhomes on Grove St. (just west of Sheridan Square), were some of my favorites in the Village. They are so simple in their design, yet very elegant. Grove Court also features a nice courtyard between the houses and street.

Walking east to Greenwich and 6th Avenues, you will enter an area of art galleries and antiques, book, and gift shops, and the beautiful Jefferson Market Courthouse building, which now serves as a public library. I spent at least an hour browsing the unique stores in the area around this busy intersection.

To complete my walking tour of the Village, I continued to Washington Square Park, which I’ve included as a separate journal entry.

From journal Valentine's Weekend in New York City

Carnegie Hall

  • August 24, 2025
  • Rated 5 of 5 by JazzBluesNYC from NYC, New York
I want to share this with the world.

I like jazz and blues, and have been to several clubs in Manhattan, NYC, New York, USA. I joined a club crawl because I couldn't get any of my friends to go with me that night. I'm glad I did. There were 12 people in the group. I met people from all over the world.

We heard three jazz and blues bands at three clubs. All of them were good to great. One of the clubs I didn't even know about. Jerry, the group leader, knows who's good and where and when they are playing. GO TO: http://www.webspawner.com/users/nyctours for a great, fun night out. One guy from Ireland was out three times in one week. Yes, the music and the group were that good.

From journal New York City Jazz & Blues

Greenwich Village

  • January 6, 2026
  • Rated 5 of 5 by GuyBrighton from New York, New York
Greenwich and West Village is full of leafy streets divided by wide commercial avenues. Bars, theatres, cinemas and bistro cafes hide in nooks and corners. There is also a British Fish & Chips shop (A Salt & Battery) and a British Tea Room (Tea & Sympathy) and a British shop (Myers of Keswick) – if you ever feel homesick/fancy a pack of Walkers crisps. You soon find that, even though everything is parallel, you walk certain streets because of their ambience and the styles of the 18th and 19th century buildings.

In one part of Greenwich Village is Washington Park Square. Despite the historic buildings that surround it, the square is probably my least favorite open space that I have come across (I often avoid it deliberately when walking home from SoHo). A ‘Marble Arch’ style monument overlooks an area full of dodgy peddlers who whisper at you as you walk past them. Near the center is a small dog-area – one of the few places where dogs can run free in this dog-crazy city. The dog-area used to be in a triangular space on the northwestern part of the square but they had to move it a few years ago when the dog started digging up the ground. Much longer ago this part of the park was where the city’s hanging tree used to stand. People would crowd every week to watch the latest criminals be hung. The bodies were buried by the gallows (probably the only buried in the city after they banned cemeteries in Manhattan in the 19th century). So the dogs at the park a few years ago started coming back to their owners not with a retrieved ball but a human bone or two!!

From journal Wishful Thinking in New York : An insider's guide

Editor Pick

Greenwich Village - Writers Past & Present

  • September 24, 2025
  • Rated 4 of 5 by sboourns from New York CIty, New York, Australia
This was the best value for money tour I have ever done. I did this walking tour with my grandparents when they came to visit. It was brilliant.

Historian John Hamilton and poet Edward Kearon Lorenzo take you on a tour of historic homes and watering holes of the Village's best known artists. The tour starts in Washington Square Park.

The guides point out the Federation style houses and tell us who lives, and has lived, at some of the addresses. John showed us where the Forbes Museum is and suggested that it is one of the city’s best kept, and cheapest, secrets. They showed us where Charles Lindberg lived and told us of how he was awarded $25k for being the first to cross the Atlantic. They spoke of Mark Twain, Mable Dodge and Edith Wharton. They showed us the site of the accidental bomb explosion in 1970 by the "Weathermen" (at the time, one of our guides, Ed, happened to be sitting in a dentist’s chair in a building directly opposite); and where Katherine Boudin was said to have sought refuge. The house was rebuilt in 1978 and is the only building allowed to face diagonally to the street. There is a teddy bear in the window whose outfit changes daily.

John pointed out the Acesion Parish House where you can hear Shakespeare readings every Monday night. They showed us where Emma Lazarus lived, they told us what pineapples meant at the entrance of people’s homes. They explained the difference between wrought iron and cast iron. They showed us the former site of the women’s penitentiary and where Mae West was tried for her Broadway show "Sex". They explained the story of Houdini and the canary and they explained why 6th Avenue was called "Avenue of the Americas". They pointed out where e.e. cummings lived and showed us old incinerators. We learnt of the fate of Edgar Allen Poe’s former morphine dispensary and how Billie Holliday managed to perform without a cabaret license.

Ed told us philanthropic stories of Armand Hammer and incredible stories of Frank Stella. He told us about chiclets in the subway and an Al Pacino movie called "Chinese Coffee". He spoke of Woody Allen, Jimmy Gambino and John’s Pizza.

They showed us where Dylan wrote "Positively W.4th St, and where the last person was executed. They showed us where we could swim in an Olympic sized swimming pool, where we could listen to poetry, and where we could drink a pint of homebrew.

I have not even begun to mention what we gleaned on that tour. These two guides are brilliant. They are enthusiastic, knowledgeable and genuine and I highly highly recommend this walking tour to both locals and visitors alike. Finally, let it be known, that I am not related to, or was friendly with, either of these two folks.

From journal New York for Foreigners

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