24th and Tomorrow

1965 22 minutes

OverviewListen icon

Designed to encourage citizen activism, this film centers on a one-man crusade to combat community indifference to urban blight. Ruing the litter, vermin and substandard housing conditions prevalent in his New York City neighborhood at 24th Street and Second Avenue, David started to pick up trash from city streets and went from building to building documenting health violations. Gaining support from the Department of Sanitation, he then enlisted the aid of tenants and their children and helped form the Improvement Association of the East Twenties. Through the organization's efforts, the streets were cleaned, buildings were given a fresh coat of paint and abandoned cars removed. To celebrate the neighborhood's revitalization, tenants, clergy and city officials, including Congressman John V. Lindsay, participated in a tree planting ceremony.

Released

1st January 1965

61 years ago

Runtime

22 minutes

Finishes at 12:49pm

Directed by

Ken Linden

No image available for Ken Linden

Written by

Sandy Krinski, Ken Linden

No image available for Sandy KrinskiNo image available for Ken Linden

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