New York Metropolis, NY – Throughout Harlem Week, Governor Hochul indicators laws to have fun the historical past and group of Harlem.
Picture courtesy Workplace of the Governor of the State of New York
Gov. Kathy Hochul signed laws on Sunday, Aug. 10, to have fun Harlem’s wealthy historical past because the group celebrated the 51st Harlem Week competition.
Hochul stated the 2 new legal guidelines will rename the 110 St-Central Park North subway station 110 St-Malcolm X Plaza and empower the Council on the Arts to designate the Harlem Renaissance Cultural District as a area of cultural significance.
“The most effective methods to have fun the wealthy historical past and group of Harlem is to acknowledge the contributions of Malcolm X and the Harlem Renaissance to New York and the world,” Gov. Hochul stated. “From the battle for civil rights and equality to boundary-breaking cultural impacts of American icons like Zora Neale Hurston and Duke Ellington, Harlem has been on the middle of progress in our nation for generations.
“It’s particularly significant to be right here as we have fun Harlem Week and mourn the passing of its co-founder, Lloyd A. Williams, whose life was devoted to championing this group,” she added.
To commemorate the life and legacy of Civil Rights chief Malcolm X and his historic connections to the Harlem group, Hochul signed S.1204/A.5339, renaming the 110 St-Central Park North 2/3 subway station 110 St-Malcolm X Plaza.
The governor famous that Malcolm X lived in Harlem for over a decade, first in 1943 after which from 1954 till his assassination in 1965.
This laws renames the station south of the Malcolm Shabazz Plaza after Malcolm X. Malcolm X’s daughter, Ilyasah Shabazz, chairperson of the Board of the Malcolm X and Dr. Betty Shabazz Memorial and Instructional Middle, joined Hochul and the Harlem Neighborhood for the renaming ceremony.
With 2025 being the one hundredth anniversary of the emergence of the Harlem Renaissance, a defining interval in American tradition, Hochul signed S.7152A/A.8220A, which designates the Harlem Renaissance Cultural District as a area of cultural significance.
After the Nice Migration, the governor famous that Harlem grew to incorporate about 175,000 Black residents, making it the world’s most densely populated Black group.
She stated the Harlem Renaissance noticed this group flourish within the Nineteen Twenties and Thirties, spawning a revolution of music, artwork, literature, theatre, vogue, politics, and scholarship, the impacts of that are nonetheless felt at the moment.
Based in 1974 by then-Manhattan Borough President Percy Sutton and Better Harlem Chamber of Commerce founder and CEO Lloyd A. Williams, and now in its 51st 12 months, Hochul stated Harlem Week is a celebration that brings collectively the higher Harlem group’s residents, companies, non secular, academic, arts, and cultural establishments.
She stated this 12 months’s theme is “Have a good time Our Magic,” which “shines a lightweight on the tradition and group of Harlem, New York Metropolis, New York State, and the ‘Harlems of the World.’”
Earlier than the invoice signing, Gov. Hochul and native leaders noticed a second of silence in reminiscence of Lloyd A. Williams, who handed away on Aug. 5.
Empire State Improvement President, CEO & Commissioner Hope Knight stated, “Harlem is greater than a neighborhood — it’s the capital of Black tradition, a cornerstone of New York State’s historical past, and a wellspring of creativity, resilience, and satisfaction.
“From its pivotal function within the Harlem Renaissance to its enduring contributions in arts, politics, and civil rights, Harlem has formed the id of our state and our nation, and molded icons like Malcolm X,” she stated. “Harlem’s unmatched cultural legacy, vibrant group, and financial resurgence — from the restoration of the legendary Victoria Theater to its rising biotech hall — proceed to point out the world why Duke Ellington insisted: Drop Me Off In Harlem.”