| My Neighborhood - Brooklyn, New York |
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| Brooklyn Heights |
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Once known as Clover
Hill, was one of New York's first suburban areas. This high ground offers
a clear view of the glorious Manhattan skyline. It was first settled
in 1642 by Dutch farmers after the completion of Manhattan's Peck Slip
ferry. At the foot of what is now Montague Street, once stood the Revolutionary
War headquarters of General George Washington's troops.
In 1816, upon
Brooklyn's recognition as a municipality, the enterprising and wellborn
Hezekiah Pierpont (Pierrepont) had streets laid out and directed that
all homes built, be constructed of brick and stone, creating a select
area in which the monied elite could settle. Property was advertised
for sale to businessmen working in lower Manhattan. This marked the
beginning of the area's aristocratic period when many large and elegant
homes and hotels were built. Some still stand today along Willow and
Pierrepont Streets. |
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| Family and church were the cornerstone's of this
patrician existence, as were formalities, replete with pomp and circumstance.
The end of WW I marked a noted change in the area. The arrival of the
automobile and the allure of the suburbs, succeeded in taking many from
the area. By the 1950s, many homes were subdivided into rooming houses
and the area underwent a decline. Unfortunately, area clearance projects
resulted in the demolition of many rows of historic brownstones. But
collective community efforts were successful in salvaging a large part
of the area, and the Promenade, a walkway with an impressive view of
the Manhattan skyline, was developed. In recent years, this neighborhood
has become one of the city's most exclusive neighborhoods, populated
by many of society's upper echelon, including Wall Street bankers and
attorneys. Well-kept brownstones, historic churches, and the many shops
and cafes along Montague Street all succeed in attracting residents
and visitors to this upscale area. |
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| Claims to Fame:
- The Brooklyn Historical Society (128 Pierrepont
Street) is host to many happenings, lectures and events relative to
Brooklyn. It houses a vast reference library of original documents
and artifacts depicting Brooklyn's history. Visitors can view bits
of the Brooklyn of yesteryear, among them seats from Ebbet's Field
and memorabilia from the old Coney Island amusement area.
- Established as New York City's first landmarked
district in 1965, over 100 historic homes remain in the area. Among
them is the charming house at 24 Middagh Street. Built in the early
1820s, it is an unmarred example of the Federal style.
- Plymouth Church of the Pilgrims at (75 Hicks Street)
was founded in 1847 and accommodated many prominent leaders among its
worshipers, including Charles Dickens, Mark Twain and Abraham Lincoln.
Congregationalist Minister Henry Ward Beecher preached at the church
from 1847-1887, making a public stand against slavery and other immoralities.
- The Promenade - a walk along this deck that extends
over the Brooklyn Queens Expressway affords an inspiring view of the
magnificent Manhattan Skyline. At night, the glitter and twinkle of
lights still has the ability to awe even the most entrenched New Yorker.
- The Squibb Pharmaceutical Company, acclaimed for
the creation of ether, greatly used as an anistetic, saw its beginnings
in the area on the site that is now The World Headquarters of the Jehovah's
Witnesses. The company moved to New Jersey in 1969.
From its very beginnings to the present day this
area has always attracted the creative, the poetic and the visionary,
including:
- The beloved poet and writer Walt Whitman, who
lived for a time in Brooklyn Heights where he composed and published
his poetry while working as a writer for a local paper, The Brooklyn
Daily Eagle, where he later served as editor.
- The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, a local paper
that served as the voice of the borough from 1841 through 1955, was
stalwart in its purpose of reporting detailed local events, as well
as national and foreign news. Its editorial policy, most times colored
by the prevailing editor, for good or for bad, served to effect current
events of the times.
- Truman Capote's Breakfast at Tiffanys
was authored while he was a resident of Brooklyn Heights.
- Singer/songwriter Harry Chapin was born and raised
in Brooklyn Heights.
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ParkTerrace.com, Brooklyn
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Park Slope Office
462 7th Avenue
Brooklyn, New York 11215
Phone: 718-369-1700
Fax: 718-369-4312
E-Mail:
Manager : Judy Noonan
Regional Manager : Milon Alam
Owner/Broker : Judy Noonan |
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