The Harlem Tourism Board (HTB) is hosting a special presentation as part of this year’s NYCxDesignFestival on Tuesday, May 20th at the Harlem Renaissance Marriott Hotel from 10a until 10p where they will feature the Birthplace of the Big Apple sculpture, created by board member, Regi Taylor, HTB’s Creative In Residence.
The commemorative monument premieres 87 years after Harlem first ‘defined’ the Big Apple as its own. The official Big Apple announcement will take place during Harlem Week in August.
Harlem Renaissance jazz impresario, Cab Calloway, however, who first defined the Big Apple in his Hepster’s Dictionary, Language of Harlem Jive.
The “[Big] Apple, (noun), the big town, the main stem, Harlem” was the official definition ascribed to New York City in 1938 by Maestro Cab Calloway in the first dictionary published by a Black man in American history, and the first time the Big Apple was defined in print to mean New York. “This evidence makes it clear that the globally iconic New York City nickname, the Big Apple, is a cultural legacy of Harlem evolved from organic slang,” explains sculptor, Regi Taylor, “making Harlem, the Birthplace of the Big Apple.”
“The evidence could not be more clear according to former Manhattan Borough Historian, Doris Rosenblum, who declared after a thorough review of the research report that “I do believe you are correct regarding the derivation of the ‘Big Apple,’ “ according to Mr. Taylor.
While the generally accepted theory of the Big Apple’s trajectory to pop culture status is attributed to 1920’s horse racing writer, John FitzGerald, who acknowledges first overhearing the phrase discussed between two Black stable hands 1300 miles from New York at a New Orleans race track, perhaps exposing his limited readers to the term, his contribution falls short to explain how the rest of the planet became enlightened.
Harlem Renaissance jazz impresario, Cab Calloway, however, who first defined the Big Apple in his Hepster’s Dictionary, Language of Harlem Jive, which sold over two-million copies internationally and was adopted by the New York Public Library as its official glossary of popular slang, does explain the global circulation of the nickname.