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Category Archives: Subway trips

Arsenals of adaptation

12 Tuesday Jun 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Adaptive reuse, Museums, New York City, Subway trips

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In May I posted the piece below about a trip a friend and I took to the Brooklyn Navy Yard. This month Architect: The Magazine of the American Institute of Architects has more on the BNY and similar facilities across the country. Adaptive reuse is a fascinating topic. Though I was not living in New York at the time, I am old enough to remember the bottom falling out here in the 1970s. Where I grew up in South Florida most of my classmates, including my best friend, were people whose families had escaped the Northeast. New York City was down for the count and whether it would ever revive was far from a forgone conclusion. I was at a gathering this past weekend and one of the guests, a delightful woman in her mid-60s, mentioned buying a Park Slope brownstone in 1968 for…$18,000. When she and her husband told their parents what they had done, the young couple’s folks laughed and laughed at their foolhardy decision.

When I moved to the city in 1997 the rotting piers were still a feature of the Brooklyn and Manhattan waterfronts. Fifteen years later that is just about a thing of the past. Much of the infrastructure in the Navy Yard dates to the Civil War. The site was still active in the decades after the Second World War until finally closing in the mid 1960s. Structural changes in the American economy had rendered it obsolete. It is good again see signs of life.

 

On what turned out to be the warmest day of the year so far, a friend and I ventured to the Brooklyn Navy Yard on Saturday. From 1801 until its closure in the mid-1960s the BNY was where most of the ships for the United States Navy were built and maintained. Its locale, Wallabout Bay, was also the site of the infamous British prison ships during the Revolutionary War. For decades the Navy Yard sat mostly vacant, but has been revitalized in recent years through adaptive reuse. The city of New York now owns the 300 acre site and has done much to lure local businesses. Furniture makers, high tech entrepreneurs, fashion designers, and even a movie studio are all part of the new economy.

The site has come a long way, but you can still see the old Navy Yard if you look hard and pay attention. Here is a building waiting for renovation.

…and another. As you might imagine, I’m a big fan of ruin porn.

Here is an old pipe.

Many will know that the USS Monitor was built at the Navy Yard. It is worth noting that Brooklyn was its own city at this time. It did not became part of New York until the merger in 1898.

The same year as the consolidation another ship built in the Navy Yard made history…

…the USS Maine. The museum had beautiful models of a number of ships built by Brooklynites over the decades.

Assistant Secretary of the Navy Franklin Delano Roosevelt visited the Navy Yard in March 1914. Note that he is standing without the assistance of others; he did not contract polio for another seven years. I had no idea how tall he was. Roosevelt exudes strength and virility. If I am not mistaken that is Andrew Carnegie standing on his left. Carnegie campaigned hard for peace before and during the Great War, but in one of history’s cruel ironies it was his steel that built many of the ships used in the war.

When Roosevelt talked about the Arsenal of Democracy as president he was referring in large part to the Navy Yard. This is the USS North Carolina on the site in April 1941. Navy Yard workers built the battleship in 1937.

And of course there was the USS Missouri, on whose decks the Japanese surrendered in September 1945.

This is the Navy Yard today.

(image/Jim Henderson)

Not a bad way to spend part of the weekend. We already have plans for other sites in the area. It is going to be a New York City summer for us.

The Arsenal of Democracy

14 Monday May 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Museums, New York City, Subway trips

≈ Comments Off on The Arsenal of Democracy

On what turned out to be the warmest day of the year so far, a friend and I ventured to the Brooklyn Navy Yard on Saturday. From 1801 until its closure in the mid-1960s the BNY was where most of the ships for the United States Navy were built and maintained. Its locale, Wallabout Bay, was also the site of the infamous British prison ships during the Revolutionary War. For decades the Navy Yard sat mostly vacant, but has been revitalized in recent years through adaptive reuse. The city of New York now owns the 300 acre site and has done much to lure local businesses. Furniture makers, high tech entrepreneurs, fashion designers, and even a movie studio are all part of the new economy.

The site has come a long way, but you can still see the old Navy Yard if you look hard and pay attention. Here is a building waiting for renovation.

…and another. As you might imagine, I’m a big fan of ruin porn.

Here is an old pipe.

Many will know that the USS Monitor was built at the Navy Yard. It is worth noting that Brooklyn was its own city at this time. It did not became part of New York until the merger in 1898.

The same year as the consolidation another ship built in the Navy Yard made history…

…the USS Maine. The museum had beautiful models of a number of ships built by Brooklynites over the decades.

Assistant Secretary of the Navy Franklin Delano Roosevelt visited the Navy Yard in March 1914. Note that he is standing without the assistance of others; he did not contract polio for another seven years. I had no idea how tall he was. Roosevelt exudes strength and virility. If I am not mistaken that is Andrew Carnegie standing on his left. Carnegie campaigned hard for peace before and during the Great War, but in one of history’s cruel ironies it was his steel that built many of the ships used in the war.

When Roosevelt talked about the Arsenal of Democracy as president he was referring in large part to the Navy Yard. This is the USS North Carolina on the site in April 1941. Navy Yard workers built the battleship in 1937.

And of course there was the USS Missouri, on whose decks the Japanese surrendered in September 1945.

This is the Navy Yard today.

(image/Jim Henderson)

Not a bad way to spend part of the weekend. We already have plans for other sites in the area. It is going to be a New York City summer for us.

Civil War subway trip

14 Thursday Jul 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Subway trips

≈ Comments Off on Civil War subway trip

Hey everybody, last week we ventured to Cypress Hills and Cypress Hills National Cemeteries.  Here are a few photographs.

Cypress Hills Cemetery is a public burial ground on the Brooklyn-Queens border.  One takes the J train to nearly the end of the line.  The cemetery was established in 1848 and is the final resting place of musician Eubie Blake, artist Piet Mondian, and Mae West to name a few.

This is the War of 1812 memorial.  The bicentennial of our second war with England starts next year.

This is the Civil War section of the public cemetery.  As you can see, there are Union and Confederate dead interred here.

Down the street is Cypress Hills National Cemetery.  Not to be confused with the public facility, CHNC is one of the fourteen original national cemeteries created by President Lincoln in 1862.  With so many young men dying, there was no choice but to create such sites.

It is always moving to see the headstones lined up row after row.

(Robert N. Dennis collection of stereoscopic views, NYPL)

Like its counterparts at Gettysburg (stereoscope above) and Antietam, it has a rostrum.

Congressional Medal of Honor recipient Wilbur Colyer is buried here.  Colyer was born in Brooklyn and was a soldier in the Big Red One.  The Fighting First trained at Governors Island before shipping out to France during the Great War.  Sadly, Colyer died just one month before the Armistice.

Our good friend Sami accompanied us.  He too is a volunteer at Governors Island and knows a great deal about New York City history.

The cemetery is a simple one, but there is still detail to be seen if one looks closely.

One sees the changing dynamics of the neighborhood as well.

What a special day this was.




Civil War subway trip

10 Sunday Apr 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Subway trips

≈ 1 Comment

Hey everybody, the Hayfoot and I took a trip earlier this month to Fort Wadsworth in Staten Island.  It is off the beaten path but worth a visit should you happen to be in New York City and have the time.

As always the first stop was the Visitors Center, where this statue of General James Wadsworth stands in the museum.  Wadsworth was mortally wounded at the Battle of the Wilderness in May 1864.

Our friend Sami came with us.  He is a volunteer with the National Park Service at Governors Island and knows a great deal about the city.

That is the western tower of the Verrazano Bridge.  Fort Tompkins is on the other side of the hill.  That one cannot see it when approaching is intentional.

This is Battery Weed seen from the top of the hill.  The photo was taken from Fort Tompkins.

It is somewhat confusing.  This particular structure was named Fort Wadsworth after General Wadsworth in 1865 and then renamed Battery Weed in honor of Brigadier General Stephen H. Weed in 1902.  Since then the fortifications have been known collectively as Fort Wadsworth.  Weed was another New Yorker and Union general, killed on Little Round Top on July 2, 1863.

It was cold.

Yes, that is Manhattan in the background.  Brooklyn is to the right.

We took a ranger tour of Fort Tompkins.  The knowledge these people have is astonishing.  I have taken dozens of such tours over the years and this was one of the best.

The ranger did a great job explaining the nuances of the fortification.

This cannon was unearthed during a construction project in Manhattan and donated to Fort Wadsworth.  The archaeology of New York City is fascinating.  There is so much history unseen below our feet.

This is one of the entrances to Fort Tompkins.  The ranger explained how troops would have expelled potential invaders.  This is why one has to take a ranger tour, for the details.

The parade ground

Always pack lunch.

Coming soon: Brooklyn’s Fort Hamilton

Thanks for checking in.




Civil War subway trip

28 Monday Feb 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in National Park Service, New York City, Subway trips, Ulysses S. Grant (General and President)

≈ 1 Comment

Hey everybody,

This past Saturday the Hayfoot and I took the A train to a site that, sadly, most New Yorkers no longer visit: Grant’s Tomb.  For decades after it was dedicated in 1897, the mausoleum was one of the most visited places in Manhattan.  Tens of thousands from across the country turned out annually to pay their respects.  Now, as you can see, that is no longer the case.  That’s the Mrs. on the far left.

The National Park Service acquired the General Grant National Memorial, as it is properly called, in 1959.  We took in a discussion led by a very knowledgeable ranger.  There aren’t many displays but the ones they do have are informative and cover Grant’s career in its entirety.

These regimental flags are reproductions

…with the exception of this one that belonged to the 11th Indiana, Colonel Lew Wallace commanding.  It was covered with glass, which is why the photo is a bit difficult to make out.

In a rare misstep, the Park Service built these benches around the perimeter of the tomb in the 1970s.  I think they were trying to be relevant.

In a better use of the space, the public area outside has been a regular stop on Harlem’s Jazzmobile going back nearly five decades.  We’re going to try to get up there this summer.

It opened in 1897 at the height of the reconciliation phase.

Hayfoot and Strawfoot

The final resting place of President and Mrs. Ulysses S. Grant.

And then it was on to Ethiopian cuisine in Harlem.

Thanks for checking in.

Keith

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