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80 5 Avenue
80 Fifth Avenue
"The Maltese Falcon" by Dashiell Hammett
80 Fifth Avenue
80 Fifth Avenue
80 Fifth Avenue
Portrait of Robert Earl Jones in Langston Hughes' "Don't You Want to be Free?"
80 Fifth Avenue
80 Fifth Avenue. Commercial building
4 West 14th Street
Manhattan: 5th Avenue - 14th Street South on west side of Fifth Avenue from 14th Street. About 1923.
80 Fifth Avenue
Jean O'Leary
80 Fifth Avenue
Paul Robeson
80 Fifth Avenue
Rockwell Kent
80 Fifth Avenue
David Rothenberg (b. August 19, 1933) is one of the Village’s most prolific activists.
80 Fifth Avenue
Black History South of Union Square
Story
80 Fifth Avenue
Louise Thompson Patterson
80 Fifth Avenue
David Rothenberg
Hudson Building
5th Avenue and 14th Street. Loft building.
80 Fifth Avenue
Bruce Voeller
80 Fifth Avenue
Langston Hughes
80 Fifth Avenue
80 5th Avenue and 14th Street, S.W. corner. .
80 Fifth Avenue
5th Avenue and 14th Street. Loft building.
80 Fifth Avenue
Post
80 Fifth Avenue, an elaborately-detailed Renaissance Revival style office building constructed in 1907-1908 by the architecture firm of Buchman and Fox, has been a striking presence at the southwest corner of Fifth Avenue and 14th Street for well over a century. The stunning architecture would be enough to warrant landmark designation of the 17-story office, store, and loft building, which has housed law firms, clothing and jewelry shops, magazines and real estate offices, a school, and civic organizations over it’s more than one hundred ten year history. But beginning in 1973, the top floor was also home to the National Gay Task Force, the country’s first national LGBT rights organization, during its early period when it made groundbreaking advances — the first in fact ever made — for LGBT rights on the federal level. This building was constructed in 1908 to be used as manufacturing and office space. Known as both 80-82 Fifth Avenue and 2-4 West 14th Street, its facades facing two of New York’s busiest streets is full of stately embellishments. This beautiful building’s lower and upper levels feature decorative floral and geometric ornamentation, elaborate cornices, and angled bay windows on the third floor. Ornamented pilasters are found at either side of these windows, with slightly more austere middle floors and in its arched windows and elaborate ornamentation at the top story. The National Gay Task Force, now renamed as The National LGBTQ Task Force, works to advance full freedom, justice, and equality for LGBTQ people. The organization is the country’s oldest national LGBTQ advocacy group. The founding members of the Task Force included Dr. Howard Brown, Martin Duberman, Barbara Gittings, Ron Gold, Frank Kameny, Nathalie Rockhill, and Bruce Voeller. They were inspired by the Stonewall uprising and the burgeoning LGBTQ rights movements in the Village. Among the Task Force’s accomplishments during the time it was located at 80 Fifth Avenue included getting the American Psychiatric Association to end its classification of homosexuality as a mental illness; getting the federal government to end its ban on employing gay or lesbian people in any federal agencies (though a guarantee not to discriminate based upon sexual orientation was not implemented until decades later); and brokering the first meeting of gay rights advocates with the White House in 1977.
80 Fifth Avenue
Ed Koch and Bella Abzug
80 Fifth Avenue
80 Fifth Avenue
[80 5th Avenue.]
80 Fifth Avenue
80 Fifth Avenue
Vito Marcantonio
80 Fifth Avenue
80 Fifth Avenue
"Save Our Children" campaign fundraising card
Hudson Building
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The Hudson Building, Union Square, May 18, 1942. This 1908 Beaux-Arts building by Buchman & Fox included both retail and office space. Though it was advertised to business clients, by the 1930s tenants included leftist groups like International Workers Order (IWO), who operated its own birth control clinic out of the building.
80 Fifth Avenue
_Jane O'Leary, 1973_
80 Fifth Avenue
International Workers Order emblem
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