HOME| LAMPS | SUBWAYS & TRAINS | ADS | TROLLEYS | SIGNS | COBBLESTONES | STREET SCENES | YOU'D NEVER BELIEVE YOU'RE IN NYC | LINKS | ALLEYS | NECROLOGY | CEMETERIES | NEIGHBORHOODS | FORGOTTENSLICES | FORGOTTENTOURS | SEARCH | FORGOTTENBOOK DIARY | FORGOTTENSTUFF | QUEENS CRAP | FRANK JUMP'S FADING ADS
![]() |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| What you see here is Bay Ridge's main drag...for most of the 19th Century, that is. Stewart Avenue (it likely takes that name from a landowner along its route) once ran straight up the spine of what was then the western edge of the town of New Utrecht.
What would become Bay Ridge was first spotted by Europeans in 1524, when Giovanni da Verrazzano sailed up the Narrows; it was then controlled by the Lenape Indians. The Dutch didn't settle the area for another 70 years, and it was a far-flung area vis-a-vis Manhattan until the subway linked it to the island borough in 1915. It was a colonial stronghold of the British, who landed there in 1776 on their way to a victorious Battle of Brooklyn. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bay Ridge's fortunes increased when the US Government constructed two Long Island forts facing the Narrows begining in 1825; Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson both served at Fort Hamilton as young officers in the 1840s. The newly dubbed Bay Ridge (renamed from Yellow Hook after an early-1850s yellow fever epidemic) began to attract wealthy landowners for its fine views of the Narrows and Upper New York Bay, and they built a series of mansions along Shore Road. Few remain today, but Bay Ridge remains a bastion of the well-off, who maintain palace-like dwellings in the side streets and avenues near the water. One of them is the one-of-a-kind "Gingerbread House" at Narrows Avenue and 83rd Street.

An excellent source for early Bay Ridge history is Jerome Hoffman's Bay Ridge Chronicles, which Amazon seems fresh out of (but I've seen in bulk at local Bay Ridge bookstores) and Peter Scarpa, Lawrence Stelter, and Peter Syrdahl's Arcadia Bay Ridge: Images of America.
No readily available historical text or online source, though, is much help in digging out information about mysterious Stewart Avenue, which, as we see from the 1874 Beers Atlas plate (via Merlis' Brooklyn: The Way It Was) was the main north-south route in Bay Ridge in that era.
To your webmaster, the map shows a fascinating vision of a Bay Ridge in transition. Still dominated by farm lanes and cow paths, we see that 3rd Avenue (with a horsecar route) and 4th Avenues had been laid out, while 60th Street, Ovington Avenue, Fort Hamilton Avenue (now Parkway) and 86th Street were already on the map. The proto-79th Street, Van Brunt Lane, is on the map. And right in the middle of things is Stewart Avenue.

When those main avenues were built, therefore, Stewart Avenue became cut off from the overall grid.
Today, you can more or less make out Stewart Avenue's old route on the map by drawing a line from 5th Avenue and 85th Street straight to 7th Avenue and 66th Street. 4th Avenue lies in Stewart Avenue's old roadbed from 5th Avenue and 95th Street south to Shore Road (you can see that on the map at left at the dotted line saying "Bay Ridge.") Seventh Avenue assumes Stewart Avenue's route north of 66th Street. Another all-but-vanished ancient route, Kowenhoven Lane, intersected Stewart Avenue at what is today the confluence of the Gowanus Expressway and 67th Street.
The map at left, a section of the overall Beers 1874 New Utrecht map, shows a gaggle of little streets at the bottom, part of the separate neighborhood of Fort Hamilton. It has largely been absorbed into Bay Ridge, though some bungalow-style homes down there remind you that it was built on somewhat marshier ground than the rest of the neighborhood.
The dotted line marks the route of the never-built Bay Ridge and Sea Shore Railroad, which was to run along Brooklyn's south shore to a terminal at the Bay Ridge ferry to Staten Island, which was at the foot of Bay Ridge Avenue for decades until it was forever closed the day aftrer the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge opened on November 21, 1964. The railroad was to run along 86th Street through what is now Dyker Beach Golf Course.
I wish we had photos of Stewart Avenue when it was, more or less, the main north-south Bay Ridge route. In fact, no old photos of Stewart Avenue have turned up at all; I haven't yet consulted the Brooklyn Historical Society. In fact it's possible that the only photographic study of Bay Ridge's Stewart Avenue has been made by me. Those who remember it when it was more prominent are quite aged now if any are still living.
On this page I'll recollect the Stewart Avenue I've seen from my years in Bay Ridge.



The listing for 71st, 72nd and 73rd Streets read:
6th Avenue
Stewart Avenue
7th Avenue
But nowhere in the guide did it list Stewart Avenue in Bay Ridge -- just the one on the other side of town, on the Bushwick-Williamsburg border (which I call East Williamsburg, but that riles up some people).
It seems the cross-street listing of Stewart Avenue was something of an error on the part of Geographia; they had stopped listing it as a Brooklyn street (I have editions prior to 1969 that do) because the city had demapped it.
But just because a street is demapped doesn't mean it isn't there. This portion, between Ovington and 71st, is now used as a private driveway, but it's still paved, unlike the section we'll see later.
Any trace of Stewart Avenue north of Ovington must have disappeared when they dug the Gowanus trench there.


By 1916 Stewart Avenue had pretty much been whittled down to what you see on this map, with the exception of the section eliminated in 1982. Notice, too, the very small yellow squares on Stewart Avenue, just north of 73rd and 74th Streets. We'll get to those.




Stewart Avenue is a fascinating study of deferred maintenance on a "living fossil."


The things you remember. See that utility pole in the picture above left? There was a big chestnut tree behind it. And, there was a very old one-way sign hanging limp on the pole by one or two screws. It was a very old one...one of the white arrow-shaped ones. This was long before the Forgotten NY era, and I never got a photo of it.
South of 73rd, Stewart Avenue assumes a more driveway-like mien once again.





We can thank the three homes discussed here, though, for the continued existence of Stewart Avenue. Till a developer purchases the whole shebang for a flock of Fedders, we'll have an aboriginal Bay Ridge lane in our midst.
HOME| LAMPS | SUBWAYS & TRAINS | ADS | TROLLEYS | SIGNS | COBBLESTONES | STREET SCENES | YOU'D NEVER BELIEVE YOU'RE IN NYC | LINKS | ALLEYS | NECROLOGY | CEMETERIES | NEIGHBORHOODS | FORGOTTENSLICES | FORGOTTENTOURS | SEARCH | FORGOTTENBOOK DIARY | FORGOTTENSTUFF | QUEENS CRAP | FRANK JUMP'S FADING ADS
Photographed May 12, 2008; page completed May 19
erpietri@earthlink.net
©2008