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Valerie Jo Bradley and James Singletary of Save Harlem Now! Brownstoner 12/16/22 Photo: Susan DeVries

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Once a Force in Harlem, the Oldest Black Church in New York Hangs On

Publisher: The New York Times
In the 227 years since its birth, Mother African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church — the oldest Black church in New York State — has served as a stop on the Underground Railroad, a haven for Black artists and intellectuals during the Harlem Renaissance, and an amphitheater for civil rights activism during the 1950s and ‘60s.

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Preservationists Protest Demolition of Landmarked Buildings Across City

Publisher: Brownstoner
Angered by the razing of landmarked or calendered properties throughout New York City — including the Jacob Dangler mansion at 441 Willoughby in Bed Stuy and literary landmark 14 Gay Street in Greenwich Village — dozens of preservationists, pols and neighborhood activists called for change at a gathering on the steps of City Hall Thursday afternoon.

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LPC Designates A Historic District in Central Harlem

Publisher: New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission
Today, the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) designated the Central Harlem – West 130-132nd Streets Historic District. This mid-block historic district is not only representative of Central Harlem’s residential architecture, but the rich social, cultural, and political life of its African American population in the 20th century.

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Row House Residents Want Historic District Expanded

Publisher: The New York Times
“What we have is 12 houses,” Matthew Spady said, walking down a ski-slope-steep street in Washington Heights, in Upper Manhattan — 12 houses that have stood together in an unbroken row since the president was William McKinley and the mayor was Robert Van Wyck, who tends nowadays to figure in rush-hour rants on the expressway named after him in Queens.

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