Jones Street

Coordinates: 40°43′55.2″N 74°0′9.16″W / 40.732000°N 74.0025444°W / 40.732000; -74.0025444

Jones Street
Postal code 10014
Northeast end West 4th Street
Southwest end Bleecker Street

Jones Street is a street located in Greenwich Village in the New York City borough of Manhattan. It runs from Bleecker Street and West 4th Street. Jones Street is often confused with Great Jones Street in NoHo, located a little more than a half-mile to the east.

What is now Jones Street predates 1789, and was named for Doctor Gardner Jones. Today's Great Jones Street was named for Samuel Jones, a lawyer who revised New York State's statutes in 1789 together with Richard Varick, and became known as "The Father of The New York Bar", who was also the brother-in-law of Gardner Jones.[1] Jones deeded the site of the street to the city under the condition that any street that ran through the property had to be named for him. However, when the street was first created in 1789, the city already had a "Jones Street," Neither brother-in-law would defer to the other to end the resulting confusion, but Samuel Jones finally ended the argument by suggesting "Then make mine 'Great Jones Street'".[2] An alternative theory has the street name prefixed with "Great" as being the wider of the two Jones Streets.[1]

The cover photo of the 1963 Bob Dylan album, The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, depicts Dylan and then-girlfriend Suze Rotolo walking down the center of Jones Street on a winter day.[3][4]

Movies filmed on Jones Street include Cruising,[5][6] Bullets Over Broadway,[7] Whatever Works,[8] Inside Llewyn Davis,[9] Addicted to Love[10] and The Irishman. In The Butcher's Wife, the butcher shop shown is Florence Meat Market at 5 Jones Street. Scenes from the first episode of the sixth season of Californication[11] were filmed on Jones Street as well as scenes from the fifth episode of Woody Allen's mini-series Crisis in Six Scenes.[12]

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 Boland Jr., Ed. "F.Y.I.", The New York Times, March 17, 2002. Accessed September 8, 2008. "In 1789 a street was opened there, but New York already had a Jones Street in Greenwich Village. So the new street was named Great Jones Street because it was wider than the norm."
  2. "A THOROUGHLY UNFAIR QUIZ ABOUT NEW YORK", The New York Times, August 10, 1985. Accessed September 8, 2008. "When neither man would yield the honor of having a street named for him, Samuel settled the issue—and one-upped his brother-in-law—by saying, Then make mine Great Jones Street."
  3. Williams, Richard. "Tomorrow is a long time", The Guardian, August 16, 2008. Accessed September 8, 2008. "Wrapped around each other, they walked through the slush towards the camera. Hunstein says they were on Cornelia Street. Rotolo is convinced it was Jones Street, one block closer to the apartment."
  4. "NYC Album Art: The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan" Archived 2010-03-28 at the Wayback Machine., The Gothamist, April 16, 2008. Accessed September 8, 2008.
  5. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0080569/locations?ref_=tt_ql_dt_5
  6. Jones Street scene starts at 20:17.
  7. "Feb 12, 15 & 25 2009: A Benefit for Caffe Vivaldi".
  8. scene filmed on Jones Street.
  9. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2042568/locations?ref_=tt_ql_dt_5
  10. very brief Jones Street scene at 1:34.
  11. "Pictures from the "Californication" TV Series Filming on Jones Street in New York City on April 20, 2012".
  12. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt4699530/locations?ref_=ttfc_sa_5

Bibliography

  • Moscow, Henry (1978), The Street Book: An Encyclopedia of Manhattan's Street Names and Their Origins, New York: Hagstrom Company, ISBN 0823212750
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