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    7 facts about Columbus Circle

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    Columbus Circle is the traditional municipal zero-mile point from which all official city distances are measured, although Google Maps uses New York City Hall for this purpose. For decades, Hagstrom sold maps that showed the areas within 25 miles (40 km) or 75 miles (121 km) from Columbus Circle.

    7 facts about Columbus Circle
    7 facts about Columbus Circle

    The travel area for recipients of a C-2 visa, which is issued for the purpose of immediate and continuous transit to or from the headquarters of the United Nations, is limited to a 25-mile radius of Columbus Circle. The same circle coincidentally defines the city’s “film zone” that local unions operate in, a counterpart to Los Angeles’ studio zone. The New York City government employee handbook considers a trip beyond a 75-mile radius from Columbus Circle as long-distance travel.

    Though Christopher Columbus never set foot in what is now the mainland United States, Italian-Americans considered the explorer a symbol of their success in a country that was hostile to them as new immigrants, and an Italian-language newspaper, Il Progresso, launched a fund-raising campaign to install the 70-feet statue in the center of town. The statue was sculpted by Roman sculptor Gaetano Russo and gifted to the City of New York.

    You’ve come across Audrey Munson, America’s first supermodel, on multiple occasions. She’s the face of New York City, memorialized in statues that decorate various institutions and tourist attractions throughout the city. Among a number of places, you’ll find her sitting on top of the Manhattan Municipal Building downtown, on the facade of the New York Public Library at 42nd Street and as Columbia Triumphant for the USS Maine Monument in Columbus Circle.

    Known by the nickname, “Miss Manhattan,” Munson made a living by posing as a model for photographers, painters and sculptors in the early 1900s.

    Just like the Grand Army Plaza – the only corner of Central Park that’s officially included in its 843-acre landscape – Columbus Circle was part of the original vision for what would eventually become the most visited urban park in the United States (and one of the most filmed locations in the world). Landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted and designer Calvert Vaux, who designed Central Park, envisioned a “grand circle” at the 8th Avenue entrance. Just like the traffic circle around the Arc de Triomphe de l’Etoile in Paris, the entryway was intended to provide an open view of the park as people approached to visit.

    In 1903, just two years before the installation of the area’s famed traffic circle, the 1,355-capacity Majestic Theatre opened at 5 Columbus Circle. The theater was famous for hosting first musical production of The Wizard of Oz, among other things, and thanks to the theater crowd it attracted, a number of eating and drinking establishments popped up in the area soon after it opened.

    The circle became known as a center for soapbox orators in the early-mid 20th century, comparable to Speakers Corner in London. It became a home particularly for non-leftists in contrast to Union Square, and for a time in the late 1930s it became a home to a number of far right speakers.

    7 facts about Columbus Circle 1
    7 facts about Columbus Circle

    The area sometimes had a poor reputation for cranks and street preachers, the “lunatic fringe whose tub-thumping make a nightmare of Columbus Circle” condemned by a New York Court of Appeals ruling in a case related to elsewhere in the city,that prompted mid-20th century configurations, but was also sometimes showcased by the national government as a rambunctious symbol of American freedom of speech.

    In the 1950s, Robert Moses razed San Juan Hill, a predominantly black neighborhood that stretched from 59th to 65th Streets, bordered by Amsterdam and 11th Avenues. Although the neighborhood had struggled with violent crime (its gangs reportedly inspired the opening sequence of West Side Story), it was also home to 7,000 people, had a rich cultural history (the Charleston was invented here), and boasted a number of famed jazz spots.

    But in 1955 Moses had declared the area a “blighted slum,” and thanks to his position as the head of the Mayor’s Committee on Slum Clearance, he was able to order the area cleared and replaced in part with what is now Lincoln Center, and used some of the federal funds to build the aforementioned Coliseum.

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