Archive

You are currently browsing the archives for the Landmark Structures category.

Jul

7

Tuesday, JULY 7, 2020 GET OUT THE SCISSORS AND SCREWDRIVERS FOR OUR CHILDHOOD PAST-TIMES

By admin

TUESDAY

July 7, 2020

RIHS’s 98th Issue of:

Included in this Issue

THE ISLAND IN 1977

Today is my 43rd anniversary of moving to Roosevelt Island. The weather was about the same as today, hot, humid and steamy.  I came from Manhattan and moved into 580 #134.  I was supposed to move to an apartment on the 7th floor.  Three days before I moved I discovered that the apartment had been rented to two tenants. The only apartments that were available were on the 4th floor in 560 or the 1st floor in 580.

The day before I was supposed to move the apartment in 560 was burned out due to a fire spreading to 4 apartments.

My only  option  was the apartment with a garden in 580.  It was a lucky choice and I loved the backyard for 19 years.  It was the scene of neighbors sitting there during hot summer evening, lobster roasts and just  being out of doors. 

The first year I was on the island I hired the company that paved Main Street to lay a brick patio, which beat the gravel surface that came with the apartment.

Growing flowers every summer made the yard glorious including wisteria that climbed the fence and barrels of inpatients and geraniums.

Th gardens were private and I never had a problem with intruders, except the 6 year old who snatched my tulips.

The back of one of the school buildings was just outside my yard.  There was a hill that the kids would sled down in winter.  After a year or two, I came home and found that management had bulldozed the hill.  End of fun time in this courtyard.

MORE CARTOONS 
HOW MANY CAN YOU IDENTIFY?
PART 2

GIRLS HAD PAPER DOLLS

BOYS HAD ERECTOR SETS

Many of our childhood past-times came back this winter.  My friends and I would spend hours clipping out paper dolls or dressing our Barbie dolls. My brother and father would be in the basement with the Erector Set making a Ferris wheel that worked.

TUESDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

WHAT AND WHERE IS THIS?
Send your submission to rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com
Win a trinket from the RIHS Visitor Center Kiosk

MONDAY  PHOTO OF THE DAY

WIND INTERVALS BY PHYLLIS MARK (1976) ON THE RIVERCROSS LAWN FOR ABOUT 2 YEARS IN THE LATE 1970’S.
LINDA BECKER, JAY JACOBSON AND JOAN BROOKS
REMEMBER THE ART PIECE

EDITORIAL

100 is Coming This Thursday, July 9th will be our 100th edition. Please pick a photo, article or item that you particularly enjoyed. Go to rihs.us and scroll down thru all our issues.

Pick your favorite and e-mail it to rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com. Judith Berdy

Text by Judith Berdy
Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac and the RIHS
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter and Deborah Dorff
FUNDING PROVIDED BY:
ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION THRU PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDING

CITY COUNCIL MEMBER BEN KALLOS DISCRETIONARY FUNDS THRU DYCD

THE ROOSEVELT ISLAND HISTORICAL SOCIETY (C)
WIKIPEDIA  (C)
 

Copyright © 2020 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Jul

6

MONDAY, JULY 6TH TIME TO TRAVEL BACK THRU TIME

By admin

Monday, July 6th, 2020

Our  97th  Edition

MORE TREATS FROM THE PAST

LARGE, GLAMOROUS CANDY SHOPS GRACED THE CITY,

WONDERFUL CANDY SHOPS IN EVERY NEIGHBORHOOD
THOSE BARTONS ALMOND KISSES WERE YUMMY
LOFT’S CANDIES WERE MANUFACTURED ON VERNON BLVD. IN THE BUILDING THAT IS
NOW MOISHE’S MINI STORAGE

THERE ARE STILL SOME GODIVA SHOPS 

DINING

LA FONDA DEL SOL IN THE TIME LIFE BUILDING

ABOVE: TOP OF THE 666’S
BELOW: MAXWELL’S PLUM ON FIRST AVENUE

ABOVE: MANY WOLFE’S STEAK HOUSE (THREE MARTINI LUNCH)
BELOW: GLOUCESTER HOUSE (ACROSS FROM ST. PAT’S, GREAT BISCUITS)

ON EAST 49TH STREET PATRICIA MURPHY’S WAS WHERE YOU TOOK GRANDMA FOR MOTHER’S DAY AND TO EAT LOTS OF POPOVERS.

STILL A FAVORITE IS THE OYSTER BAR IN GRAND CENTRAL.  PROBABLY MY ADMIRATION OF THE GUASTAVINO TILES AND CLAM CHOWDER.

ICE CREAM PARLORS

RUMPLEMEYER’S AT THE ST. MORITZ

AIRLINES  WE  FLEW

CARTOON CHARACTERS OF THE PAST
CAN YOU NAME THEM?

 

 

 

MONDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

IDENTIFY THIS ART PIECE
SEND ENTRY TO  ROOSEVELTISLANDHISTORY@GMAIL.COM
WIN A KIOSK TRINKET

WEEKEND PHOTO 

PART OF FDR FOUR FREEDOMS SPEECH
ENGRAVED ON WALL OF FDR FOUR FREEDOMS PARK

MULTIPLE WINNERS: BARBARA BROOKS, NANCY BROWN, ED LITCHER, ALEXIS VILLEFANE, BRENDA VAUGHAN

The family tradition continues. My  brother Alan is the chief grilling specialist.

From Caroline Cavalli-

You forgot Alba’s Italian Pastries in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. But I sure do miss Ebinger’s. You could buy half the cake or pie, thereby getting a nice assortment. Caroline

Hi Judy, I loved your bakery issue!!! I’ve always adored bakery windows, from the time I was very little. I would ogle the pastries, wanting to taste everything on display. In my old Brooklyn neighborhood, there were alway Napoleans and cupcakes with whipped cream and a cherry on the top. And cakes with lots of frosting. There was an Ebinger bakery about a half-hour walk from our apartment (there was no transportation available to get there other than on foot), and for years, my birthday cake came from there: yellow layer cake with chocolate butter cream frosting.

Back in the 1950s they could sell you half a cake (the cake would be sliced into two perfectly even halves), for people like my parents, who couldn’t afford to pay for a whole cake. My mother never asked for any kind of decoration, or even the words “Happy Birthday” written on it. It wasn’t until I married Mitch that I got a real “birthday cake,” bought by his mother. It left me teary-eyed.

Ironically, when we moved to a more middle-class neighborhood (in the Midwood High School area, where Bernie Sanders grew up), there was an Ebinger’s bakery around the corner from our apartment building. That was absolutely heaven!! They would sell holiday-themed individual pastries, with icing that matched the holiday symbolically (e.g., green icing with a shamrock for St. Patrick’s Day, pink icing with a red heart for Valentine’s Day). These were made of yellow cake with butter cream in the center. My mother would buy two on Friday afternoons, one for me and one for Mitch, when we were dating.

The other picture that you included in the bakery issue that meant something special to me was the Hungarian pastry shop next to Columbia University. Amber was an undergraduate at Columbia, and she would frequent that place, because she loved my mother’s Hungarian homemade pastries, and she could buy things that she was fond of in that bakery (I think their Hungarian accent also gave her a lift). She also would visit my parents during those four undergraduate years, on Friday nights, for sabbath dinner. Mitch and I were based in Pittsburgh, so we missed out on those dinners. So, many, many thanks for the bakery issue!! Susan —
Susan Berk-Seligson
Research Professor and Professor Emerita
Department of Spanish and Portuguese

Text by Judith Berdy Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky
for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter and Deborah Dorff
All materials in this publication are copyrighted (c)

MATERIAL COPYRIGHT WIKIPEDIA, GOOGLE IMAGES, RIHS ARCHIVES AND MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED WITHOUT PERMISSION (C)

FUNDING BY ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDING

DISCRETIONARY FUNDING BY COUNCIL MEMBER BEN KALLOS THRU NYC DYCD

Copyright © 2020 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Jul

4

July 4/5, 2020 – CELEBRATING THE 4TH

By admin

THE KIOSK WILL BE OPEN THIS WEEKEND. COME CELEBRATE THE 4TH WITH US!

THIS IS THE 96th ISSUE OF
FROM THE ARCHIVES
JULY 4-5, 2020  WEEKEND EDITION

 HOW WE CELEBRATED

OUR INDEPENDENCE DAY
HOLIDAY

July 4th Parade

SMALL TOWN  PARADE IN MONTICELLO, NY

JERSEY SHORE PARADE

Heroic Images During World War l

Before Norman Rockwell 

The BBQ, an American Tradition

I assume my parents were at a July 4th event. We still have the GENIUS AT WORK apron. 
We had lots of BBQ’s and family would visit our home in Suburbia. Dad would spend hours at the grill.  Spiffy shoes  Mr. B.!

TIME TO CELEBRATE THE 4TH AT THE RIHS VISITOR CENTER KIOSK

WE ARE OPEN EVERY SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 
DO YOUR GIFT SOPPING WITH US!!

WEEKEND PHOTO
IDENTIFY IT 
SEND YOUR ENTRY TO: ROOSEVELTISLANDHISTORY@GMAIL.COM

FRIDAY IMAGE OF THE DAY
RUNNING COMMUTER MOSAIC AT THE 72ND STREET
AND SECOND AVENUE SUBWAY STATION
ALEXIS VILLAFANE GOT IT FIRST

EDITORIAL

This week we took a look at the office, took a road 
trip, ate cake and  today celebrated the 4th.
We are going to recognize the 4th by looking forward to a ferry trip to Long Island City… or maybe points farther away.
We will be at the Visitor Center all weekend to greet the locals and visitors.

Stop by…Judith Berdy

jbird134@aol.com

Funding Provided by:
Roosevelt Island Operating Corporation Public Purpose Funds
Council Member Ben Kallos City Council Discretionary Funds thru DYCD
Text by Judith Berdy
Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac and the RIHS
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter and Deborah Dorff
ALL PHOTOS COPYRIGHT RIHS. 2020 (C)
ALL PHOTOS IN THIS ISSUE (C) JUDITH BERDY RIHS

Copyright © 2020 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Jul

3

FRIDAY, JULY 3, 2020 – TIME TO EAT CAKE

By admin

OUR CONTINUING SITUATION COMPLETELY JUSTIFIES THE CONSUMPTION OF SWEETS.  SOME OF OUR FAVORITE BAKERIES ARE LONG GONE, CORPORATE OWNED NOW AND NOT THE SAME AS BEFORE.  LET’S WANDER THRU THE LAND OF HOBART MIXERS.
WHAT WAS YOUR FAVORITE?  

FRIDAY, JULY 3,  2020

The

95th Edition

From Our Archives

LET US EAT CAKE!

BAKERIES OF TODAY AND YESTERDAY

QUEENS

USED TO BE JUST BREAD BUT IT HAS EXPANDED. JUST NEXT TO Q102 BUS STOP AT 30-17 BROADWAY, ASTORIA

FAMILY OWNED BY CHRISTOPHER WALKEN FAMILY.  NOW HIPSTER DINING STREET,

STILL OPEN WITH OLD STYLE FURNISHINGS AT 29-15 DITMARS BLVD.  BEING CROWDED OUT BY OTHER ETHNIC BAKERIES IN AREA.

OMONIA CAFE ON THE SAME CORNER FOR DECADES  AT 32-20 BROADWAY, ASTORIA. GREAT FOR FAMILY AFTERNOONS OF DINING AND TALKING. NO RUSH HERE. (AND HAPPILY SO MUCH BETTER SINCE NO SMOKING)

BROOKLYN

198 COURT STREET

192 UNION STREET IN PARK SLOPE

MANHATTAN

HUNGARIAN PASTRY SHOP 
THERE IS NO SOCIAL DISTANCING, SINCE THERE IS NO DISTANCE BETWEEN TABLES.  COLUMBIA TYPES HANG OUT HERE. GREAT STRUDEL AND CASH ONLY.

FERRERA ONE OF TWO WITH SIMILAR NAMES IN LITTLE ITALY, GREAT FOR TOURISTS. 195 GRAND STREET

CURRENTLY CALLED BIRDBATH BAKERY AND STILL BAKING TRADITIONAL BREADS. SEEMS TO BE TURNNG HIPSTER AND “GREEN”

NEIGHBORHOOD FAVORITE FOR AGES AT 372 THIRD AVENUE

GREEK TREATS AT 629  9TH AVENUE

YOU CAN START WITH THEIR STICKY BUNS, AND CAKES AND ALL I CAN SAY IS YUMMY.  AN UPPER EAST SIDE FAVORITE.

NO TRAIN TRIP IS COMPLETE WITHOUT A CHALLAH OR RAISIN PUMPERNICKEL OR BABKA.  ALWAYS A GOOD REASON TO PASS THUR GRAND CENTRAL, PENN OR PORT AUTHORITY.

WONDERFUL BREADS AT 308 EAST 78 STREET

NEWCOMERS

TRES CHIC PATISSERIE NOW ALL OVER MANHATTAN

WASHINGTON, DC

IT MAY BE A LONG RIDE BUT BREAD FURST ON CONNECTICUT AVENUE NW IN D.C. IS WORTH IT. THE BAKED GOODS AND BREAD ARE SUPERB. HAM AND CHEESE ON A BAGUETTE CAN MAKE YOUR DAY

GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN

I DROOL AT THE SITE OF THE BOXES STACKED UP ON MY GRANDMOTHER’S KITCHEN TABLE.

WONDERFUL PASTRY AND CAKES. FEW NEW VARIETIES BUT EVERYTHING WAS PERFECT. ONLY CHEF BONTE AND WIFE IN STORE. YOU WAITED PATIENTLY AND IT WAS WORTH IT TO HAVE ONE OF THEIR MADELAINES.

THEIR BLACK AND WHITE COOKIES CRUMBED LAST YEAR AND THE SHOP CLOSED

ONE OF THE MANY GERMAN SPECIALTY BAKERIES NOT GONE

NEIGHBORHOOD BAKERY IN FOREST HILLS WITH THOSE GREAT MODEL WEDDING CAKES IN THE WINDOW

FRIDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

IDENTIFY AND LOCATE THIS
SEND YOUR ENTRY TO: ROOSEVELTISLANDHISTORY@GMAIL.COM
FOR KIOSK TRINKET

THURSDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

EDITORIAL

After writing about all these bakeries I have a desire for some good fresh pastry.  Too often we look at the showcase and get the pastry home to find out it is tasteless or worse, stale. I will have to take an imaginary trip to Paris or Nice or Monaco.

In the meantime I should be dreaming of salads and diets to fight my Covid 20 lbs.

Judith Berdy

Text by Judith Berdy
Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac and the RIHS
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter  and Deborah Dorff

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

FUNDING PROVIDED BY ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE GRANTS
CITY COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVE BEN KALLOS DISCRETIONARY FUNDING THRU DYCD

Copyright © 2020 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Jul

2

THURSDAY, JULY 2, 2020 – OFF ON A ROAD TRIP WITH RON CRAWFORD

By admin

THURSDAY, JULY 2,  2020

The

94th Edition

From Our Archives

OFF ON A ROADT RIP WITH 
RON CRAWFORD   (c)

roncrawfordart.com

We have all canceled our trips to Calcutta or  to Casablanca for this summer. Let’s rent an RV and off we go across America in our socially distancing RV.  If we thought quarantining in our NYC apartments was fun  this should be the ultimate challenge.  (There is no maintenance man here to fix the plumbing and you are testing dad’s talents).  Load the gear and join our family on the road west……………

Okay, we made it to DC. Let’s see if we can make it a little farther.

Just passed thru Evansville, Indiana. Have not had to threaten the kids to send them home by bus yet.

We made to the Second City. Looks pretty cool here. The BEAN is wonderful and right in the middle of the city.  The L is overhead and those mid westerners are so friendly and polite.

Out in the country passing thru quaint Americana.

Sorry kids, you stay in the camper while mom and dad party!!  No way, this year!  Take out tacos for dinner.

Which kid wants to stay in Hollywood?  This is your chance to get out of the RV!!!  Last call??

San Francisco is so lovely with Victorian homes, Fisherman’s Wharf and leftover Flower Children in Haight Ashbury.  Explain 1968 to the kids.

Let’s go home thru the National Parks and meet the wildlife and mountain peaks! 

THURSDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY
Send your entry to rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com
Win a trinket from the RIHS Visitor Center

WEDNESDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY
CHAPEL OF THE GOOD SHEPHERD
Steps leading to lower level 
Winner is Nina Lublin

EDITORIAL

We have been walking around the island the last few days. I am saddened to see that many of our seniors and others are not looking well.  After being cooped up in apartments, scared of Covid-19 an emotional toll is being taken on many of our elders.

Our Carter Burden Senior Center is closed for activities and meals. However, the garden is open weekdays for people to sit in.  There is plenty of space to socially distant. There are umbrellas and lots of shade in the garden.  Lisa Fernandez, director has tended the garden this spring and summer. It is bursting with Flowers and plants.  To enter the garden go thru alleyway next to 540 Main St.  The entry is to the left thru the wooden gate.  (The garden is usually open 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. weekdays).

Judith  Berdy

Text by Judith Berdy
Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac and the RIHS
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter  and Deborah Dorff

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

FUNDING PROVIDED BY ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE GRANTS
CITY COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVE BEN KALLOS DISCRETIONARY FUNDING THRU DYCD

Copyright © 2020 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Jul

1

Wednesday, July 1, 2020 – Let’s take a 15 cent subway ride to the office

By admin

WEDNESDAY, JULY 1,  2020

The

93rd Edition

From Our Archives

BACK TO THE 
1950’S – 1960’s OFFICE 
“TAKE DICTATION”

My first office job was in 1967 or thereabouts. I was a Kelly Girl. This was a temporary agency for young women to get into the office work field.  I remember the advertisements were completely sexist.  
We made sure we looked perfect from the hair-dryer perfect hair, stockings even in summer and working in an office for a week or so at a time. You would hand in your time sheet and wait for another job.

The offices all had secretaries and an office manager (female, not married and no sense of humor)

Bosses were men in offices. 

An IBM Selectric typewriter was a status symbol in the office. If you typed a letter, you put the letterhead on top of carbon paper and copy pages underneath.  If you made a mistake, you used the roller eraser on the copies and CO-REC-TAPE  on the first page.  

There was an ashtray on your desk for yourself or visitors to use.  

A lady would come by with the coffee cart.  You could always schmooze at the water cooler.

You went to lunch.  Everyone went to lunch whether 30,45 minutes or 1 hour.  I do not remember eating at my desk.  For years I worked in an office and we had a full floor of cafeteria and table service.  I could bring a guest or go underground to Rockefeller Center for lunch.

Office chat would be who was getting married or having a baby and then decorating their desk on the day before the wedding or leaving on maternity leave.

We left at 5 pm. Rarely, was there overtime or weekend work.  No one had a pager, cell phone or other communications devise.

You got back in the subway and home for a restful weekend and no thoughts of your job.

The 15 cent subway ride was hot and sticky in the summer and heat blasting under your legs in the winter.

You had to type 45 wpm and take steno to be a secretary.

Getting a new typewriter was a big event.

Boss got an armchair, you got a “secretarial chair”
Please note pen-set on desk.  I don’t think the pens worked by a status symbol in the office.

Water cooler chatter was a great part of the day.

Subway reading  I remember Humor in Uniform. Just enough for a commute. 

I must have worked in a vacuum. No exciting relationships that I knew of.

WEDNESDAY’S PHOTO OF THE DAY

What is this and where is it located
E-mail jbird134@aol.com
 Win a trinket from Kiosk

TUESDAY’S PHOTO OF THE DAY

The atrium of Motorgate
Winner is Alexis Villefane

EDITORIAL

Time to say thanks. We have Covid-19 testing on the island this week. For ages, our neighbors have asked for testing on the island. Ben Kallos’ office and the NYC Health+ Hospitals came through for our community.  RIOC has been great in providing amenities and facilities.

Located under the helix (where the farmers market is in the winter) an efficient operation is registering and testing our neighbors.

You will receive the test results in 3-5 days.
The testers will be here Wednesday and Thursday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Thanks to the great staff from Gotham Health, part of NYC H+H.  They are friendly and efficient.  Many of us do not realize that we have an amazing
public health system that caters to all  New Yorkers.  To take advantage of any of their services you are never asked your immigration status, ability to pay  or other intrusive questions.

Please take advantage of this opportunity to be tested.

JUDITH BERDY
jbird134@aol.com

Text by Judith Berdy
Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac and the RIHS
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter  and Deborah Dorff

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

RON CRAWFORD (C)
FUNDING PROVIDED BY ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPORE GRANTS
CITY COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVE BEN KALLOS DISCRETIONARY FUNDING THRU DYCD

Copyright © 2020 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Jun

30

Tuesday, June 30 2020 PASTELS AND WATERCOLORS OF THE SEASONS

By admin

TUESDAY

JUNE 30, 2020

RIHS’s 92nd Issue of:

Included in this Issue

GEORGETTE SINCLAIR
ART OF THE SEASONS
Part 2

AUTUMN ON THE SOUTH END
OF THE ISLAND

WINTER, A SEASON TO REMEMBER 

SPRINGTIME

Georgette Sinclair a New York artist from Roosevelt Island, has been a long-time award winning member of Salmagundi Club , a long time member of RIVAA, and Associate member of the following art organizations: Pastel Society of America, Catherine Lorrillard Wolfe and Allied Artists of America. Her work has been exhibited in solo and group shows nationally and internationally. Collectors around the world own and enjoy her art work.

You can learn more at http://www.georgettesinclair.com/

TUESDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

WHAT AND WHERE IS THIS?
Send your submission to JBIRD134@AOL.COM
Win a trinket from the RIHS Visitor Center Kiosk

MONDAY  PHOTO OF THE DAY

Steps leading to pier on west side of island south of Meditation Steps.

EDITORIAL

#100 is Coming

Next Thursday, July 9th will be our 100th edition. Please pick a photo, article or item that you particularly enjoyed.  Go to rihs.us and scroll down thru all our issues.  Pick your favorite and e-mail it to rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com.
Judith Berdy

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Text by Judith Berdy
Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac and the RIHS
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter and Deborah Dorff
FUNDING PROVIDED BY:
ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION THRU PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDING

CITY COUNCIL MEMBER BEN KALLOS DISCRETIONARY FUNDS THRU DYCD

REPRODUCED WITH PERMISSION (C)

ALL IMAGES IN THIS EDITION BY GEORGETTE SINCLAIR (C)
THE ROOSEVELT ISLAND HISTORICAL SOCIETY (C)
WIKIPEDIA  (C)

 

Copyright © 2020 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Jun

29

MONDAY, JUNE 29, 2020 – Art of Georgette Sinclair

By admin

Monday, June 29th, 2020

Our  91st Edition

THE ART OF GEORGETTE SINCLAIR

PART 1

ROOSEVELT ISLAND PASTELS AND WATERCOLORS

Georgette Sinclair

“I was always a dreamer… As a kid I used to watch the sky, following the light embracing the earth and I was fascinated by the changing form and color of the clouds. I wished I was a little cloud in that magnificent moment. Today, I am captivated by the French impressionists and by the poetic vision of American Tonalism. I try to capture the mood of the moment and want to freeze it forever, as it is a sublime experience that nature reveals to us… The secret is to just look around with an inquisitive eye and an open soul and mind.”

Georgette is inspired by eternal beauty of nature. Working mostly in pastels she finds poetry in the ordinary scenes. Her atmospheric landscapes evoke her enthusiasm and spirit of places that charm and enchant the soul and mind. The expression of mood is her response to a fragment in time. Traveling is a great source of inspiration for her work. She delights in painting outdoor scenes, fields of lavender, golden haystacks, or wandering in a hidden country road. She is equally fascinated by peeking in and out of window, as can be seen in some of her paintings. A New York artist currently living on Roosevelt Island, Georgette Sinclair is an award winning artist who earned a Master of Science and a Doctoral Degree in Audiology.

Georgette’s art training began in early childhood with drawing and painting classes at the public School of Art in the country of origin. Later on in life Georgette attended the Art Student League of NYC in addition to attending various art workshops in the States and abroad. She has been a member of Pen & Brush Inc. in NYC (2001-2003), Salmagundi Club of NYC since 2001, and RIVAA since 2001. Her work is owned by collectors around the world and has appeared in solo and group shows in galleries in NYC, New Jersey, Vermont and abroad.

For more info about the artist please visit www.georgettesinclair.com

ROOSEVELT ISLAND

SUMMER

SUNSETS AND EVENINGS

PHOTO OF THE DAY
IDENTIFY THIS LOCATION
SEND ENTRY TO JBIRD134@AOL.COM
WIN A KIOSK TRINKET

MYSTERY PHOTO FROM THE WEEKEND

DECORATIVE IRONWORK ON THE RIHS VISITOR CENTER KIOSK

EDITORIAL

We are open for business. Under Phase 2, we have opened the RIHS visitor center for weekend shopping and visitor information.
After 3 months of being closed, we cleaned the entire 218  square feet of the interior and simplified our merchandising..

We have lots of great items for your gift giving. Jon, Bill, Ellen and Barbara will be at the kiosk this weekend from 12 noon to 5 p.m. 
WE WILL BE OPEN ON FRIDAY, JULY 4TH.
Stop by and say hello.
Bring your dog for a bowl of cold water and lots of treats.

Text by Judith Berdy Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky
for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter and Deborah Dorff
All materials in this publication are copyrighted (c)

ALL IMAGES COPYRIGHT GEORGETTE SINCLAIR 2020 (C)
MATERIAL COPYRIGHT WIKIPEDIA, GOOGLE IMAGES, RIHS ARCHIVES AND MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED WITHOUT PERMISSION (C)

FUNDING BY ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDING

DISCRETIONARY FUNDING BY COUNCIL MEMBER BEN KALLOS THRU NYC DYCD

Copyright © 2020 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Jun

27

June 27/28, 2020 Weekend Edition – A Variety of Dining Selections

By admin

THIS IS THE 90th ISSUE OF
FROM THE ARCHIVES

JUNE  27-28, 2020  WEEKEND EDITION

WHERE WE ATE 

Horn and Hardart Automat
Chock Full O’Nuts
Schafft’s
Charleston Garden
Bird Cage
Good Humor Ice Cream
Howard Johnson’s
Lundy Brothers
Junior’s
Jahn’s Ice Cream
Longechamps

HORN AND HARDART AUTOMAT

You brought a dollar bill to the cashier and she gave you 20 nickels, enough for a grand dinner of a main dish bake beans, dessert and coffee with change to spare.

CHOCK FULL O’NUTS

Nutted Cheese, Donut and Coffee for about 60 cents, Sandwiches were made by women never touching the ingredients and magically wielding two spatulas.

SCHRAFFT’S

If I behaved all day at B. Altman, we would stop at Schrafft’s on 34th Street for a chocolate ice cream soda for me. Then off to Franklin Simon, Arnold Constable and Macy’s.

CHARLESTON GARDEN
B. ALTMAN

https://www.altmanfoundation.org/about/history/memories_milestones/AltmanBook2.pdf

FOUR LADIES TO A SHARED TABLE. THE TRAY FIT IN THE SLOTS ON THE TABLE. THE AREA IS NOW THE DINING AREA OF CUNY GRADUATE CENTER, WITH THE AMBIANCE OF A GYM.

THE BIRD CAGE
LORD & TAYLOR

THERE WE NO TABLES. THE CHAIR HAD A SWING AWAY TRAY ATTACHED. DESSERT WAS DELIVERED BY A WAITRESS PUSHING A PINK ROCKET-SHAPED CART.

GOOD HUMOR ICE CREAM

Run from the dinner table with a quarter to get an ice cream from the Good Humor man with the napkin that had a slit in it for the stick!

HOWARD JOHNSON’S

Stop on Queens Blvd  and get ice cream cones for everyone in the station wagon, My day must have memorized everyone’s favorite flavor.

LUNDY BROTHERS
SHEEPSHEAD BAY

Long tables for family groups and watching the fishing boats across the street

JUNIOR’S

Darn, I never ate in the original Junior’s, but have consumed some slices from the branch in Grand Central Terminal

JAHN’S ICE CREAM

Come in on your birthday with identification and get a free sundae.  Order a KITCHEN SINK for $6- and get 18 scoops of ice cream!!!

RESTAURANT LONGECHAMPS

UNFORTUNATELY, I WAS NOT INTO DECOR WHEN I DINED AT LONGECHAMPS. THERE WAS ONE IN MANHATTAN HOUSE IN THE EARLY 1970’S THAT LOOKED OUT INTO A GARDEN.

WEEKEND PHOTO 
Can you identify this object and location?
Send you response to jbird134@aol.com
Winner gets a trinket from kiosk.

FRIDAY IMAGE OF THE DAY

Steps leading to Rivercross Lobby
Jay Jacobson and many others guessed it correctly
.

EDITORIAL

Today I ventured back to my childhood and teen years when I was skinny, I mean skinny.  Maybe, it was the choice of my parents dining selections.  I remember fondly all of those listed.  As you can see I liked a place with am gimmick. 
My choices have improved, though I miss my dad’s choices of French Restaurants.

Tell me your favorite places to eat.


Judith Berdy

Judith Berdy
jbird134@aol.com

Funding Provided by:
Roosevelt Island Operating Corporation Public Purpose Funds
Council Member Ben Kallos City Council Discretionary Funds thru DYCD
Text by Judith Berdy
Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac and the RIHS
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter and Deborah Dorff
ALL PHOTOS COPYRIGHT RIHS. 2020 (C)
ALL PHOTOS IN THIS ISSUE (C) JUDITH BERDY RIHS

Copyright © 2020 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Jun

26

Friday, June 26, 2020 – REMEMBER THAT PLACE?

By admin

Friday, June 26, 2020

The

89th Edition

From Our Archives

DISAPPEARING NEW YORK CITY 

 IN

POSTCARDS

Out trip starts at LaGuardia Airport arriving on a DC-3.

Since we are in Queens we will pass the Sunshine Biscuit factory near the Queensboro Bridge.

The Singer Building a graceful site, now gone from downtown.

City Prison, known as The Tombs, is located on the corner of Leonard and Centre Streets, a dismal structure of Egyptian architecture where prisoners walked between the prison and the courthouse on the BRIDGE OF SIGHS.

Siegel-Cooper was the grandest of the department stores on Ladies Mile, now Bed, Bath and Beyond

Madison Square Garden was the place to be seen and unfortunately Sanford White met the gun of Harry Thaw there and ended the architect’s life….over a woman.

Located on 26th Street at the East River, Bellevue was the port of embarkation for those traveling to the wonderful institutions on Blackwell’s Island.

The second Madison Square Garden on Eighth Avenue had little to say  for it.  My experience at the circus there left a lasting aroma.

The original Waldorf Astoria was located at 350 Fifth Avenue, now the Empire State Building

Located on 44th an 6th the Hippodrome was a grand burlesque theatre

A Wonderful sign over Times Square where the only “characters” were naked statues.

Before Dick Clark there was Ben Grauer doing a 15 minute show on New Year’s eve.

Every summer I would visit Times Square and see the Camel Man blowing smoke rings.

I do remember the Dodgers winning the ’55 World Series

FRIDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

Identify this photo and location.
Send to Jbird134@aol.com
Win a kiosk trinket

THURSDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

THE MANUFACTURERS OF THE ORIGINAL SWISS TRAM.
TWO WINNERS: 
ALEXI VILLFANE
OLYA TURCHIN

EDITORIAL

Today I joined Red Cross Volunteers at Coler giving gift bags to the staff. There are a group of family foundations that have been supporting hospital staffs for the last four months.  We gave every staff member a large bag containing refreshments, personal care items,  snacks and breakfast foods.  Of course every bag contains a roll of bathroom tissue.

The Coler staff is great an appreciative of the generous support of so many New Yorkers.

Coler is a special place. At the moment  there  are still over 50 Covid-19 patients in the RIMC hospital units.

The State still mandates that the residents cannot have visitors or leave the campus yet. Many are eager, but caution comes first,  The wonderful garden is a great place fro the residents to get fresh air and enjoy the summer weather.

Coler needs your support. Coler has been tending to the people of New York since 1952 and many of us have just discovered it.

Judith Berdy

Text by Judith Berdy
Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac and the RIHS
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter  and Deborah Dorff

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

FUNDING PROVIDED BY ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE GRANTS
CITY COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVE BEN KALLOS DISCRETIONARY FUNDING THRU DYCD

Copyright © 2020 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com