Greenwich House is a West Village settlement house in New York City .
26-477: Greenwich House was founded on Thanksgiving Day 1902 by city planner and social worker Mary K. Simkhovitch in a building at 26 Jones Street in Manhattan 's West Village . Its original purpose was to help New York's growing immigrant population adapt to life in their new country. Early supporters who joined her on opening day included social reformers Jacob Riis , Felix Adler , and Carl Shurz . Greenwich Village
52-491: A 199-seat Off-Broadway theatre located in New York City's historic Greenwich House at 27 Barrow Street and a production company of the same name. From 2003 to 2018, the venue was leased to Barrow Street Theatre, a commercial theater company operated by producers Scott Morfee and Tom Wirtshafter. The theater space has been operated by Ars Nova since September 1, 2018 under the names Ars Nova at Greenwich House and
78-452: A gift from Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney , Greenwich House was able to hire architects Delano and Aldrich to design its current Federalist building at 27 Barrow Street. The new building, complete with gym, running track, theater, and rooftop playground, provided Greenwich House the space to establish new programs such as a nursery school and children's theater program. Greenwich House soon needed more space. The old Handicraft School building
104-514: A professional theater, currently the home of Ars Nova and previously home to Soho Rep and the Barrow Street Theatre , a gym with running track, commercial kitchen, medical offices and a rooftop playground among other facilities. The building was built with a shaft for an elevator, but no actual elevator, as the new technology was too expensive at the time. Greenwich House Pottery is located at 16 Jones Street. The current building
130-555: A program for children who have suffered from abuse. Greenwich House's main facilities are located in Greenwich Village , including its main building at 27 Barrow Street, Pottery at 16 Jones Street and Music School at 46 Barrow Street. Greenwich House also rents space for programs, primarily senior and behavioral health programs, including at a nearby church, Our Lady of Pompeii ; and at a former convent located on Washington Square Park North. Greenwich House's main building
156-564: Is a full service clay studio center for ceramics. The Pottery offers classes and workshops for students of all ages. It also host Master Series lectures as well and two residency programs, including Egyptian painter Ghada Amer . Within Greenwich House Pottery is the Jane Hartsook Gallery.[13] The gallery was named in honor of Jane Hartsook, former Pottery director. Greenwich House YCC and Summer STEAM Camp
182-581: Is located in Greenwich House's main building, 27 Barrow Street. When the Children's Aid Society moved away from the West Village in 2011, Greenwich House assumed responsibility for its After-School and Summer Arts Camp programs. In 1987 six-year-old Village girl Lisa Steinberg was found murdered, the victim of physical abuse, with the prime suspects her adoptive parents. Headlines following
208-599: The Greenwich Street Theatre . The theater space, which opened in 1917, has also been home to SoHo Rep . While under the jurisdiction of the theatre company, the theater was home to a number of Off-Broadway hits, including Bug by Tracy Letts , Buyer and Cellar , Sweeney Todd and Orson's Shadow by Austin Pendleton . Following their departure from the Greenwich House theatre, Barrow rebranded as Barrow Street Productions and produced
234-698: The Somerville, Massachusetts High School for two years. In 1894 she started a year of graduate school at Radcliffe College . Two Boston organizations, the Church of the Carpenter , a Christian Socialist church founded by W. D. P. Bliss , and Denison House , a settlement house run by Helena Dudley , had a lasting influence on Simkhovitch. She visited black and immigrant families in Boston’s tenement slums, observed and documented their poverty, and became aware of
260-648: The United States; and publishing the Tenant's Rights Manual, the first ever of its kind in the nation. Recognizing a need for recreation and skills training among Village residents, Greenwich House established Greenwich House Music School at 46 Barrow Street in 1905, followed by the Handicraft School, the precursor to Greenwich House Pottery , in 1909. By 1917 the organization's Jones Street buildings were becoming overcrowded for its programs. Thanks to
286-544: The church agreed to a new revised lease allowing the center to remain. Founded in 1905, Greenwich House Music School was founded as a place for immigrant children and now provides music, art, and dance education for both children and adults. About 40 faculty members provide group and individual instruction for a variety of instruments, including piano, strings, guitar, harp, percussion, woodwinds, brass and Suzuki Violin . In addition to music, early childhood classes are offered in music and art. Dance classes are also available at
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#1732779606099312-787: The future Nobel Peace Prize winner, attended the International Socialist Trade Union Congress in London. After London she attended Columbia University where she worked with Edwin Robert Anderson Seligman and James Harvey Robinson and boarded with the writer Anne O'Hagan Shinn . In 1902, she and others founded the Greenwich House , a settlement house in Greenwich Village in New York City . In 1905, she
338-588: The grandfather of Electronic Music, and current faculty Brandee Younger , jazz harpist. Notable alumni include Bobby Lopez , the Tony, Grammy, Emmy and Academy Award-winning composer for the movie Frozen , Avenue Q and Book of Mormon , as well as Erika Nickrenz of the Eroica Trio . Greenwich House Music School is a member of the National Guild for Community Arts Education. Greenwich House Pottery
364-576: The immediate neighborhood, CSP has expanded over time to serve hundreds of the most vulnerable individuals a year from across the city with individualized therapy. Barrow Street Nursery School is a pre-school. Greenwich House also operates four senior centers, a senior health and consultation center providing mental and physical health treatment, a methadone maintenance clinic, chemical dependency program and all-girls non-competitive basketball league. Mary Kingsbury Simkhovitch Mary Kingsbury Simkhovitch (September 8, 1867 – November 15, 1951)
390-436: The interior and now comprise the 100 seat Renee Weiler Concert Hall as well as sound proof practice rooms. Greenwich House's rented space in the basement of Our Lady of Pompeii Catholic Church also received notoriety. In 2015, after more than thirty years in the space, the pastor of the church attempted to evict the senior center. After months of negotiations, including elected officials and Cardinal Timothy Dolan , weighing in,
416-687: The late 1980s Greenwich House played a central role in the AIDS crisis in the West Village neighborhood, one of the city's largest gay communities. In 1987 Greenwich House opened the AIDS Mental Health Project followed by the HIV Primary Medical Care Project. Today, the organization continues to host a long term HIV survivors support group. Also in 1987, Greenwich House founded the Children's Safety Project,
442-465: The only program in the city dedicated to treating young victims of abuse. The Children's Safety Project was founded after a group of concerned neighbors came together after the killing of local Village child, nine year old Lisa Steinberg . Today Greenwich House provides art education, senior service and behavioral health programs including an after-school, summer arts camp, nursery school, senior centers and senior health clinic, substance abuse clinics and
468-619: The power and wealth of the city’s slumlords. In 1895 she attended the University of Berlin on a scholarship from the Women's Educational and Industrial Union . Her mother accompanied her to Europe in the summer of 1895 and stayed in Berlin while school was in session. It was there that Mary met and became engaged to Vladimir Simkhovitch (1874-1959), a Russian student of economics. During the summer of 1896 she and her friend Emily Greene Balch ,
494-409: The school. The Renee Weiler Concert Hall on the school's second floor hosts a variety of performances throughout the year. Notable performers who have passed through the concert hall include Meredith Monk , Hilary Hahn , John Cage , David Amram , Tim Berne and Ruth Laredo . Notable faculty members include long time Piano Chair, German Diez (1924-2014), Morton Subotnick , sometimes referred to as
520-460: The trail and conviction of Lisa's adoptive father and illegal guardian filled the papers for two years straight. A direct response to the community's call to protect its children, Greenwich House launched the Children's Safety Project that same year. CSP helps children heal from their trauma of abuse through supportive therapy and by teaching them the life-skills required to become self-reliant and lead productive lives. While originally intended to serve
546-560: Was a member of the Committee of Fourteen that was seeking to reduce prostitution in New York City . In 1931, Simkhovitch was closely involved in the founding of the National Public Housing Conference , serving as its first president. She died on November 15, 1951, in New York City . Her papers are archived at Harvard . Barrow Street Theatre Barrow Street Theatre is the name of both
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#1732779606099572-605: Was a mixed area at the time. Italian immigrants began crowding out the existing Irish population. Many homes lacked running water. There was a high infant death rate and poor education. Early programs sought to relieve congestion and improve living conditions, which included founding the Greenwich Village Improvement Society, forerunner to the Greenwich Village Association and first neighborhood association of its kind in
598-688: Was an American city planner and social worker . She was born in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts , to Laura Davis Holmes (1839-1932) and Isaac Franklin Kingsbury (1841-1919). She graduated from Newton High School in 1886 and received her B.A. from Boston University , where she had been a member of Phi Beta Kappa , in 1890. During college she performed volunteer work in a teenage girls' club at Boston's St. Augustine's Episcopal Church, an African American congregation, and at "St. Monica's Home for old colored women." After graduation she taught Latin in
624-407: Was built between 1916 and 1917, funded by board members including Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney and Anna Woershoffer. The Flemish-bond building was designed in the neo-federal style by architects Delano and Aldrich . The building was considered an example of refined American design, complete with mural by Arthur Crisp, intended to inspire immigrants new to the country. The seven-story building contains
650-553: Was built in 1928, also designed by Delano and Aldrich. The building is notable for containing the only remaining gas pottery kilns in Manhattan. It is also the home of the Jane Hartsook Gallery. Greenwich House Music School, located at 46 Barrow Street composes two out of a row of six brick row homes. The homes were originally designed in the Italianate style by Smith Woodruff in 1851. The two Music School homes were combined on
676-475: Was rebuilt as Greenwich House Pottery in 1928, enabling it to become a renowned center for ceramics. The Metropolitan Museum of Art purchased two pieces from the Pottery in 1939. In 1942 Greenwich House continued to add more services, and the New York City's first after-school program was followed by a senior center. By the 1980s Greenwich House offered a mix of social service and arts education programs. In
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