South of Union Square logo
South of Union Square
Location
70 Fifth Avenue
70 Fifth Avenue
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

"The Crisis" issue
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

"National Board of Review of Motion Pictures Magazine"
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

"A Man Was Lynched Yesterday" flag
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

"The Brownies' Book" issue
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) pamphlet
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

National Board of Review of Motion Pictures logo
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

Crystal Eastman
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

Henry Morgenthau Sr.
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

Roger Baldwin
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

"The Jungle" by Upton Sinclair
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

Campaign poster for the American Committee for Relief in the Near East (now the Near East Foundation)
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue
Post

70 Fifth Avenue (at far right), May 19, 1933. Constructed in 1913 as a speculative office building, the 12-story structure on the corner of Fifth Avenue and West 13th Street was advertised as "office space at a prestige address." In 1914 it became the headquarters for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and the offices of its official publication, The Crisis. (The NAACP had previous worked from offices at 20 Vesey Street for the first five years of their existence.)
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

70 Fifth Avenue; 2-6 West 13th Street
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

Jesse Redmon Fauset
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue
Post

Village Preservation successfully advocated for this building's landmark designation in 2021. This building housed the headquarters of the nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organizations, the NAACP, the first magazines for an African-American audience, The Crisis Magazine, and what would become the American Civil Liberties Union, among many other entities. To learn more about 70 Fifth Avenue, click here.
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

W.E.B. Du Bois
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

Countee Cullen in Central Park
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

Campaign poster for the American Committee for Relief in the Near East (now the Near East Foundation), 1917-1919
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

NAACP flyer calling for the federal anti-lynching bill
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

NAACP logo
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

"Inherit the Wind" trailer still
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

Campaign poster for the American Committee for Relief in the Near East (now the Near East Foundation)
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom logo
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

The 1917 Silent March on Fifth Avenue
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue

70 Fifth Avenue; 2-6 West 13th Street
70 Fifth Avenue image

70 Fifth Avenue