Houston Street (Manhattan)
Houston Street redirects here. For the Major League Baseball player with a similar name, see Huston Street. |
Houston Street looking east, from The Bowery |
|
Houston Street looking west, from The Bowery |
Houston Street is a large thoroughfare running
east -
west north of the
downtown area of the
borough of
Manhattan in
New York City, one block south of 1st Street. It serves as the dividing line between
Greenwich Village and
SoHo on the West Side and between the
East Village and the
Lower East Side on the East Side.
Houston Street is named for
William Houstoun, who was a
Delegate to the
Continental Congress for the State of
Georgia from 1784 through 1786. The street was christened by
Nicholas Bayard III, whose daughter, Mary, was married to Houstoun in 1788. The couple met while Houstoun, a member of an ancient and aristocratic Scotish family, was serving in the Congress. Bayard cut the street through a tract he owned in the vicinity of
Canal Street in which he lived, and the city later extended it to include
North Street, the northern border of New York's east side at the beginning of the 19th Century.
The current spelling of the name is a corruption: the street appears as
Houstoun in the city's Common Council minutes for 1808, and the official map drawn in 1811 to establish the street grid that is still current. In those years, the
Texas hero
Sam Houston, for whom the street is sometimes said to have been named, was an unknown teenager in
Tennessee. Also mistaken, is the explanation that the name derives from the
Dutch words
huys for
house, and
tuyn for
Garden.*Source: "The Street Book"; an encyclopedia of Manhattan's street names and their origins. By Henry Moscow.
In 1891,
Nikola Tesla established his Houston Street laboratory. Much of Tesla's research was lost in the 1895 Houston Street lab fire.
The street was widened in the late 19th century, which resulted in numerous small empty lots on both sides of the street where buildings were demolished. These lots are now used by vendors and some have been turned into
community gardens.
Lower Manhattan's
SoHo district takes its name from an
acronym for "South Of Houston": the street serves as SoHo's northern boundary. North of Houston Street, there is also a neighborhood called "
NoHo."
The
street name Houston (
pronounced ) confuses many people from outside of New York (invariably becoming one of the easiest signs of spotting tourists) because the letters "ou" are pronounced as in the word
house, whereas the same letters in the name of the city of
Houston, Texas (pronounced ) are pronounced like the "u" in
huge. This is due to the fact that Houston Street was named for
William Houstoun (note that the spelling is different), long before the fame of
Sam Houston, for whom the city in Texas is named.
*Knight, Sam.
What a Street! (But Do You Ever Remember Being There?) New York Times,
October 17,
2004.