Names of New York Discovering the city's past, present, and future through its place-names

Joshua Jelly-Schapiro

Book - 2021

"From the coauthor of the award-winning Nonstop Metropolis--a short, fascinating journey into the past, present, and future of New York City through its place names and the stories they contain. Drawing on his background in cultural geography, Joshua Jelly-Schapiro excavates the wealth of stories that are embedded in New York City's place names and uses them to illuminate the power of naming to shape experience and our sense of place. He traces the ways that the native Lenape, the Dutch settlers, the British invaders, and successive waves of immigrants have left their marks on the island and continue to reshape it. He explores how many New York place names have accrued iconic significance far beyond the city's boundaries; for... example, "Brooklyn" is the name of a notorious street gang in Haiti, of restaurants from New Zealand to Paris, and of thousands of children (it is among the top fifty girl's names in America). He interviews the last living speaker of Lenape, tours the harbor's many "out-islands" with a tugboat captain, and meets the linguists at the Endangered Language Alliance who study the estimated eight hundred languages now spoken in New York. And he makes clear that as immigrants and marginalized groups continue to find new ways to make the city's streets and boroughs their own, the names that adhere to the landscape function not only as portals to explore the past but as a means to reimagine what's possible now"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Pantheon Books [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Joshua Jelly-Schapiro (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
243 pages ; 20 cm
ISBN
9781524748920
  • 1. The Power of Names
  • 2. The Names Before
  • 3. Navigators and Duyvils and English and Kings (On Colonial Names)
  • 4. The Americans
  • 5. Leaving Shore: City of Islands
  • 6. Brokers and Powers (and Neighborhoods, Too)
  • 7. Honors and Sounds
  • 8. Making Place: Names of the Future
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index of Place-Names
Review by Booklist Review

Cultural geographer Jelly-Schapiro (Island People: The Caribbean and the World, 2016) believes that names matter. Surveying the origins of place-names in New York (both City and State), he finds a melting pot of origins that evoke the entire history of the place. His deep research reveals that no one can tell for sure the meaning of Manhattan other than that it springs from a Native American root. Some New York place-names have almost completely eclipsed their origins. The Dutch town of Breukelen now has little relationship to its namesake New World borough of Brooklyn. Other place-names spring out of pretension, as in replacing "street" with "avenue," which has now taken on utilitarian significance to distinguish north-south routes from east-west. Even today, New York is renaming streets whose present toponyms reflect historical social and political wrongs. Jelly-Schapiro's sprightly prose and ear for New Yorkers' stories shows, if nothing else, that place-names are less permanent than the ground they identify, and changing them helps forget a past or shape a future.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Jelly-Schapiro (Island People), a geographer and scholar-in-residence at NYU's Institute for Public Knowledge, delivers a fascinating look at how the names of New York City's streets, neighborhoods, parks, and buildings have shaped the city's identity. Jelly-Schapiro gathers a smorgasbord of New York City lore, including the origins of the word jonesing in reference to an alley near Great Jones Street where junkies hung out in the 1960s. He also delves into theories about the etymology of Mannahatta and explains that the York in New York derives from a Celtic term for "place of the yew tree." Real estate magnates have left their mark all over the city, sometimes unintentionally: the founders of Astoria in Queens hoped to raise money from John Jacob Astor by naming their village in his honor, but he never visited and only coughed up $500. More recently, New York streets have taken on new names in honor of illustrious residents: Ruby Dee and Ozzie Davis have his-and-her street signs on their old Harlem block. Throughout, Jelly-Schapiro maintains a light touch, even when acknowledging the city's history of wealth inequality and racial discrimination. Lovers of the Big Apple will delight in this unique and informative history. (Apr.)

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Review by Library Journal Review

In this latest work, writer Jelly-Schapiro (Island People) brings awareness and keen insight to how places in New York City were originally named, with occasional discussion of areas outside the city. He begins with landmark and street names derived from Lenape words. Along the way, he also offers an accessible overview of Local Law 28, which, among other mandates, allows for "co-naming" streets and corners without having to change official maps. The author brings both impressive detail and rich history to his exploration of a variety of naming conventions, such as those taken from the landscape or terrain, names referencing the role of the street or the vocations of its inhabitants, streets commemorating historical events, and more. A lot of ground is covered but it never feels like something is missing from this wide-ranging work. The narrative also addresses historical figures (such as George Washington) who spent time in New York, and their namesake landmarks (e.g., the George Washington Bridge). VERDICT While toponymy, or the study of place-names, may appear to be an overwhelming topic, Jelly-Schapiro's writing is informative, accessible, and entertaining. He is engaging throughout, and will leave readers thinking twice about the place-names they encounter on a daily basis.--Rebecca Kluberdanz, Central New York Lib. Resources Council, Syracuse

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The co-editor of Nonstop Metropolis: A New York City Atlas returns to the city to document the places that serve as "generators of tales." The map of New York City is both historical palimpsest and a fascinating index of events, actors, and peoples in contact and motion. As Jelly-Schapiro writes, having noted the time and thought people put into giving names to their children, "if names matter so much when attached to people, they matter even more when attached to places, as labels that last longer, in our minds and on our maps, than any single human life." Mulberry Street is an example: It suggests the fact of a tree, but underneath it lies a story of a Five Corners gangster who supposedly uprooted the tree and beat up his gangbanger foes with it. Jelly-Schapiro takes a leisurely spin through the five boroughs, stopping to notice an Indian name buried in often mangled form--Rockaway, say, which comes from the Munsee Indian word leekuwahkuy, "sandy place," which of course is just what Rockaway is--or remark on the curious alphabet and number soup of Forest Hills, where, he adds, you can get some wonderful Chinese food. The history of place names is bound up in ethnicities, and the author doesn't stint: There are plenty of Native American names, of course (as he wryly observes, "What's more American than naming stuff for people you've killed?"), Dutch names from the pre-British era, and names marking moments of social injustice--e.g., a block in the Bronx named for the ill-fated Malian immigrant Amadou Diallo--and popular culture, such as Corona's Run-DMC JMJ Way and Staten Island's Wu-Tang District. It all adds up to an entertaining education in the ways of a city that never stops transforming, meaning new names in the future. Toponym aficionados and New York history buffs alike will revel in Jelly-Schapiro's explorations. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

1. THE POWER OF NAMES Names matter. Just ask any parent agonizing over what to call a newborn. Or any kid burdened with a name they hate. Just think of the song made popular by Johnny Cash, about a boy who explains that "life ain't easy for a boy named Sue," and confronts the father who named him ("My name is Sue. How do you do! Now you gonna die!"). Whether you traverse your life as a Jane or an Ali or a Joaquin or an Eve--or you decide, as a grown‑up, that you'd rather endure or enjoy it as someone else--we all learn that names mark us. Totems of identity, systems of allusion, names can signal where we're from, who our people are, who we attach ourselves to, which Bible character or dead relative or living movie star our namers loved best. Murmured by an intimate or yelled by a foe, a name can be an endearment or a curse. Declaimed by protesters in the street, a name becomes an assertion of dignity, of rights, and of the refusal to overlook or forget. Names are shorthand, they're synecdoche. They are acknowledgments or shapers of history, containers for memory or for hope. And if names matter so much when attached to people, they matter even more when attached to places, as labels that last longer, in our minds and on our maps, than any single human life. "Name, though it seem but a superficial and outward matter, yet it carrieth much impression and enchantment." That's how Francis Bacon described the matrix of asso­ciations we affix, consciously or not, to the public words by which we navigate our days. Place-names can bind people together, or keep them apart. They can encode history and signal mores. They can proclaim what a cul­ture venerates at one moment in time, and serve as vessels for how it evolves and shifts later on. Gettysburg, Attica, Stonewall, Rome. Wall Street, Main Street, Alabama, Prague. Malibu, Beirut, Boca Raton--place-names can summon worlds and evoke epochs in just a few syllables. They can recall long-ago events or become, as settings for more recent ones, metonyms for historical change. Place-names can become styles of dress (Bermuda shorts, Capri pants) and of dance (once we did the Charleston, now we do the Rockaway). They can hail rebellions or honor heroes or spring, like Sleepy Hollow and Zion, from books. Whether a name's born of whimsy or faith, whether it was first written down by a cavalier in his log or a bureaucrat in a city hall, its "impression and enchantment" derives, too, from the truth that its meaning can't be fully divorced from its roots. In place-names lie stories. Stories, in the first instance, about their coiners--tales, say, about the long-ago Dutchmen who wandered an island of wetlands and hills that the people who lived there may or may not have called Mannahatta, but whose northern acreage those Dutchmen named for a marshy town in Holland called Haarlem. Then there are also stories about the complex or contradictory processes by which certain labels come to be recognized as "official." Stories about how people, singly or in groups, attach certain attributes to place-names that grow iconic (iconic of, for example, as with twentieth-century Harlem, Black culture and pride). And stories, too, about all the ways that such words thus do much more than merely label location. About how these words--in their rhythm and sound and how they look rendered into Roman letters or affixed on street signs and maps--shape our sense of place. Toponymy--the study of place-names--isn't a well-known field. Say the term "toponymist" even to a profes­sional geographer, and you'll conjure a hobbyist or word hoarder--a figure seen as a compiler of useful trivia. Some of us find our minds fed and our road trips improved by this kind of trivia, by learning, for example, that American place-makers fell in love with two sophisticated-sounding suffixes meaning "town," one borrowed from German (-burg) and one from French (-ville), with which they ran wild in naming Hattiesburg and Pittsburgh and Vicksburg and Fredericksburg and Charlottesville and Hicksville and Danville (a village in Vermont near where I grew up, which one might incorrectly guess is named after a guy named Dan). We are intrigued to learn that during another bout of Francophilia, in the late 1800s, city planners who had wearied of the mundane word "street" began calling the broader ones by a term--"avenue"--which in France meant a tree-lined drive to a grand estate. Who, while walking down Manhattan's Mulberry Street, does not find the trip made richer by pondering how its blocks, long before they became home to Italian immigrants and then to the restaurants that still make its name synonymous with the best cannoli, were home until the 1850s to an actual mulberry tree? As legend, if not history, has it, the Gangs of New York -era folk hero Mose Humphrey pulled the tree up by its roots and used it to bludgeon rival toughs from the Plug Uglies. Toponymy, at its simplest, is all about such bits of knowledge and lore. But as George R. Stewart, the doyen of American place-name lovers, observed, "the meaning of a name is bigger than the words composing it." And Marcel Proust agreed: In Swann's Way, he described how place-names "magnetized my desires" in his youth, "not as an inaccessible ideal but as a real and enveloping substance." The names that obsessed him weren't matched by the actual places; Parma was "compact, smooth," redolent of "Stendhalian sweetness and the reflected hue of violets," unlike the fusty and sprawling burgh in Northern Italy that he later visited. Proust was making a point similar to one that geographer Yi‑Fu Tuan made in his book Topophilia: It's only in and through place--the places we love and leave and pass through and want to go to--that we figure out who we are. If language is consciousness and humans are a "place-loving species," then place-names--toponyms--may mold a larger piece of our minds than we think. Place-names have the power not merely to locate experience, but to shape it: not merely to label the locales to which they refer but also "in some mysterious and beautiful way become part of [them]" as the writer Henry Porter put it. Portals through which to access the past, place-names are also a means to reexamine, especially in times of ire and tumult, what's possible. And nowhere is this more true than in a great city--a place, Tuan wrote, that "can be seen as a construction of words as much as stone." Cities are monuments to civilization, and its opposite. They're condensers of experience and creators of encounter. They're nothing if not generators of tales. Excerpted from Names of New York: Discovering the City's Past, Present, and Future Through Its Place-Names by Joshua Jelly-Schapiro All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.