Month: October 2023

  • You’re Invited to the November HNBA Meeting!

    You’re Invited to the November HNBA Meeting!

    Mark your calendar. On Tuesday, November 14th, join HNBA for our November meeting at 7:00 PM at the Salvation Army building (2306 3rd Avenue): We will have officers from Manhattan North – the overarching NYPD group that manages crime and public safety above Central Park. If you live above Central Park then please come out…

  • $10 Million Dollars

    $10 Million Dollars

    Thursday, at 6:30 PM, at the Silberman School of Social Work (3rd + 119th): Your Chance to Weigh In On How $10 Million Dollars of Your Tax Money Is Spent.  If you have an opinion on who should or shouldn’t receive revitalization funding, come out on Thursday at 6:30 PM and make your voice heard.…

  • The Space Race

    The Space Race

    THE SPACE RACE weaves together the stories of Black astronauts seeking to break the bonds of social injustice to reach for the stars, including Guion Bluford, Ed Dwight and Charles Bolden, among many others. In THE SPACE RACE, directors Diego Hurtado de Mendoza and Lisa Cortés profile the pioneering Black pilots, scientists and engineers who…

  • Great Photos of Harlem Cyclists

    Great Photos of Harlem Cyclists

    Thelma Golden, director and chief curator of the Studio Museum of Harlem, has won and Lillian Gish Prize, which carries a value of $250,000. The award recognizes Golden’s significant contribution to the arts. Golden, who has been at the helm of the museum since 2005, expressed her gratitude upon being honored.

  • The Black Eagle

    The Black Eagle

    Hubert Fauntleroy Julian was born in Port of Spain, Trinidad, in 1897. His father, Henry, was a cocoa plantation manager in Toco. Julian saw his first airplane in January 1913, during an exhibition flight. After World War I, he left his home to go to Canada. In November 1920, he flew for the first time with Billy…

  • Green Lights – Memento From Colonial New York

    Green Lights – Memento From Colonial New York

    If you’ve ever wondered why our precinct, and all precincts in NYC, for that matter, have two green lights flanking their entrance, well, the tradition of the green lights goes back to the 1600’s when the earliest group of 8 officers carried green lanterns on their rounds of New Amsterdam. Once back from patrol, the…

  • The Cost of Incarceration

    The Cost of Incarceration

    + Get Active – It’s Your Community Every year, the United States spends over $1.1 billion incarcerating 13,200 New Yorkers. About 55% of those imprisoned in New York City during that period are expected to be released within 1 to 4 years. Analysis of prison admission data shows that a small number of neighborhoods have…

  • Dutch Colonial Era Firefighting

    Dutch Colonial Era Firefighting

    During Dutch colonial rule, fires were the terror of every resident. On September 28, 1648 for example, the council ordered the firewardens to inspect all chimneys in New Amsterdam, and on December 12, 1657, ordered a chimney tax on the city for buying fire buckets In Harlem it was noted that: At the meeting, December…

  • A New Look For This Newsletter

    A New Look For This Newsletter

    This week, we’ll switch from a WordPress email distribution to a new newsletter publisher. The emails will now come from: hnba@mail.beehiiv.com (Beehiiv.com being the new newsletter platform we’re using) You can expect new newsletters to look like this: We hope you will enjoy the new format.

  • Harlem in Film

    Harlem in Film

    These were independent films that were shot almost entirely on studio stages, (virtually no on-the-streets cinematography). Still, these two films remain important documents of how Harlem and Black life in Harlem was envisioned and represented by a Black director – Oscar Micheaux. This is the double feature DVD: You can learn more about Oscar Micheaux…

  • 119th Street and 5th Avenue

    119th Street and 5th Avenue

    A great photo from 1992 of Bob’s Newsstand, taken at 5th Avenue and 119th Street. It’s a little hard to see, but Bob is standing to the left of the door. Here is that intersection, today: The black and white photo is taken by Katsu Naito and is featured in a Guardian photo essay: https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2023/sep/04/katsu-naito-harlem-1990s-new-york-photo-essay…

  • Film Screening: Exploring the Impact of Methadone on Communities of Color

    Film Screening: Exploring the Impact of Methadone on Communities of Color

    Tomorrow! Join “Swallow This” Directors in a Conversation About Methadone’s Impact on Communities of Color It was FREEDOM. Swallow THIS: A Documentary About Methadone and COVID-19 uncovers what happened in opioid treatment programs during the pandemic.   Join the directors and The Greater Harlem Coalition in a free screening and conversation with the directors on Saturday,…