pop culture locations from movies, music, tv & more...
woody and mary guthrie’s apartment
from woody guthrie posted in music by crabapple
After the release of Dust Bowl Ballads in the summer of 1940, Guthrie was also working on numerous NYC radio programs. He sent for his wife and three children to join him at this four bedroom apartment.
The apartment became a social hub of Guthrie's world: the folks that continuously streamed included Alan Lomax, Lead Belly, Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee.
mcsorley’s ale house
from woody guthrie posted in music by corporate_sunshine
This East Village bar has been around since somewhere between 1854-1865, and has been a vibrant part of the neighborhood since then.
Writers like Brendan Behan and Paul Blackburn were regulars here. E.E. Cummings described McSorley's as "the ale which never lets you grow old" as well as "snug and evil."
Other notable visitors include Abraham Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, and Boss Tweed.
Here is a picture of Woody Guthrie performing there in 1943.
the eagle pub
from dna posted in technology by corporate_sunshine
On February 28, 1953, Francis Crick, a researcher at Cambridge, walked into this popular campus watering hole. His announcement: Crick and James Watson had "discovered the secret of life."
Namely, the two had decoded the structure of deoxyribonucleic acid, DNA. Sixty years later, that discovery is still having massive ramifications.
woody guthrie water tower
from woody guthrie posted in music by crabapple
In 1972, this water tower was erected and the words "Home of Woody Guthrie" were painted on the side.
The move was vehemently opposed by the Okemah City Council and the local Chamber of Commerce for fear that America's most famous folk singer was purportedly a communist.
The other water towers read "Hot" and "Cold".
woody guthrie boyhood home
from woody guthrie posted in music by crabapple
Just down the street, on the Woody Guthrie family lot, is a tall cedar tree that has been carved into a Guthrie memorial.
On the east side, the carving reads W.G. and Okemah, and the other side says "This Land is Your Land." There is a path and a handrail up to the carving.
The carving was done by the neighbor across the street who has other carvings in his yard.