“NBC Studio 1H”…Hurely’s Bar
“NBC Studio 1H”…Hurely’s Bar
As you can see in the photo below, Hurley’s Bar (which opened in 1892) was just a half a block away from NBC’s studio entrance, making it the nearest watering hole for everyone from stars to stage hands. It became the favorite for radio, television, newspaper and sports celebrities as well as tourists and midtown workers.
The old-fashioned saloon atmosphere, as well as the convenient location in Rockefeller Center, made Hurley’s a favorite. Liz Trotta noted “You never knew who would be standing next to your lifting elbow at Hurley’s. Jason Robards, Jonathan Winters, jazz musicians from the local clubs and the ‘Tonight’ show, starlets, football players, the lot.”
Johnny Carson made the Hurley name nationally familiar while he did his show live from Rockefeller Center. It was the bar in all of his Ed McMahon drinking jokes. David Letterman did several on-air visits to the bar. NBC technicians haunted the place so regularly that among themselves it was known as Studio 1-H.
Hurley’s was known as a place where status was left at the door. Mayor John Lindsay stopped in once, only to be hissed by the patrons. When Henry Kissinger and two bodyguards got noisy, they were ejected by the bartender “for rowdy behavior.”
But this is only half of a great “David & Goliath” story.
The bar had been here since 1892 and had always done well, even during prohibition when a florist shop was used to disguise the bar and it’s new back door.
In 1930, John D. Rockefeller, Jr. had begun aggressively buying up a staggering twenty-two acres of midtown property, right in the middle of Fifth Avenue’s most exclusive district, for a seemingly implausible project: Rockefeller Center. One by one he purchased buildings from Fifth to Sixth Avenue between 48th and 51st Streets. In the stranglehold of the Great Depression, none but the city’s wealthiest property owners could resist the offer to convert real estate to cash.
None except John F. Maxwell, grandson of John F. Boronowsky who owned the three story building at the opposite end of the block from Hurley’s and, of course, the feisty Irishmen themselves. In June 1931 Maxwell sent word to Rockefeller that he would not sell “at any price.”
Construction had already began on the gargantuan Art Deco complex of nineteen buildings on May 17, 1930. The block of 49th to 50th Streets, Sixth Avenue to 5th Avenue was eventually demolished, leaving only the two brick Victorian buildings standing on opposite corners of a devastated landscape.
The RCA Building—70 stories tall—rose around Hurley’s, diminishing the bar building only in height. But nothing in New York City is permanent and in 1979 Hurley Brothers and Daly was sold. Journalist William Safire spoke for New Yorkers in an article mourning the loss. The mahogany bar was removed to a Third Avenue restaurant and, as Nancy Arum wrote in her letter to New York Magazine that year “a pretend old-fashioned bar now stands where the real old-fashioned bar once was.”
The pretend old-fashioned bar took the name Hurley’s and, most likely, tourists never noticed the change. But proximity, tradition, or habit still brought the Rockefeller Center workers and celebrities into the bar until September 2, 1999. That night owner Adrien Barbey served the last glass of beer in the bar that had stood at Sixth Avenue and 49th Street for 102 years.
Today, Hurley’s is a bakery and the building at the other end of the block is a 9 West store. The 1931 photo on the right shows 6th Avenue with it’s elevated train (yellow). Hurely’s is in the red circle and 46th Street is in aqua. The other building left standing on the 6th Avenue corner is the space that is now a 9 West store. The 11 story NBC studio building is just behind Hurley’s.
Got engaged there, spent many a happy hour playing Liars poker with the guys. Many happy memories.
Loved the raw bay scallops appetizer…
I spent many days/nights at Hurley’s from 1969-1977. Not only was it a great bar, but the bartender ran tabs on many of us regulars which you settled when you got your next paycheck. I believe the waiter was named George, who always wore a bow tie, white shirt, and black jacket.
When I was in New York in 1979-80, it was a more upscale restaurant named Dave Wolfe’s. Many great times and fond memories.
Legend has it that the original NBC Network satellite distribution project was first designed on the back of a Hurley’s cocktail napkin.
The “chef” in the original Hurley’s always had a cigarette, with a long ash dangling, in his mouth. I recall the afternoon a side of beef was delivered, the chef held the kitchen’s swinging doors open, and the beef was placed on the floor. Great burgers.
Actually, the street is 49th St, not 46th (last paragraph). I never knew there was an El on Sixth Ave. I wonder when it was put under Sixth Avenue. Great story!
The building on the north side of the property at 50th and 6th was owned by Rockefeller, but when Hurley’s refused to sell, it was left standing as a match to the building on 49th.
I have a Hurley’s menu.
We sat there and watched the SNL episode with Elton John when we couldn’t get standby tickets.
Spent lots of time there… But not too much.
There was a great Tomorrow Show done from inside Hurley’s. Wish I still had a copy. Significant in that Dave Garroway was one of the guests. 10/15/1975. http://www.nbcuniversalarchives.com/nbcuni/clip/5112448425_s01.do
Spent many an hour in 1H from 1975 till it closed. Many blurry memories.
I began working @ NBC in 1980 as an T.V. Broadcast Engineer doing Electronic Maintenance in all of the T.V Studios. NBC had a private telephone network called the TOE line that connected between all studios and technical areas. This phone network TOE (Technical Operations & Engineering) was used by Studio operators, Transmission, and Maintenance Engineers to communicate and solve ongoing technical issues. One of the Electronic Maintenance Engineers actually ran an extension of this line into HURLEY’S aka Studio 1H. If an on air studio had a problem they could reach us, just in case we were in Studio 1H on a “break”. The TOE line would ring and off we would go to fix a camera, audio, video switcher, or what ever issue the On Air studio might have.. Hurley’s owner Adrien Barbey was a great host and actually had Brass plaques with his favorite patrons names on them placed in some of the booths. Needles to say we were all saddened when Hurley’s was no more.