At the turn into the 21st Century Fort Greene embraces high hope as a vital part of downtown Brooklyn. A rising crest of talented young artists and professionals has taken residence here. Creative shops and restaurants now line the avenues. Better still, innovation and culture is more assured with the arrival of the Mark Morris Dance Group, a new High School of the Arts that includes courses in preservation, a revitalized Brooklyn Music School, 651 Arts that advances African American performing arts, the Alliance of Resident Theatres/New York, and of course the Brooklyn Academy of Music—all these are enviable assets for Fort Greene’s future. More promises are still unfolding with the Brooklyn Academy of Music Local Development Corporation that seeks to build a new Visual and Performing Arts Library and other new vehicles of culture.
Archive for September, 2004
A Bright Future
Tuesday, September 21st, 2004Fort Greene Park and Fowler Square
Monday, September 20th, 2004The highest point in Fort Greene is a 30-acre park from which the area takes its name. Fort Greene Park was built on the site of the early Fort Putnam in the War of Independence. It was later called Fort Washington, as well as ultimately being renamed after Gen. Nathaniel Greene, one of George Washington’s key aides. The grounds were designed in 1867 by Olmsted and Vaux, who also created Central and Prospect Parks. In 1908 a Doric column Martyrs Monument was dedicated to approximately 11,500 patriots during the Revolution in the 1770s. These Americans died of illness and starvation aboard British prison ships in Wallabout Bay. Many of their remains are in a crypt below the monument.
Fort Greene Today
Saturday, September 18th, 2004Fort Greene includes two New York City landmarked districts: the Fort Greene Historic District and the Brooklyn Academy of Music Historic District. These two adjacent districts are also listed on the National and New York State Registers of Historic Places.
Fort Greene showcases 19th Century building arts in a progression from early frame houses of the 1840s-50s to brick and brownstone from the Civil War era, and on to the 1880s. Here are some of New York’s finest examples of neo-Grec, Italianate and Second Empire styles, as well as a popular style after the 1870s. It is best seen in South Oxford Street between Lafayette and DeKalb Avenues where homes show the geometrically abstracted design derived from the work of the English architect, Sir Charles Eastlake.
The 20th Century
Thursday, September 16th, 2004Most construction in Fort Greene was completed by the end of the 1890s. Only five superb buildings from the first third of the 20th Century were added: the HSBC (Williamsburgh) Bank, Hanson Place Central Methodist Church, Queen of All Saints RC Church, the Masonic Temple and the Brooklyn Academy of Music. Enrico Caruso and Geraldine Farrar opened the Academy in 1908 in a performance of Charles Gounod’s Faust.
In the 1920s-40s Fort Greene was a brightly lit Hollywood showcase with numerous cinemas, including the Paramount from 1928 which had a great Wurlitzer organ, still in place. On the side of Paramount along DeKalb Avenue (now the Long Island University gymnasium) there remains a palimpsest of a sign advertising the Paramount Theatre. Marianne Moore, the poet, lived in Cumberland Street during this period, and she was a big fan of the Brooklyn Dodgers. She once wrote that “Baseball is like writing, and writing is exciting.” Richard Wright’s celebrated novel, Native Son, was also written in Fort Greene when the author lived in Carlton Avenue.
The Civil War
Wednesday, September 15th, 2004Lincoln’s election in 1860 was soon followed by South Carolina’s secession from the Union, and the Civil War began. Although they had not given their full vote to Lincoln, the people of Fort Greene were strongly pro-Union and in favor of abolition. New York State had outlawed slavery in 1827. Brooklyn’s first “Coloured” school, where the Walt Whitman Houses are today, opened 20 years later. Perhaps half of Brooklyn’s African Americans of that period lived in the Fort Greene-to-Brooklyn City Hall section. Labor competition for jobs at the Navy Yard, however, grew fierce during the Civil War and the Draft Riots by hooligans, often pitted against skilled black workers, grew ugly.
Yet black accomplishment could not be denied. The principal of P.S. 67 in 1863 was African American, and by 1882 Dr. Phillip A. White became the first black member of Brooklyn’s Board of Education. The village of Weeksville near Schenectady Avenue, where some Fort Greene blacks relocated, also produced the first female African American physician and the first black police officer in New York.
Fort Greene Grows Up
Tuesday, September 14th, 2004Only a few farm houses had been built in the area in the 1840s, but the 1850s saw a real estate boom that required new streets to be laid out. Developers seized on the idea of spiffy London names to add cachet, with Fort Greene streets dubbed as Portland, Oxford, Cumberland. Gas lighting lit homes, water lines as well as flush toilets and sewers eliminated privies, and hammers pounded incessantly into the 1860s. Baby buggies also abounded. Grand Italianate row houses sprang up on South Portland Avenue, bearing a flourish of ornamental doorway pediments and bracketed cornices, all in high relief, and inspired by old palaces in Italy. These houses were followed in the next decade by the stylized geometric order of the English architect, Charles Eastlake. Their ornamentation is simplified and incised in the stone, with angularly framed doorways and windows. A few examples the Eastlake style are in South Oxford Street.
Breuckelen
Monday, September 13th, 2004By 1646, five early Dutch towns on western Long Island united as one, called Breuckelen for its namesake near Amsterdam, Holland. The town’s first Italian was Peter Caesar Alberti who started a tobacco plantation near the bay in Fort Greene in 1649, but was killed six years later by the native people. Other plots of land became farms for such families as the Jacksons, Ryersons and van Couwenhovens. The Dutch yielded New Netherlands to British sovereignty in 1664, under the Duke of York, but growth of Brooklyn’s population was very slow—by 1698 there were 509 people, including 65 slaves, and at the start of the War of Independence in 1775, there were only 3,500.
When British forces anchored in the Narrows near Gravesend in 1776, the American Patriots had already created a redoubt, Fort Putnam, on the hillock that is now Fort Greene Park—renamed later in honor of Gen. Nathaniel Greene, one of Washington’s top aides. But vastly outnumbered by the British and Hessian troops, the Patriots had to retreat from the southern reaches of Brooklyn toward Fort Greene, and on the night of August 29, 1776, under a cover of rain and fog, Gen. Washington ordered all his men evacuated by small boats to Manhattan. It was a defeat, yet a victory by saving the army for another day—and ultimate triumph.
Meantime, the British commanded all New York citizens to swear allegiance to the Crown, or face imprisonment aboard derelict old boats moored in Wallabout Bay. Some 11,500 of those prisoners, primarily sailors including African Americans and a few nationals of other countries, and at least one woman who bore a son on board, died of starvation or pestilence. Their bodies were heaved overboard, either for shallow burial in the sands, or simply to wash up on shore. By 1806 the citizens of Fort Greene began collecting those remains for interment in a small crypt near the western edge of the Navy Yard.
Prehistory
Sunday, September 12th, 2004Bleakly during the last great Ice Age some 12,000 years ago, a crunching slurry of massive granite boulders, rocks and gravelly clay bruised down across the whole northern rim of America from Cape Cod to Washington State. One of the last great puddles of this terminal moraine (final downwash) settled as hillocks and sandy valleys across Long Island, ending at a cleft at what is now the East River. Fort Greene is a part of that “imported” land, stretching from Clinton Hill at the east down to the waterfront and Navy Yard at the west, opposite lower Manhattan.
2004 Graffiti
Wednesday, September 1st, 2004Graffiti
Along with the recognition Fort Greene has been receiving, as of late we have also seen an increase in property tagging or graffiti. With your help we can send these “artists” packing. If you see graffiti please call Graffiti-Free Brooklyn at 718-802-3875 to report graffiti from either residential or commercial buildings.
Graffiti
By i.leon golomb
staring at one,
and with headlight-like glare,
as the silver scrawls shine in the night,
there are those who seem unaware or uninterested as they multiply like a plague.
……………with neighborhood tours
now advertising Fort Greene as a neighborhood under siege…….
-
Not so poetic! - Graffiti on the rise in Fort Greene
If you see graffiti please report it to the Graffiti-Free Brooklyn- 718.802.3875.
Be sure to call with an actual address where you have seen a tag.
September Newsletter article on Graffiti
