Electric substation on 133rd Street in the Bronx | |
![]() Interactive map of 133rd Street | |
| Location | Manhattan andthe Bronx |
|---|---|
| West end | Riverside Drive (Manhattan) Bruckner Boulevard and St. Ann's Place (Bronx) |
| Major junctions | Broadway,Seventh Avenue |
| East end | Lenox Avenue/Malcolm X Boulevard (Manhattan) Locust Avenue (Bronx) |
133rd Street is a street inManhattan andthe Bronx,New York City. InHarlem, Manhattan, it begins atRiverside Drive on its western side and crossesBroadway,Amsterdam Avenue, and ends at Convent Avenue, before resuming on the eastern side, crossingSeventh Avenue, and ending atLenox Avenue. InPort Morris in the Bronx, it runs fromBruckner Boulevard/St. Ann's Place to Locust Avenue.[1]
The block between Seventh Avenue and Lenox Avenues was once a thriving night spot, known as "Swing Street", with numerous cabarets, jazz clubs, and speakeasies.
The street is described in modern times as "a quiet stretch ofbrownstones andtenement-style apartment houses, the kind of block that typifies this section ofcentral Harlem".[2]
The street has historical significance during the Prohibition era when there were many speakeasies operating on the street and it was known as "Swing Street".[3][4] The street also gained a reputation as "Jungle Alley" because of "inter-racial mingling" on the street.[2][4]

During theJazz Age there were at least 20 jazz clubs on the street, mainly concentrated between Lenox Avenue (Malcolm X Boulevard) and Seventh Avenue, and a youngBillie Holiday performed here and was discovered here at the age of 17.[2][4][5] Holiday has cited 133rd Street as the original Swing Street, playing a major role in the development of African-American entertainment in Harlem and jazz.The Nest Club opened in 1923 when Melville Frazier and John Carey leased the building at 169 West 133rd Street and established the Barbecue Club on the main floor and The Nest on the downstairs floor, which opened on October 18, 1923.[2] Jazz historianFrank Driggs described the club as having a "Chicago gangland atmosphere".[2] Nightclubs of note include Tillie's Chicken Shack, known for torch singer Elmira, Bank's Club, Harry Hansberry's Clam House at 146 W. 133rd St., one of New York City's most notorious LGBTspeakeasies established in 1928,[6] featuringGladys Bentley in a tuxedo singing "her own risque lyrics to popular songs", and Catagonia Club, better known asPod's and Jerry's,[7] which featured jazz pianist and composerWillie "The Lion" Smith.[8]
The street began to lose its attraction following the repeal of Prohibition in 1933, and theHarlem Riot of 1935 effectively killed the reputation of the street as a racial safe haven and most of the interracial clubs were forced to close.[9] One of the last clubs to stay open was Pod's and Jerry's, which was renamed "The Log Cabin" in 1933, and stayed open until about 1948-9, long after52nd Street had replaced 133rd Street as the "Swing street". Further racial violence broke out at 133rd Street and Seventh Avenue during theHarlem Riot of 1964.

Numerous mills sprang up along the street on the eastern side but many of the former derelict buildings have been razed to the ground and new buildings erected. TheNew York Post has a printing centre here. On the western side is the Terence D. Tolbert Educational Complex and Roberto Clemente School,KIPP Infinity Charter School and theManhattanville Bus Depot. The New York Structural Biology Center is situated in the Park Building at 89 Convent Avenue opposite the street.[10] On the eastern side isBethlehem Moriah Baptist Church andBill's Place, a jazz club established in 2006 by tenor saxophonistBill Saxton in a building which was the former speakeasy Tillie's Chicken Shack. Bishop R.C. Lawson once had a Bible book store on 133rd Street.[11]
40°48′50″N73°56′41″W / 40.81389°N 73.94472°W /40.81389; -73.94472