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Hotel Albert
65-67 University Place
Hotel Albert
"If He Hollers Let Him Go" by Chester B. Himes
Hotel Albert
"If He Hollers Let Him Go" by Chester Himes
Hotel Albert
Thomas Wolfe
Hotel Albert
"The Complete Poems of Hart Crane"
Hotel Albert
Hotel Albert.
Hotel Albert
Hotel Albert, N.Y.
Hotel Albert
Hotel Albert.
Hotel Albert
Hotel Albert 11th Street and University Place New York City
Hotel Albert
Hotel Albert and Albert Chambers
Hotel Albert
Hotel Albert
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The "New" Albert Hotel refers to the last two parts of the hotel Albert complex. These were built as a 12-story extension on University Place, built 1903-04 and designed by the firm of Buchman & Fox. The final section of the Hotel Albert to be built was the 6-story neo-colonial style building located on the northeast corner of University Place and East 10th Street. It was built 1922-24, and designed by William L. Bottomly and the firm of Sugarman & Hess. Some of those writers who have stayed at the Albert (or St. Stephens) include Robert Louis Stevenson, Harte Crane, Richard Wright, Anais Nin, Diane di Prima and Leroi Jones/Amiri Baraka. Political radicals stayed at the Albert as early as 1906 including Ivan Ivanovich Norodny (chief executive commissioner of the Russian Military Revolutionary Party). John Gages, the editor of the Daily Worker, held a rally there in 1958. Many artists stayed there or gathered in the ground floor restaurant. Joseph Brody, who ran the restaurant from 1946 to 1968, hung the art of some of the many patron/artists on the walls and sponsored poetry contests; he also offered tours of the Village on a bus decoratively painted by Salvador Dali. Some of the famous musicians who spent time at the Albert during the 1960s and 70s included Jim Morrison, Carly Simon, Joni Mitchell, and James Taylor. The Mamas & the Papas wrote the hit “California Dreamin'” and Lovin’ Spoonful wrote “Do You Believe in Magic” at the Albert.
Hotel Albert
Charles S. Johnson
The Hotel Albert
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Most of us remember the famous line from Alfred Hitchcock’s 1954 thriller, Rear Window, “Meet me in the bar at the Albert Hotel,” delivered hauntingly by Jimmy Stewart to Raymond Burr. Today the building is a co-op complex comprised of four distinct structures functioning as a single entity and occupying the entire blockfront of University Place between East 10th Street and East 11th Street. The oldest of the buildings dates back to the 1870s, while another section was built by one of New York’s greatest and most celebrated architects. Collectively, the four buildings of the Albert Hotel have hosted a nearly unrivaled list of historically significant figures over the years. In 2012 the complex was listed on the New York State and National Registers of Historic Places — a largely honorific designation.
Hotel Albert
Hotel Albert.
Hotel Albert
Hotel Albert
“Goodbye and Hello” by Tim Buckley album cover
Hotel Albert
_Samuel Delany, 2019_
Hotel Albert
The New Hotel Albert, New York City
Hotel Albert
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The former Hotel Albert complex consists of four buildings at 23 East 10th Street/40-52 East 11th Street/65-67 University Place. The buildings were constructed in 1875-76, 1881-82, 1903-1904, and 1922-1924. From the 1880s through the early 1970s, the Hotel played a large role in New York City’s cultural life. During the postwar era, prominent painters, writers, photographers, and musicians found inspiration at the hotel. LGBTQ and African-American artists established communities here, as did radical, Jewish, and working-class organizations such as the Progressive Labor Party. The hotel hosted dramatic productions at the “Albert Theatre for a brief period.” To learn more about the Hotel Albert, click here.
Hotel Albert
"Of Time and the River" by Thomas Wolfe
Hotel Albert
Albert Hotel, 79-67 University Place at 11th Street. (Roege 9342)
Hotel Albert
Hotel Albert
The “Scopes Monkey Trial.” Clarence Darrow (standing) interrogates William Jennings Bryan (seated)
Hotel Albert
42-44 East 11th Street
Hotel Albert
University Place and 11th Street. New Hotel Albert.
Hotel Albert
Albert Pinkham Ryder
Hotel Albert
Advertisement for The Lovin’ Spoonful single “Do You Believe in Magic”
Hotel Albert
Hotel Albert, N.Y. City
Hotel Albert
Progressive Labor Party emblem
Hotel Albert
42-44 East 11th Street
Hotel Albert
Hotel Albert, 11th St. & University Place, New York. One Block West of Broadway.
Hotel Albert
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The Hotel Albert The next part of what is now the Albert complex to be built was directly west of the St. Stephen. Also commissioned by Rosenbaum, it was the first section of today’s complex to use the Albert name (Rosenbaum’s given name), located on the southeast corner of University Place and East 11th Street. Built in 1881-82 as a high-end apartment house or “French Flats,” and called the Albert Apartment House, it was one of the earliest examples in New York of the then-novel concept of apartment house design for middle- or upper-class residents. It was designed by the great architect Henry Hardenbergh, designer of perhaps the most famous and beloved of all of New York’s early apartment houses, Central Park West’s the Dakota (1880-84), as well as other great New York City landmarks such as the Schermerhorn Building located just a few blocks away on Lafayette Street, and the Plaza Hotel. In 1887, the Albert Apartments was converted into a hotel, rechristened the Hotel Albert. Just a few years later in 1895 the Hotel Albert absorbed the neighboring St. Stephen, thus beginning the Albert’s outward sprawl.
Hotel Albert
"The Race Track" by Albert Pinkham Ryder
Hotel Albert
Photo by Berenice Abbott
Hotel Albert
Hotel Albert.
Hotel Albert
"The Bridge" by Hart Crane
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