SO LONG VILLAGE CIGARS

by Kevin Walsh

No, the scene shown here is hardly Forgotten–it’s iconic and emblematic of the Village and has been seen by millions, New York natives and visitors alike. It does have its “Forgotten” aspects, which I’ll get to. The intersection of 7th Avenue South and Christopher Street has existed only since the 1910s, when 7th Avenue was hammered south to connect 7th and Greenwich Avenues with Varick and Clarkson Streets. The “new” 7th Avenue South ran above a new southern extension of the IRT Subway that now comprises a lengthy chunk of the #1 train.

The unmistakable red and white signs of Village Cigars, on the SW corner of 7th Avenue South and Christopher Street, are emblematic of the Village. The cigar shop has been here since the 1920s.

Occupying the same location adjacent to Sheridan Square since the early twentieth century, this corner convenience store is as close to a New York institution as a little tobacco store can get… inside, the triangular, utilitarian store does a brisk business. One wall holds lighters, papers, flasks, and cigar cutters; another stocks cigarettes from around the world; the third displays the store’s cigars, which hail largely from Central and South America. Village Cigars also sells hookahs, pipes, and related paraphernalia, as well as corner-shop staples like lottery tickets and candy bars, but it’s mainly a place to buy a quality cigar for less than the price of a pack of cigarettes. — New York Magazine

However, things are changing. Village Cigars has closed and had stopped paying rent in a dispute over terms, reported property owner Jon Posner in Curbed. Mr. Posner says he hopes to keep the building’s appearance as is, including the famed red signs. Around town, there has been a trend the past decade or so of a new business moving in and retaining old signage, even though the new. business has nothing to do with the old. At Gates Avenue and Cambridge Place in Clinton Hill, Italian restaurant Locanda Vini & Olii retained and even repaired the old Lewis Drug Store sign that had been in place previously, as seen here.

Presumably, Mr. Posner won’t touch this little item embedded in the sidewalk outside the former cigar store. The property marker for the long-gone Hess Estate has long been a Forgotten NY favorite. There used to be a five-story residential building on Christopher Street called The Voorhis. It was condemned in the 1910s to make way for the IRT subway and 7th Avenue South However, the Voorhis’ owner, David Hess, refused to surrender this small plot to the city to become part of 7th Avenue South’s new sidewalk. The Hesses created this mosaic to let everyone know of their small (very small) victory against the city.

Village Cigars moved to its present corner site in 1922, and bought the 500-square inch property from the Hesses for $1,000. The mosaic has stayed put, while Village Cigars became an iconic symbol of the Village…until February 2024, a 102-year run. The Hesses sold their triangle to Village Cigars in 1938, but there it remains, a monument to good old fashioned spite. (Mostly all of my own triumphs have come from spite.)

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2/8/24

6 comments

chris February 9, 2024 - 4:31 pm

I’m sure its been depicted in countless paintings and sketches of the Village so in that way
it will never die

Reply
John February 9, 2024 - 5:27 pm

Where will Woody Allen find his next village shot in the future?

Reply
Jamal Taylor February 9, 2024 - 6:00 pm

I’m guessing the rent is ridiculously high because of the location. The building itself is tiny- too small for basically anything other than a cramped smoke shop or maybe a candy store.
Be a shame to see it become yet another vape shop, but traditional smoking probably isn’t enough to sustain it.

Reply
Peter February 10, 2024 - 12:29 pm

Cigar smoking was trendy about 15 or 20 years ago but that seems to have passed.

Reply
Tal Barzilai February 10, 2024 - 4:16 pm

I find it interesting how its replacement will use this building considering its size being pretty small.

Reply

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