A Night-Club Map of Harlem
The stars indicate the places that are open all night. The only important omission is the location of the various speakeasies but since there are about 500 of them, you won't have much trouble.
Manhattan,
A Weekly for Wakeful New Yorkers, No.1 Vol. 1,
January 18th, 1933.
Lithograph map within magazine and open pocket.
410 by 610mm (16.25 by 24 inches).
18595
notes:
Simms Campbell's magnificent map of 1930s Harlem.
To succeed in a white-dominated society, Campbell, the first nationally-prominent African-American cartoonist, rarely used Black themes in his drawings. But he had close ties to Harlem's cultural "Renaissance" and this map was his most important early Black-related work, forgotten for decades because it appeared in the first issue of an obscure magazine for Manhattan night-owls which failed in a month.
To succeed in a white-dominated society, Campbell, the first nationally-prominent African-American cartoonist, rarely used Black themes in his drawings. But he had close ties to Harlem's cultural "Renaissance" and this map was his most important early Black-related work, forgotten for decades because it appeared in the first issue of an obscure magazine for Manhattan night-owls which failed in a month.
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