Langston’s Coffee Break

Posted on September 22, 2006 by


building.jpg“Maybe you ought to move uptown where you’d be safer,” is a line from “Coffee Break,” a short story in The Best of Simple, by Harlem Renaissance writer Langston Hughes.

Situated on the corner of 145th Street between Bradhurst and 8th Avenue, on the former site of an unoccupied building and adjoining empty lot, his namesake condominum development is becoming one of the most attractive new properties in the once barren area. With penthouses sitting on top and glass encased prime retail space below, The Langston sits primly across from a Duane Reade, Pathmark and Jackie Robinson Park. On an opposite corner is a vacant space that advertises the new home of Maroons, opening summer of 2005.

Speaking of prime retail space, an undisclosed inside source has informed UPTOWN flavor that the retail anchors will be Citibank on the 8th Avenue side, The Gap in the space above running along 145th Street and Starbucks on the corner of Bradhurst. If you remember, we presented the question as to whether Harlem could successfully accommodate another Starbucks just the other day.

But back to Jesse B. Semple, the main character in Hughes’ stories known more for hanging out in bars rather than coffeehouses. During a coffee break Jesse’s boss asked, “Now that you can vote and have a congressman and all, what does The Negro want?” Semple informed his boss that the “problem” came down to white folks. Though they let a few Blacks integrate with them, they had no intention of integrating back. Jesse’s boss retorted, but what about all that crime, and Jesse responded “But it’s only poor folks that get robbed. We don’t have no multi-million dollar frauds or Hope Diamond thefts. Maybe you ought to move uptown where you’d be safer.”

The boss said, “The coffee break is over.”

Related: Myharlem.org

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