Hank’s Saloon of Brooklyn – Signed Art Print (Dive Bar Icon in Boerum Hill)
$150.00
Hang this legendary dive — originally Doray Tavern, later Hank’s Saloon — cornerstone of Third & Atlantic, Boerum Hill, Brooklyn. This was a pen-and-ink drawing (with spicy flame accents) capturing the smoky charm of a bar built in 1860, reborn in 1971 by Dorothy & Ray Slattery, and thriving for decades—even after 2004’s renaming by the new owners, paying tribute to Hank Williams.
This place weathered foreclosure in 2012, was a home to Mohawk ironworkers & country music nights, and dazzled Esquire as one of America’s Best Bars—closing in 2018 after over a century of grit & glory bklyner.com+1bklyner.com+1.
🎯 What You’re Getting:
- 
Limited-edition print, sizes 16×20″ (image 12×16″), 9×12″, or 8×10″ 
- 
Signed & numbered (runs of 100 for the 16×20″ and 9x12") 
- 
Printed on heavyweight archival cotton rag paper—built to last decades 
- 
Makes an eye-catching conversation piece for living rooms, dens, safe rooms, and bar alcoves 
- 
Free U.S. shipping 
🌟 Why This Print Rocks
- 
Historic dive-bar legend: Once called the Doray Tavern, a haunt for Mohawk “skywalkers” who built NYC’s skyscrapers 
- 
Iconic ambiance: Recognizable flame-painted exterior, battered bar, dusty stage—all in vivid line and poppin colors 
- 
Rich, local flavor captured: From Jeannie Talierco’s behind-the-bar tales to Sunday-night country shows and cheap beers 
- 
Cultural cornerstone: Named by Esquire and Grub Street; survived gentrification and foreclosure 
📌 Perfect For:
- 
Bar-obsessed New Yorkers craving gritty nostalgia 
- 
Collectors of dive-bar history and Americana 
- 
Gift-givers looking for NYC stories 
- 
Home decorators who love the real, old landmarks 
✔️ Technical Specs:
| Size | Image Area | Edition Limit | Paper Type | 
|---|---|---|---|
| 16″ × 20″ | 12″ × 16″ | 100 | Archival cotton rag | 
| 9″ × 12″ | 8" x 11" | 100 | Archival cotton rag | 
| 8″ × 10″ | 7.5" x 9.5" | -- | Archival cotton rag | 
✅ Add to Cart to claim your piece of HBK (historic Brooklyn keep). It’s more than art—it’s a chunk of NYC’s soul, framed and ready to spark a thousand stories.
 
         
    
    
   
    
       
    
       
    
       
    
      