List of eponymous streets in New York City
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
This is a list of streets and squares in New York City named after a person, organized by borough.[1]
Contents
Manhattan
- Allen Street – Captain William Henry Allen, the youngest person to command a Navy ship in the War of 1812.
- Ann Street – Ann White, wife of developer and merchant Capt. Thomas White
- Astor Place and Astor Row – John Jacob Astor and other members of the Astor family, landowners [2]
- Barrow Street – Thomas Barrow, artist of a popular engraving of Trinity Church
- Bayard Street and Hester Street – Hester Bayard
- Beach Street – Paul Bache, the son-in-law of Anthony Lispenard, who owned Lispenard Meadows, just south of what is now Canal Street
- Beak Street – uncertain, but probably for the Beak family
- Beekman Place, Beekman Street, William Street – Wilhelmus Beekman. William Street is also named for William of Nassau.
- Bethune Street (pronounced Beth-YOON) – Johanna Bethune, co-founder of the New York Orphan Asylum
- Bleecker Street – Anthony Bleecker (1770–1827). a lawyer, poet and friend of Washington Irving and William Cullen Bryant, because the street ran through Bleecker's farm.
- Bogardus Place – the Bogardus family, including Everardus Bogardus and James Bogardus
- Broome Street – John Broome, lieutenant governor of New York
- Cabrini Boulevard – Mother Cabrini
- Charles Street – Charles Christopher Amos, landowner
- Charlton Street – John Charlton, president of the New York Medical Society
- Christopher Street – Charles Christopher Amos, landowner. Prior to 1799 known as Skinner Road after Col. William Skinner, son-in-law of landowner Adm. Peter Warren
- Colonel Robert Magaw Place – Robert Magaw, a colonel in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War
- Columbus Circle – for the quadcentennial of the first voyage of Christopher Columbus
- Cortlandt Street – for the Cortlandt family, landowners
- Delancey Street – James De Lancey, who owned a farm located in what is now the Lower East Side
- Detective Omar J. Edwards Way – after a police officer killed by friendly fire[3]
- Forsyth Street – Lt. Col. Benjamin Forsyth
- Fulton Street – Robert Fulton
- Gay Street – possibly "R. Gay," apocryphally to Sidney Howard Gay
- George Balanchine Way – In 1990 a segment of West 63rd Street near the New York State Theatre was renamed George Balanchine Way, after the founder of the New-York City Ballet.
- Great Jones Street – Samuel Jones, "The Father of The New York Bar"
- Greene Street – Nathanael Greene, American Revolutionary War hero
- Henry Street (Manhattan) – Henry Rutgers, American Revolutionary War hero
- Horatio Street – Horatio Gates, American Revolutionary War hero of the Battle of Saratoga
- Houston Street (pronounced HOW-ston) – William Houstoun, Founding Father
- Irving Place – Washington Irving (author) known for his History of New York and short stories like "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow"
- Jane Street – A Mr. Jaynes, who resided at #81, where Alexander Hamilton is sometimes said to have died
- Jefferson Street (Manhattan) – Thomas Jefferson, 3rd American President
- Peter Jennings Way – Peter Jennings, ABC News anchor
- Juan Pablo Duarte Boulevard (part of Saint Nicholas Avenue) – Juan Pablo Duarte, a founding father of the Dominican Republic
- LaGuardia Place – Fiorello LaGuardia, Mayor of New York City
- Lenox Avenue – James Lenox, philanthropist
- Leroy Street – Jacob Le Roy & Son, a shipping company and War of 1812 blockade-runner
- Ludlow Street – Augustus Ludlow, War of 1812 naval hero
- Macdougal Street – Alexander McDougall, Revolutionary War hero
- Madison Avenue and Madison Street – James Madison, fourth president of the United States
- Mercer Street – Hugh Mercer, American Revolutionary War figure
- Malcolm X Boulevard (co-named with Lenox Avenue) – Malcolm X American human rights activist
- Monroe Street (Manhattan) – James Monroe, American president
- Morton Street – Jacob Morton, early 19th century militia commander
- Nassau Street – William of Nassau
- Perry Street – Oliver Hazard Perry, naval hero of the War of 1812
- Rivington Street – James Rivington, Revolutionary War-era publisher
- Rutgers Street – Henry Rutgers, American Revolutionary War hero
- St. Mark's Place
- Saint Nicholas Avenue – Saint Nicholas
- Stuyvesant Street – Peter Stuyvesant, last governor of New Netherland, who owned the land [4]
- Sullivan Street – John Sullivan, American Revolutionary War general
- Thompson Street – William Thompson, Revolutionary War general
- Vanderbilt Avenue – Vanderbilt family, who owned Grand Central Terminal, the construction of which predicated construction of the road
- Varick Street – Richard Varick, American Revolutionary War figure and Mayor of New York City
- Vesey Street (pronounced VEE-see) – after Rev. William Vesey
- Washington Street – George Washington, first president of the United States
- Wooster Street – David Wooster, American Revolutionary War hero
- Worth Street – William J. Worth
Squares
- Chatham Square – William Pitt, 1st Earl of Chatham, and Prime Minister of Great Britain
- Duffy Square – Chaplain Francis P. Duffy of New York's 69th Infantry Regiment
- Hanover Square – the House of Hanover
- Lincoln Square – a local landowner
- Madison Square – James Madison, fourth President of the United States
- Margaret Sanger Square – founder of Planned Parenthood
- Times Square – The New York Times
- Tompkins Square Park – Daniel D. Tompkins (1774–1825), Vice President of the United States
- Verdi Square – Giuseppe Verdi, Italian composer
- Washington Square Park – George Washington
- Worth Square – William J. Worth
Bronx
- Bruckner Boulevard and Bruckner Expressway – Henry Bruckner, politician and longtime Borough President
- Elias Karmon Way; (Located at the corner of Thwaites Place and Barker Avenue 10467) – Elias Karmon, aka fondly "Mr. Bronx" and then later "Dr. Bronx" for his honorary graduate degree. He was great-grandfather, a generous philanthropist and humanitarian to multiple causes in and outside of the Bronx, and owed multiple businesses in the Bronx since the late 1930s.
- Bartow Avenue – Family of John Bartow, a missionary for the Anglican Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in London
- Seabury Avenue – Samuel Seabury, first Bishop of the Protestant Episcopal of America
- Corsa Avenue – Family of Andrew Corsa who led 5,000 American and French troops to Morrisania to survey British fortifications
Brooklyn
- Fulton Street – Robert Fulton
- Herzl Street – Theodor Herzl
- McGuinness Boulevard – Peter McGuinness
- Vanderbilt Avenue – Vanderbilt family
Queens
- Brinckerhoff Avenue – the Brinckerhoff family
- Douglaston Parkway – named for the Douglas family as was the area of Douglaston, Queens
- Francis Lewis Boulevard – Francis Lewis, local resident and signer of the Declaration of Independence
- Parsons Boulevard – named after botanist Samuel Bowne Parsons
- Jackie Robinson Parkway – Jackie Robinson – Major League Baseball player
- Roosevelt Avenue – Theodore Roosevelt [5]
- Sean Bell Way – renamed for the victim of a controversial police-involved shooting, originally named Liverpool Street
- Steinway Street – named for the makers of the famed Steinway piano. Their factory was located in the Astoria area of Queens, where this street runs through.
- Van Wyck Expressway (formerly Van Wyck Boulevard) – named for Robert Anderson Van Wyck, first mayor of New York City after the consolidation of the five boroughs
Staten Island
- Father Capodanno Boulevard – Vincent R. Capodanno, killed in action in the Vietnam War
- Hylan Boulevard – John F. Hylan, Mayor of New York City
- LaGuardia Avenue – Fiorello LaGuardia, Mayor of New York City
- Detective Russel Timoshenko Way – after a police officer killed in the line of duty
See also
- List of eponymous roads in London
- List of eponymous streets in Manila
- List of numbered streets in Manhattan
References
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Further reading
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- ↑ "Harlem street renamed Detective Omar J. Edwards Way in honor of slain officer" by Bob Kappstatter, Daily News (New York), May 29, 2011
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