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Webster Hall
Webster Hall
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Webster Hall, a run-down community center on East 11th Street, was the site of a succession of masquerade balls during the 1910s that enhanced the image of Greenwich Village as a perpetual party place. Patterned after the bacchanals staged in the art-student quarter of Paris, these costume spectacles were conceived initially as fund-raisers for local radical organizations. However, the causes they purported to support receded in importance as the balls grew rowdier, drawing many oglers and uptowners to the Village. At their peak of popularity around 1918, as many as two balls per week were being presented at what the Villagers teasingly had branded "The Devil's Playhouse."

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