The second African Burying Ground was located on the west side of First (Chrystie) Street, between
Stanton and
Rivington Streets, extending to the
Bowery, after the
African Burial Ground near
Collect Pond was declared closed in 1794. In the 1820s St Philip's assumed ownership from the City Council, and when the cemetery was closed in 1853, remains were disinterred and removed to
Cypress Hills Cemetery. On June 28, 1776, on the corner of Chrystie and
Grand Streets,
Thomas Hickey was hung in front of over 20,000 spectators for having participated in a plot to kill
George Washington. From 1847 through 1854, New York's
Temple Emanu-El was located at 56 Chrystie Street, the site now part of the Park. The
settlement movement maintained a Settlement House there, where
Lee Strasberg first became involved in the theater.
Dorothy Day's
Catholic Worker Movement continued this concept with one of their hospitality houses there.
Michael Harrington frequented it in 1951/52 shortly after he moved to New York.
Dixon Place, a theater that previously occupied several sites in Lower Manhattan since their foundation in 1986, opened on Chrystie Street in 2009. The
cabaret nightclub
The Box Manhattan, sister club to
The Box Soho in London, is located in Chrystie Street. ==In popular culture==