Blue Listed Brooklyn

January 11, 2007

In its newly published annual best-of-the-world guide, international travel expert Lonely Planet has named Brooklyn as a top tourist destination.

Brooklyn? Honestly?

Yep, to the astonishment of many native New Yorkers, Lonely Planet’s “Blue List: The Best in Travel 2007” says, “Brooklyn’s booming. Any New Yorker worth their street cred knows the new downtown lies just across the East River.”

The book, a collection of travel tips submitted by Lonely Planet’s readers and staff members, includes a two-page spread on this borough and states that “a cultural movement has emerged” in what they call “the USA’s biggest city-within-a-city.”

Brooklyn? Seriously?

Yes, along with Hawaii and New Orleans, Brooklyn has been singled out as a favorite U.S. destination. While we’ve gotten accustomed to occasionally glimpsing double-decker sightseeing coaches on some of the streets closest to Manhattan, many (OK, most) New Yorkers still have trouble believing that Brooklyn is a hotspot for tourists.

In fact, the inclusion of Brooklyn in latest edition of the best-selling guidebook has made headlines here. The Blue List’s recommendations include the Brooklyn Bridge, Prospect Park, Coney Island and the Mermaid Parade, the Brooklyn Museum and the Jacques Torres Chocolate Factory, all located in what Lonely Plant is calling “the hippest part of New York City.”

Brooklyn? Really?

Yeah, really. So please pardon us while we take a moment to kvell.


Lonely Planet Blue List 2007
Originally uploaded by annulla.

Lonely Planet Blue List 2007
NY Daily News: Brooklyn’s the REAL vacation hot spot
My Fox NY: Brooklyn Top Tourist Spot
NY1: Brooklyn Makes Lonely Planet List
Borough President Marty Markowitz Hails Lonely Planet
Lonely Planet


Bare Chests and Bare Branches

January 6, 2007

Some thought it was frightening, others found it delightful, but all agreed that a 72 degree (22 C) day in January was astonishing. On a date that normally demands hats, gloves, mufflers and heavy overcoats, New Yorkers ventured out in t-shirts, shorts and sandals.

If not for the bare branches overhead, this could have been mistaken for a day in May. Since the unseasonably warm weather came on a Saturday, when most residents were free of commitments to work or school, many families were able to enjoy the sunny weather together.

Brooklynites walked, ran, rode and skated to Prospect Park to jog, picnic, relax, mingle and play. They scampered across still-green lawns flying frisbees and kites, read and picnicked under shadeless trees, romped through the playground and practiced yoga and Tai Chi under the clear blue sky. Tennis rackets shed their covers, volleyball nets were strung up, footballs taken out of closets and a clown made an appearance at the playground.

Tomorrow the temperature will drop 20 degrees; jackets will again be worn, ears will again be covered, tennis rackets and footballs will again be relegated to the closet. But for one bright, shining day, Mother Nature gave Brooklyn a brief, shining, early taste of spring.


The brilliant blue sky above Grand Army Plaza  Posted by Picasa


Sitting in the sun at Grand Army Plaza  Posted by Picasa


Sunbathing on the lawn  Posted by Picasa


Father teaching daughter to play  Posted by Picasa


Playing with a remote-control car  Posted by Picasa


Jogging  Posted by Picasa


Boys on the Harmony Playground  Posted by Picasa


Mastering training wheels  Posted by Picasa


Skateboarding  Posted by Picasa


Making balloon animals at the playground  Posted by Picasa


Muffin the cat, secure in his harness  Posted by Picasa


Climbing the harp sculpture  Posted by Picasa


Crowded roadways  Posted by Picasa


Biker in an Oscar the Grouch shirt  Posted by Picasa


Walking a dog  Posted by Picasa


Reading  Posted by Picasa

NY Times: 72-Degree Day Breaks Record in New York
Prospect Park


Yes, Spelling Counts

January 5, 2007

It isn’t just something your teachers said; in Brooklyn, even vandals know that correct spelling and punctuation are important.

These notes appeared inside the Flushing Avenue IND subway station on a poster for Cedric the Entertainer’s new movie, Code Name: The Cleaner.


Thoe’s are real Posted by Picasa


“Those” – You can’t spell Posted by Picasa

Code Name: The Cleaner
NYC Subway: IND Crosstown, Flushing Avenue
Station Reporter: G Train


Goodbye to the Holidays

January 4, 2007

Tonight they changed the sign on the marquee at the Brooklyn Heights Cinema. The hoiday season is now officially over.


Happy Holidays – Watch More Movies Posted by Picasa

Cinema Treasures: Brooklyn Heights Cinema


Holidays Underground

January 3, 2007

No one would ever mistake a New York City subway station for Rockefeller Center, but if you know where to look, seasonal decorations can be found underground.

The Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) doesn’t decorate the subways (not that anyone would expect them to do so) but they don’t forbid holiday decor, either. The only official policy is a prohibition against anything that would block views into and out of the token booths and train dispatchers’ offices. Other than that, decorations are allowed at the discretion of the station manager.

As a result, every year certain Transit Authority employees take the time to bring a bit of holiday cheer to their subterranean workplaces. Using their own materials and at their own expense, these men and women string tinsel, hang lights and garlands, draw snowmen and stars on whiteboards and even use discarded MetroCards to create tiny, bright pockets of merriment in the dark tunnels.

Time constraints allowed me to capture only a few examples before the decorations were taken down for the season, but if I’m still here next year, I’ll be back and publish more.


Clark Street Station Posted by Picasa


Court Street Station Posted by Picasa


Train dispatcher’s office at Cortland Street Station Posted by Picasa


Tree decorated with MetroCards and TransitCheks  Posted by Picasa

NYC Transit: Subways
Transit Chek
Gothamist: Token Booth Closings


Blues on the Street

January 2, 2007

I thought these New York Police Department officers on the corner of Fifth Avenue and 42nd Street looked as though they were posing for photographs, so I took a few.

These members of the NYPD are standing in front of the main branch of the New York Public Library. This would have been a very bad moment for anyone to try stealing a few books.


NYPD at Fifth Avenue & 42nd Street  Posted by Picasa


Police officers assemble next to the New York Public Library  Posted by Picasa


Listening to instructions  Posted by Picasa


With Liberty and Burgers for All

December 30, 2006

Tonight, a minor commotion occurred outside the Burger King on 14th Street. A statuesque woman emerged from the restaurant and was immediately surrounded by people screaming, shouting and begging for autographs.

Leaning against the front window, New York Liberty Guard Loree Moore graciously signed napkins, menus and scraps of paper and posed for photos with her fans.

A star athlete eating burgers? Aren’t they restricted to diets of filtered water, vitamins, protein powders and tofu? Moore laughed, shook her head, and said that she eats what she likes and she prefers burgers.

Hmmm. A scandal-free professional basketball player and role model who loves burgers? Sounds like an endorsement deal just waiting to happen. Burger King, are you listening?


Loree Moore  Posted by Picasa


The star with fans  Posted by Picasa

New York Liberty
Loree Moore
Burger King


You’re in New York. Go in Style.

December 26, 2006

If you’ve spent any time in New York City, you know that clean, free public restrooms are almost nonexistent. And in midtown Manhattan, site of some of the busiest streets in the world, relief is frustratingly elusive.

However, in a brilliant marriage of public service and promotion, on November 20th Procter & Gamble’s Charmin brand toilet paper opened a public restroom in the heart of Times Square. Located in the Bertelsmann Building at 1540 Broadway, next to the Virgin Megastore, the Charmin restrooms are not only sparkling clean, they are actually entertaining.

The building, squarely in the center of a prime destination for millions of tourists and natives, has been staffed with dozens of cheerful hosts and attendants (many of them out-of-work actors and dancers) in blue and white uniforms.

Anticipating long lines, the planners equipped the waiting space with plentiful seating, plasma televisions, a disco-like stage where guests can sing and dance to the brand’s bouncy theme song, a nose-blowing lounge area stocked with boxes of facial tissues, a pair of fireplaces, stroller parking, tourist information and a photo corner for those who want a picture with Charmin’s mascot, a big, fuzzy brown bear.

The main attractions are even more impressive — 20 small, bright, private rooms, including some with disabled access and baby changing stations. All are equipped with sinks, soap and plenty of Charmin toilet paper and are hand-cleaned by an attendant after each use.

Sadly, this deluxe comfort palace is here only temporarily. Due to some baffling city ordinance or other, on December 31 the Charmin restrooms will close their doors forever. Unfortuately, it seems that sometimes even restrooms have to go.


Entrance under the arrow Posted by Picasa


The waiting line Posted by Picasa


Sign inside a stall Posted by Picasa


Inside a stall: lots of soap, mirrors & towels Posted by Picasa


Ceiling of a stall Posted by Picasa


Lounging near an electric fireplace Posted by Picasa


Posing for photos with the bear Posted by Picasa


Attendant photographing a visitor with the big bear  Posted by Picasa


The nose-blowing section Posted by Picasa

Charmin
Charmin in Times Square
The Procter & Gamble Company
Bertelsmann Building
NY Magazine: Charmin’s Times Square Toilets
YouTube: Charmin’s Times Square Bathrooms
USA Today: Charmin Rolls Out 20 Restrooms


Fêtes de Noël at Bryant Park

December 23, 2006

European-style outdoor holiday markets are a relatively new phenomenon in New York City. In recent years these temporary marketplaces have appeared in several areas around Manhattan including Union Square (the oldest), Columbus Circle (the newest), the cafe at St. Bartholomew’s Church (the smallest) and Bryant Park (the most centrally-located).

Now in its fifth year, the holiday market at Bryant Park is officially known as Fêtes de Noël. The market includes over 100 booths with green and white striped canvas roofs arrayed around the fountain (turned off for the season) and the skating rink (erected for the season). Most of the booths offer specialty items and handicrafts ranging from stuffed toys to suits of armor.

Tucked among and around the booths are an enormous star-topped tree and a refreshment area complete with tables, chairs and snacks including hot cider, cocoa, hot waffles, candy apples, caramel apples and shao bings (Chinese buns).

If shopping, snacking and skating becomes boring, you can always duck into the New York Public Library — the main research library shares the block with Bryant Park and its closed stacks are located directly under this space.


42nd Street entrance to Bryant Park Posted by Picasa


Booth selling goods from Thailand Posted by Picasa


Candle booth Posted by Picasa


At a jewelry booth Posted by Picasa


Food booth: apples on the right, bings on the left Posted by Picasa


Hot apple cider – $3.00 a cup Posted by Picasa


The skating rink Posted by Picasa


Kids skating class Posted by Picasa


A little skater and friends Posted by Picasa


Skaters in view of the tree  Posted by Picasa


Greenery & booths around the fountain  Posted by Picasa


Women’s clothing booth Posted by Picasa


The stands at night  Posted by Picasa


The Bryant Park tree  Posted by Picasa

NY Magazine: Fêtes de Noël
Fêtes de Noël
NY Magazine: Bryant Park
New York Public Library stacks
NYC Nosh: Bings
Roll and Dough
NY Times: Unique Pastry Bing


Art Beyond Measure

December 20, 2006

“Look, it cannot be seen — it is beyond form. Listen, it cannot be heard — it is beyond sound. Grasp, it cannot be held — it is intangible. These three are indefinable; therefore they are joined in one.
– Tao Te Ching, Chapter 14

First identified by Chinese philosophers 3,000 years ago, Tao is “the infinitely powerful force containing the truth and existing before the world was created” — indescribable, beyond the constraints of time and space, sound and vision.

It is believed that each person imagines Tao according to his or her own nature. A wise person sees Tao as wisdom; a kind person believes that Tao is kindness; a merciful person understands Tao as mercy.

From December 7 to December 29, the Taipei Cultural Center is hosting an exhibit called Beyond Measure. The show features eight artists sharing their own visions and understandings of Tao, and each work is illustrated with a verse from the Tao Te Ching.

The artists come from Taiwan, Japan, China and the United States, they are all currently based in New York and they are united in their desire to show the invisible, define the indefinable and measure the immeasurable.


Works on mezzanine Posted by Picasa


ON Megumi Akiyushi’s “Flower Gallery” Posted by Picasa


ON Megumi Akiyushi’s “Flower Gallery”/Jon D’Orazio’s “Drala Crests III” Posted by Picasa


Jon D’Orazio’s “Drala Crests III” Posted by Picasa


Jon D’Orazio’s “Jade Mirror 41 CL1” Posted by Picasa


Hai Zhang’s “Culturally Appropriate” Posted by Picasa


Section of Yo Yo Xiao’s “Dance With Death” Posted by Picasa


Section of Yo Yo Xiao’s “Dance With Death” Posted by Picasa


Still from Cecily McKeown’s “Tao #204” video Posted by Picasa


Still from Cecily McKeown’s “Civilization #56” video Posted by Picasa


ON Megumi Akiyushi’s “Coffin for the Living” Posted by Picasa


Huang Shih Chieh’s “BSB-Side View” Posted by Picasa


Chin Chih Yang’s “Jesus Christ Superstar” Posted by Picasa


Chin Chih Yang’s “Blind Buddha” Posted by Picasa


Lobby with Chang Lishan’s “Light” Posted by Picasa

Taipei Cultural Center
Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in New York
ON Megumi Akiyoshi
Jon D’Orazio
Hai Zhang
Huang Shih Chieh
Chin Chih Yang
Chang Lishan


Union Square Holiday Market

December 19, 2006

Over the past decade it has become a holiday tradition: late in November, the air is filled with the sounds of saws and hammers as red and white striped tents are hoisted, tiny lights and boughs of greenery are draped over fountains, lampposts and statues, and the southern section of Union Square is transformed into a bustling Holiday Marketplace.

Now in its 11th year, Union Square Holiday Market includes more than 100 vendors selling handicrafts, foods, holiday decorations, antique prints, jewelry, toys, clothing and more. During the month that it is open (November 24 – December 24), the Marketplace is busy night and day. On a clear night like this, passersby are enticed by the distinctive sights, sounds and aromas of New York during the holiday season. Hot apple cider, anyone?


Sitting on the fountain Posted by Picasa


Shoppers at a jewelry booth Posted by Picasa


At a booth selling decorations Posted by Picasa


Jewelry vendor’s booth  Posted by Picasa


Paper goods’ vendor’s booth Posted by Picasa


Examining handmade earrings Posted by Picasa


Crowding around a booth Posted by Picasa


Rack of knitted hats Posted by Picasa

NYC Parks Dept: Union Square Holiday Market
NYC Parks: Union Square Holiday Market


Cadman Plaza Dressed in Holiday Style

December 17, 2006

Cadman Plaza is the closest thing to a “town square” in the borough of Brooklyn. Named for the Reverend Dr. Samuel Parkes Cadman, an early 20th-century Brooklyn minister, the Plaza is located on Court Street at the border of two historic neighborhoods: Brooklyn Heights and Downtown Brooklyn.

If you live in Brooklyn for any length of time, you will surely have to pass through Cadman Plaza to take care of some sort of business. Nearly every subway and bus line stops here and the Plaza is surrounded by government office buildings including Borough Hall, federal and state court buildings and the main branch of the Brooklyn Post Office. Nearby are the Business Library (a branch of the Brooklyn Public Library), the offices of the International Red Cross and the headquarters of the Jehovah’s Witnesses.

The Plaza is only a few minutes away from the Brooklyn Bridge and it serves as a gateway to historic Montague Street and its wealth of brownstones, small shops and restaurants. The space is filled with memorials, statues, benches, fountains and flags and includes lawns (currently being replaced), greenery, trees, shrubs and borders of fragrant roses. This is the location of a year-round Greenmarket and the site of many public protests and community events.

In a community as diverse as Brooklyn, it shouldn’t be surprising that various groups choose to celebrate the season in the ways that fit their beliefs. Here are some of that holiday decorations that Brooklynites have placed on Cadman Plaza.


Christmas Tree sponsored by the Brooklyn Terminal Markets Association Posted by Picasa


Menorah sponsored by Chabad Lubavitch and Congregation B’Nai Avraham Posted by Picasa


Nativity scene sponsored by the Catholic Lawyers Guild Posted by Picasa


Menorah in front of Borough Hall steps Posted by Picasa


Cadman Plaza and Borough Hall Posted by Picasa

NYC: Cadman Plaza Park
Wikipedia: Cadman Plaza
The Business Library


Don’t Knock, Shout

December 16, 2006

Today this sign was posted on the front doors of the Iglesia Antioquia, a Pentecostal church on Brooklyn’s Atlantic Avenue.


Sign on church door  Posted by Picasa


Music at the MetLife Building

December 14, 2006

Originally known as the PamAm Building, the 58-story MetLife Building is adjacent to Grand Central Terminal. During the holiday season, the building hosts a series of free concerts by high schools from the surrounding region.

I was passing through the lobby today when this group, which was visiting the city from Connecticut’s Stamford High School, began a performance that included songs about Hanukkah, Christmas and Kwaanza.


The Stamford High School choir Posted by Picasa


Part of the orchestra Posted by Picasa


The string section Posted by Picasa


Singers Posted by Picasa


Strings players Posted by Picasa


Two members of the choir Posted by Picasa


Harmonizing Posted by Picasa


The violinists Posted by Picasa


A singer Posted by Picasa


Two players Posted by Picasa


A singer Posted by Picasa

Stamford High School
The MetLife Building
Wikipedia: The MetLife Building


The Gift of Music

December 14, 2006

This afternoon, on my way to catch the 1 train, I ducked into the Duane Reade drugstore at the corner of Broadway and 50th Street to buy a roll of tape.

As I stepped through the entrance, I nearly tripped over a man who was fiddling with wires leading to a large speaker on the floor. The man adjusted the connection, shifted the speaker and a clear, high voice surged through.

Going inside, I couldn’t fail to notice the vivacious woman in bright red who stood beside a folding table covered with stacks of CDs. As I moved closer, the woman smiled brightly and told me that she was there to promote her new Christmas recording; her name was Lyza Wilson and she was the singer whose voice I was hearing.

I left the store with two of her CDs. It wasn’t until I was on the subway heading downtown that I realized that I’d completely forgotten the task that led me to the drugstore: I still didn’t have any tape.

But I had something better; I’d received the gift of music — all the better because it came at such an unexpected time from such an unlikely place. And although she was singing in a drugstore instead of a theatre, this afternoon Lyza Wilson truly was a star on Broadway.


Lyza Wilson holding her recordings Posted by Picasa

Lyza Wilson
Duane Reade


Blood Diamond

December 4, 2006

New York is filled with famous, glamorous people leading exciting, glittering lives. I’m not one of them. However, on rare occasions, I manage to find myself in their midst. This evening was one of those times.

Tonight Marie Claire magazine held a cocktail reception and screening of the new adventure film “Blood Diamond.” The screening was followed by a discussion featuring Brooklyn native and star Jennifer Connelly, director/producer Edward Zwick and the magazine’s editor in chief, Joanna Coles.

The event ended when the star was reminded that she had to leave; she was due at a taping of the Conan O’Brien show. As the attendees went out into the cold December night, we were given copies of the January issue of Marie Claire featuring Jennifer Connelly on the cover.


Producer Marshall Herskovitz, Jennifer Connelly, Joanna Coles, Edward Zwick, Publisher Susan Plagemann  Posted by Picasa


Jennifer Connelly with Marie Claire cover  Posted by Picasa

Blood Diamond
The New Yorker: Review of Blood Diamond
Amnesty Magazine: Blood Diamonds
The Kimberley Process
Marie Claire
Conan O’Brien


The Independent and Small Press Book Fair

December 3, 2006

This weekend the Small Press Center, a non-profit educational organization for independent publishers, sponsored its 19th annual Independent and Small Press Book Fair.

A program of the General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen of the City of New York, the Small Press Center serves those “driven primarily by a desire to publish what interests them, what they believe in” regardless of whether or not large publishing houses consider it commercially feasible.

The Small Press Center is housed in a landmark Victorian structure at 20 West 44th Street in Manhattan. Built in 1893, it was designed by architects Hugh Lamb and Charles Alonzo Rich to house the Berkley School (at the time, a private school for boys). The General Society moved here in 1899 and designated its central space, a three-story, skylight-topped expanse, as the main reading room for their members’ library.

The library was the site of the Book Fair, with most of the 100 or so publishers in attendance exhibiting their wares in the main reading room or on the surrounding balconies. In addition to the books, the Book Fair included readings, talks and panel discussions with authors, editors, illustrators and publishers.


Author Emily Jenkins Posted by Picasa


Illustrator Tomek Bogacki Posted by Picasa


Poet/TV personality Ira Joe Fisher Posted by Picasa


Literary anti-hero Amiri Baraka Posted by Picasa


Author Colin Channer Posted by Picasa


Graffiti artist Savager Posted by Picasa


Graffiti artist Erni Posted by Picasa


Graffiti artist Smith Posted by Picasa


Graffiti artist Lady Pink Posted by Picasa

Small Press Center
Book Fair Schedule of Events
Emily Jenkins
Tomek Bogacki
Colin Channer
Amiri Baraka
Savager
Erni
Smith and Lady Pink
General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen
The General Society Library
Lamb and Rich Architecture


The Rink and the Ring

December 2, 2006

At this time of year I’m always of two minds regarding midtown Manhattan: I’m anxious to see the fabulous, elaborate holiday decorations but I also want to stay far away from the hectic, bustling crowds that overflow the shops and stores and make the sidewalks impassable.

This evening I was in midtown, only a few blocks from Rockefeller Center, when I decided to take a short detour and get a quick look at its legendary massive Christmas tree (currently an 88-foot tall Norway spruce from western Connecticut) and fabled ice skating rink.

I slowly waded through the masses in the Channel Gardens that lead from Fifth Avenue to the holiday display, snapped a few photos of the tree, and moved forward towards the skating rink. Despite the patient, smiling security guards, the throng around the railing was at least 12 deep and many were trying to push and plead their way to the front (“We came all the way from India for this!” “We flew here from Texas just to see the ice rink!” “Please let my sick little boy through to see the skaters!”).

I extricated myself from the crush and started to walk towards the subways when I saw a spot, right near the elevator, where relatively few people stood. I headed there and squeezed in between a large family from Connecticut, another from Russia and an excited group from Italy.

As I leaned towards the railing to take some photos, the surrounding crowd jostled me and I concentrated more on keeping my balance than watching the action on the ice. When I looked up, I noticed an attractive young couple standing stock still in the middle of the ice. I took a couple of shots of them, a few more photos of the crowd in the rink, and left.

When I got home and looked through the images I’d taken, I realized what I’d inadvertently captured. Since they say that a picture is worth a thousand words, I’ll let the photos (sorry for the poor quality) tell the story of the boy with the blond hair, the girl with the pink scarf, the rink and the ring.


The 88 foot tall tree at Rockefeller Center  Posted by Picasa


Looking onto the skating rink Posted by Picasa


The ice is crowded Posted by Picasa


A couple skates to the center of the rink Posted by Picasa


He drops down on one knee Posted by Picasa


The clinch; looks like she said “yes” Posted by Picasa


He presents the ring Posted by Picasa


They don’t even notice the gathering spectators Posted by Picasa


They skate off as the crowd applauds Posted by Picasa

The Rink at Rockefeller Center
Rockefeller Center
WNBC’s Tree-Cam


A Day on Sheepshead Bay

November 29, 2006

“If you’d come here five, ten years ago,” said the old waitress, “you would have seen twice as many boats, three times as many restaurants and none of these great big places. Back then the tallest building was three stories high.”

She leaned on the counter, wiped her hands on her apron, and talked about the neighborhood’s many vanished businesses. In recent years, dozens of mom and pop stores have disappeared as real estate developers bought up blocks, demolished the existing structures and replaced them with luxury condominiums.

Similar stories can be heard in nearly every corner of the city but the denizens of this neighborhood are a stubborn lot, and most are determined to stay put here in Brooklyn’s only fishing village, Sheepshead Bay.

The Bay, named after the sheepshead (a large saltwater fish), is renowned for its abundant waters. Fishing once played a vital role in the neighborhood’s economy and the area around the concrete piers on Emmons Avenue still includes several bait and tackle shops, seafood restaurants and clam bars.

While the sheepshead disappeared from these waters long ago, the piers remain crowded with dozens of ducks, gulls, swans and fishing boats. The fleet usually goes out after dawn and returns before dark. The boats are met by shoppers who eagerly swap cooking tips and snatch up the catch of the day, often including flounder, tuna, bluefish and crabs.

A bit further down the road, tucked between the yacht clubs and construction sites, are a few rusted gates. These lead to narrow alleyways crowded with tiny bungalows. Most of the alleys and cottages are what remains of Sheepshead Bay’s first housing development, built around 1920 by a developer named Robert Densely.

A bit farther down the street, past the few retirement homes and “no-tell” motels, Emmons Avenue turns into an entrance to the Belt Parkway. The sand dunes begin where the sidewalk ends. The trails in the sand lead down to a quiet beach, where amateur fishermen patiently throw their nets into the water and haul their evening’s meals from the Bay.


The fishing fleet on the bay  Posted by Picasa


The Brooklyn VI boasts a “Curtious” Crew  Posted by Picasa


The Crystal Marie  Posted by Picasa


Fisherman on deck, filling bag for customer Posted by Picasa


Entrance to Sheepshead Bay Yacht Club  Posted by Picasa


Bernie’s Bait & Tackle  Posted by Picasa


Stella Maris Fishing Shop  Posted by Picasa


Sand dunes  Posted by Picasa


Brush on sand dunes  Posted by Picasa


Cottages at 3082 Emmons Avenue  Posted by Picasa


More cottages at 3082 Emmons Avenue  Posted by Picasa


View of Bay from 3082 Emmons Avenue  Posted by Picasa


View from the center of Lake Avenue  Posted by Picasa


Houses on Hitchings Avenue  Posted by Picasa


Swan  Posted by Picasa


Swans and ducks near the Ocean Avenue footbridge  Posted by Picasa


Ocean Avenue footbridge  Posted by Picasa

WPA Guide: Sheepshead Bay
Wikipedia: Sheepshead Bay
Forgotten NY: Sheepshead Bay
Forgotten NY: Alleys of Sheepshead Bay
Sheepshead Bay Party Boats
NY Fisherman: Sheepshead Bay
Sheepshead Bay Yacht Club
The Belt Parkway


Behind the Gates of New York Marble Cemetery

November 26, 2006

Every day thousands of people pass the thick stone walls and tall iron gates but few step behind them. New York Marble Cemetery is open to the public only a handful of days each year; from March through November, the gates generally open (for a few hours) the last Sunday of each month. However, since the Cemetery lacks both staff and shelter, if the weather is inclement or no volunteer is available, the entrance to this secret garden will remain locked.

Today was the cemetery’s last scheduled opening for 2006. A stream of curious visitors came, encouraged by the open gate and the unusually mild weather. A volunteer provided literature and information about the cemetery, its founders, the current state of repair (a section of the 12-foot high walls recently collapsed) and the trustee’s efforts to protect and restore it.

New York Marble Cemetery (also known as the Second Avenue Cemetery) is the oldest public non-sectarian cemetery in New York City. Established in 1831 to serve the city’s gentry, more than 2,000 interments have taken place here. Unlike most American cemeteries, this half acre patch of green has no gravestones, ground markers, mausoleums, lamps, flower arrangements or monuments. Although the setting is stark, this isn’t a place where the original decorations have been lost or stripped away; by design, the cemetery is simple, unadorned and restrained. The original landscape consisted of a level stretch of lawn marked only by shrubbery and white sand paths.

Founded during an epidemic when in-ground burials were forbidden, interments are 10 feet underground in solid white marble vaults, each the size of a small room. The 156 vaults are arranged in a grid and access provided by removal of stone slabs set below the lawn’s surface. The numbers of the vaults and names of the original owners are on marble plaques set into the surrounding walls.

Although the most recent burial was in 1937, New York Marble Cemetery is not simply a place of historic interest; despite appearances, it is a working burial facility. Each vault belongs to the heirs of the original owners and descendants retain the right to be interred here. In fact, some have made plans to ensure that this cemetery, the last place in Manhattan where a person can still be legally buried, will be their final resting place.


Visitors at outer gate Posted by Picasa


Alley leads from the outer gate to the inner gate Posted by Picasa


Visitors enter cemetery through inner gate Posted by Picasa


Vault of publisher Uriah R. Scribner Posted by Picasa


Vault of Elisha Peck Posted by Picasa


Visitors on the lawn Posted by Picasa


Volunteer answers vistors’ questions Posted by Picasa


Visitors and plaques along the south wall Posted by Picasa


View to west wall Posted by Picasa


Shrubbery and east wall Posted by Picasa


Broken stone awaits repair Posted by Picasa

  • New York Marble Cemetery
  • Cemetery Schedule and Map
  • Letter Regarding Construction Behind Cemetery

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