HOME | ADS | ALLEYS | CEMETERIES | COBBLESTONES | FORGOTTENSLICES | LAMPS | NEIGHBORHOODS | SIGNS | STREET NECROLOGY | STREET SCENES | SUBWAYS & TRAINS | TROLLEYS | YOU'D NEVER BELIEVE YOU'RE IN NYC | LINKS | FORGOTTENTOURS | SEARCH | FORGOTTENSTUFF | QUEENS CRAP | FRANK JUMP'S FADING ADS | OUT OF TOWN | BOWERY BOYS | ALL CITY NY | LOST CITY | VANISHING NY | FNY THE BOOK/ERRATA | CONDENSED POP

NYC's STREET COGNATES |
We're going to Broadway today. We're also going to Park Avenue, Lexington Avenue, Wall Street, Canal Street and several other well-known New York City locales. But since this website is called Forgotten NY, things aren't always as obvious as they can appear. Get your Brooks Brothers suit on and bring your portfolio... Wall Street is our first stop. |
Wall Street, Staten Island, has a good view of Upper New York Bay, downtown Brooklyn and the Williamsburg Bank building in the distance.
Since 2001 the Staten Island Yankees, the NY Yankees' Class A affiliate, have played at the Richmond County Bank Ballpark at St. George. |
WALL STREET Prominent buildings: 1918 Staten Island Museum/Institute of Arts & Sciences, 1922 120th Precinct NYPD, Richmond County Bank, Lotan Apartments, Lieutenant Lia Playground Undoubtedly yclept for its somewhat wealthier namesake across Upper New York Bay (which was in turn named for a wall built by the Dutch of New Amsterdam to keep out Native Americans and Englishmen) Wall Street can boast a water view like its Manhattan counterpart. That's about where the similarities end, though it can be said that the Staten Island Wall Street's location on a steep hill gives it a better view of the water; Manhattan Wall Street's view is cut off by the FDR Drive. J.P. Morgan didn't build an empire on this Wall Street but the Staten Island Yankees may build a dynasty on Wall Street and Richmond Terrace. The Twin Towers dominated the view from center field at the Richmond County Bank Ballpark at St. George until 9/11/01. The view will never be quite the same. |
Just as Brooklyn's Park Avenue is dominated for half its length by another Robert Moses elevated auto facilitator (I-278), Manhattan's Park Avenue is shadowed by another elevated structure above 96th Street: the venerable section of Amtrak/Metro North. |
PARK AVENUE Notable structure: the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway, built by the City in segments between 1937 and 1964. It's unclear if Brooklyn's Park Avenue was named for its Manhattan counterpart (unlikely, since Park Avenue in Manhattan was called 4th Avenue for much of its history. We do know that Brooklyn's Park Avenue was first opened in 1839. |
Park Avenue is a quiet street in Port Richmond. In this view, the 1924 Park Baptist Church is at left while the "new" PS 20, built in the 1920s, is at right.
Veterans Park makes a quiet oasis at the end of the day. Port Richmond is less busy now than it used to be; the demise of the SIRT Northern Branch in the 1950s and later, the construction of the Staten Island Mall in the 70s took a lot of the fizz out of the soda. |
PARK AVENUE
It's not on Park Avenue (it's on Heberton) but old PS 20, built in 1891, is a mighty neo-Romanesque tribute to the days when most public school kids got straight A's. The last few years, old PS20 has been home to senior housing. Its belfry and clock await repair. |
Lexington Avenue in Manhattan is home to the gleaming Chrysler Building, briefly NYC's tallest, as well as the art deco masterpiece Chanin Building as well as the chrome-plated Grand Hyatt (formerly the Commodore) Hotel. In Brooklyn, it's a rather nondescript street like any other with local residences and businesses. It does, however, have a place in history in the mass transportation story in Brooklyn.
Brooklyn's Lexington Avenue El in its heyday began its run at Park Row in Manhattan. It crossed the Brooklyn Bridge, stopping first at Sands Street (a large and utterly forgotten transit complex at the foot of the bridge), and shared the Myrtle Avenue line with these stops: Bridge Street, Navy Street, Vanderbilt Avenue, Washington Avenue; Myrtle (just after diverging from that street's El), DeKalb, Greene, Franklin, Nostrand, Tompkins, Sumner, Reid (now Malcolm X Blvd.) joining Broadway line at Ralph Avenue. |
LEXINGTON AVENUE
|
CANAL STREET Notable buildings: Edgewater Village Hall, 1889; NYC Public Library
at Wright Street, 1907
When walking in Tappen Park (named for a Stapleton World War I hero) it isn't too difficult to envision the days when Stapleton was just another small town that dotted the Staten Island shoreline. It is surrounded by high hills and has a village square of sorts, where local businesses cluster and the old village hall and bandshell still stand. Stapleton is home to many venerable structures, some dating to the 1820s. Until the 1960s, it was home to numerous breweries.
|
|
|
NORTHERN BOULEVARD Staten Island's Northern Boulevard seems rather incongruously named; there are no prominent landmarks it is "north" of. While it's rather wider than the surrounding streets in the quiet Sunnyside neighborhood south of Clove Lakes Park, it hardly qualifies as a "boulevard." Conjecture: If you draw a line with your finger along the path of the now-abandoned Richmond Parkway extension to the Staten Island Expressway northeast, Northern Boulevard is right along the line. Could Northern Boulevard have been built as a Richmond Parkway approach road? |
This is the third Reformed church to stand on this site, which was, in 1663, where organized religion by Europeans on Staten Island got its start.
The Dutch cemetery, with interments dating to the early 1700s, is adjacent to the Reformed church. |
CHURCH STREET
In Manhattan, Church Street, one of many Manhattan streets with names associated with Trinity Church, runs from Liberty Street and Trinity Place north to Canal Street. Much of it is now in the ground zero area surrounding the destroyed World Trade Center. |
Avenue B is incongruously named: it is not surrounded by an Avenue A or an Avenue C. Perhaps, in the past, parallel Cottage Place and Jewett Avenue were so named. Brooklyn also has a set of lettered avenues which go from A to Z, excepting E, G and Q. Brooklyn's Avenue B can be found in Remsen Village north of Canarsie (Beverley Road may have been called Avenue B at one time). |
AVENUE B While Manhattan's Avenue B is smack in the middle of the comebacking East Village, a mecca for clubbers and resurgent nightlife, Staten Island's Avenue B is a one-block street with a couple of venerable dwellings that look like they are from the 1800s, as are several in this area. |
BROADWAY While Manhattan and Bronx' Broadway runs from Bowling Green at the tip of Manhattan all the way to the Canadian border as US Route 9, Staten Island's Broadway is rather more modest, running from Clove Lakes Park north to Staten Island's north shore. |
Broadway and Richmond Terrace, West New Brighton, Staten Island |
|
TRINITY PLACE Manhattan's Trinity Place runs parallel to Broadway, running from Greenwich and Morris Streets north to Liberty and Church Streets and is named, like so many streets in lower Manhattan, for Trinity Church or its churchmen. Staten Islands's Trinity Place is charming on its own terms though...it has several examples of beautiful 1880s-1900 style architrecture with fascinating detail (left and below).
|
Route signs from nycroads.com
HOME | ADS | ALLEYS | CEMETERIES | COBBLESTONES | FORGOTTENSLICES | LAMPS | NEIGHBORHOODS | SIGNS | STREET NECROLOGY | STREET SCENES | SUBWAYS & TRAINS | TROLLEYS | YOU'D NEVER BELIEVE YOU'RE IN NYC | LINKS | FORGOTTENTOURS | SEARCH | FORGOTTENSTUFF | QUEENS CRAP | FRANK JUMP'S FADING ADS | OUT OF TOWN | BOWERY BOYS | ALL CITY NY | LOST CITY | VANISHING NY | FNY THE BOOK/ERRATA | CONDENSED POP
E me at erpietri@earthlink.net
©2001 Midnight Fish