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Full Circle – A Look Back at SoHo’s Broadway

by Yukie Ohta, SoHo Memory Project | Part of ‘A Look Back at SoHo’s Broadway’ Series

Bloomingdale’s SoHo on Broadway between Spring and Broome Streets

Bloomingdale’s SoHo on Broadway between Spring and Broome Streets

Our neighborhood’s long history, from meadowland to suburb to commercial center to red light district to industrial hub to art capital and finally back to commercial center, reminds us that our city is forever changing.

Lord and Taylor Department Store, ca. 1850

Lord and Taylor Department Store on Broadway and Grand Street, ca. 1850

In the mid-1800’s, the stretch of Broadway between Canal and Houston Streets was a center of opulence that would put its current day incarnation to shame. The Broadway “corridor,” as it is now called, was then the stomping ground of the well to do.

Arnold Constable & Company, once the oldest New York department store, opened on Canal Street in 1857, in a building that stretched all the way to Howard Street along Mercer Street, where Agnes B. is now located. Its neighbor was none other than Lord and Taylor, at Broadway and Grand Street, now

An advertisement for Hill Brothers Milliners, featuring the “Myra” hat.

An advertisement for Hill Brothers Milliners, featuring the “Myra” hat.

Wells Fargo Bank. Further north, at Broadway and Prince, was not Armani Exchange, but Hill Brothers, purveyors of millinery goods to the well-dressed ladies of the day.

One of the most luxurious shops of all was Tiffany and Co. at 550 Broadway between Prince and Spring Streets, where Banana Republic now resides. The Atlas clock in the image above is the one that now adorns the facade of the Tiffany & Co. flagship store on Fifth Avenue at 57th Street.

Tiffany & Co. at 550 Broadway, 1858

Tiffany & Co. at 550 Broadway, 1858

In this city that never sleeps, where change happens in a heartbeat, it seems that, at least on our little stretch of Broadway, we have come full circle.

 

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