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Built on the marshes beside Hudson River, the quarter distinguish itself from the rest of the city through its check pattern map resulted from the winding track that joins the bed of old waterflows. From the 1920s, Greenwich Village becomes the refuge of bohemian literary and arts. Novelists O’Henry, Djuna Barnes, Theodore Dreiser, playwright O’Neil, female poet Edna St. Vincent Millay, poet E. Cummings, all lived in the Village at that time. During the first half of the 20th century, the theatral middle of the Village dominated the New Yorker drama scene as well, through the creation of Provincetown Players, Djuna Barnes being one of its founders, and the Cherry Lane Theater founded by Edna St. Vincent Millay in 1924. The particular ambience of Greenwich is favorable to the artistic creation. Life is mostly nocturnal : it begins at 4 PM and finishes at dawn. Cafes are places to meet and discuss new people, and where new theories on arts and literatures are experimented. Cafes Lafayette, Reggio and Breevoort (on the 5th Avenue) are some of the general quarters of artists and writers.
Washington Square Arch
viewed 566 times
Private hotels
viewed 419 times
Music Inn
viewed 358 times
Chess players
viewed 324 times
Astor Place
viewed 368 times
Moving Restaurant
viewed 333 times
Colonnade Row
viewed 388 times
Cooper Union
viewed 366 times
Counterculture
viewed 383 times
St Marks Place
viewed 315 times
Basketball
viewed 341 times
Union Square
viewed 332 times
Greenmarket at Union Square
viewed 362 times
Strand Bookstore
viewed 410 times