Night-Club Map of Harlem, 1932

Night-Club map of Harlem from the Feb 1, 1932 edition of Manhattan Magazine (1MB)

Points of interest under the Harlem Moon: A dozen Marijuana cigarettes guaranteed to give a three-day jag. If the Crab Man says “Top or bottom?” (meaning his basket) say “Bottom” and you will get a “shorty” of gin. The white haired apostle who wanders about passing out benedictions and philosophy. Hot peanuts, the Harlem National Food. When there’s no room on the dance floor, they just stand still and shake — that’s the “bump.”

The café au lait girls which are the color of coffee and cream. The waiters who tap dance to and fro with trays bearing glasses of water (and other liquids) and never spill a drop. The police dogs which the sheiks hire for the Sunday Parade. The eternal Harlem question: “What’s th’ number?” meaning 3 Pari-muted digits of the seventh race, which all Harlem bets on. Most of the gamblers pick their numbers from the dream books.

What’s hidden under the Potomac?

The layout of Washington DC shows a striking resemblance to the cutaway view of the Great Pyramid of Giza, especially when you look at the original L’Enfant plan from 1791

  • The King’s Chamber coincides with the White House with its air-shafts running up New York and NW Pennsylvania Avenues.
  • The Queen’s Chamber lines up to the Washington Monument (built in 1848)
  • The Great Hall runs down Pennsylvania Avenue from the White-house to the Capital building.
  • The shaft running from the intersection of the great hall and the hall that leads to the Queen’s Chamber can be seen in the original L’Enfant plan, but it is not in the 1938 map (bottom).
  • The entrance to the pyramid roughly coincides with the congressional cemetery (ironic).
  • The subterranean chamber would be placed under the Potomac river (also ironic).
  • I didn’t even touch upon the Masonic imagery that can be found throughout DC’s design.

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