Hop on board as author and architect Fran Leadon treats readers to a 13-mile tour of Broadway Street in New York City, which was, believe it or not, an old Indian trail.
And for history buffs, readers will learn in “Broadway: A History of New York City in Thirteen Miles” that upper Broadway, in what is now Fort Tryon Park, was the stretch of land that Margaret Corbin on November 16, 1776, during the Revolutionary War, took over for her fatally injured husband and heroically shot the cannon against the advancing British. Corbin was the first woman awarded a military pension.
In a fast paced, beautifully written, meticulously researched, and always entertaining 400 or so pages, Leadon builds on the early foundations of one of the most famous streets in the world, documenting the first ticker tape parade, beginning in 1899 through Adolph Ochs relocating the New York Times at 1475 Broadway and the opening of the Times Tower in 1905; and of course, documenting the glitz and bright lights of the very heart of the American theatre industry, known to some as "The Great White Way." Imagine, in 1927 alone, 264 new shows opened on Broadway, including Jerome Kern’s “Showboat” at the Ziegfeld Theater.
What I found particularly revealing about Leadon’s vastly entertaining book was the way he unearthed the unique character and ethnic distinction of old Broadway, especially the west side of the street, before it gave way to lavish stores and affluent condominiums. The author, for example, gives the location of the old Almanac Broadway Drug store (with the soda fountain stools), the C & L Restaurant, the Tip Toe Inn, and Steinberg’s Dairy, among other distinctive fixtures of the neighborhood.
Baseball fans won’t be disappointed with Leadon’s account of Hilltop Park in Broadway (between 165th and 168th Street), home of the New York Highlanders (Yankees) before they abandoned the area for the Polo Grounds after the 1912 season.
All in all, Leadon does a spectacular job of indulging readers to the best Broadway has to offer from its early English settlers to the infusion of European immigrants through its heyday as a lively, bustling thoroughfare.
-Bill Lucey
WPLucey@gmail.com
July 9, 2018