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You are currently browsing the Roosevelt Island Historical Society blog archives for October, 2023.

Oct

31

Tuesday, October 31, 2023 – BEFORE COLUMBIA, THE BLOOMINGDALE ASYLUM

By admin

COME TO VOTE ON HALLOWEEN AND GET YOUR SPECIAL LIMITED EDITION STICKER WHILE SUPPLIES LAST.

EARLY VOTING IS TAKING PLACE IN THE RIVAA GALLERY, 527 MAIN STREET
ON THESE DATES:

Tuesday, October 318am-4pm
Wednesday, November 110am-8pm
Thursday, November 210am-8pm
Friday, November 38am-4pm
Saturday, November 49am-5pm
Sunday, November 59am-5pm

ELECTION DAY-TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7 AT  PS 217

FROM THE ARCHIVES

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31,  2023

Before

Columbia University:

The Bloomingdale Insane Asylum

 Ysabel Cacho

UPPER WEST SIDE.COM

Before Columbia University: The Bloomingdale Insane Asylum

 Ysabel Cacho  

In the 21st Century, it’s difficult to picture Morningside Heights without the prestigious Columbia University campus. But what most people may not remember is that before the university, 116th and Broadway was home to the Bloomingdale Asylum for mentally ill patients. What had started out as a modern approach to treating these patients ended in controversy. This isn’t a ghost story but a real account based on reports of the asylum’s eerie tenure on the Upper West Side.

In 1776, The New York Hospital (now known as New York-Presbyterian Hospital) opened its doors to take care of 3,000 soldiers fighting in the Revolutionary War. Among the wounded were also mentally ill patients. Throughout the years, the hospital saw a steady rise in these patients.

In 1802, a committee considered adding a separate wing specifically for the mentally ill. However, in a more radical move, it was decided that there should be a separate and new building to accommodate them. The committee wanted the new asylum to be formed with a more moral approach to treating patients instead of a medical one, which involved visitation and physical activities.

A new committee composed of Thomas Eddy, John R. Murray, John Aspinwall, Thomas Buckley, Cadwallader Colden, and Peter A. Jay looked around the city of New York to find a suitable home for their new project. They decided to purchase a tranquil site on 116th and Bloomingdale Road, now known as Broadway, overlooking the Hudson River. Of course this site is now home to Columbia University.

The Bloomingdale Insane Asylum officially opened on June 1, 1821.

Drawn by Archibald L. Dick. Engraved by H. Fossette., Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

According to reports, it was a beautiful building made of limestone and had 120 patients. Several years later, in 1829, a new, three-story brick building with iron-barred windows was made to accommodate noisier and more violent male patients. A separate wing was also built for violent female patients in 1937.

c/o NYPL Digital Collections

During its first few decades, the asylum basked in the glow as a pioneer for asylums. But by the 1850s, the glow began to fade.

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According to Columbia University Libraries, a patient could be admitted to the asylum against his or her will in the 1850s. Some true stories include Caroline Underhill, who was “forcibly incarcerated” at Bloomingdale by her sister and nephew. Underhill’s relatives had conspired to evict her from her home, which her father left for her. Commodore Richard W. Meade, the brother of Gettysburg hero General George Meade, was also wrongly institutionalized because he didn’t consent to his daughter’s suitor’s proposal.

READ MORE: Bloomingdale Village: Digging Deep Into Our Neighborhood’s Early Days

“Wealthy people would send their family there because it had such a good reputation,” Mackin said. “It was not uncommon, if a wealthy husband wanted to get rid of his wife, he paid a lot of money to get a doctor to sign and put her away for ‘mental health reasons’.”– Jim Mackin, local historian with the Bloomingdale Neighborhood History Group and author of the upcoming release, Notable New Yorkers of Manhattan’s Upper West Side: Bloomingdale-Morningside Heights

Habeas corpus lawyer John Townsend went to the local paper, The New York Tribune, to shine a light on the Bloomingdale Asylum issues. He spoke against the cruel treatment and brutality the patients experienced, which caused some of them to die from the abuse. When one of the head doctors remarked that critics should stop by the asylum to witness the conditions themselves, the Tribune took him up on his offer.

READ MORE: Haunted Buildings of the Upper West Side

Reporter Julius Chambers went undercover as a patient on August 12, 1872, to write about the environment. After he was released in the same month, he published a series of damaging articles discussing his experience. In one of his articles called “Among the Maniacs,” Chambers described his stay in great detail:

“A night of horror among raving patients—sleep disturbed by agonized cries of the dangerous idiots—close cells, uncomfortable beds and chairs, scanty and foul food, filthy baths, and rude and vulgar attendants—no amusements, games, or reading matter—imbecile boys exposed naked to the sun, and venerable blind men beaten by enraged keepers.”





Chambers also noted that once he moved to the asylum’s main building, his living conditions and the quality of the attendants improved. Following the public outcry and government investigation, the head doctor at Bloomingdale retired in 1877.

By the 1880s, the Bloomingdale Asylum was reported to be left in a “vulnerable position.” However, during the late 1860s, the institutions’ trustees purchased around 300 acres of land in White Plains to move the asylum there. In 1889, the asylum began selling off property to pay for their big move.

That same year, the New York Times announced that Columbia College students would have a new home in Morningside Heights when college authorities finally took possession of the property. It was reported that the Teachers College took one of the asylum buildings as a dorm. Since then, Columbia University has made the property on Bloomingdale its home in the neighborhood.

However, Buell Hall is the one remaining building on Columbia’s campus which dates back to the Bloomingdale Insane Asylum; it was originally reserved for wealthy male patients.

photo credit: Beyond My Ken via Wikimedia Commons

TUESDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

SEND YOUR RESPONSE TO:
ROOSEVELTISLANDHISTORY@GMAIL.COM

MONDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

Photo shows intersection of Atlantic, Fourth, and Flatbush Avenues in Brooklyn. Building at left is still there and was then a subway station entrance; today it’s a skylight for the station. Across the street is the Long Island RR terminal, still there underground but a new building on street level. The old BMT 5th Ave. elevated line runs atop Flatbush Avenue; it was closed and removed in 1940.

Today’s Barclay Center would be across the street and to the right.

Andy Sparberg

CREDITS

SHORPY THE HISTORIC AMERICAN PHOTO ARCHIVEUPPER WS
UPPER WESTSIDE.COM

JUDITH BERDY

 

MAYA LEVANON-PHOTOS TIK TOK & INSTAGRAM

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated

www.tiktok.com/@rooseveltislandhsociety
Instagram roosevelt_island_history


THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

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Copyright © 2022 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Oct

30

Monday, October 30, 2023 – LET’S TAKE A RIDE THRU SOME AUTO IMAGES

By admin

OUR HEARTS GO OUR TO OUR FRIENDS, FAMILIES AND NEIGHBORS IN ISRAEL

EARLY VOTING IS TAKING PLACE IN THE RIVAA GALLERY, 527 MAIN STREET
ON THESE DATES:

Monday, October 309am-5pm
Tuesday, October 318am-4pm
Wednesday, November 110am-8pm
Thursday, November 210am-8pm
Friday, November 38am-4pm
Saturday, November 49am-5pm
Sunday, November 59am-5pm

ELECTION DAY-TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7 AT  PS 217

FROM THE ARCHIVES

MONDAY, OCTOBER 30,  2023

LET’S TAKE A 

SPIN IN OUR NEW CAR


SHORPY AMERICAN HISTORIC PHOTO ARCHIVE

Washington, D.C., circa 1921. “Geo. C. Rice Auto Co., front.” These deals won’t last long, folks.

New York, 1951. “Hoffman Motors, Park Avenue. Driver standing next to Jaguar Mark VII saloon

Washington, D.C., circa 1911. “Hudson cars, H.B. Leary agency, 1317½ 14th Street N.W.”

June 1942. “Florence, Alabama, Saturday afternoon.” Medium format acetate negative by Arthur Rothstein for the Office of War Information

April 12, 1936. Newsboys in Jackson, Ohio

An after photo of Lockheed during WWII (unbelievable 1940s pictures). This is pretty neat special effects during the 1940’s. I have never seen these pictures or knew that we had gone this far to protect ourselves. During World War II the Army Corps of Engineers needed to hide the Lockheed Burbank Aircraft Plant to protect it from Japanese air attack. They covered it with camouflage netting to make it look like a rural subdivision from the air.


MONDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

SEND YOUR RESPONSE TO:
ROOSEVELTISLANDHISTORY@GMAIL.COM

WEEKEND PHOTO OF THE DAY

OPEN 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. THIS WEEKEND

HARRA REISER GOT IT RIGHT

CREDITS

SHORPY THE HISTORIC AMERICAN PHOTO ARCHIVE
JUDITH BERDY


Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter and Deborah Dorff

MAYA LEVANON-PHOTOS TIK TOK & INSTAGRAM

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated

www.tiktok.com/@rooseveltislandhsociety
Instagram roosevelt_island_history


THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

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Copyright © 2022 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Oct

29

Weekend, October 28-29, 2023 – SOME INTERESTING SCENES ON THE RIVER

By admin

OUR HEARTS GO OUR TO OUR FRIENDS, FAMILIES AND NEIGHBORS IN ISRAEL

FROM THE ARCHIVES

WEEKEND, OCTOBER 28-29,  2023


SCENES OF THE


EAST RIVER


WIKIMEDIA COMMONS

East River by Theodore Earl Butler.jpg

Theodore Earl Butler

1861-1936 | American

Summertime on the East River, 1921.JPG

“Scene at one of the docks of the East RiverNew York, where those for whom the journey to the beaches is too long or too expensive forget the sweltering heat of August in the cool waters.”

USS Relief East River New York July 1, 1898.jpg

U.S. Army hospital ship Relief in New York harbor’s East River July 1, 1898 just before sailing for Cuba.

New York City- East River Bridge LCCN2003678102.jpg

Title: New York City: East River Bridge Abstract/medium: 1 photographic print.

West Indian Fruit Steamer, East River, New York City 1938 429.jpeg

Carlton Theodore Chapman

East River Traffic, New York in 1912.jpg

an oil painting by Patrick O’Brien, 2016, of the East River in New York, showing the area where the South Street Seaport is in modern times.

WEEKEND PHOTO

SEND YOUR RESPONSE TO:
ROOSEVELTISLANDHISTORY@GMAIL.COM

FRIDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

RIVERCROSS BUILDING INSPECTION BY
HIFH RISE PLATFORM. BEATS SCAFFOLDING!!

CREDITS

WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
JUDITH BERDY

MAYA LEVANON-PHOTOS TIK TOK & INSTAGRAM

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated

www.tiktok.com/@rooseveltislandhsociety
Instagram roosevelt_island_history


THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

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Copyright © 2022 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Oct

27

Friday, October 27, 2023 – THE MEXICAN TRADITION COMES TO ROCKEFELLER CENTER

By admin

OUR HEARTS GO OUR TO OUR FRIENDS, FAMILIES AND NEIGHBORS IN ISRAEL

FROM THE ARCHIVES

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27,  2023

Rockefeller Center

Will Transform Into A Beautiful

‘Día De Muertos’

Celebration Tomorrow
 

ISSUE#  1111

TISHMAN SPEYER

Love the annual Dia de Muertos celebration at Rockefeller Center! (Tishman Speyer)

From Friday, October 27 through Thursday, November 2, the iconic Plaza is hosting their third annual “Mexico Week” alongside Tequila Casa Dragones, which will include everything from musical performances to colorful art installations and cultural activities.

It’s all to celebrate the “Day of the Dead” in NYC, a tradition in Mexico that allows people to mourn and then celebrate loved ones who have passed on by creating ofrendas (offerings) to them, sharing memories and spending time in their spiritual presence.

“Mexico Week” is also in partnership with the Consulate General of Mexico in New York and the Mexican Cultural Institute, honoring 200+ years of Mexico’s independence.

Thiis year’s celebration will specifically highlight Mexican artist Daniel Valero of Mestiz design studio based in San Miguel de Allende. He will be responsible for the 2023 ofrenda, “Los Dos Soles.” Valero will showcase a similar ofrenda at a Casa Dragones at the same time. An ofrenda is a display altar dedicated to those who have passed away.

Los Dos Soles will be a “symbolic portal to San Miguel de Allende.” New Yorkers will be able to honor their loved ones by pinning letters or photos to the back of the ofrenda in remembrance.

“Los Dos Soles asks guests to embrace the duality of life and death, acknowledging them as integral facets of our collective human journey.” adds Daniel Valero, Mexican architect and designer of Mestiz. “This year’s ofrenda transcends the boundaries of space and time, allowing guests to take in the shared elements and colors that unite altars located in two distant locations, fostering a rich and cross-cultural perspective.”

According to the press release, the 2023 event programming is as follows:

  • Friday, October 27: Ofrenda open to the public (all day)
    • 11am: Ofrenda unveiling ceremony & opening remarks @ Center Plaza at 30 Rock
    • 11am-1pm: Traditional Day of the Dead Catrina face painting
    • 12pm-1pm: Performances by TONO and Mariachi bands
    • 12pm-5pm: Timed altar participation, including photo-taking opportunities and tributes.
    • 12pm-5pm: Casa Dragones samplings with special offers for purchase at Morrells’s Wine & Spirits
  • Saturday, October 28: Ofrenda open to the public (all day)
    • 12pm – 3pm: Traditional Day of the Dead Catrina face painting
    • 12pm – 5pm: Timed altar participation, including photo-taking opportunities and tributes.
    • 1pm: 15-30 min Mariachi performance
    • 1:30pm: TONO performance by Mexican dancer and choreographer Diego Vega Solorza
    • 12pm-5pm: Casa Dragones samplings with special offers for purchase at Morrells’s Wine & Spirits
  • Sunday, October 29: Ofrenda open to the public (all day)
    • 12pm – 3pm: Traditional Day of the Dead Catrina face painting
    • 12pm – 5pm: Timed altar participation, including photo-taking opportunities and tributes.
    • 1pm: 15-30 min Mariachi performance
    • 1:30pm: TONO performance by Mexican dancer and choreographer Diego Vega Solorza
  • Monday, October 30 – Thursday, November 2nd: Ofrenda open to the public (all day)
    • 12pm-2pm: Casa Dragones samplings with special offers for purchase at Morrells’s Wine & Spirits
    • 12pm-3pm: Timed altar participation, including photo-taking opportunities and tributes.

Check it out at Rockefeller Center between 49th and 50th Streets and Fifth and Sixth Aves! Stay up to date on the latest happenings at Rockefeller Center here.

When: October 27 – November 2

Where: Rockefeller Center

FRIDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

SEND YOUR RESPONSE TO:
ROOSEVELTISLANDHISTORY@GMAIL.COM

THURSDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

Annual Halloween Display in Octagon Lobby
Janet King, Hara Reiser, Ellen Jacoby, Gloria Herman, Alexis Villafane,and Nina Lublin all got it right

CREDITS

Rockefeller Center
JUDITH BERDY

MAYA LEVANON-PHOTOS TIK TOK & INSTAGRAM

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated

www.tiktok.com/@rooseveltislandhsociety
Instagram roosevelt_island_history


THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

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Copyright © 2022 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Oct

26

Thursday, October 26, 2023 – THOSE MYSTERIOUS TOWERS ATOP STEINER STUDIOS

By admin

OUR HEARTS GO OUR TO OUR FRIENDS, FAMILIES AND NEIGHBORS IN ISRAEL

FROM THE ARCHIVES

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26,  2023

THE WWII RADIO

TOWERS ATOP

STEINER STUDIO

IN THE

BROOKLYN NAVY YARD

ISSUE#  1110

UNTAPPED NEW YORK

@untappedcities Do you have story on a replica bridge on top of buildings in brooklyn. I can’t find anything on it but i see it from BQE.

— lauren (@nationofnations) 

A photo she took from a car gave us the clue we needed: rather than a replica bridge, they’re the WWII radio towers once used by the Navy, specifically the Third Naval District US Naval Communication Center Headquarters. They sit atop the 1940s-era building, 25 Washington Avenue, in the Brooklyn Navy Yard, and part of Steiner Studios.

In this forum, Navy seamen who worked at the station mention using it to communicate with the Bermuda station, with ships coming in and out of the New York City harbor, and one guys mentions tracking Sputnik (which another refutes). The New York Post writes, “The spidery structures uncannily conjure the era of warships in the roiling Atlantic with which they communicated.”

Andrew Gustafson, vice president of Turnstile Tours, a company that gives tours of the Navy Yard, confirms that there isn’t too much well-documented information about the towers themselves. He says, “You may find reference to it being ‘strong enough to reach Puerto Rico, which was in the Third Naval District,’ which is not correct. That is not a comment on the power of the antenna – again, I have no idea – but on the fact that Puerto Rico was in the Third Naval District only from 1903 to 1919, long before this building existed.

Dennis Riley, archivist for the Brooklyn Navy Yard shared with us architectural drawings related to the towers

He continues, “The transmitter sits on top of Building 1 or Building 291, which was built in 1942 as the Material Sciences Laboratory. This building housed much of the primary research operations of the Yard, including testing the resilience and properties of materials and equipment used by the navy, as well as developing radio, radar, sonar, and other electronics and navigation equipment. Much of navigation system for the Polaris nuclear submarines was developed in this building.”

Studios Chairman Doug Steiner also had the radio towers lit up too, “in an understated, blue-and-white way. They’re not going to blink,” reports the Post. Today, the building holds not only Steiner Studios but also Carnegie Mellon’s Integrative Media Program and Brooklyn College Graduate School of Cinema.

THURSDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

SEND YOUR RESPONSE TO:
ROOSEVELTISLANDHISTORY@GMAIL.COM

TUESDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

WWII RADIO TOWERS ATOP STEINER STUDIOS IN BROOKLYN NAVY YARD

CREDITS

UNTAPPED NEW YORK
JUDITH BERDY

MAYA LEVANON-PHOTOS TIK TOK & INSTAGRAM

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated

www.tiktok.com/@rooseveltislandhsociety
Instagram roosevelt_island_history


THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

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Copyright © 2022 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Oct

25

Wednesday, October 25, 2023 – A WONDERFUL ADDITION TO FIFTH AVENUE

By admin

OUR HEARTS GO OUR TO OUR FRIENDS, FAMILIES AND NEIGHBORS IN ISRAEL

FROM THE ARCHIVES

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25,  2023


THE LITTLE PRINCE



ON FIFTH AVENUE
 

ISSUE#  1109

UNTAPPED NEW YORK

A bronze statue of the Little Prince now gazes wistfully toward the trees of Central Park in Manhattan’s Upper East Side. The titular subject of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s 1943 children’s novel is celebrating his 80th birthday, and sculptor Jean-Marc de Pas’s four-foot-tall version arrived yesterday, September 21, in front of Villa Albertine, the French Embassy’s bookshop and cultural center in New York. The story of the beloved figure has been translated into more than 500 languages and dialects

Saint-Exupéry wrote Le Petit Prince (The Little Prince) while living in New York after escaping the Nazi invasion of his native France. The book tells the story of a young boy who lands in the Sahara desert from a faraway planet. A pilot crashes and meets him, jumpstarting a winding tale of friendship filled with insightful commentary on the human condition. As the pair wanders through the barren landscape, the Little Prince tells the man about his travels to six planets. He met a different person at each location, each of whom was entangled in his own habitual folly. Saint-Exupéry’s tale offers meditations on how to live a worthwhile life — and how not to fall into the trappings of cynicism and adulthood.

Gaëtan Bruel, the director of Villa Albertine and cultural counselor for the French Embassy, said in an interview with Hyperallergic that the Little Prince is perhaps the most universal character in French literature. Bruel spoke to the importance of the lessons in the story, among them kindness, wisdom, dialogue, and the acceptance of differences.

After his time in New York, Saint-Exupéry served as a reconnaissance pilot for the French Air Force. In 1944, he died in a plane crash, likely shot down by enemy fire.

The new sculpture sits on a low stone wall in front of the gilded-age Payne Whitney House that hosts Villa Albertine. A row of small palm trees blow in the wind behind the prince as he gazes skyward.

One passerby, self-proclaimed arts lover and hobbyist photographer Timothy Arena, stopped to look at the sculpture on his way from the Frick’s Breuer location to the Metropolitan Museum of Art a few blocks north of Villa Albertine.

“I’ve walked by here dozens of times,” he said, noting that the shiny bronze of the sculpture and plaque had caught his attention. He was familiar with the subject, especially after visiting an exhibition on The Little Prince at the Morgan Library and Museum last winter. Seeing the sculpture, he said, made him want to read the book.

Film stylist Meghan Kleinheinz strolled along Fifth Avenue and paused to examine the work and take a photograph. “The texture of the bronze really gives it a lot of movement,” Kleinheinz told Hyperallergic. “It looks perfect — with the breeze coming through and hitting the paint and with the palms.”

“It catches you,” added Kleinheinz, who remembers reading the story as a child.

Gaëtan Bruel, the director of Villa Albertine and cultural counselor for the French Embassy, said in an interview with Hyperallergic that the Little Prince is perhaps the most universal character in French literature. Bruel spoke to the importance of the lessons in the story, among them kindness, wisdom, dialogue, and the acceptance of differences.

“He’s a quite political figure — not a partisan one — but someone who can inspire a generation of minds,” Bruel said. The antifascist biography of the Little Prince’s creator contributes to the tale’s significance as well.

The statue was sponsored by the American Society of Le Souvenir Français nonprofit and the children’s advocacy group Antoine de Saint Exupéry Youth Foundation. Bruel discussed the statue’s connection to Villa Albertine, which hosts an artist residency program. Like the Little Prince, he said, these artists are travelers who have much to learn and share.

Bruel recalled the first time he read the story. His mother was a preschool teacher, and when he was the same age as her students, she read him the book while they were traveling on their sailboat.

“There is no sailboat in The Little Prince,” said Bruel. “But I felt a connection. I remember that the sky in the book reminded me of the sky above the sea.”

DUE TO LATENESS OF THE HOUR, OUR WEDNESDAY PHOTO WILL RETURN ON THURSDAY

TUESDAY  PHOTO OF THE DAY

WWII RADIO TOWERS ATOP STEINER STUDIOS IN BROOKLYN NAVY YARD

CREDITS

UNTAPPED NEW YORK

HYPERALLERGIC
JUDITH BERDY

MAYA LEVANON-PHOTOS TIK TOK & INSTAGRAM

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated

www.tiktok.com/@rooseveltislandhsociety
Instagram roosevelt_island_history


THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

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Copyright © 2022 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Oct

24

Tuesday, October 24, 2023 – A MYTH COMES TO LIFE IN UNION SQUARE

By admin

OUR HEARTS GO OUR TO OUR FRIENDS, FAMILIES AND NEIGHBORS IN ISRAEL

FROM THE ARCHIVES

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24,  2023

NEW SEWER ALLIGATOR

ART IN

UNION SQUARE

IS INSPIRED BY NYC MYTH

ISSUE#  1108

UNTAPPED NEW YORK

In 2015, Untapped New York writer Thomas Hynes asked a pressing question to a representative of the NYC Department of Environmental Protection. “Are there now or have there ever been alligators in the New York City sewer system?”

Legend has it that in the early 20th century, wealthy New Yorkers would vacation to warm states like Louisiana and Florida, bringing back with them baby alligators as souvenirs. Once these gators got bigger and their owners realized New York was not the appropriate home for them, they would be flushed down the toilet to live and reproduce in our city sewer system. Despite the response that came back from the Department denying any existence of sewer alligators, New Yorkers have remained fascinated with this mythical concept

Photo by Jane Kratochvil

The myth comes back to life with a new statue unveiled on Tuesday, October 17th; a life-sized bronze alligator perched on the back of a manhole lid. This piece of alligator art, titled NYC Legend, was crafted by Swedish artist Alexander Klingspor, famous for his gorgeous bronze work. A smaller version of the gator was displayed at the 2022 London Art Fair, only now having the full-sized piece unveiled in exactly the city where it belongs.

In Klingspor’s description of the sculpture, he says that it’s inspired by two themes he noticed in our world. The first is the fact that our civilization still very much needs gods and mythical creatures as did the humans that came before us. Our natural desire for the supernatural is simply not as visible as it once was, but it surely still exists in the backdrop (or sewers) of our daily lives. The second theme aims at exposing our modern habit of taking animals out of their natural environment and putting them where we see fit, creating an endless cycle of invasive species.

Photo by Jane Kratochvil

Alligators themselves have made themselves an integral part of mythology spanning thousands of years, symbolizing survival and the ability to regrow and adapt. New Yorkers have consistently proven they have the thick skin of a gator- through a pandemic, economic downfall, a terrorist attack, and beyond. Klingspor’s statue is a personification of this resilient New York spirit.

Alligator art sculpture in Union Square

At the Thompson Central Park New York, a short distance uptown from Union Square, there is a highly-anticipated public art exhibition featuring more of Klingspor’s work where visitors can also get a behind-the-scenes into the artist’s creative process of bringing NYC Legend to life. This exhibition will be on display within the hotel’s newly unveiled ground floor atrium through November. The alligator sculpture, NYC Legends, will be on display in Union Square’s Triangle Park through June 2024.

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TUESDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

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MONDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

A BELLOWS ON DISPLAY AT THE 

MUSEUM OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK
THE DESCRIPTION SAYS:BELLOWS, UNKOWN MAKER, C.1820
WOOD,LATHER, BRASS AND PAINT
GIFT OF MYRS.LYMAN RHOADES, 1953 (5394)

“ThIS ORNATE PAIR OF BELLOWS WAS CREATED BY AN 
UNIDENTIFIED INMATE ON WELFARE ISLAND AS TODAY’S 
ROOSEVELT ISLAND WAS SOMETIMES KNOWN BECAUSE
OF NUMEROUS PRISONS , ASYLUMS AND ALMSHOUSES
LOCATED THERE.  THE INMATE CREATED A SET OF BELLOWS, FOR 
REASONS THAT ARE UNKNOWN, FOR WIVES
OF TEN OF THE MOST PROMINENT NEW YORKS OF THE DAY.

Credits

UNTAPPED NEW YORK
JUDITH BERDY

MAYA LEVANON-PHOTOS TIK TOK & INSTAGRAM

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated

www.tiktok.com/@rooseveltislandhsociety
Instagram roosevelt_island_history


THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

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Copyright © 2022 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
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Oct

23

Monday, October 23, 2023 – A HOTEL WITH AN OPERA HISTORY AND GREAT TALES

By admin

OUR HEARTS GO OUR TO OUR FRIENDS, FAMILIES AND NEIGHBORS IN ISRAEL

FROM THE ARCHIVES

MONDAY, OCTOBER 23,  2023

The 1903 Hotel York

No. 488 7th Avenue

DAYTONIAN IN MANHATTAN

ISSUE#  1107

photo by Nicolas Lemery Nantel / salokin.com

At the turn of the last century the neighborhood north of 34th Street and west of Fifth Avenue was a mish-mash of old brick-faced houses and small commercial buildings four or five stories tall.  The millinery and apparel districts had already begun inching northward; but it would be several years before the neighborhood would earn the title of The Garment District.  Instead, now, it was the theaters and entertainment houses around Herald Square that drew the most attention.

But on December 12, 1901 the Pennsylvania Railroad made an announcement that would change the area forever.  The company planned to spent $150 million to join New Jersey and Manhattan with an under-river railroad tunnel terminating in a monumental station facing engulfing Seventh to Eighth Avenues from 31st Street to 33rd Streets—the Pennsylvania Station.

Developers were quick to recognize the potential in the surrounding blocks—soon to be swarming with businessmen and tourists coming and going from the station.  Within the year ground was broken for R. H. Macy’s enormous department store facing 34th Street, far above the established shopping district, and brothers James and David Todd laid plans for upscale hotels.

At the time of the Pennsylvania Railroad’s announcement the Doherty brothers, John and William, lived in the house at No. 488 Seventh Avenue.  William was an architect and John earned a living as a mason.  The Dohertys would soon be moving out.

James and David Todd engaged architect Harry B.Mulliken to design the Aberdeen Hotel at No. 17 West 32nd Street.  Ground was broken in 1902, the same year that Mulliken teamed with Edgar J. Moeller to form the partnership of Mulliken & Moeller.  Perhaps that firm’s firm commission was also for the Todds—another hotel nearby on the side of the Doherty house and its neighbors at the corner of Seventh Avenue and 36th Street—the Hotel York.

Completed in 1903 the Hotel York was a standout.  A two story base of rusticated limestone was topped by a third floor of planar stone.  Above this nine stories of red brick and limestone erupted skyward in a profusion of turn-of-the-century architectural ostentation.  A residential wedding cake, the Beaux Arts façade was frosted with carved urns, garlands, cartouches, and grotesques.  Balconies of carved stone or cast iron broke the flat planes

The facade boiled over with carved ornamentation.  photo by Nicolas Lemery Nantel / salokin.com

The Hotel York opened as both a transient and residential hotel.  The lavish public spaces mimicked the exterior with gushing molded plaster festoons and scrollwork, marble columns and expensive carpeting and draperies.  Guests and residents enjoyed amenities like the in-house barber shop.  The hotel’s proximity to the theater district made it an immediate favorite with the acting profession

The elaborate public rooms were often the scene of formal functions — photo by Byron Company, from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York 

Among the first of these was well-known actor E. M. Holland.  In February 1904 the 56-year old was much annoyed with hotel security.  He lived in room 455 on the 10th floor on and February 7 went to bed with his door open.  According to The Sun the following day, “When he woke up his overcoat, a derby hat and $17 in money were gone.”

Holland dressed for his part as Eben Holden in 1901 — copyright expired

The newspaper noted that “Holland was pretty sore over his loss.”  His professional pride was perhaps bruised since, at the time, he was playing the great detective Bedford in the play Raffles.

Also living in the hotel at the time were, according to The Sun, “Mrs. Nellie Stevens, an actress out of a job, and her friend, a Miss Goodrich, an actress in better luck.”   In November that year the two women met at the Liberty Theatre to see a play.  Nellie Stevens was running late and tossed her rings into a handkerchief, hoping to save time by putting them on in the hansom cab.

No sooner had she settled into her seat in the theater than she noticed one of her rings—a diamond valued at $400 (about $10,000 today) was missing.  She rushed back to the York Hotel and notified the house detective Andrew Hanley.  He traced the cab back to Sullivan’s Stables on West 35th Street; only to find out that in the day or two it took him to track it down the cabbie, James Lawrence, had been laid off.

When Lawrence arrived back at the stables on November 14 to pick up his pay the detective was notified.  He and Mrs. Stevens rushed the one-block distance to confront him.  Lawrence admitted to finding the ring, stuck his hand in his pocket and announced “And here it is.”

“Mrs. Stevens, with a little shriek of joy and gratitude, seized the ring.  She looked at it.  Then she shrieked again.,” said The Sun.

It wasn’t her ring.  “This is a phony diamond.  The ring is a ringer, and a poor ringer at that,” she exclaimed.  She pressed charges of grand larceny against cabbie with grand larceny.  But she was out a diamond ring, nevertheless.

Another actress to cross the threshold of the Hotel York was the young and beautiful Evelyn Nesbit.  She had been married to millionaire Harry Kendall Thaw in 1904; however she carried on a dalliance with architect Stanford White.  The affair would end with the renowned architect dead on the floor of his magnificent Madison Square Garden on June 25, 1906, the victim of an enraged husband.

During the murder trial, White’s chauffeur testified to driving Evelyn here and there on certain occasions, including one night in September 1905 when he dropped her off at the Hotel York.

A long, permanent marquee sheltered arriving guests from the elements — photo by Irving Underhill, from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York 
On October 26, 1907 the new Italian conductor of the Metropolitan Opera House arrived from Europe and moved into his apartments in the hotel.  The famed conductor would be in friendly surroundings—the Hotel York was a favorite home for many of the opera house’s singers and workers. 

Not all the residents, of course, were in the theater.  Mining engineer Thomas R. Marshall lived here in 1907, and earlier that year the hotel had been forced into the awkward situation of evicting a Duke. 

In 1904, a day or two following his brother James B. Duke’s wedding, tobacco millionaire Brodie Duke went on a binge of drinking and partying.  The spree lasted for several days and along for the ride much of the time was Alice Webb, whose reputation was not altogether without stain.  On December 19, 1904 the pair was married in the Madison Square Presbyterian Church—although Brodie later denied remembering any of it. 

Duke won a divorce decree on March 27, 1906 and a year later Alice was living in the York Hotel.  But on May 2, 1907 the hotel was forced to evict the 38-year old for failing to pay her board.  On Saturday night, two days later, around 9:30 she showed up at the hotel drunk “and was unable to take care of herself,” according to the New-York Tribune.  “She rejected an offer of the clerk who wished to show her to a room, to protect her, and she left the hotel.” 

While the Duke name was normally engraved on invitations to the balls and dinners at the highest levels of Manhattan society; that night it would be written in the ledger of the West 38th Street police station.  Alice Duke was arrested around midnight incapacitated with drink.  “The woman was well dressed.  She wore a big straw hat and big pearl earrings,” said the Tribune.  She had with her “numerous bonds and several thousand dollars of stock of the American Tobacco Company.” 

The following year on December 1 the Todds sold the Hotel York to Columbia University professor William M. Sloane for $825,000—a substantial $20 million in today’s dollars.  Seven days later Sloane resold the property to the Stanworth Company of which Sloane was a director. 

The English actress Maud Odell, known in the theatrical world as “The $10,000 English beauty,” was staying in the York while playing at the American Theatre in November 1909.  She was terrified when she received a letter threatening to disfigure her face with acid. 

“If you do not pay Mr. Mudd $100 on Wednesday following your matinee performance do not be surprised to be shot during your next performance or to have your face marred by acid.  A man will come up to you and say, ‘Have you a package for Mr. Mudd?’  Then you are to turn over to him a package containing 100 iron men.  Do not notify the cops; they will not do you any good.  You will see this insignia in your sleep.” 

The unsigned letter bore a sketch of three daggers forming a triangle above a larger dagger. 

Police were notified by the theater’s agent and a few days later the actress received a second envelope.  In it was a card with the words “La Signa Monte Secunda” and the triangle of daggers—this time with a numeral 3 in the center. 

Understandably, the Edwardian actress became hysterical.  Two detectives were assigned to escort her back and forth between the York Hotel and the theater in a taxi.
After the completion of Pennsylvania Station in 1910, the Hotel York was quick to market its location, a “two minute walk.”  The hotel still soared above the neighboring buildings.

The Italian opera singers sometimes upset the harmony of the upscale residence hotel and it all came to a head in April 1911 when singers Didur, Gilly, Pini-Corsi, and Rossi; the chorus master Romel; and the Italian conductor Signor Podesti were told to leave.  Both Podesti and Didur lived in suites with their wives; the others were single.  Trouble came when the conductor’s wife tried to scrimp by cooking Italian dishes in their rooms.
 
“The Italian singers, being of a thrifty disposition, did not eat at the hotel, but preferred the restaurants run by their own countrymen, where they could get macaroni and spaghetti flavored with the grated cheese and washed down with flasks of red chianti,” explained The New York Times. 

That was all well and good until Signora Podesi bought a chafing dish and, according to the newspaper, “prepared with a spoonful of butter, a grating of full-flavored cheese, an onion, grated bread crumbs and a strong suspicion of garlic, suppers for herself and spouse.  The odor of this dish spread along the corridor, it is said, to the rooms occupied by a learned professor from Chicago.  He protested that the perfume of the onion disturbed him.” 

Hotel management informed the conductor that cooking in the rooms was forbidden.  Repeatedly.  Each time Signor Podesti would bow and apologize and his wife would go on cooking.  It ended with everyone associated with the Metropolitan Opera Company receiving letters of eviction. 

Podesti and his wife, carrying her Pekingese toy dog Winki under her arm, stormed into the office of the Met’s press agent.  The agent was already in stress because Caruso could not sing that night.  Mrs. Podesti lamented that they would sleep on the street and her husband waved the eviction notice in the air. 

While “the Italians held an indignation meeting around him,” the agent phoned Jay G. Wilbraham, resident manager of the York Hotel.  The agent heard of garlic and onion odors and complaining guests; Wilbraham heard of the long-term happy relationship the Met had with the York.  In the end the troupe was allowed to stay “if Signora Podesti stopped cooking in her room.”  The tempest in the pasta pot was allayed. 

Perhaps the hotel’s most poignant story played out in 1922 when the former stage star Rose Coghlan checked in to the Hotel York for the last time.  One of the best known actresses in America for over 50 years, she reminisced about her glory days in the 1880s and ‘90s on April 7, 1922 “Lord! How fine I used to think myself with my little old one-horse barouche and my $25-a-month coachman here in gay New York.  I really felt quite grand as I drove through Central Park and returned the bows of the society elite.  I used to board the horse in a livery stable.  His name was Pete.  I wonder what’s become of the poor chap.” 

Now, at 70 years of age, she was penniless.  Theater folk heard of her plight and sent checks—David Belsaco’s was for $100.  Telling a reporter that she was suffering “a temporary embarrassment,” she sat in the bed and laughed “The ‘financial whirl’ got me.  It gets the best of us, especially we women of the stage.” 

The New-York Tribune described her rooms in the York as “sunny quarters on an upper floor.”  The newspaper said “The veteran actress, suffering from a nervous breakdown, wept as she extolled the generosity of her friends in helping her get these new and comfortable quarters.” 

After recollecting her days of stardom she cautioned “Don’t imagine I’m repining, though.  I’m not.  My friends are dear, the kindest and best of friends.  My daughter is the dearest and most capable of daughters.  Without her I’d have been poor indeed.  Now I’m rich.”  She wiped a tear from her eye and continued, “I’m rich because the sort of folk I always wished to have love me still do.  That, I assert, is fortune enough.”

Rose Coghlan and her husband, Charles, perform in the 1894 play Lady Barter.  Photograph by Byron Company, from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York 

Rose’s daughter was there to take the aged actress to her home on Long Island.  Her mother told the reporter “You mustn’t think I’m living in the past, though.  I’m going back to the stage.  In a few months with the sunlight and the lovely outdoors I’ll be myself again.  It isn’t in me to be an invalid…In three months from now I’ll be kicking up my heels like a schoolgirl—just like a schoolgirl—just..”  And in the middle of her sentence the elderly woman who had brought audiences to their feet for decades had fallen asleep.

In 1925 the hotel was renovated to accommodate stores at street level.  Throughout the next few decades fewer and fewer of the theatrical crowd would live here as newer hotels opened closer to Times Square—now the undisputed center of the theater area. 

With the entertainment district gone, the Garment District took over.  By the 1960s the York Hotel was occupied mostly by traveling salesmen.  Only two floors of the hotel were now rented for guests; the rest having been taken over by garment salesmen as would-be showrooms, especially during market weeks.  The salesmen and buyers who managed to get one of the rooms for sleeping would pay $15.65 for a single with bath.

In March 1968 a young designer took room 613 in order to market his first collection—a total of nine designs.  It was Calvin Klein’s foot in the door of the Seventh Avenue fashion industry. 

A modern glass marquee stretches the near-length of the first floor. photo by Nicolas Lemery Nantel / salokin.com

In 1986 Martin Swartzman & Partners purchased the 12-story building and commissioned architect Costas Kondylis to converted it to mixed commercial and residential space.  Completed in 1986 the former hotel opened with 108 rental apartments.

Although the street level has been brutalized with unsympathetic storefronts and an out-of-place green glass marquee; the grand 1903 former hotel—once home to actresses and divas—still drips with Edwardian decoration.

photo by Nicolas Lemery Nantel / salokin.com

OUR JULIA GASH TAPESTRY THROWS HAVE ARRIVED.

100 % COTTON
48″  x  60″
MADE IN USA
$75-
CHARGE CARDS ACCEPTED
ORDER YOURS TODAY OR AVAILABLE AT RIHS KIOSK.
ORDER FROM US BY CHARGE CARD AND WE WILL SHIP TO YOUR FRIENDS AND FAMILY ($22- SHIPPING AND HANDLING)

ROOSEVELTISLANDHISTORY@GMAIL.COM

EACH THROW IS NEATLY PACKAGED READY TO BE GIVEN AS A GREAT HOLIDAY PRESENT

MONDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

SEND YOUR RESPONSE TO:
ROOSEVELTISLANDHISTORY@GMAIL.COM

WEEKEND PHOTO OF THE DAY

THE FORMER HOTEL YORK,
NOW APARTMENTS ON THE CORNER OF
SEVENTH AVENUE AND 36TH STREET.

CREDITS

DAYTONIAN IN MANHATTAN
MUSEUM OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK
JUDITH BERDY


Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter and Deborah Dorff

MAYA LEVANON-PHOTOS TIK TOK & INSTAGRAM

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated

www.tiktok.com/@rooseveltislandhsociety
Instagram roosevelt_island_history


THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

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Copyright © 2022 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Oct

21

Weekend, October 21-22, 2023 – A HOSPITAL THAT CURED THOUSANDS ON STATEN ISLAND

By admin

OUR HEARTS GO OUR TO OUR FRIENDS, FAMILIES AND NEIGHBORS IN ISRAEL

EDITORIAL

After listening to our neighbors discuss the tram crowding tonight, here are my thoughts:
Line monitors are a great idea.  We use it at elections where they keep order in the line and let seniors/disabled  go ahead.  Someone in a bright vest can be an obvious choice. It can be a  diplomatic, pleasant, patient person who can gently keep order.

Poma  staff are better at customer service and putting up signs is only part of their job.  Give them funding to have more staff on hand to deal with the turnstiles.  It is exhausting to spend a shift dealing with unruly crowds.  Let’s keep order on-line, before the turnstiles, and a limit on 100 persons on the platform.

PSD can be at the base of the staircase to prevent staircase lines.

The  tram is being denied staffing, security and customer service. RIOC should let the tram staff manage the platform and fund extra staffing.

We need large obvious signs that seats are for senior disabled only. Signs above seats on cabins and above bench on Manhattan platform.

We love our visitors most of whom tell us how great the island is.
Take a look at any of the attractions below and we know that there is organization at these attractions.

Remember, many of them stand on long organized lines for the following. 

FOR COMPARISON, PRICES FOR A VIEW:
ONE VANDERBILT   $42
EMPIRE STATE          44
EDGE                          36
TOP OF THE ROCK    34

AND WE ONLY CHARGE $2.90!!!!!

Let’s get our act  together and get a calm organized tram ride.

Judith Berdy

FROM THE ARCHIVES

THE FORGOTTEN BLACK

NURSES WHO HELPED CURE

TUBERCULOSIS IN NYC


UNTAPPED NEW YORK


 
NICOLE SARANIERO

ISSUE#  1106

In 1929, Sea View Hospital was in crisis. The now-partially abandoned Staten Island medical facility was experiencing a mass exodus of white nurses while simultaneously handling an overwhelming amount of tuberculosis patients. To remedy the situation, New York City officials began recruiting Black female nurses from the South, offering freedom from the oppression of Jim Crow and the benefits of good pay, education, housing, and employment. The stories of these trailblazing nurses have gone largely untold for nearly a century, but now, author Maria Smilios sheds light on their achievements in her new booThe Black Angels: The Untold Story of the Nurses Who Helped Cure Tuberculosis.\
In the early half of the 20th century, tuberculosis killed over 5.6 million Americans. The disease was especially devasting to cities like New York where it ran rampant through crowded tenement houses and spread rapidly among poor communities. Those suffering from the disease were sent to various healthcare facilities around the edge of the city in hopes of containing the spread and giving patients clean, fresh air.Tuberculosis patients filled the rooms of healthcare facilities such as the now-abandoned Neponsit Beach Hospital in the Rockaways and Sea Breeze Hospital in Coney Island as well as a tuberculosis pavilion on North Brother Island. Some were even quarantined on ferry barges converted into floating wards run by Bellevue Hospital. One of the most famous tuberculosis sanitoriums, and the largest at one point, was Sea View Hospital in Staten Island.

Sea View Hospital in an abandoned state

Sea View Hospital opened in 1913 and was comprised of thirty-seven buildings. The sprawling complex sat at the second highest point on Staten Island, once the site of a grand hilltop estate called “Ocean View.” By the 1920s, when the 2,000-bed hospital was running out of nurses, it was called a “pest house” and a place where “no one left alive.” The Black Angels changed that.

Over the course of twenty years, women like Edna Sutton, Missouria Louvinia Meadows-Walker, Clemmie Philips, Janie Shirley, and Virginia Allen, bravely marched to the front lines of the epidemic and cared for patients who others turned their backs on. Not only did these women work grueling hours day in and day out and put themselves at risk to care for New York’s sick, but they did so while also fighting racism and discrimination.

Photo Courtesy of NYCHHC Sea View Archives

At the time, most of New York City’s more than two dozen municipal hospitals discriminated against Black nurses in some way, whether that meant they simply were not allowed to be hired or there were quotas that limited the number of Black nurses who could be employed. While the medical breakthroughs of white, male doctors and researchers at Sea View who found a cure for tuberculosis have long been celebrated worldwide, the contributions of the Black nurses – who were among the first to administer the groundbreaking drug, isoniazid – have largely been kept alive in the memories of their families, friends, and local communities.

Photo Courtesy of James Williams

Using first-hand interviews and never-before-accessed archives, Smilios brings the stories of the Black Angels to centerstage, highlighting how their efforts helped to desegregate the New York City hospital system, stop discriminatory practices in medical education and medical research, and ultimately save countless lives. Learn more about The Black Angels from the author in our upcoming virtual talk, and get your own copy of The Black Angels, out now!

Sea View Hospital: Panoramic View. Wards, gardens, curved paths leading to 1-story building, and covered corridors.

OUR JULIA GASH TAPESTRY THROWS HAVE ARRIVED.

100 % COTTON
48″  x  60″
MADE IN USA
$75-
CHARGE CARDS ACCEPTED
ORDER YOURS TODAY OR AVAILABLE AT RIHS KIOSK.
ORDER FROM US BY CHARGE CARD AND WE WILL SHIP TO YOUR FRIENDS AND FAMILY ($22- SHIPPING AND HANDLING)

ROOSEVELTISLANDHISTORY@GMAIL.COM

EACH THROW IS NEATLY PACKAGED READY TO BE GIVEN AS A GREAT HOLIDAY PRESENT

WEEKEND PHOTO OF THE DAY

FIND OUT MONDAY WHAT THIS BUILDING IS

CREDITS

UNTAPPED NEW YORK
MUNICIPAL ARCHVES
JUDITH BERDY

MAYA LEVANON-PHOTOS TIK TOK & INSTAGRAM

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated

www.tiktok.com/@rooseveltislandhsociety
Instagram roosevelt_island_history


THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

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Copyright © 2022 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Oct

20

Friday, October 20, 2023 – REVEALING A WONDERFUL 1970’S ARTWORK

By admin

OUR HEARTS GO OUR TO OUR FRIENDS, FAMILIES AND NEIGHBORS IN ISRAEL

EDITORIAL

After listening to our neighbors discuss the tram crowding tonight, here are my thoughts:
Line monitors are a great idea.  We use it at elections where they keep order in the line and let seniors/disabled  go ahead.  Someone in a bright vest can be an obvious choice. It can be a  diplomatic, pleasant, patient person who can gently keep order.

Poma  staff are better at customer service and putting up signs is only part of their job.  Give them funding to have more staff on hand to deal with the turnstiles.  It is exhausting to spend a shift dealing with unruly crowds.  Let’s keep order on-line, before the turnstiles, and a limit on 100 persons on the platform.

PSD can be at the base of the staircase to prevent staircase lines.

The  tram is being denied staffing, security and customer service. RIOC should let the tram staff manage the platform and fund extra staffing.

We need large obvious signs that seats are for senior disabled only. Signs above seats on cabins and above bench on Manhattan platform.

We love our visitors most of whom tell us how great the island is.
Take a look at any of the attractions below and we know that there is organization at these attractions.

Remember, many of them stand on long organized lines for the following. 

FOR COMPARISON, PRICES FOR A VIEW:
ONE VANDERBILT   $42
EMPIRE STATE          44
EDGE                          36
TOP OF THE ROCK    34

AND WE ONLY CHARGE $2.90!!!!!

Let’s get our act  together and get a calm organized tram ride.

Judith Berdy

FROM THE ARCHIVES

FRIDAY , OCTOBER 20,  2023

Restoration of Richard Haas’

trompe-l’oeil mural in Soho begins


CITY Arts

ISSUE#  1105

The original mural in 1974

112 Prince Street mural in 1974 (left) and during the current restoration project (right). Photos: CITYarts

About

For the first time in over four decades, artist Richard Haas’s landmark 112 Prince Street mural will be restored. Under Haas’s leadership and creative direction, muralist Robin Alcantara will work with a team of painters to restore the mural at the recommendation of Tsipi Ben-Haim, the Founder, Executive and Creative Director of 34-year-old public art and education nonprofit, CITYarts, Inc., which has been the project’s fiscal sponsor since 2015. Created in 1974 under the aegis of public art pioneer Doris Freedman, the 75-foot wide, five-story-high trompe l’oeil mural on the corner of Prince and Greene streets was Haas’s very first outdoor mural. Now largely decayed and covered in graffiti, the original mural was painted to resemble the cast-iron facades typical of 19th-century buildings distinguishing the historic district of SoHo and included the depiction of a cat in one of the windows that belonged to a longtime owner. It was, as Haas describes, “a catalyst that led to the creation of over 100 interior and exterior murals throughout the world.” In a 1989 New York Times review of his public art, architecture critic Paul Goldberger called Mr. Haas “the great architectural muralist of our time.”
 

Approximately eight years ago, after an article written by David Dunlap appeared in the New York Times describing how the Richard Haas mural in SoHo had faded almost beyond recognition, the artist received a call from David Walentas of Two Trees, the developer and creator of the Dumbo residential district, offering a substantial gift to kick start  the fundraising campaign to restore the mural. Encouraged by Mr. Walentas’ donation, the artist and his wife, Katherine Sokolnikoff, selected CITYarts, Inc. to assume the role of fiscal sponsor for the project, and together with assistance from Kenisha Thomas, Alina Slonim, and Pauline Rumore, they were able to secure enough funding from additional philanthropies, like the Bloomberg Foundation, the Silverweed Foundation, and Agnes Gund, as well as 75 private donations to restore the mural. The  successful campaign can be largely attributed to the late Doris Freedman, who founded and ran the public art nonprofit CityWalls and was deeply involved in the public art scene in New York City in the early 1970s as the main supporter and dynamo behind the most important early murals and public art projects in NYC—including Haas’s work. In Freedman’s honor, the Bloomberg Philanthropies made a generous grant and proposed that the repainting of the mural be done in Doris’s honor, and the consensus among  several other major donors was that this was an excellent idea.  The artist was pleased with this plan as well as he has a deep respect and affection for Ms. Freedman as she truly put him on his life’s journey in the public art field through her original support of the 112 Prince Street project.

After the COVID-19 pandemic interrupted the project and stalled its progress, the two new owners of the 112 Prince Street Co-op became interested in seeing the mural restored and joined with Haas in efforts to move the project ahead. The new Co-op President had one request for Haas: to add her dog, rescued from Aleppo, Syria, as one of the pets painted into the windows of the mural. Mr. Haas was pleased to oblige.

Finally, in May of this year, Landmarks gave their approval for the mural restoration, prompting Tsipi Ben-Haim to continue her advocacy by garnering the support of local businesses and fellow SoHo residents. Acting as the public art advisor and community liaison of the project, Ms. Ben-Haim also successfully recruited the support of Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and SoHo Councilman Christopher Marte. After years of planning and anticipation, the SoHo community is thrilled to have Haas’s historic mural brought back to life. 

The repainting of the wall will begin in late September 2023 and is set to take approximately three to four weeks—weather permitting.

About the Artists

Richard Haas is best known for his large-scale architectural murals with his signature trompe-l’oeil style that are exemplified in more than 100 public art projects across New York, Chicago, Miami, Los Angeles, and Munich, Germany that began with SoHo’s 112 Prince Street mural in 1974. He is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and his numerous awards include the Medal of Honor from the American Institute of Architects. The Prince Street Mural project has also received a grant from the National Academy of Design’s Abbey Mural Fund. Haas’s works have been featured in exhibitions at major museums and galleries and his work is represented in the collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Museum of Modern Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, and the Smithsonian Museum among others. http://www.richardhaas.com/

Robin Alcantara founded Blazay LLC in 2020. Alcantara is a 30-year-old artist and muralist from Yonkers, NY. After earning his degree from the University of the Arts in Philadelphia, Alcantara honed in on his craft of hand-painting large-scale murals nationally while working at the award-winning Colossal Media. From 2015-2020, Alcantara served as an expert painter for Colossal working on campaigns for international brands including Adidas, Doyle Dane Bernbach, HBO, and  Gucci. Since 2020 Alcantara has focused on crowd-funded projects highlighting current events, local heroes and legends, and other private commissions. He also works with CITYarts and NYpublic schools leading workshops and creating murals with community youth.

OTHER MURALS

Homage to the Chicago School 1211 North LaSalle Street, Chicago, IL. (1980)

Keim silicate paint, 1800 square feet

Executed by Evergreene Painting Studios, New York

The mural, which is painted on three sides of an eighteen-floor apartment house, follows the color and lines of the finished front facade and reflects Louis Sullivan’s decorative style.

Fountainebleau Hotel Miami Beach, FL (1985-86 destroyed)

Keim silicate paint on brick, 19,200 square feet

Commissioned by the Muss Corporation

Executed by American Illusion, New York

The large Art Deco “Arc de Triomphe” offers a view onto the original Fountainebleau Hilton Hotel, designed by Morris Lapidus, and is “lit” by two sixty-five feet high grand lamps in the form of caryatids.

110 Livingston Street Brooklyn, NY. (2007)

This very large project on the former Board of Education building in downtown Brooklyn was completed in the Spring of 2007.

Blackwood Rosen Apartment, Alwyn Court New York, NY. (1977)

10′ x 12′

Nashville Public Library Nashville, TN. (2000-01)

Executed by Jason Gaillard and Chris Semergieff for Robert A. M. Stern Architects

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