3 avr. 2015

Pictures of New York’s Greenwich Village in the 1910s-1920s


Greenwich Village became widely identified as America's bohemia by the mid-1910s. The radicals who lived in Greenwich Village in the early 20th century rejected traditional structured socialization, preferring instead bohemian informality. Yet they often met in Village hangouts to discuss their ideas about revolution and art. These places, and the individuals that frequented them, earned the Village its reputation as America's Left Bank and attracted tourists and those who wanted to live the bohemian lifestyle.

-Vintage Everyday