| The history of Bay
Ridge and Fort Hamilton, two neighborhoods overlooking New York Bay,
illustrates how innovations in transportation have reshaped Brooklyn
and underlines the importance of preserving vital landmarks. Both Bay
Ridge and Fort Hamilton were transformed by the building of the Verrazano
Narrows Bridge an experience that had inspired residents to develop
a shared, positive vision of their area’s future.
The colonial history of Bay Ridge began in 1625
when the Dutch West India Company acquired the land from the Nyack Indians.
The Dutch settlers originally referred to the area, which was part of
the town of New Utrecht, as Yellow Hook (and sometimes Yellow Ridge)
for the color of the clay found there. But after the yellow-fever epidemic
of 1848-49, residents chose to rename their community to evoke instead
the beautiful surrounding bay and the glacial ridge that runs along
what is now Ridge Boulevard.
Wealthy industrialists and businessmen were drawn
to the area as a summer retreat and built mansions on the Bay Ridge
bluffs. Two examples of these extraordinary homes remain, The Howard
E, and Jessie Jones House, nicknamed the Gingerbread House by local
residents, is a landmarked stone building with a pseudo-thatched rood
on Narrows Avenue and 83rd Street.
Built in 1916-17 in the Arts and Crafts style rarely
seen in New York City the house offers a glimpse of the fanciful summer
cottages that filled Bay Ridge during those years. The second mansion
that remains, the current home of the Fontbonne Academy, a girls’ school,
is a relic of Bay Ridge’s heyday as a summer rendezvous for members
of high society. Local legend has it that this house was once purchased
for the actress Lillian Russell by the high-living financier “ Diamond
Jim” Brady.
Bay Ridge has given new life to other unusual buildings
of this early era. What is today Fort Hamilton High School, for example
was one the site of the Crescent Athletic Club, a posh retreat that
brought together the richest Bay Ridge residents.
Perhaps the greatest challenge to residents’ conception
of their community was the building of the Verrazano Narrows Bridge
to Staten Island. Robert Moses, chairman of the Triborough Bridge and
Tunnel Authority pushed the project through over strong opposition by
Bay Ridge residents, 8,000 of whom were displaced to make room for the
bridge. Many claim that the Bay Ridge community’s unsuccessful opposition
to the construction fueled the activism that remains strong today. The
results of this community involvement are impressive. Bay Ridge has
preserved the 16-acre Leif Ericson Park, which is popular for soccer,
and the 27-acre Owl’s Head Park, a favorite picnic area that was once
the estate of Brooklyn mayor and senator Henry C. Murphy. The 58-acre
Shore Road Park – which connects Owl’s Head Park at the northern end
of Bay Ridge to the southernmost Fort Hamilton area – boasts a two-and-a-half
mile winding path on which walkers, joggers, and roller-bladers enjoy
breathtaking clear views of the New York City harbor.
Today, Bay Ridge has its own morel, and its tree-lined
streets are filled with one- and two- family homes. Unlike many other
Brooklyn neighborhoods, these houses have garages, basements, and lawns,
which make certain streets of Bay Ridge look like those in the outer
suburbs. Ethnic diversity is strength of the community. Generations
of original Scandinavian and Italian residents have welcomed more recent
Chinese, Russian, Greek, Korean, Lebanese, Egyptian, Syrian, and Jordanian
immigrants. In the 1980, Chinese entrepreneurs who had settled in nearby
Sunset Park transformed some of Bay Ridge abandoned warehouses into
bustling garment factories. The most prevalent setters in the 1990s
have been newcomers from China and the former Soviet Union.
The ethnic foods served in 3rd and 5th
Avenue restaurants and sold in specialty stores now represent the full
diversity of the neighborhood’s residents, and the shopping area from
4th to 6th Avenues is vibrant and diverse. One
of the most famous stores in Bay Ridge is Kleinfeld’s, which opened
more than 55 years ago as a furrier named I. Kleinfeld and Son.
Today’s Kleinfeld’s, the nucleus of Bay Ridge’s retail wedding center,
welcomes more that 18,000 brides through its doors each year, sells
more that 8,000 wedding gowns annually, and offers a shuttle service
to and from Manhattan.
One foot of the Verrazano Narrows Bridge rests in
Fort Hamilton, which is listed in the National Register of Historic
Places as the second oldest continuously garrisoned federal post in
the United States, although in 1997 it was severely reduced. The fort
is named for Alexander Hamilton, who fought with the colonials in the
Battle of Brooklyn, and is on the site of an early Dutch blockhouse.
Fort Lewis, an earlier fort on the same site, was made of earth and
timber and helped repel the British during the War of 1812. Fort Hamilton
itself was built between 1825 and 1813 as the first granite fort in
New York harbor, and the building in the center of today’s fort in land
marked, even though it was altered in 1937 and 1938 when it was converted
to an officers’ club. During the Civil War, volunteer regiments trained
at the fort, and the water battery, Fort Lafayette, became a prison
for high-ranking Confederate captives. Brooklynites in the area during
this time could see ships lined up across the Narrows to help defend
Fort Hamilton and other fortifications on Staten Island from Confederate
raiders. Fort Hamilton also provided troops to help put down the draft
riots of July 1863, when New Yorkers, resenting enforced conscription,
tore up railroad tracks, burned hotels, and attached blacks. The building
and armaments of Fort Hamilton kept place with munitions technology.
When refitted cannon made vertical walled masonry obsolete, the fort
was refitted with long-range guns hidden from view. These guns in turn
were replaced, first with antiship artillery, than with anti-aircraft
defenses as the threats to the safety of the harbor changed. The guns
were removed altogether in 1954 when Nike missiles began a 20-year term
a protecting New York City. But Fort Hamilton remained active. During
both world wars, the base was used as a major embarkation and separation
center. And more recently, in the mid-1990s, it was used as a recruiting
command post and as the military entrance and processing station for
New York City. The 26th Army Band is in residence there,
and the Veteran’s Administration Hospital serves the needs of veterans
and families of military personnel from all over New York. Visitors
to the fort all discover an extensive collection of military paraphernalia
and old maps of the area in a small museum founded in 1980.
The civilian area names Fort Hamilton features
more high-rise housing than does its neighbor, Bay Ridge, but it also
includes one – and two-family homes. Many who live in the area consider
themselves a part of Bay Ride as well as of their own neighborhood, in
a fitting testament to how both early and more recent residents have
shared common assets and have united to preserve them. |