The Trailblazing Harlem Night Market Returns to East Harlem This Weekend

The Trailblazing Harlem Night Market Returns to East Harlem This Weekend

THE CURIOUS UPTOWNER

After a one-year pause, the trailblazing Harlem Night Market is returning to East Harlem bigger and better than before.

The indoor festival highlighting local businesses, which launched in 2019, will stretch across three lots on Park Avenue this year.

This includes the block-long La Placita between 115th and 116th Streets where the market first launched as well as the historic La Marqueta between 114th and 115th Streets and the Urban Garden Center between 116th and 117th Streets.

Expect food, drinks, and artisanal goods from up to 75 vendors, including uptown favorites like Harlem Biscuit Co., Sugar Hill Creamery and Harlem Seafood Soul.

There will be activities for kids, too, including Three Kings Day crown-making with El Museo del Barrio, plus photographs with Santa (the family activities will take place at the Urban Garden Center on Saturday 4pm-6pm and Sunday 3pm-6pm).

Music will segue from live performances from groups such as Los Pleneros de la 21 and Sing Harlem Gospel Choir to tracks by DJs Stormin' Norman and Ted Smooth.

A note for anyone who might be confused: This is a separate event from last summer's Uptown Night Market in West Harlem.

The dates are this Friday, December 17 5pm-9pm; Saturday, December 18 4pm-9pm and Sunday, December 19 3pm-8pm.

Popular Harlem Night Market Returning To La Marqueta For 2021

Popular Harlem Night Market Returning  To La Marqueta For 2021

PATCH

By Nick Garber

EAST HARLEM, NY — A popular market that took Harlem by storm two years ago is back after a pandemic hiatus — just in time for the holidays.

This year's Harlem Night Market will open on Dec. 17, spanning three days during the last shopping weekend before Christmas. (It's not to be confused with the Uptown Night Market, an upstart event in West Harlem that just wrapped up its inaugural season.)

Like in 2019, it will be based at La Marqueta, the shopping complex under the Metro-North tracks along Park Avenue. To accommodate even more vendors, this year's market has grown to cover three lots of La Marqueta between 115th and 117th streets.

Vendors will include Harlem Biscuit Company, Black Rican Vegan, Au Jus BBQ, Taco Africana and Cafe Ollin — joining dozens of others on the long and growing list.

The Harlem Night Market will run from 5-9 p.m. on Friday, Dec. 18; 4-0 p.m. on Saturday, and 3-8 p.m. on Sunday. Like last time, it was put together by Uptown Grand Central, TBo Harlem, Union Settlement and NYC Public Markets.

Entry will be free, but visitors can register in advance online. Proof of vaccination and an ID will be required to enter.

"All of Uptown and the Bronx remembers that their aunties and grandmas went to La Marqueta to do their shopping," Uptown Grand Central director Carey King said in a news release.

"The Harlem Night Market is about bringing the next generation of shoppers and vendors back to this historic complex that is the heartbeat for small business and culture in the neighborhood."

When it opened in 2019, the event billed itself as the first night market in Manhattan, joining similar concepts in Queens and the Bronx.

During the night market, stalls in La Marqueta's historic retail market building will come alive with food, drinks and craft vendors, while the recently renovated La Placita Event Space will feature performances by Los Pleneros de la 21, the Sing Harlem Gospel Choir, and D.J.s Ted Smooth and Stormin' Norman — plus graffiti artists creating live art and other food and craft vendors. Finally, the Urban Garden Center across 116th Street will host a small family space decorated with wreaths and garlands, with family-oriented vendors and cultural activities by El Museo del Barrio.

"The return of the holiday night market at La Placita is exactly the cultural and economic programming needed at this time," Councilmember Diana Ayala said in a statement.

Harlem Restaurant Week & East Harlem Tasting Tour

Harlem Restaurant Week & East Harlem Tasting Tour

PIX 11 News

By Kirstin Cole

Patrick Griffin is the owner of Au Jus Oklahoma BBQ in East Harlem, which is part of Harlem Restaurant Week. Making his briskets is a 14-hour process.

Harlem Restaurant Week is two weeks long, with a grand finale event this weekend called the East Harlem Tasting Tour. A $15 ticket gets you samples at a dozen international restaurants along Lexington Avenue.

The International Flavors of Harlem Restaurant Week

The International Flavors of Harlem Restaurant Week

FOX 5 NY

By Christal Young

It’s the 12th annual Harlem Restaurant Week. It encompasses restaurants from 96th Street to 155th Street, river to river.

To give you an idea of how much diversity you can find, one block in East Harlem has a Thai place, a Mexican place, a French Moroccan place and a barbecue.

“You can literally travel around the world in Harlem without living the neighborhood,” says Nikoa Evans-Hendricks, the director of Harlem Park to Park. “East, West and Central Harlem come together to showcase the international cuisine that we have available in Harlem, and the wonderful vibes and experiences you can have.”

At Bar Goyana, Brazil and Belgium are attached. Owner Jaqueline Quieroz created a bar that features Brazilian feijoada on one side, and chocolate mousse on the other. “It’s fabulous to be part of these initiatives that bring so many people to Harlem,” she says.

Around the corner, you’ll find Lexington Pizza Parlour, which feels like a hidden gem. Says owner Charles Devigne, “We like people from other neighborhoods finding out about all the exciting things that are happening here.”

And when your sweet tooth calls, let Harlem Baking Co. answer. Located inside the pizza parlour, it offers desserts in jars to take home.

“The area around Lexington and the lower 100s, we’ve got everything,” says Carey King, director of Uptown Grand Central. “As you can see, Italian, Brazilian, Thai, seafood, everything you could possibly want. And up around 116th Street, we’ve got one of the largest concentration of Mexican restaurants, which a lot of people don’t know about.”

A Better Harlem With The 125th Street Mural Project With The Association For A Better New York

A Better Harlem With The 125th Street Mural Project With The Association For A Better New York

HARLEM WORLD

The Association for a Better New York hosted a tour unveiling new murals created as part of its citywide, community-based arts program “Together, We Are New York” on Sunday, October 24, on East 125th Street.

As part of the program ABNY sponsored multi-disciplinary works of art in all five boroughs to celebrate the City’s resilience as it emerges from the pandemic.

Together, We Are New York focused on neighborhoods that were deeply impacted by COVID. The artists and projects were selected for each neighborhood by local community-based organizations.

Along East 125th Street in Harlem, NY, the not-for-profit Uptown Grand Central worked with local artists Menaceresa, Andre Trenier, Kristy McCarthy, Kron, and Lostbreed Culture to create murals on storefront security gates.

This walking tour included conversations with the local artists, CBOs solicited input on the project, and small business owners volunteered the space for the murals.

Stops along the tour included:

· 125th Street Pizza and Melover Wine & Liquor (256 East 125th, b/t Second & Third);

· The FDNY Firehouse (at 124th St & Third);

· Q&N Food (107 East 125th St, b/t Lex & Park);

· The old Wendy’s/Samaritan Village (79 East 125th Street, b/t Park & Madison), Jahlookova (51 East 125th, b/t Park & Madison); and

· Harlem Fresh (10 East 125th, b/t Madison & Fifth).

· The event concludes at Marcus Garvey Park.

For 50 years, ABNY has worked as a catalyst to bring business, political, labor, and non-profit leaders together to address problems facing the economic and social well-being of the city.

Under the leadership of Chair Steven Rubenstein and Chief Executive Officer Melva M. Miller, the organization continues to carry out its mission by providing forums and programs that work to build a better New York.

Photo credit: 1-5) ABNY.

Harlem Halloween 2021: Haunted Houses, Music, Pumpkins & More

Harlem Halloween 2021: Haunted Houses, Music, Pumpkins & More

PATCH

By Nick Garber

HARLEM, NY — Halloween is almost here, and no neighborhood in New York knows how to throw down like Harlem.

From costume contests to pumpkin carving to haunted houses to, of course, treats, here's Harlem Patch's roundup of the most notable Halloween events happening this weekend in the neighborhood.

Sunday, Oct. 31 (Halloween)

Trick-Or-Treat on East Harlem Open Streets

  • When: 2 p.m.-6 p.m.

  • Where: TWO LOCATIONS: Pleasant Avenue and East 118th Street; and East 101st Street and Lexington Avenue

  • Description: Back by popular demand, this event from Uptown Grand Central will feature candy, pumpkins, music and photo backdrops for pumpkin pics with kids. Free pre-registration is welcomed but not required for the event, which was supported by Councilmember Diana Ayala and East River Plaza.

City Cleanup Corps hiring New Yorkers to keep litter off of streets

City Cleanup Corps hiring New Yorkers to keep litter off of streets

PIX 11 NEWS

By Michelle Ross

HARLEM, Manhattan — Throughout the last year and a half, the pandemic has created new issues while also causing a spike in existing ones — particularly with litter.

An excess of garbage has been seen throughout the streets of New York City and helping to fix this problem is the City Cleanup Corps.

One team is deployed on 125th Street in East Harlem and the members are picking up trash to keep the neighborhood looking vibrant, Nathan Moran, assistant director of the New York City Economic Development Corporation, said.

“They’re active in the community, cleaning sidewalks, doing supplementary sanitation,” Moran said. “We’re really happy and proud of the presence that we’ve brought to the neighborhood.”

The East Harlem route was just added and is part of a larger citywide effort to beautify public spaces across the five boroughs. They also help in removing graffiti and creating murals.

They’re playing an active role in the city’s recovery— not only for residents of the neighborhood, but also for tourists, too. The Metro-North Harlem line is an area they focus on and they want passengers coming off the train to be greeted by a clean environment.

Carey King, director of Uptown Grand Central, said there’s a consistent presence of people passing through and the clean up crew is making a difference.

“The business owners notice it, the families notice it, the commuters notice it and so it just makes the neighborhood feel more taken care of,” King said.

It’s also gratifying for those doing the cleaning like Margiet Lebron.

“It makes me feel better because it makes me know that I’m making it better for my kids,” Lebron said. “I got two kids and I want my daughters to walk somewhere where there’s not garbage.”

According to NYCEDC, 150,000 pounds of trash has been cleaned up across the city so far.

Just a month ago in East Harlem, 400 bags of trash were being filled a week. Now, it’s down to 200 bags a week, according to Gary Linares, the program director at Positive Workforce.

“We have an army of cleaning people on the street every day,” Linares said. “Cleaning up now that the pandemic is lifting, we’re hiring more people and we’re hiring more shifts so they could keep the city clean.”

The city is looking to hire 10,000 people to help continue this work. The pay is $15 to $20 an hour and there are still spots available, so if you’re interested, click here for more information on how to apply.

10 Fun Things to Do This Weekend in Harlem & Beyond

10 Fun Things to Do This Weekend in Harlem & Beyond

THE CURIOUS UPTOWNER

Open House New York Weekend
Saturday, October 16 & Sunday, October 17; FREE
Various locations

This weekend dedicated to exploring New York's unique spaces has a number of free in-person tours in Upper Manhattan, including a visit to the Dyckman Farmhouse in Inwood, built in 1784 and still in its original spot on Broadway, as well as a walk along the half-mile-long Grandscale Mural Project in East Harlem. (Note: Proof of COVID-19 vaccination with ID and masks are required.)

Fallen Harlem Firefighters Memorialized In Mural, 20 Years Later

Fallen Harlem Firefighters Memorialized In Mural, 20 Years Later

PATCH

By Nick Garber

EAST HARLEM, NY — Two decades after they lost their lives at the World Trade Center, two Harlem firefighters are being memorialized through a new mural that will soon surround the firehouse that they called home.

On Sept. 11, 2001, Fred Scheffold and Joseph Marchbanks, Jr. were battalion chiefs at Engine 35, Ladder 14, Battalion 12, on Third Avenue near East 124th Street. Scheffold was just completing a 24-hour shift at the World Trade Center, with Marchbanks arriving to replace him, when the south tower collapsed on top of them.

The two men were among the few first responders from uptown Manhattan to perish that day. In the ensuing years, their colleagues have remembered Marchbanks and Scheffold through stories, photos, and annual visits to the men's families.

Now, through a coincidence of timing, the two chiefs are being immortalized on the 20th anniversary of the attacks through a mural being painted onto the green construction fence that surrounds the old Pathmark supermarket site on Third Avenue, right next to the firehouse.

"This will put a face outside to the names. Stir up conversation," said a longtime Engine 35 firefighter who once worked alongside Scheffold and Marchbanks.

The mural came together this spring, as artists were at work on the nearby Grandscale Mural Project. The firefighter — who asked not to be identified by name — approached organizers with the idea of beautifying the fence by the firehouse, where giant letters spelled out "FDNY PARKING ONLY."

After debating a few subjects, with the anniversary approaching, the firefighter and the artist, Robin Alcantara (known as Blazay), settled on Scheffold and Marchbanks. As inspiration, the firehouse lent a couple of photographs of the two men, as well as an image of the giant banner reading "We Will Never Forget" that is hung on the firehouse every September.

Though funding for the murals had run out, organizers Uptown Grand Central secured another donation from the property owner to make it happen.

"Those stories never go away"

Of the roughly 50 firefighters who make up Engine 35, only around five remain who were working on 9/11. But even the new hires are eager to learn about Scheffold, a marathon runner, avid reader and father of three daughters — and Marchbanks — a father of two who insisted on being called a "firefighter" despite his status as a chief.

At the annual memorials honoring both men, the crowds have only grown, said Steve Damato, a former captain at Engine 35 who has helped lead each year's services.

"You'd think that it would peter out," he told Patch. "And it hasn't. The numbers last year were as big as the numbers ever were."

To Damato, the anniversary is a chance to remember two men he knew, but wishes he had known better. Marchbanks stands out in Damato's mind for his generosity, his joyousness, and his mischievous — and frequent — laugh.

Scheffold, meanwhile, was adventurous and "in for anything." An elder in the firehouse, Scheffold was sturdy under pressure, and Damato was just starting to get to know him better in September 2001.

"I was getting closer to him," Damato said. "And then he got killed."

The "never forget" credo is interpreted broadly at Engine 35, the anonymous firefighter said, referring not only to the first responders who died but also to the civilians who lost their lives, and even the violence of the wars that sprung from 9/11.

The 20th anniversary, he said, is a chance to stop those memories from fading.

"The further it gets away, you think, 'Will people start to forget? Will people take it as just another day?'" he said. "If people just take a little time out of their day and think about all the lives that were lost, that's what we want."

The new mural will be completed in the coming days next to Engine 35/Ladder 14/Battalion 12 at 2282 Third Ave.

Harlem Street To Be Co-Named For Legendary 1958 Jazz Photo

Harlem Street To Be Co-Named For Legendary 1958 Jazz Photo

PATCH

By Nick Garber

EAST HARLEM, NY — On a Tuesday in August 1958, an impossibly stacked lineup of some of the world's foremost jazz musicians gathered on a brownstone-lined block in Harlem to pose for a photograph.

Charles Mingus stood on the stoop. Sonny Rollins, Thelonious Monk, Mary Lou Williams and Dizzy Gillespie posed on the sidewalk. Count Basie sat on the curb, joined by some local kids.

The man behind the camera was Art Kane, a 33-year-old freelance photographer on assignment from Esquire magazine, where it was published a few months later.

All told, 57 musicians made it into the shot, which became legendary in the ensuing decades for the talent contained within it. Known as "Harlem 1958," it even became the subject of an Oscar-nominated documentary, "A Great Day in Harlem," whose title has become synonymous with the photo.

Now, on the 63rd anniversary of "Harlem 1958," the quiet block of East 126th Street where it was taken will be co-named in honor of the image and the photographer.

After a ceremony at 2:45 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 12, the block between Fifth and Madison Avenues will become known as "Art Kane Harlem 1958 Place," in honor of what organizers call "one of the most celebrated images in American history."

Speakers will include Jonathan Kane, the son of Art, who died in 1995.

"I'm incredibly honored," Jonathan told Patch. The co-naming, he said, is a tribute to the 57 musicians "as much as it is for the Kane family."

Living subjects to speak

Of the 57 musicians in the photo, only two are still alive: Rollins, who is now 90, and fellow saxophonist Benny Golson, who is 92. Though both are unable to attend, they sent remarks that will be read at the ceremony.

It was organized by the East Harlem nonprofit Uptown Grand Central as part of a long-term goal of creating a cultural walking tour through northeast Harlem.

The photo is inseparable from East Harlem, organizers note: many of the musicians met up at the New York Central Railroad (now Metro-North) train tracks before venturing out into the neighborhood.

Other speakers will include Dean Schomburg, a board member at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture; and Wayne Winborne, Executive Director of the Institute of Jazz Studies at Rutgers University/Newark.

"Uptown is proud to honor the deep-rooted history of jazz here in Harlem, along with the visionary man who conceived and took this iconic photo more than 60 years ago," Uptown Grand Central chair Diane Collier said in a statement. "Along with the Harlem/East Harlem residents, we are pleased to memorialize this wonderful event with a street sign on the block where it all happened."

Thursday's ceremony will also feature a performance by jazz flutist Patience Higgins, along with the Sugar Hill Quartet. To learn more and attend, read about the ceremony on Eventbrite.