Radio Row -- Cortlandt Street 1930-1970
BY FRANCIS H. YONKER
[You never know when a bit of radio history
will resurface. Eight years ago, A.R.C. published an article by Ed Schneck
(July 1990) in which he shared the Cortlandt St. memories of his 91-year-
old father H.L. Schenck. At the time, Ed asked Francis Yonker for the
photos he had heard were in the Yonker collection. However, Francis could
not locate them. Meanwhile, another short piece on the famous "Radio
Row" by Alton DuBois appeared in April 1991. But, miraculously the
elusive Yonker photos suddenly surfaced, and we're grateful to Francis for
telling us about them and sharing this "Photo Essay" with our
readers.
A second part of this "Saga of the
Cortlandt St. Negatives" has to do with their printing. Tim Morse,
the photographer who handles our more challenging photography problems,
called this one a "real adventure." Although he has worked with
negatives as old as the turn of the century, Tim had never encountered any
like these, which had been rolled in a cannister, probably since 1950.
They were like a coiled spring, almost impossible to lay down, until he
subjected them to the weight of a 10-pound dictionary for 10 days. Even
then they coiled, but not as tightly, and were so strong that they lifted
the negative carrier.
As for the quality of the photos, Tim says
they are very sharp, but the negatives are what photographers call
"thin" --not a lot of detail. They were either underexposed or
underdeveloped, and had to be printed on high contrast paper. There are a
lot of scratches, causing the white lines on the prints.
But, this "adventure in printing"
seems to have paid off for Tim in unexpected ways. For example, when he
recently took his children to the World Trade Center in New York, once the
site of "Radio Row," shown in Figure 1, he asked them to guess
where they were. They actually found his explanation about Cortlandt St.
impressive. In fact, so did he -- his "battle with the film" had
been fun and well worth the effort.
Remember when the World Trade Center (Twin
Towers) wasn't there? A 5¢ subway ride would take me downtown near the
tip of Manhattan to Cortlandt St. [That subway stop is still called "Cortlandt
St."] In the early 1930s, Cortlandt St. was known as
"Competition Row" and later as "Radio Row." In the
early 1940s, I was setting up a radio/sound repair shop, and I needed a
set of Supreme instruments, such as a tube tester, an RF and audio
oscillator, a 3" oscilloscope, and an RCA Rider Channalyst. For
almost anything I needed I could go to 10 or 20 stores on Radio Row
looking for the best prices.

Figure 1. Location of Radio Row in lower Manhattan, now the World
Trade Center site. (See Figure 6 for a detailed street map.)
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At that time, car radios had the antennas
mounted under the running boards. Antenna kits for insulating a car's
bumper for an antenna were common. Frequency modulation was new in
broadcasting, and servicemen had to know how to tune the discriminator
transformers. High impedance DC vacuum tube voltmeters were just being
introduced, so I had to add that to my list.
By the way, FM was on the 42 to 50
megacycles band then. Black and white television, just in its infancy with
a 3" picture CRT, was broadcast from the Empire State Building only
two or three hours a day. Television receivers were being sold on Radio
Row, as were all the tubes and parts for any receiver. Radio Row was a
shopper's paradise for the hams who built their own transmitters. Parts
and equipment galore!
World War II brought a halt to television,
and ham radio bands were closed down. Times were tough in the marketplace
until 1945 when war surplus equipment started to arrive. Many new stores
opened up in this area selling military gear at junk prices.
A WALK THROUGH RADIO ROW
The photos included show many radio stores
in the early 1950s, as you can judge by the vintage of the cars -- the
latest model in the photos is a 1954 Ford. The stores can be identified
and located by the front door or sign and street number, and by referring
to that position on the street map shown in Figure 6. Cortlandt St. is not
alone in this area because Greenwich, Dey, and Liberty Streets also joined
in the common theme of competitive radio.

Figure 2. Greenwich Street, showing Lou Resnick selling radio and
television along with sports equipment at No. 166 through to
Oscar's at No. 176. In between is Stewart's at No. 169, Maxim at
No. 170, Radio Row at No.172 and Nat Unget at No.174 1/2. A quick
crew cut at the Veteran's Barber Shop, No.174, was available to
radio store shoppers.
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As you walked beyond the immediate Radio
Row area north on Greenwich where it joined West Broadway, Harrison Radio
was located at #10 West Broadway -- a ham's paradise for equipment.
Several subway stops north would place you on Canal St., another long
street of surplus supplies covering radio, electrical, plastics, and
everything else. TAB ("That's a Buy"), a surplus store, was at
512 Broadway and 6 Church St. Grand Central Radio was at 45th St. near
Madison, and there were several other stores at 14th St. around Union Sq.,
Packard, etc.

Figure 3. The corner of Cortlandt and Greenwich showing Davega at
No. 63, Arrow (only "row" shows on sign) at No. 65,
Lennard Radio at No. 69, and Digby Auction at No. 71. In the
distance is the elevated highway along the Hudson River. The odd
side of the street continues on the following page.
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Figure 4. Continuing along Cortlandt, we find Bernie Briggs at No.
77; the area of the photo with the Cortlandt Restaurant next door
at No. 79 is damaged; Magna and Center Electronics Co. Auto Radios
are at Nos. 79 1/2 and 81.
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Figure 5. Working our way along the even side of Cortlandt,
starting across the street from Ben and Joe's Luncheonette, is
Rand Radio at No. 84. Arrow is next door at No. 82 and Mike Kranz
and Short Wave Radio are at No. 80 and No. 78 (both are behind the
truck.) On the corner of Washington St. is North Radio at No. 76.
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At this time, I was employed by RCA
Radiomarine in the Holland Plaza Building at 75 Varick St., located
between the Holland Tunnel Exit and entrances at Canal St. I was
installing radio equipment on the USS United States docked on the Hudson
River.
When the World Trade Center came along
around 1970, its property lines started at Vesey St. on the north to
Liberty St. on the south, Trinity Place on the east and the elevated
highway on the west. This project obliterated Radio Row, as well as the
most progressive businesses scattered all over Manhattan as far north as
45th St.

Figure 6. Street map of "Radio Row" in lower Manhattan
showing the business locations.
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(Francis H. Yonker, 1229 Inverary Pl.,
State College, PA 16801)
Francis Yonker's radio history goes back
to 1929 when he had a home-brew regenerative radio on his bike and a RCA
Radiola III on his sled. As a Naval officer in World War II, he attended
courses at Bowdoin College and M.I.T. specializing in radar and
countermeasures. He has retired twice: once from Penn State, his alma
mater, after 22 years of teaching and having built TV Channel 3 Education,
Station WPSX; and again in 1991 as a full professor after 20 more years in
radio and TV.
Reprinted from the Antique Radio
Classified, September 1998. (Vol 15, No 9).
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