BROOKLYN HEIGHTS — Dorothy Day’s extraordinary life began in Brooklyn, and now a street corner near her birthplace has been named after the legendary founder of the Catholic Worker movement.

The intersection of Pineapple and Henry streets in Brooklyn Heights is now officially called “Dorothy Day Way” in honor of the Servant of God, who was born nearby at 71 Pineapple Street in 1897.
On May 2, Day’s granddaughter, Martha Hennessy, and members of the Dorothy Day Guild, the organization promoting her cause for sainthood, joined clergy for the ceremony to unveil the street sign.
Hennessy and Councilman Lincoln Restler, who sponsored legislation in the City Council to name the street corner, did the honors of pulling the string to remove a covering and reveal the street sign.
Hennessy, who like her grandmother is a Catholic peace activist, called the ceremony “a beautiful moment.”
RELATED: Life and Work of Dorothy Day Is Captured in a N.Y. Artist’s Work
The street naming marked the second time New York City has paid tribute to Day.
In 2021, the city commissioned a Staten Island ferry in her name, and the Dorothy Day had its inaugural voyage in 2023.
Dorothy Day (1897-1980) was a journalist and social activist who lived a wild, bohemian youth before converting to Catholicism in 1927. She fed and clothed the poor, advocated for civil rights, and protested all wars.
On May 1, 1933, Day co-founded the Catholic Worker movement, a faith-based organization that urges members to perform the Corporal Works of Mercy and work for peace and justice. At the same time, Day also began publishing a newspaper, The Catholic Worker, which is still published today.
Day’s life of faith inspired others, said Father Anthony Andreassi, administrative vicar for the Brooklyn Oratory Parishes in Brooklyn Heights.
“She was a convert to Catholicism, a woman of incredible faith and committed to the poor,” he said. “I know many people who have been attracted to the church because of Dorothy Day and have come to accept baptism.”
Day was declared a Servant of God by New York Archbishop John O’Connor in 2000. Twenty-one years later, following the conclusion of the diocesan phase of the investigation into her life and her fitness for sainthood, her case was submitted to the Vatican for review by Cardinal Timothy Dolan.
Kevin Ahern, board chairman of the Dorothy Day Guild, said he sees the street corner naming as an opportunity to promote her good works.
“And maybe by learning about her,” Ahern said, “they can be inspired by her to live their life a little … and make the world a better place.”
RELATED: Pax Christi is Honored With First Dorothy Day Peacemaker Award as Global Conflicts Spike
Alex Avitabile, a guild board member, spearheaded the drive to have the street corner named for Day, whom he met in 1970. He asked Restler to sponsor legislation.
Avitabile recalled walking up to her after a talk she had given at the Catholic Worker House in Rochester and telling her how much he admired her. Even back then, he said he felt he was in the presence of a saintly person.
“I knew,” Avitabile recalled. “She had a way about her — her eyes. There are a few people I’ve met who are saintly people. And I could just see that.”
The Catholic Worker movement, which celebrated its 93rd anniversary on May 1, is still going strong today, according to guild members.
Hennessy said she is pleased to see that people are still inspired by her grandmother, even 46 years after her death.
“It’s pretty astounding, the place she holds in their hearts and in their minds,” she said. “It’s only expanding, and I truly believe that she will bring so much good to the Catholic Church and bring people back to the church.”
