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You'll find a lot of books on the shelves, especially during the holiday season, that have dozens of old-time postcards of New York's most famous landmarks...the Empire State Building, the Statue of Liberty, Central Park, and all the rest. Between about 1900 and 1950, hundreds of thousands of postcards depicting painted versions, as well as photographs, of New York's tourist attractions abounded in cigar shops and stationery stores.

However, the intrepid artists and shutterbugs didn't content themselves with New York's most beaten tracks. They also made it to New York City's furthest outposts and rendered faithful versions of scenes that are now...in some cases, Forgotten.

Forgotten Fan Peter Sefton has been sending me these images over the months, so I thought I'd gather tham on a webpage, with explanations where I have any.

 

The upper west side of Manhattan, and indeed, many of the choice waterfront areas of New York City, from the mid-1800s on featured large, fortress-like mansions by the bright lights of that time. Paterno Castle, in its time, rivaled the Xanadu that Bill Gates designed for himself in Washington State.

Paterno Castle stood at what is now Cabrini Boulevard and West 181st Street in Washington Heights. Italian immigrant Charles Paterno (no relation, as far as I know, to Penn State coach Joe Paterno) built it between 1907 and 1909. It contained a mushroom cellar, a swimming pool surrounded by birdcages, and a 20' by 80' master bedroom. Its seven-acre site was surrounded by woods and greenhouses.

Charles Paterno and brother Joseph built many of the grand apartment buildings in the area, and by 1918 he owned 75 buildings housing about 28,000 people. In that year he built 270 Park Avenue, which takes up the entire Park-Madison-47th-48th Street block, which stood until 1960. By 1938, Paterno demolished Paterno Castle and built Castle Village, five thirteen-story towers containing 580 apartments. But the old Castle's retaining wall can still be seen along Henry Hudson Parkway.

Paterno is remembered by the Paterno Trivium, a small triangle park at Cabrini Boulevard, Pinehurst Avenue and West 187th Street.

Either a small part of Paterno Castle is still there, or some pf Castle Village has been designed to resemble it. At right, a plaque dedicated to Paterno in the complex.

Some of the entrance gate just south of the Cloisters does remain.

 

The only other public acknowledgement of the Paternos is at this small triangle, Paterno Trivium, at Cabrini Boulevard, Pinehurst Avenue and West 187th Street.

 

Similar to Paterno Castle was this edifice I know only as Billing's Residence.

The Cloisters, built in Fort Tryon Park beginning in 1934, MAY occupy this site today, though I can't be sure.

 

  Another castle in the same neighborhood was the Libby Castle in Washington Heights.

The Bayard Tower, seen in this view from about 1910, was located near the Bliss Estate in what is now Owls Head Park in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn.

Times have changed, since while Owls Head Park now fronts on the Narrows and Staten Island beyond, it also provides a spectacular view of a garbage rendering plant.

 

Pillared Fort Hamilton High School, which fronts Shore Road at 83rd Street, looks like the quintessential high school, the kind Wally and the Beav went to.

In the 1800s and early 1900s, though, the Crescent Athletic Club, whose boathouse is shown here, occupied the still-rural site.

Similar boathouses lined Shore Road until the early 20th Century.

From this scene, only the bend in Shore Road remains today.

They don't call it Bath Beach for nothing.

In its previous incarnation, the water's edge at Bensonhurst (southeast of Bay Ridge), today dominated by the Belt Parkway, was lined with summer resorts, mansions, beaches, and boathouses, like this one.

This scene from about 1910-1915 shows Bay Ridge Parkway at about Ridge Boulevard as it descends a steep hill toward the Narrows.

Though new housing was built here in the 1970s, this part of Brooklyn is much the same as it was then. Why change a good thing?

 

The same can be said for this postcard showing Ridge Boulevard at 82nd Street,

 

The Bay Ridge Roller Skating Rink at 62nd and 7th Avenue was later occupied by the Crazy Country Club as well as other night spots.

Indoor roller skating made a brief comeback from about 1978-1982 but then died down again. These days in line skating has replaced it (don't get me started).

Some postcards showed transit lines, including many that have long-since vanished from the scene.

 

This card from 1910 shows New Utrecht Avenue and 49th Street in Borough Park. Since 1917, New Utrecht Avenue has been almost completely overshadowed by an elevated train mostly used by the B and M subway lines, but in this long-ago era, the Brooklyn, Bath and West End Railroad ran here.

Later, the el became known as the West End line as some still call it today.

For more on the old West End rail line, see Paul Matus' excellent website, Rapidtransit.net.

This card from about 1900-1910 shows the corner of Atlantic and Flatbush Avenues.

Downtown Brooklyn used to be under a maze of elevated trains. Fulton Street, Flatbush Avenue, Adams Street, Myrtle Avenue and Hudson Avenue (most of which no longer even exists) all were under its shadow.

Shown here is the Fifth Avenue El, which parted company from the Myrtle Avenue El at Hudson Avenue, then turned down Flatbush Avenue, and then down Fifth to its terminus at Third Avenue and 65th Street.

When you add the Brooklyn terminal of the Long Island Railroad, and the BMT subway constructed in 1916, and trolleys, you might say that 1916 to about 1940 was a golden age of public transportation in New York (if you can overlook management blunders that gave you the Malbone Street Wreck, the fact that there no air conditioning and wouldn't be till the 70s, and other things).

The corner of Atlantic and Flatbush has so far resisted the comeback that downtown Brooklyn and Park Slope has experienced over the past decade. There has been a big hole in the ground where the LIRR terminal was for the last 25 years, and there will be a big hole in the ground there for some time to come.

 

BELOW: The Fifth Avenue El crosses a stone bridge over Shore Road Drive. The bridge is still there today, although the El was torn down in 1940, a victim of the BMT and the then-new IND subway lines.

 

I must admit I'm somewhat stumped about the location of this photo, which looks to be about 1890 or so. It's obviously the LIRR Main Line on Atlantic Avenue, which didn't go below ground until 1940. The caption says "Manhattan Junction, East New York" so, I imagine, we're at Van Sinderen Avenue, where the old Canarsie Line turned off. Later the line was elevated and became a part of the subway system.

I've heard differnt stories about the Canarsie Line being under the aegis of the LIRR, but don't have the definitive word. Can any Forgotten Fans help?

 

The card shows the Garretson Homestead, on today's Kissena Boulevard near Jewel Avenue, which, according to the card, was built in the 1660s. The Beers 1873 atlas shows it clearly. I'm not sure when it was torn down.

 

While there are still plenty of yacht clubs in New York City, the Knickerbocker Yacht Club existed about 1900. Similar was the Bayside Yacht Club, below.

Your grandfather's Flushing.

RIGHT: These two pictures, from about 1915, depict Flushing as it used to be: a tree-lined neighborhood filled with Victorian-style two-family homes with wrap-around porches. While the eastern sections of Murray Hill (the eastern part of Flushing) still resemble these photos, most of Flushing today is composed of boring high-rise apartment buildings.

The old Jefferson School, at Murray Street and Sanford Avenue, was replaced with a new school in 1967, which still stands.

 

Few Victorian homes remain along Sanford Avenue in Flushing. The Niantic Clubhouse may be one of them--I'll have to check.

 

Ozone Park of an earlier era, about 1910-1915.

South Beach, Staten Island, is now just a shadow of its earlier incarnation as a summer resort (it used to boast its own branch of the Staten Island Rapid Transit). In its day it ALMOST rivaled Coney Island decades before easy travel between Staten Island and Brooklyn was made possible by the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge.

This old postcard shows Happy Land Park.

 

Yes, Virginia, there used to be an amusement park, complete with roller coaster, in upper Manhattan.

 

We will finish our look at postcards with a view of Madison Square Park in 1915. The clock at left is still there.

For dozens of more NYC postcards of an earlier era, see Jim Lileks' page.

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