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PM Daily, January 25, 1942, Vol. 2, No. 32, p. 11
Two Passengers Are Killed As Auto Dives Into Hudson
Police Raise Connecticut Auto that plunged into the Hudson at 29th St. Saturday. Two people (one in car window) were killed…
A Street Cleaner, Charles Sharkey, heard screams, helped rescue driver (third person in car) who had managed to get out…
The Driver, Burton Chapin, was taken to a waterfront shack to get over the shock. He still grasps driver’s license.
PM Photos by Weegee

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Weegee Daily, January 25, 2013
No Pedestrians Are Killed…
Looking into the Hudson at 29th St. Thursday. No people were killed…
It was too cold for this, 17 degrees and very, very windy…
The piers are no longer present… below a small heliport; across the street from something like a sanitation parking/working area… My right hand is frozen… He still grasps a camera…
Weegee Daily Photos by Ceegee

Weegee Daily Map!

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Theater District Smoked Up At Curtain Time Last Night
PM Daily, January 24, 1941, Vol. 1, No. 158, p. 15
The fire started among baled bolts of cotton fabric in the basement of 70 W. 38th St. The alarm was sent in at 8 o’clock and a second at 8:21. By 8:45, though the smoke made it a mean one to get at, the blaze had been doused without damage to millinery shops on the upper floors. The parked car at center got a soaking. One fireman was seriously burned in the foot.
PM photos by Weegee

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Weegee Daily, January 24, 2013
No Longer The Theater District, Not Smoked Up A Curatin Time Last Night…

Weegee Daily photos by Ceegee

(to be continued…)

Weegee Daily Map!

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PM Daily, January 21, 1941, Vol. 1, No. 155, p.1
New York Shelters…
protect 7000 of the city’s homeless residents every cold wintry night. There are two city shelters, one for men, one for women, and others like this one, the Bowery Mission, where these men are allowed to sit up all night… after they’ve sung hymns for an hour or so.

PM Newspaper 1941
PM Daily, January 21, 1941, Vol. 1, No. 155, p. 12
Here’s How a PM Reporter Spent a Night on the Bowery…
You don’t have to sing for your sleep, but men who spend the night at the Municipal Lodging House at 432 E. 25th St. are turned out at 5 a.m. regardless of the weather. It’s a long, hard walk from the Bowery to the lodgings, yet it’s mostly the old men who go there.

“…Then I retraced my steps with a photographer and took these pictures, finishing at 5 a.m. at the Municipal Lodging House, where I watched and he photographed the homeless old men being turned out into the bitter cold.
That’s right. They turn these men out at 5 a.m. into the cold, bitter morning.”

PM Newspaper 1941
PM Daily, January 21, 1941, Vol. 1, No. 155, p. 13
…And Here’s How Hundreds of Homeless Men Spend Every Night.
At No. 8 Bowery [believe there was a correction issued the next day] is the dark, dingy Bowery (All Night) Mission. Those who come early have to sing hymns for their sleep. Late comers stand out in the cold until services are over. Services last about two hours, till midnight. Sleepers at the Mission have to lean over the bench in front. They walk in and out all night. They cough. They snore. Drunks babble, dogs[!] bark. Sleep ends at 5 a.m.

PM Photos by Weegee

The amazing article by Gene De Poris begins: “I was a bum on New York’s Bowery. I told my mother I didn’t want any dinner, not even a cup of coffee…”

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Weegee Daily, January 21, 2013
Approximate location of the Municipal Lodging House, 432 East 25th St., Manhattan. Today it’s the rear of the VA hospital, and after three months, it’s still closed after Super Storm Sandy…

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Weegee Daily, January 21, 2013
…And Here’s How Hundreds of People Spend Saturday Afternoons…
Stuck in traffic while driving on the Bowery; shopping on the Bowery, shopping in the Lower East Side, and shopping in Nolita…
The Bowery Mission, at 227 Bowery (229 Bowery, was, among other things, the studio of the great Charles Eisenmann, etc.), the best looking building on the block, is still offering shelter, and song, etc…
Two homeless in NYC snapshots:
In the winter of 1941: 7,000 homeless people.
In the fall of 2012:
Total number of homeless people in municipal shelters: 48,694
Number of homeless families: 11,678
Number of homeless children: 20,383
Number of homeless adults in families: 17,843
Number of homeless single adults: 10,476
Number of homeless single men: 7,728
Number of homeless single women: 2,740
(2012 info from the Coalition for the Homeless website.)

Weegee Daily Photos by Ceegee

Weegee Daily Map!

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PM Daily, January 20, 1941, p. 32
44 Firemen for Midget Fire: Nine engines, 44 firemen, three radio cars, six cops helped put out blaing bantam car. Weegee, who took the picture, suggested driver pull car to nearest fire station.

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January 20, 2013
No Firemen for Midget Car: No fire, instead a very small automobile and at the end of the antenna, a plaque stating that Herman Melville lived behind the very small automobile (no white whale, no Moby Dick of a vehicle), where he wrote Billy Budd, (and a lot of poetry, where his son killed him self – shot himself in the head, I believe; where Herman commuted across town, to the Hudson River, to a boring job). In front of the back of the Armory (site of the (in)famous 1913 Armory show)… Ceegee, who took the picture, monomaniacally pursuing his own white whale of photography, didn’t suggest that the driver pull car to nearest modernist, post-cubist, circular circus staircase, and ride the El… And the Pequod?

Weegee Daily Map!

PM Newspaper 1941
PM Daily, January 20, 1941, Vol. 1, No. 154, p. 19
Weegee Revisits Coney Island… It’s Not Dead—Only Sleeping
By Weegee
“Having covered Coney Island last summer (July 21, 1940), and the picture getting a big play in PM then, I decided to take a ride out there Sunday and see what the Island looks like in winter time…”

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Weegee Daily, January 20, 2013

Ceegee Revisits Coney Island… It’s Not Dead—Only Sleeping and Recovering From Super Storm Sandy
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July 21, 2012                                                                   Jan. 20, 2013

By Ceegee
Having covered Coney Island last summer (July 21, 2012), and the picture getting a big play in Weegee Daily then, I decided to take a subway out there Sunday and see what the Island looks like in winter time.
On the way out to the Island there were no female straphangers to keep me company. What a difference from the summer time! Then I can choose between blondes and brunettes. (Where do all the straphangers go in winter time?)
Riding by the Gownus Canal on the F train, there were only a few girls on the bicycle path. They were all bundled up. I wasn’t going to waste memory and megabytes… No “cheesecake” (legs showing), no pictures.
I got to Coney by noon. The beach was deserted and so was I… On the boardwalk a lone man was getting a sun bath besides a closed hot dog stand.
I then took a walk through the rides and games of chance. Every thing was shut tighter than the Romney Hdqs.
As I passed by the Coney Island Sideshows by the Seashore, Coney Island U.S.A. Museum, I wanted to photograph some of the wonders. But the place was closed.
All the skee ball and ice cream places were closed. The aquarium is still closed. But the human polar bears went for a swim… A statue stares, a cat, and Coney, sleeps…

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Weegee Daily, January 20, 2013


10 Shoots 10 cents – This is the only sun bather Ceegee found today at Coney Island. He sits in front of a padlocked shooting gallery near boardwalk.

Perhaps one of the longest texts by Weegee in PM Daily. Presumably heavily edited… Most bizarre sentence (not surprisingly about, in part, other newspapers): “I then stopped off at Feltman’s carrousel (wooden horse merry-go-round to youse mugs who read the News and Mirror.)”

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A Weegee Daily Map!

(To be continued… edited, etc…)

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PM Daily, January 18, 1943, p.7
Our Little Businessmen Bounced Around by War
Signs of the times are reproduced below…
Chinese curio store doubles up with rival.
There’s a barber shortage on the Bowery.
This establishment has already closed.
Vacant store becomes baby carriage depot.
James Butler grocery store, that’s all.
Hamburger joint will re-open, they hope.
Musical instrument store shuts up shop.
Leon is gone, but his salve is still on sale.
Tailor going out of business.
PM Photos by Weegee


Weegee Daily, January 18, 2013
Signs of the times are reproduced above.
WD Photos by Ceegee

Weegee Daily Map!

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PM Daily, January 18, 1941, p. 5
Thirteen-Ton Roosevelt Bust Placed Before Post Office…
PM Photo by Weegee


Weegee Daily, January 18, 2013
Weegee Daily Photos by Ceegee

Weegee Daily Map!

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PM Daily, January 17, 1945, Vol. 5, No. 183, p. 15
The Press Agent Wasn’t Snowed In
No kidding, these were the Grape Fruit Gals pretending to shovel snow outside the Winter Garden Theater, where by an odd coincidence, they are playing in Laffing Room Only. Press agent’s handout said the girls dropped by rehearsals to tackle the snowstorm because of the manpower shortage.
Joe Flynn, the press agent, holds the girls’ coats while they pose. Only reason we have the pictures is that Weegee happened by.
You see, it’s like this…
Photos by Weegee, PM


Weegee Daily, January 17, 1941
No snow, but the Winter Garden (1634 Broadway) remains, standing strong… Weegee Mia! disco ball and all…
4.5 inches of snow and strong winds in New York City on January 16, 1945, made the 11 inches of snow in January the heaviest since 1936…
Photos by Ceegee, WD

Weegee Daily Map!

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PM Daily, January 17, 1941, Vol. 1, No. 153, p. 20

A truck smashed a fire-alarm box on this pole at Spring and Greenwich Sts., putting 11 others out of whack. Radio cars patrolled the neighborhood till they were fixed.
PM Photo by Weegee


Weegee Daily, January 17, 2013
No snow, but a bit of rain, and these two (Very Important) Poles at Spring and Greenwich Sts. were standing still…
WD Photos by Ceegee

Weegee Daily Map!

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PM Daily, January 17, 1941, Vol. 1, No. 153, p. 14
Charlie the Bum Confesses Setting Chinatown Fire
Two alarms brought 75 firemen to keep fire from spreading from three “tinderbox” tenements across 18-foot Doyers St., one of city’s narrowest.
Police said that a Chinese had confessed setting yesterday’s fire which destroyed a dilapidated old wooden building at 8 Doyers St., in Chinatown…
Three persons, two Chinese and one white man, died in that fire. Assistant District Attorney Rosenblum called the building “one of the rottenest hellholes I’ve ever seen.”
Mr. Rosenblum questioned tenants who paid $2 to $7 a month for dark cubicles. It appeared that the structure, which stood on Chinatown’s Bloody Angle
PM Photos by Weegee

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Site of 8 Doyers St.
Weegee Daily, January 17, 1941
No fires, and not much sign of life… except for retro Dim Sum Parlor at the end…

WD Photos by Ceegee

Weegee Daily Map!