Fascinating Brooklyn stories from our local history archivists.

POTW: Ecology cleanup along Coney Island Creek

POTW: Canine Fitness Month

Linewaiters' Gazette: Early Years of the Park Slope Food Coop's Newsletter

POTW: Spring Time
Long Island Viewbook
Brooklynology Editorial StaffThis blog post is the fourth in a series that is part of a project funded by The Robert David Lion Gardiner foundation to assess and improve access to archival collections in our holdings that relate to Long Island. It was written by Cecilia Wright, an assessment archivist working on the project.
The American Toilet (1837)
Brooklynology Editorial StaffThis blog post is the third in a series that is part of a project funded by The Robert David Lion Gardiner foundation to assess and improve access to archival collections in our holdings that relate to Long Island. It was written by Cecilia Wright, an assessment archivist working on the project.In a manila folder stored with other manila folders concerning the Petit and Schenk families of Long Island, is a small 4.25” by 5” bound book. The inside page of this book reveals that its title is: The American Toilet. The date on this page, 1837, also explains the choice of “toilet,” which…
Out (Again) on Long Island
Brooklynology Editorial StaffThis blog post is the second in a series, that is part of a project funded by The Robert David Lion Gardiner foundation to assess and improve access to archival collections in our holdings that relate to Long Island. It was written by Cecilia Wright, an assessment archivist working on the project.

POTW: Design Talent Born in Brooklyn

POTW: Angular Beauty in Brooklyn Heights

POTW: Coney Island montage
Kevina, Center for Brooklyn History

A Hanging in Brooklyn, Part 1
Kevina, Center for Brooklyn History
Content note: This story contains strong language, descriptions of violence, and descriptions of racism. On the morning of August 1st 1884, Alexander Jefferson, known to his family and friends as Alec, walked to the gallows surrounded by clergymen, doctors, and activists. His brother Celestial Jefferson did not attend, but spent time with him the night prior. A throng of spectators spilled out around Fort Greene’s Raymond Street Jail. The ministers sang “Nearer My God to Thee” and other hymns. Doctors stood by, waiting to autopsy and skeletonize his body for research and display.…

POTW: Barrel of Fun
POTW: The Williamsburgh Branch
This week's Photo of the Week is an image of the Williamsburgh Branch of Brooklyn Public Library located at 240 Division Avenue. The Williamsburgh Branch, which was built in 1903, was one of 21 branches created with funds provided by Andrew Carnegie. One of the more interesting facts about the Williamsburgh Branch is that enclosed in one of the cornerstones is a capsule containing Brooklyn Newspapers, the Carnegie contract, and other contemporary documents. Depicted are, presumably, school children, seated at the library with a librarian at the desk in the corner. It is assumed…

POTW: Smog Safety

POTW: Viele's Original Prospect Park

POTW: The talkative Annie Brown

POTW: A Steady Gaze

The Greatest Fair Ever Held

POTW: Story Hour in the Snow

POTW: Mystery Parade
Kevina, Center for Brooklyn History

POTW: Street Scenes with John D. Morrell

POTW: Sliding in Fort Greene

Glasslands Gallery
Glasslands Gallery was a club in Williamsburg, located at 289 Kent Avenue. It was opened by Brooke Baxter and Rolyn Hu in 2006. Baxter had a previous gallery in the same building which was called Glass House Gallery. As a concert venue, Glasslands was one of the longest running venues on the Williamsburg waterfront. As notoriety grew Glasslands started to attract bigger acts including Kyp Malone from TV on the Radio, Grizzly Bear, Matt and Kim, Deerhunter, Kimya Dawson and Julianna Barwick. Vampire Weekend and the Yeah, Yeah, Yeahs, Bon Iver and MGMT were some of the earlier…

POTW: New Beginnings

POTW: Poison Books

POTW: A sidewalk in Bensonhurst

POTW: A Castle in Brooklyn

POTW: Cozy in Brownsville
Kevina, Center for Brooklyn History

Lots of Lott: Examining Portraits of John A. Lott
The Center for Brooklyn History is home to a wide variety of portraits of Brooklyn residents. The walls of the Othmer Library include a handful of our portrait paintings—serious-looking oil on canvas images of wealthy 19th-century men and women dressed to impress.

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: Who Goes There?

POTW: Tribute to a Dodger Dad

POTW: O'Dwyer for Mayor

POTW: Coney Island Carousel

Infant Incubators at Dreamland
Infant incubators as amusement park attraction? Browsing through the digitized Eugene L. Armbruster photographs and scrapbooks, I saw a few photographs of the exterior and interior of an old German farmhouse-style building. At the bottom of each photo, Armbruster wrote: "Infant Incubators Dreamland, 1904."

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: Into the Othmer

POTW: Coal on the Marquee

POTW: Weird Scenes along the Beach

POTW: Garbage barge at Barren Island

Opening the Pocket Doors: Highlights from the Audiovisual Recordings
NicoleA little over two years ago, my colleague Katherine Sorresso and I began processing the institutional records of the Brooklyn Historical Society (BHS), now the Center for Brooklyn History at the Brooklyn Public Library. These records document the Society's activities from its founding as the Long Island Historical Society in 1863 until its merger with the Brooklyn Collection in 2020. The collection includes materials produced by various departments and records from individuals in leadership roles within BHS. The earlier materials consist of analog formats – ledgers, scrapbooks, correspondence…

POTW: Early Shirley

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors – Welcome to the Brooklyn Historical Society!
Nicole
POTW: A Garden Grows Again in Flatbush
Kevina, Center for Brooklyn History

POTW: Jewels in the Sidewalk

Brooklyn's got school spirit
Here at the Center for Brooklyn History, we collect anything and everything related to Brooklyn history. That includes materials related to our borough's many schools, such as yearbooks and high school newspapers, documenting Brooklyn's long educational history. But did you know we also have artifacts from Brooklyn schools? Brooklynites have shown their school pride in all kinds of ways through the generations, and we collect and document it all, from our broad composite Brooklyn schools collection to collections of material from specific schools or individuals. In honor of Back to School…

POTW: Back to School

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: To the Library!

POTW: Fort Hamilton Cannon

Opening the Pocket Doors: One Building, Many Uses
When visiting the Center for Brooklyn History today, you enter a vast space that today has been split into various sections. Upon entering, you are immediately greeted by our wonderful Welcome Services team at the front desk, behind which is a segmented wall that showcases upcoming programs. To the left, we have a quaint gift shop. But if you continue into the space, you will see a large room with chairs, tables, and couches. Occasionally, this space will be rearranged for lectures with a small stage and an array of seats. This lecture set up is reminiscent of this room’s original, intended…

Out on Long Island
Brooklynology Editorial StaffThis blog post is the first in a series, that is part of a project funded by The Robert David Lion Gardiner foundation to assess and improve access to archival collections in our holdings that relate to Long Island. It was written by Catherine Jonas-Walsh, an assessment archivist working on the project.

POTW: Seeing Double

POTW: National Oyster Day

POTW: The Thunderbolt

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors – World of Tomorrow

POTW: Turrets Long Gone

POTW: Moonlight
Kevina, Center for Brooklyn History

Kitchen Connections
One of the things I love about archival research is how many senses it activates. The obvious visual delights, tactile sensations, hints of grass and vanilla wafting from the boxes, and the reading room rustle of papers, chairs, and keyboards. Noticeably and rightfully absent is our fifth sense, taste. Archival research has no flavor*, but food is constantly on the minds of many researchers. What were their research subjects eating? What did it taste like? What did their homes smell like while it was cooking? How and where did they source ingredients? These questions are key to understanding…

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: Everybody Has Those Days
Brooklyn Historical Society Staff, circa 1990. Brooklyn Historical Society Institutional Records, ARC 288. Brooklyn Public Library, Center for Brooklyn History.Have you ever felt like this at work? The real question is, what exactly is the person in the photograph feeling and expressing? Why was this photograph taken? To me, this photograph evokes extreme frustration, possibly having to do with their work or with their computer. But to different people, the picture could evoke different emotions, such as exhaustion or perhaps even pain from a headache. Unfortunately, we don’t have any more…

POTW: Coney Island Boardwalk

POTW: Is Your Summer Booked?

Seeing Stars: Astronomical Observatories in Brooklyn

POTW: New York's Floating Cars

POTW: A Mournful Ouroboros

POTW from the Vault: Cat named “Lazybones”
This From the Vault post was originally written by Tess Colwell and published on January 9, 2019 by the Brooklyn Historical Society. To see the latest Photo of the Week entries, visit the Brooklynology blog home, or subscribe to our Center for Brooklyn History newsletter.

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: Here’s to Baseball!

Brooklyn poets remember
Kevina, Center for Brooklyn History

POTW: The House on the Hill

From the Vault: An Ode to Brooklyn Poets
Kevina, Center for Brooklyn History

Green-Wood Cemetery
Entrance to Greenwood Cemetery, [190-?], Brooklyn Postcard collection, Brooklyn Public Library, Center for Brooklyn History. The Center for Brooklyn History provides this guide for those researching Green-Wood Cemetery. The Center for Brooklyn History’s holdings include books, photographs, maps, deeds, illustrations, and oral histories. In addition to these materials, researchers are encouraged to browse the collections and other research guides for resources that may be relevant to their work. To make an appointment or ask a question, please contact cbhreference@bklynlibrary.org…

POTW: Hello, Doily!

Portals to the Past: A Peek Through the Archives
For the past few years, in pursuit of a new career as an information professional, I have been working towards a master’s degree in library and information science (MLIS) with a concentration in archival studies from the iSchool at the University of Missouri, where I will be graduating in May. My profound passion for libraries and archives stems from the belief that providing access to valuable resources is a fundamental service to the community, especially for those underrepresented individuals whose stories are often overlooked and difficult to discover. As a queer first-generation minority…

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: The Enthusiastic Catalogers Department
Brooklyn Historical Society Staff, circa 1994. Brooklyn Historical Society Institutional Records, ARC 288. Brooklyn Public Library, Center for Brooklyn History.Did your favorite singer release an album recently and use an image of a card catalog to promote said album? Are you not entirely sure what a card catalog actually is? Not to worry, we are here to explain! Let’s first look at the word catalog: for the purpose of libraries at its most basic level, it is an organized list of books held by a specific library. Prior to cards, library catalogs were recorded in books. But as…

The Rocks Cry Out

POTW: A Tree Grows on Garfield Place

POTW: A Peek Inside Brooklyn Eye and Ear Hospital

Margaret Armstrong, Alice Morse, and the Decorated Cloth Book Cover
In the 1880s, two New Yorkers burst into the competitive scene of cloth book cover design: Margaret Nielson Armstrong (1867–1944), a Manhattanite, and Alice Cordelia Morse (1863–1961), a Brooklynite. They became two of the major forces behind the art's golden age, which lasted from about 1880 to 1910. Fourteen of their works are on display at the Center for Brooklyn History, now through June 2024.

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: Voices of Brooklyn

POTW: Cutting up carpenters

POTW: Rain, rain, go away

POTW: Ramadan
Kevina, Center for Brooklyn History
Young girl at evening prayers with her father during Ramadan, 2010, GERH_0001; Robert E. Gerhardt, Jr. photograph collection, Brooklyn Public Library, Center for Brooklyn History.This Sunday, March 10 marks the new moon and the start of Ramadan. In this photo from the Robert E. Gerhardt, Jr. photograph collection, a young girl stares intently into the camera. She and her father are praying at the Muslim American Society in Bath Beach, 1933 Bath Avenue, in 2010. Robert Gerhardt Began photographing Muslims in Brooklyn in 2010 during Ramadan, leading him to photograph mosques and Muslims all…

Dipping into the Collection: Thall and Lopez family papers and photographs
For this month's blog post we thought we might take a peek into the collection, looking at the Thall and Lopez family papers and photographs. The collection consists of documents, ephemera, and photographs related to several generations of the Thall and Lopez families of Canarsie, Brooklyn. Included in the collection are letters, photographs, account ledgers, blueprints, wills, deeds, stock certificates, a Civil War infantry manual, Civil War currency, notes, newspaper clippings, electrification contracts, and assorted legal documents. It’s an interesting look at a family that has lived in…

Railfan Sandwich Man's Loco-Motive to Increase Business

Opening the Pocket Doors: Beauty and the Beer (An Exhibit That Never Was)
[Beauty and the Beer exhibit advertisement], ca. 2000. Brooklyn Historical Society Institutional Records, ARC 288. Brooklyn Public Library, Center for Brooklyn History.She’s beauty and she’s grace, she’s Miss..Rheingold? That’s right. From 1941 until 1965, the beer company, Rheingold Brewery—best known as the official beer of the New York Mets—also ran a beauty contest called Miss Rheingold. The beer company was founded by German-Jewish immigrant Samuel Liebmann in the 1850s in Brooklyn. His sons took over their father’s brewery about a decade later and eventually changed the name to…

For Valentine’s Day, a Love Letter to Joan Maynard, Activist and Artist
February is both the month of Black history and the month of love, so what better time to discuss one of Brooklyn’s most beloved historical figures, Joan Maynard!

POTW: Biking with a Friend

Documenting a Brownstone's Rebirth
In 2018, the New York Times published a story about an unusual Carroll Gardens brownstone for sale. 12 Second Place had been painstakingly restored during the brownstone revival movement of the 1960s and 70s, and had been owned by the same couple, Jane and Thor Rinden, ever since. Moreover, the Rindens had documented their five-year renovation process (1968-1973) in a charming and intimate scrapbook filled with photographs and memories. Fascinated by this story, I left a comment on the article, and fortuitously enough, the Rindens' estate decided that the scrapbook should come to the…

POTW: Happy Black History Month

POTW: Midwinter Remembrance

POTW: Great big beautiful dolls

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: Adopt-A-Block

POTW: From the Vault: Majestic Theater
This From the Vault post was originally written by Tess Colwell and published on January 27, 2016 by the Brooklyn Historical Society. To see the latest Photo of the Week entries, visit the Brooklynology blog home, or subscribe to our Center for Brooklyn History newsletter.

POTW: Love of Line, of Light and Shadow: The Brooklyn Bridge
Kevina, Center for Brooklyn History

Opening the Pocket Doors: A History of Education at the Brooklyn Historical Society

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: Say Cheese!
POTW: From the Vault: Real Brooklyn, a day in our lives photographs now available at BHS
This From the Vault post was originally written by John Zarrillo and published on March 10, 2016 by the Brooklyn Historical Society. To see the latest Photo of the Week entries, visit the Brooklynology blog home, or subscribe to our Center for Brooklyn History newsletter.
POTW: World Wildlife Day & the Pigeon

Honor Among Thieves?

POTW: All this for the Dodgers!
Pint-Sized Pilgrims

Not forgotten: Activism in the AIDS/Brooklyn exhibition collection

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: What Could Have Been
Katherine
From the Vault: Ruby's Bar
This From the Vault post was originally written by Julie May and published on May 13, 2013 by the Brooklyn Historical Society. To see the latest Photo of the Week entries, visit the Brooklynology blog home, or subscribe to our Center for Brooklyn History newsletter. This Photo of the Week was originally written and published by the Brooklyn Historical Society, so some terms and links may be out of date. To see the latest Photo of the Week entries, visit the Brooklynology blog home, or subscribe to the Center for Brooklyn History…

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: A Stained Glass Mystery
POTW: May the Library Be With You

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: A Room of (Our) Own
National Pasta Day

Black Masons in Brooklyn: an Indomitable Brotherhood
Halloween Inspiration

POTW: The Blessing of Brooke the Office Cat

POTW: From the Vault: Transformation and Discovery
Kevina, Center for Brooklyn History
Prospect Park Zoo

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: Get Out Your Camera!

I Married the Widow of the Man Who Shot Your Horse
Kevina, Center for Brooklyn History
POTW: Park Slope's Colorful Past

These Homes are for the Birds

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: Save the Clock Tower!
The George Aptecker Collection
POTW: Telephone Booth: From the Vaults

New York City History Day
SonyaLast June, 30 students from New York City participated in National History Day, a contest for Middle and High School students held at the University of Maryland in College Park, MD. After months of hard work crafting original historical research projects and competing in multiple contests, they were selected from over 500,000 students who competed internationally. The projects, all connected to the theme – Frontiers in History: People, Places, Ideas – ranged in topic and presentation. From performances examining the visionary of David Sarnoff and his impact on television; to papers examining…
International Lifeguard Appreciation Day

POTW: Cumberland Street Hospital's magnet

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: A Peek Inside the Vault
POTW: Remembering Summer 2020
Happy Fourth of July
Kevina, Center for Brooklyn History

Bookplates: Explanation and Inspiration
A bookplate is a label attached to the inside cover of a book, usually with the owner's name or initials, sometimes following the Latin phrase “ex libris” which translates to “from the books of.” Each label is unique to its owner, a way of announcing to the world, "This is mine!" A label that we would recognize as a modern bookplate has origins in late 15th century Germany. One of the first examples is this small hand-colored woodcut print depicting an angel holding a shield, which appears in books from the library of scholar and priest Hilprand Brandenburg (1442-1514). By…

POTW: Brooklyn Fire Headquarters

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: Humble Beginnings at the Hamilton
My Parents’ Wedding Photo
We never had much artwork in our home. The visual centerpiece of our living room was a symmetrical arrangement of three framed photographs: my parents’ hand oiled color wedding portrait in the center, flanked by the black and white high school graduation photos of me and my younger brother Robert. My parents, Carmella and Anthony Racioppo, displayed this same wedding portrait in each of their three Brooklyn apartments. I grew up seeing it every day. As I learned about photography, I realized what a good photograph it was: a professionally lighted studio portrait taken with a Century view…
POTW: Brooklyn Army Terminal
POTW: When Disco Was King
POTW: A Horse-Drawn Toilet

POTW: Penny-farthing

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: The Trails and Trials of Miss Edna Huntington
POTW: Olives on the Avenue
POTW: Happy May Day from this Brighton Beach Fishmonger
Kevina, Center for Brooklyn History
Eugenie Fribourg: Nearly 99 Years in Brooklyn
May is Jewish American Heritage Month and to celebrate I thought we could take a closer look at the Eugenie Fribourg Family Photographs and Ephemera Collection. It is comprised of materials relating to and documenting the family and professional life of Eugenie Merzbach Fribourg, a Jewish-American Brooklynite whose life spanned nearly the entire 20th century. She was born in 1908 and died in 2007, just weeks before her 99th birthday and the vast majority of her life was spent in Brooklyn.

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: Underneath the Floorboards
Want a Tattoo? Fuhgeddaboudit!
POTW: The Shot Heard Round the World
Assessing an 1848 Clairvoyant's Predictions for Brooklyn's Future
POTW: Four Horses of Fort Greene

Brooklyn Goes Daffy - It's Spring!

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: The Women’s Committee of the Long Island Historical Society
POTW: One Pub's Layered History

POTW: Happy Women's History Month from three Queen Esthers
Kevina, Center for Brooklyn History

A Tale of Two Schools: a Brooklyn-France Connection in the Aftermath of World War II

POTW: A Decade in the Life of a Brooklyn Photographer: the Laura Fitzpatrick Collection

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: Celebrating Presidents' Day with President Susan Mullin
POTW: Celebrating Don Newcombe
POTW: Soup Season: The Syrian-Jewish Edition

Opening the Pocket Doors: What Past Exhibitions Reveal
Brooklyn's Mechanical Milkman

POTW: Kane Street Synagogue
POTW: Odessa in Brooklyn

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: Ba Da Dao/Sunset Park Chinatown History Project

Sliding into the New Year
Stories a Photo Can Tell
July 16, 1968 Was Hot

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: A Look at Executive Director, David Kahn
POTW: Dining Under the Dome
POTW: Brooklyn Theater Fire: The Musical!

Cutting a Rug: Evidence(s) of Social Dance in Brooklyn
POTW: The Smallest Horse in the World

POTW: Bundling Up

POTW: Opening the Pocket Doors: Processing Brooklyn Historical Society’s Institutional Records
POTW: Hurricane Sandy
Be Kind, Rewind

The Lady of Gravesend
The Lady so integral to the history and development of Brooklyn spent most of her life in England. She was born Deborah Dunch around 1586, in London’s Gray’s Inn or a country estate outside the city. Her father, Walter Dunch, was a barrister and her grandfather, William Dunch, was an Auditor of the Royal Mint. She was a child during the reign of Elizabeth I, and grew up in the shadow of the plague, which had killed one-quarter to one-third of London’s population only twenty years before her birth and made appearances again in 1581 and 1592.

POTW: No Bones About It – They Are Getting the Skinny on This Exam Subject
POTW: Five Children and a Puppy
Gina Murrell
POTW: The Elephantine Colossus
LGBTQ+ History Resources at the Center for Brooklyn History
POTW: Risky Business: October 1878
Liza

POTW: Wasted Space, But Not for Long
POTW: A Child's Bedroom in 1880

POTW: Eugene L. Armbruster photographs and scrapbooks, 1900-1939
The World of Miklos Suba
Remembering 9/11 with Larry Racioppo and Amy Weinstein
Larry Racioppo and Amy Weinstein
This month's guest blog post comes from friend of the blog Larry Racioppo and Amy Weinstein. First is Larry's contribution followed by Amy's. On February 19, 2002, I met Jan Ramirez, the vice president and director of the New York Historical Society's museum, at St. Paul’s Chapel, the oldest church building in Manhattan. Soon after the 9/11 attacks she helped to launch History Responds. As part of this series, she commissioned me to photograph the Chapel’s wrought-iron fence which ran north along Broadway from Fulton Street to Vesey Street. Thousands of New Yorkers and…
Williamsburg Bridge
POTW: Shirley Chisholm Visits Fulton Street Festival
POTW: Jacob Mann Photographs

The Skate Emancipator: Abraham Lincoln’s Unexpected Legacy in Prospect Park
Abraham Lincoln never thought he would witness a kickflip. Never mind seeing one while cast in bronze and elevated nearly nineteen feet high over the southeast corner of Prospect Park lake. However if you stroll through the park’s ornate Concert Grove and make your way down to the waterfront esplanade, taking care to avoid the skateboarders flying around Abe’s feet, you will find yourself being scrutinized by more than the sunbathing red-eared slider turtles who have (against all odds) also made the lake their home. Skaters grind, slide, and slam under the watchful eye of the United…

POTW: Hot Dog Days
Remembering CETA artists in NYC
Walking through the Clark Street subway station in Brooklyn Heights, one can easily miss the two colorful tile murals installed near the entrances. Completed in 1981 by artists Jonah Sellenraad, Alan Samalin, and ceramicist Joe Stallone, the murals depict several nearby attractions, including Plymouth Church and the Brooklyn Heights Promenade.
POTW: Summer Vibes

One-Woman Coney Express
Anders Goldfarb Photographs of Coney Island
POTW: Mourning the Victorian Way
POTW: Extortionists Targeting Abortion Doctors Arrested

Unbanning Books Since 1934
You might have heard of our recent initiative Books Unbanned, which allows individuals ages 13-21 nationwide to apply for a free BPL eCard, providing access to our full eBook collection as well as our learning databases, and which makes a selection of frequently challenged and banned eBook & audiobook titles always available for BPL cardholders. But obviously, banning books and restricting access to information is unfortunately not a new phenomenon. Did you know that in 1934, the Brooklyn Jewish Center founded the American Library of Nazi-Banned Books? Though it's…

POTW: To Save Three Lives
POTW: Kindergarten Class at Fort Greene Park
POTW: From Factory to Community Hub

Introducing the Park Slope Civic Council Records
The Park Slope Civic Council (PSCC) was founded in 1896 as the South Brooklyn Board of Trade, a kind of chamber of commerce formed to lobby the city and state for improvements to infrastructure and services across the geographic area south of Downtown Brooklyn. In the late 1950s, the South Brooklyn Board of Trade changed its name to the Park Slope Civic Council in order to improve engagement in the neighborhood. As a result of this change, PSCC leaders planned to center civic projects and residents' needs, as opposed to focusing mostly on business owners. …

Fighting Metal: Keys to Victory
Home Sweet Hut
Wonder Wheel
POTW: Miss Chien at the Book Chute

Community-driven Change in Prospect Lefferts Gardens and Greater Gowanus
Throughout the Center for Brooklyn History’s archival collections there exists evidence of grassroots community organizations mobilizing to improve the quality of life for Brooklyn residents. Two recently processed collections provide insight into the people, programs, and services of community-driven neighborhood associations in Prospect Lefferts Gardens and Greater Gowanus, meanwhile illuminating common and reoccurring issues faced by residents throughout the greater metropolitan area. This month we take a closer look at the history and impact of the Prospect Lefferts Gardens…
POTW: Jamel Shabazz's Portrait of Louis Reyes Rivera

POTW: April Showers Bring May Flowers and Floods
POTW: Bringing Swagger to the Court Since 1910

POTW: What’s Better Than a Bake Sale?
POTW: Sun and Sea Therapy for Children

The Eberhard Faber Pencil Company
The Eberhard Faber Pencil Company traces back to 18th century Bavaria, where carpenter Casper (Kasper) Faber began crafting and selling lead pencils in the small town of Stein. Casper’s son Anton Wilhelm (A.W.), took over the business in 1784, renaming it the A.W. Faber Company.
POTW: Early Years of the Pratt Institute
POTW: The Cube as an Alternate Plan to Urban Renewal
POTW: The Evolution of Thought: Work by Lucille Fornasieri Gold

Changing Tides: 1965 Journal of Brooklyn CORE

POTW: On a Boat Built for One
POTW: Windows of Rare Beauty

Built for Brooklyn History: A Place With Many Names
POTW: An Unsightly Approach
POTW: Shark attacks in Brooklyn? Fuhgeddaboudit!
Eubie Blake and the Legitimization of the Black Musical
POTW: Civic Center Book Shop: "For Lovers of Old Books"

POTW: Atoms for Peace and Goodbye, Central Library
POTW: Hell's Gate Explosion
Allyson

POTW: Macaroni-Making Machine

Coordinating Dance Moves and Community in Brighton Beach

"The Fastest and Most Thrilling Ride Ever Offered the Public": Flying Turns at Steeplechase Park
It's January in Brooklyn, but one can always take a journey into summer through the collections at the Center for Brooklyn History (CBH). CBH holds many archival collections and digitized photographs on our digital collections portal and online image gallery that document Coney Island and its fantastic amusement parks, such as Luna Park, Dreamland and Steeplechase Park.
POTW: A Million Possibilities

POTW: Encounter with Kismet on a Ride Through Bed-Stuy
Deborah
POTW: Gil Hodges Gets His Due

The Brooklyn Theatre Fire of December 1876: a community's response
At the Center for Brooklyn History, a variety of collections document Brooklyn's vaudeville and theater scenes—from scrapbooks where individuals preserved programs and tickets, to periodicals like The Opera Glass, the Brooklyn Daily Programme and The Brooklyn Daily Stage. These serve as a testament to the popularity of these performances among a wide and diverse segment of Brooklynites.

POTW: One Photographer's Reflections on Protests and the Pandemic
The Restoration of Endale Arch
Allyson

POTW: Brooklyn's Dog and Horse Parade
POTW: Happy Birthday Marianne Moore

Eaglets on a Jolly Jamboree

POTW: Bring Your Photo ID: Filling Gaps in the Archive
POTW: Trommer's Near-Beer

POTW: A Tough Rowhouse to Hoe: On Agriculture and Urban Development

The Kanawake Teieriwakwata hymnal: aiding Mohawk services in the city of churches
POTW: A (Maybe) Brooklyn Haunting for Spooky Season
Allyson

The Art of Healing: Works from the Veterans Creative Arts Program collection
POTW: Dressing for Tradition
The Soap Fat Collector

Faces of a Family in 19th Century New York: the Ramus Collection
A Legacy in Lead

POTW: April 1, 1949: A Day in Brooklyn Labor History

The Poet From Syria
Anna Schwartz
POTW: Inman's Vaudeville
Allyson

Water, Water Everywhere
POTW: An Unusual Ride to School

POTW: Housing Starts: The Riverside Buildings and the Push for Affordable Housing in Brooklyn
An Icy Summer

Debate and Diplomacy in Brooklyn’s History
Jen HoyerEvery year, the National History Day contest provides students with an opportunity to dive into research related to an overall theme and present their findings in a variety of formats at their regional contest. We’re thrilled to host the regional contest for New York City at the Center for Brooklyn History in the 2021-22 school year, and we’ve been using the summer break to brainstorm some of our favorite topics related to this year’s contest theme. This year’s theme is Debate & Diplomacy in History: Successes, Failures, Consequences. You can read more about the theme at nhd.org/theme.…
POTW: Hat Works of Knox the Hatter
POTW: Steve Brodie Jumped off the Brooklyn Bridge and Lived (Maybe?)

Contribute to our Brooklyn Resists Community Collecting Project

Celebrating Student Research: Brooklyn Connections 2020-21
Brooklyn Connections is a program run by the Center for Brooklyn History’s education department that cultivates 21st Century learning skills in students and supports teachers with the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. Click here to view a selection of this year's Brooklyn Connections final projects.

POTW: Bulger's Hotel: Subway Construction Photographs Shed Light on a Lost Brooklyn Business
Cecily DyerPOTW: Brooklyn's Lost Saltwater Oasis
The Lost Murals of Borough Hall

POTW: Process of EL-imination: the last days of the Fulton Street elevated
POTW: Lionel the Lion-Faced Man
Taking a Bite Out of Spiritualism
When the Scientific American offered a $2500 prize to anyone who could produce a visible psychic manifestation, Chicago medium Elizabeth Allen Tomson answered the call. In the Fall of 1923 she arrived in New York with her husband and spokesman, Dr. Clarence Tomson and their daughter. Tomson performed several seances in homes across the city, using a technique that involved her entering a large cabinet where she fell into a trance and manifested spirits of the dead.

POTW: Wheeling in the Years: A Slice of Brooklyn Bicycle History
To close out National Bicycle Month, here's a little a celebration of bicycling in Brooklyn, from 1897 to the present.
POTW: A Look Back at Brooklyn's Central Library

A Story of Sands Street
POTW: A Mother's Immigration Story

The Librarian in Congress: The Life and Work of Major Owens
Representing Brooklyn From his roots as a librarian here at Brooklyn Public Library, to his ascent to the New York State Senate and U.S. House of Representatives, Major Owens' legacy is defined by his work as a tireless antipoverty reformer and as an advocate for education, civil rights, Americans with disabilities, workers' rights, and immigrants. As Brooklyn Public Library cautiously opens the doors to Central Library and a handful of other branches a little further this month, we are also unveiling renovations and improvements that have taken place during our…

POTW: Spring, Is That You?
Anna Schwartz

POTW: Mesopotamia in Brownsville
Deborah

POTW: Park Slope's Old Tower House

POTW: Brooklyn in Blue

POTW: National Library Outreach Day: On Bookmobiles and Fugitive Libraries
POTW: When the Dodgers went to the Bronx: Game 1 of the 1947 World Series
Allyson
POTW: The Opening of a Vaudeville Theater in Williamsburg
Amy Lau

POTW: One Bedford-Stuyvesant Block's Industrial Past
POTW: Cleaning Up the Waterfront with N.A.G.
Dee Bowers

POTW: The Brief Life of a Fanciful Building
Deborah
Web Archiving at BPL: Saving Brooklyn's Web Content One URL at a Time
Dee BowersDid you know that Brooklyn Public Library has a web archive? In 2017, the Brooklyn Collection (now part of the new Center for Brooklyn History) joined the Internet Archive’s Community Webs program, in which public libraries around the country are given the funding and support to start and sustain web archives. We have been archiving Brooklyn web content through this program for over three years now. Web archiving is how we describe the process by which we save and preserve websites and web content in a stable and static archival format. This is…

Preserving Black History in Brooklyn
Anna Schwartz

POTW: Bedford-Stuyvesant's Dar-ul-Islam Movement
Maggie Schreiner

POTW: Brooklyn's First Black Elected Official: Bertram L. Baker
Before Shirley Chisholm or David Dinkins made history, Bertram L. Baker paved the way. If you've found yourself on Jefferson Avenue between Tompkins and Throop Avenues, you may have noticed street signs announcing his name. The first Black elected official from Brooklyn, Bertram L. Baker made his debut in the New York State Assembly in November 1948, where he would serve for the next twenty-two years. It was a milestone in Brooklyn history, but do you know his story, or what politics in the borough looked like when he was elected?

Community and Activism in one Brooklyn Family's Roots
Cecily DyerA few years ago, I went in search of background information about a periodical in the Center for Brooklyn History collections called Afro-America. It was published in the late 1960s from Fred Richardson’s African American Bookstore in Crown Heights, which sold books by and about Black writers, poets, and political leaders, as well as picture books for children and art by Black artists. Fred opened the store when he was just 22.
POTW: The Life Saving Station of Manhattan Beach
POTW: Generations of New Years

Brooklyn's Teen Poets
The teenage years are a difficult time, with emotions running high and relationships with the people in your life changing quickly. Poetry is a universal outlet for teens to explore feelings about themselves and their world. While most poems stay tucked away in journals or at the bottom of trash cans, some brave souls are eager to share. Before social media, publication in a school newspaper was one of the most direct ways for a poet to reach their peers. We combed through our Brooklyn High School newspapers for a selection of the very best teen poetry Brooklyn had to offer:…
POTW: When Coal Was King
POTW: A Few of Our Favorite Things: Holiday Photos from the Collections
NatibaThis year has proven to be a year like no other, full of ups and downs, and a longing from most for better and brighter days. Despite the challenges, we at the Center for Brooklyn History are grateful for what we've been able to achieve this year. A historic partnership between two long standing, and significant institutions, and with it, the opportunity to serve our community and our borough, by expanding access to a singular collection in a single space, free and open to all. For this edition of Photo of the Week, we'd like to share our personal picks from our combined collections, that…
POTW: Before the Roller Disco
POTW: The 1960 Plane Crash That Rocked Park Slope
POTW: Vanderveer Park: When Flatbush Was a Suburb

Vanderveer Park: When Flatbush Was a Suburb
POTW: The Curious Origins of Thanksgiving
POTW: Take Two Shots and Call Me in the Morning: The Business of Selling Beer and Liquor
Michelle MontalbanoPOTW: A Brooklyn Block's Hidden History

A Short History of the Saratoga Park Playground
Saratoga Park is one of the many beautiful greenspaces Brooklyn has to offer. It’s the second largest park in Bedford-Stuyvesant, named for the nearby Saratoga Street, which takes its name from the Battles of Saratoga during the Revolutionary War. According to the New York City Parks Department, the word Saratoga might be Iroquois or Mohawk in origin, perhaps meaning either “springs from hillside” or “place of miraculous water in rock.” Before it became a park, the land was owned by James C. Brower and his family. Brower owned a hardware business, helped organize the New York and…
POTW: This Business of Voting…
POTW: Is It Un-American for Mothers to Work?
POTW: Designing the Library of the Future
POTW: Celebrating the Next Million Possibilities!

Reading Against the Grain in the Montauk Club Collection
The Brooklyn Collection is now part of the Center for Brooklyn History! Learn more about this historic partnership here. This post is a collaborative effort of historian Dylan Yeats, Vice President of the Montauk Club and co-chair of its History Committee, and archivist Diana Bowers-Smith, who processed the Montauk Club Collection at Brooklyn Public Library along with librarian and archives volunteer Kreya Jackson. Founded in 1889, when Brooklyn was still an independent city, the Montauk Club is a social club in the Park Slope neighborhood. Its landmarked Venetian Gothic clubhouse,…
POTW: Home Sweet Brooklyn
POTW: Fall(ing) into an Odd Brooklyn Autumn
Brooklyn Navy Yard oral history collection now available online!
POTW: The Migration of Mexican Cuisine
Summer Archives Internship Reflection from Sophia Terry
Summer Archives Internship Reflection from Fiona Wu
POTW: Sorting Mail at the Post Office
Supplementing Curriculum with Primary Sources
Brooklyn Connections is the education division of the Brooklyn Collection where we focus on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. This post's author, Rachel Chapman, is a former science teacher and current school librarian at the George Westinghouse Educational Campus in downtown Brooklyn serving grades 6 through 12 where she enjoys engaging students in reading and research. Rachel received her Masters of Science in Library and Information Science (MSLIS) from the…
POTW: Mapping New York City's Waterways
POTW: Building NYC's Water Infrastructure
POTW: A Bungalow by the Bay
POTW: No To-Go Cocktails Allowed: Brooklyn's Temperance Village
POTW: On the Rail: the Behr Monorail that Never Was
POTW: A Grave Tale: Roswell Graves, Jr. and the Cemetery of the Evergreens
POTW: A Litigious Legacy: the Story of a Gravesend Map
Lesson Learned? Considering the Draft Riots of 1863 for Today
The arrival of 4,000 Union troops in Manhattan on Thursday, July 16, 1863, marked the beginning of the end to four days of civic unrest and racial violence throughout New York City, Brooklyn, and Staten Island. That week, hundreds of buildings had been ransacked and burned. 119 people had been killed (although some estimates push that number closer to 500) including 19 African Americans, 11 of whom had been publicly lynched.At the height of the Civil War, the events that came to be known as the Draft Riots ignited simmering class and racial tensions in a city–and country–spiraling in the wake…
POTW: Start Exploring with the BHS Map Portal

Brooklyn Connections Student Projects, an Online Gallery
Brooklyn Connections is the education division of the Brooklyn Collection where we focus on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. Click here to view a selection of this year's Brooklyn Connections final projects.
Announcing the Launch of the BHS Map Portal!
POTW: A Summer Day at Dreamland
POTW: Quarantine Summer

A Teacher Grows in Brooklyn: Sarah J. Smith Tompkins Garnet
In March 2020, just before the closure of Brooklyn Public Library’s physical spaces, the Brooklyn Connections team had the pleasure of spending a day at the Brooklyn College Archives with their archivists and a group of New York City school teachers for a day-long professional development workshop on women in Brooklyn. We were excited to be in the Brooklyn College Archives because of their fantastic collection of material about the life and work of Shirley Chisholm; this inspired us to look at material from the Brooklyn Collection that highlights the lives of other women of color in Brooklyn…
POTW: A Reckoning for Brooklyn's Philip Livingston: Slaver, Trader, and Signer of the Declaration of Independence
POTW: Transforming Brooklyn's Legal Landscape

In Honor of Black Life
What does remembrance look like? As an archivist, special collections manager and lover of history, a large part of remembrance for me is representation. This and other similar threads are constantly a part of how I think about the work we do at the Brooklyn Collection. Who are we representing? Who has enough, and who does not? I ask this every time I think about a possible donation or addition to our collection. Our current climate and the awakening being experienced by others around Black life and its importance (it is), how history is repeating itself and the renewed calls to remove…
POTW: Grammar School Graduation, 1900
Processing Privilege and Moving to Action: Watch, Listen, Explore
Structural Racism in America: Watch, Listen, Explore
Confronting a History of Injustice: Watch, Listen, Explore
POTW: Black Lives Matter
Finding your Brooklyn Roots in Brooklyn Historical Society's Beginnings
With its "Finding Your Brooklyn Roots" initiative, BHS invites its followers to submit questions about their Brooklyn ancestors. In this post, we share one of our recent discoveries based on one of your inquiries. When a patron wrote to us hoping to learn more about her family roots in Brooklyn, she didn’t expect that we would be able to trace her ancestors back to Brooklyn Historical Society. We were just as surprised to find out that her second and third-great grandfathers, Julian and John Hooper, were not only early members of the Society, but made several contributions to our collections…
POTW: Brooklyn is not a Place, It is a People

My Mother's Sisters
After singer-songwriter John Prine died on April 7, 2020 from coronavirus complications, local radio stations and media outlets created playlists of his “essential songs”. Listening to WFUV-FM, I heard When I Get to Heaven for the first time. The song, from Tree of Forgiveness, his 18th and last studio album in 2018, begins humorously, but then turns serious. Some of Prine’s lyrics really struck home for me: “I wanna see all my mama’s sisters because that’s where all the love starts. I miss ‘em all like crazy, bless their little hearts.” My mother had three sisters and four brothers who…
POTW: Class Portraits from Clinton Hill
“Spanish Influenza” in Brooklyn and What We Can Learn from Our History
We turn to the history of the “Spanish” influenza pandemic, which swept through New York City in several waves between 1918 and 1920. Today, insights from this past may help us cautiously begin this next chapter in our present.
POTW: Cleaning Up in Brooklyn
Backgrounds of Brooklyn: Historical Flair for Your Video Calls!
POTW: Keeping New York in Motion
Moving Day: When All of Brooklyn Moved at Once
POTW: Changing with the Times, Always First to Respond
"Indian Villages": The Story Behind a Map
POTW: Taking Stock of Staying Stocked
HIV in Our Communities
POTW: The Evolution of a Brooklyn Block

Online Instruction and Office Hours with Brooklyn Connections
To all the teachers who are teaching online right now, the Brooklyn Connections team wants to say: thank you for everything you are doing! We recognize how exceptionally challenging, time consuming and emotionally and physically taxing this work is and we are here to offer support. Let us know if we can help in any of the following ways: Online Instruction: Let us take the mic for awhile! Brooklyn Connections educators are here to deliver live or asynchronous lessons of your choosing for grades 4 through 12. What kind of lessons? Online research! (i.…
POTW: A Flatbush Pharmacy
Poison for Profit
Everybody gets sick. For most of us, our health is a deeply personal and even private topic. But sickness and health are also public issues that have long shaped Brooklyn’s economy, its built environment, its laws and institutions, and its diverse communities. Taking Care of Brooklyn: Stories of Sickness and Health is one of Brooklyn Historical Society’s current exhibitions which explores how centuries of Brooklynites have understood sickness and health. Through the experiences of everyday Brooklynites giving, receiving, demanding, and being denied health care, Taking Care of Brooklyn shows…

Stay Connected! Online Research Tutorials for Brooklyn Newsstand and our Digital Collections
Looking for tips for digging into your Brooklyn history research online? Check out our new video tutorials for Brooklyn Newsstand and the Brooklyn Collection's Digital Collections. Brooklyn Newsstand is a collection of digitized Brooklyn newspapers made available through a partnership with Newspapers.com. Right now, the full content of Brooklyn Newsstand is available for free from any location. The Digital Collections offer a selection of more than 20,000 historical photographs and maps from the Brooklyn Collection, and audio and video recordings created by the Brooklyn…
POTW: Cooking for Brooklyn
Contraception, Control & Care
Everybody gets sick. For most of us, our health is a deeply personal and even private topic. But sickness and health are also public issues that have long shaped Brooklyn’s economy, its built environment, its laws and institutions, and its diverse communities. Taking Care of Brooklyn: Stories of Sickness and Health is one of Brooklyn Historical Society’s current exhibitions which explores how centuries of Brooklynites have understood sickness and health. Through the experiences of everyday Brooklynites giving, receiving, demanding, and being denied health care, Taking Care of Brooklyn…
POTW: Doing Your Part to Take Care of Brooklyn
The Recap: Toxic City

Photographs and Reflection in the Time of Quarantine
I’m restless. I’m 72 years old and have been “sheltering at home” since March 7th. I’m not sure which I miss more – seeing my grandchildren or exploring the outskirts of New York City. I’ve spent many quiet hours photographing its waterfront and abandoned interiors. Almost every day since the 7th, I’ve scanned panoramic and large format negatives or made pigmented inkjet prints, and I expect to continue this routine in the weeks and months ahead. I’m lucky to have the means and equipment to do so, but man do I miss being out photographing. I’m trying to internalize the advice of my friend…
POTW: A Mother's Rights
Pandemics in Brooklyn: a view from 1918
It’s hard to know which of these things is more unexpected: that, in a time of health crisis and desperate need for accurate information, my first instinct is to read the newspaper from 100 years ago; or that said news coverage has proved oddly comforting. If either of these instincts resonates with you as well, check out what the Brooklyn Daily Eagle shared about the 1918 influenza pandemic. First of all: folks felt unsure about things. On September 18th, writing about “Influenza and Sports” (some things never change…), the Eagle reported that “Whether the influenza will flourish is a…

Hidden Ephemera in the Clippings Files
Beyond the stanchions, in the center of the Brooklyn Collection, sit two rows of cabinets. Clocking in at 110 drawers, they contain a collection of newspaper clippings that are finally getting some much-needed attention. The clippings files include folders with obscure labels such as "Local Color" and "Brooklyn Spirit", and the subjects they cover—the aforementioned included—are cataloged in a 447-page Word document. It is also one of our best-kept secrets. Though we use the clippings files to answer many reference questions, they are so sprawling and voluminous that even a…
POTW: Brooklyn Women Rule the Road
POTW: Emily Roebling's Bridge
POTW: Hunterfly Road and Brooklyn's Weeksville
New recordings from the Packer Collegiate Institute now online!
This post was written by Aliki Caloyeras, Brooklyn Historical Society Digitization Intern. Brooklyn Historical Society is pleased to announce the availability of over 175 newly digitized audio recordings, films, and videos from the Packer Collegiate Institute records (2014.019). This project has been made possible by a generous digitization grant from the Metropolitan Library Council (METRO), and follows up on our previous work with METRO to preserve quickly-deteriorating magnetic media and provide the public with easy access to our audio, video, and film collections.
POTW: Williamsburg families

From Castle Keeps to Community Spaces: The Evolution of Brooklyn’s Armories
Deborah
POTW: Desegregating Brooklyn's Classrooms
The Recap: Gentrification 2.0
POTW: A Leather Pocketbook
POTW: A Souvenir Bell Cast from the Fire
Brooklyn Historical Society's Statement in Support of our Colleagues at the Museum of Chinese in America
A statement from BHS President and CEO Deborah Schwartz The staff and Board of Brooklyn Historical Society are devastated by the news of the fire at 70 Mulberry Street, where MOCA stored its invaluable collections. We share MOCA’s commitment to the importance of local history, and we are prepared to help in any way we can as our colleagues establish their path to recovery. From its founding, MOCA has been a bold and creative voice in the museum field, never shrinking from the next challenge in telling the resilient stories of community. MOCA will need resources and expertise to get…
POTW: Alfred Steers's commemorative medals
POTW: Revolutionary-era cannonball
POTW: A Ceremonial Firefighter's Helmet
POTW: Happy New Year!
I, Asimov in Brooklyn: How the Library Shaped a Writer’s Mind
I'll write as I please and let the critics do the analyzing.
— Asimov, 1973
POTW: Cozy up for the holidays!
POTW: It's Christmastime in Brooklyn!
POTW: Manhattan Bridge

A Child’s Christmas in South Brooklyn (with apologies to Dylan Thomas)
When I was a boy growing up in South Brooklyn, no one was concerned about keeping Christ in Christmas. That was a given. Even my uncles who never set foot in church went to the standing room only midnight mass on Christmas Eve.
POTW: Winter is coming...
POTW: Thanksgiving Day

Teaching with Primary Sources: History Mystery!
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection. It focuses on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. This blog post is part of a series from the Brooklyn Connections team, sharing skills and ideas for using archives primary source material in the classroom. Using primary sources in the classroom shows us that we can access history through many different formats as long as we are grounded in historical thinking. A History Mystery is a fun way to create an…
POTW: G. Frank Edgar Pearsall
POTW: John Yapp Culyer
Caring for Brooklyn’s Digital History
Erica López, BHS Digital Preservation Fellow, writes about the joys and challenges of preserving legacy media. We experience, understand and interact with Brooklyn’s rich history in so many different shapes and forms. At Brooklyn Historical Society’s Othmer Library, this history is documented in manuscripts, photographs, moving images, oral histories and artifacts. In today’s increasingly digital world, our history can also be found on floppy disks, CDs, hard drives, and smart phones. Digital materials are at risk for a number of reasons, but the biggest risk is obsolescence. For…

On Native Land
On October 7th, I attended a convening of Brooklyn based cultural institutions, hosted by Brooklyn Museum in partnership with the Lenape Center. It was a 2-day workshop to discuss Living Land Acknowledgements and develop ongoing collaborative projects between Lenape-Delaware Nations and cultural institutions in Brooklyn. A Living Land Acknowledgment is a statement that recognizes the indigenous peoples who have been dispossessed from the homelands and territories upon which an institution was built and currently occupies and operates in. For Brooklyn, it was originally the “Lenapehoking…
POTW: The Elephantine Colossus
POTW: The Carroll Street Bridge
POTW: Lucille Fornasieri Gold Photographs
POTW: The Frank J. Trezza Seatrain Shipbuilding Collection
Teaching with Primary Sources: School History in Brooklyn
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection, focused on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. This blog post is part of a series from the Brooklyn Connections team, sharing skills and ideas for using archives primary source material in the classroom. As part of our work, we create freely available Primary Source Packets to help students and teachers access primary source material from the Brooklyn Collection about local history topics. Now that school is…
A Voice from the Past
Preserved in Brooklyn Historical Society’s collections is a wax audio cylinder from 1927 with a big story to tell.Intent listeners will just make out the soft voice of a woman identified as “Mrs. Hunt.” She thanks the congregation of Plymouth Church for inviting her to Brooklyn Heights to celebrate “the memory of one whose name always seems to me to be the complement of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher.”Although a somewhat obscure figure today, Mrs. Hunt, (also known as Sally Maria Diggs, Rose Ward, and, troublingly, "Pinky," throughout her life), shared a unique…

For Every Reader, Their Book
Madeline Knight-DixonAs soon as I tell anyone I’m a librarian, inevitably one of the first questions people ask is, “Can you recommend a good book?!” The short answer is: Yes! S. R. Ranganathan created five principles of librarianship (and yes, this is the kind of thing you learn in library school). One of these principles is, “Every reader, their book” and “Every book, their reader.” Connecting patrons to books that match their interests and needs is one of my favorite parts of being a librarian. We in “the biz” refer to this as Readers’ Advisory. At Brooklyn Public Library, we’ve taken readers’ advisory to the…
POTW: The Sharon Hall Hotel
POTW: Zig Zag Records, Sheepshead Bay
POTW: Bliss Estate, Owl's Head Park
POTW: Altar to Liberty, Green-Wood Cemetery
An End of Summer Tribute: Coney Island and the Wonder Wheel
Imagine this: It’s a cool summer day and you are the first in line with your friends for the Ferris wheel on Coney Island. The operator opens the gate and you hop on a blue passenger car and sit facing the beach. Your pod slowly rises and starts to shake; the higher and higher you get, the more clearly you can see the boats floating on the horizon, and as you sit behind your friends you see a wonderful view of the Verrazano Bridge, then the pod…drops! The wind blows heavy as you swing in the air. You scream, but also laugh it off because you go on the Ferris wheel every time you’re here but…
POTW: Ocean Parkway Bike Path

A (Not So) Brief History of Red Hook
Shipyards, dry docks, and machine shops. The place with the IKEA and the Fairway. Home of the fabled wild dogs on Beard St. and the abandoned grain elevator. Former home of the Dell's Maraschino Factory and the Snapple Factory. A Brooklyn neighborhood with a "small town" feel, cobbled streets, and limited public transit. It's possible that no other section of the borough has been so readily defined by single facets of its complex character. A waterfront community with deep maritime and industrial roots, Red Hook—like many neighborhoods in Brooklyn—is in flux. This is vividly borne out…

Teaching with Primary Sources: Food in Brooklyn
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection, focused on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. This blog post is part of a series from the Brooklyn Connections team, sharing skills and ideas for using archives primary source material in the classroom. As part of our work, we create freely available Primary Source Packets to help students and teachers access primary source material from the Brooklyn Collection about local history topics. Brooklynites love to…
POTW: The Ralph Irving Lloyd Lantern Slides
POTW: Clay Lancaster
Teaching with Primary Sources: Environmentalism in Brooklyn
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection, focused on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. This blog post is part of a series from the Brooklyn Connections team, sharing skills and ideas for using archives primary source material in the classroom. As part of our work, we create freely available Primary Source Packets to help students and teachers access primary source material from the Brooklyn Collection about local history topics. As summer…
POTW: The Anthony Costanzo Brooklyn Navy Yard Collection
Map Digitization!
Thanks to our new initiative, Portal to the Past: Creating Brooklyn Historical Society’s Digital Map Collections, BHS has just finished digitizing 1,600 maps!In 2017, BHS received a generous grant from National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) to support Portal to the Past: Creating Brooklyn Historical Society’s Digital Map Collections, a project that will increase public access to the institution’s extensive collection of flat and folded maps through conservation, digitization, and the creation of a web-based portal. Additional generous funding for this project has been provided by the…
POTW: Marianne Moore
Making Award-Winning Connections
A visitor to the Brooklyn Collection archive this summer will notice an eye-catching display in our exhibition case. Stepping closer, they’ll learn about the Dreamland fire in Coney Island, read political cartoons about the Verrazzano Bridge, and even see a replica of the Farragut Houses public housing project. The visitor will more than likely learn something new about Brooklyn’s history from this exhibition by local researches. They may be surprised to learn that all of these researchers are students.
POTW: The Williamsburg Bridge
Newly Digitized Historic Video Now Available!
We are excited to announce that Brooklyn Historical Society has arrived on the Internet Archive!We will be using this new account to provide access to historic films, movies, and audio recordings from our collections. You can currently explore over 40 newly digitized movies and 6 audio recordings from a variety of our collections, ranging from 1920s home movies to 1970s radio commercials. fig-17918] Our digitization project revealed some lovely surprises! We digitized videos of BHS exhibitions from the late 1980s and early 1990s, including “Not Forgotten: AIDS at the Brooklyn…
BHS's Young Scholars Program wins 2019 AASLH Award of Excellence for Leadership in History
The AASLH Leadership In History Awards is the Nation’s Most Prestigious Competition for Recognition of Achievement in State and Local History.
BHS's Young Scholars Program wins 2019 AASLH Award of Excellence for Leadership in History
The AASLH Leadership In History Awards is the Nation’s Most Prestigious Competition for Recognition of Achievement in State and Local History.
POTW: Fabulous Coney Island!
POTW: The Red Hook Grain Terminal
POTW: The Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge
POTW: Japanese Hill-and-Pond Garden
POTW: The Soldiers' and Sailors' Memorial Arch
Outlining inequality: how student research put redlining on the map
Jen HoyerAt Brooklyn Connections we are all about student research, and so we’re always excited to find historic examples of this in the Brooklyn Collection. One item in particular gives a glimpse into the impact student research has had on our borough. NYPIRG, the New York Public Interest Research Group, was founded in the 1970s as an issues-focused student activist group. Within seven years of its inception it was based on thirteen campuses across the state and counted over 100,000 dues-paying members. Students were able to receive academic credit for engaging in research on NYPIRG projects;…
POTW: The Fulton Ferry Fireboat House
POTW: Schenck-Crooke House
A Personal History of the Mermaid Parade
According to Wikipedia, Coney Island’s first Mermaid Parade took place in 1983, and it is now the largest art parade in the United States, attracting over 3,000 participants and hundreds of thousands of spectators.
Hours before the Parade’s start, the audience begins lining up behind police barricades along Surf Avenue. Spectators and costumed participants ride the subway to the recently renovated Stillwell Avenue stop.
POTW: Kings Theatre
The mysterious affair of Stiles
POTW: Brooklyn Fire Headquarters
POTW: Huron Street Public Bath
POTW: Hicks-Platt House, Gravesend
Teaching with Primary Sources: the LGBTQ+ Movement in Brooklyn
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection, focused on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. This blog post is part of a series from the Brooklyn Connections team, sharing skills and ideas for using archives primary source material in the classroom. As part of our work, we create freely available Primary Source Packets to help students and teachers access primary source material from the Brooklyn Collection about local history topics. Every year in June we…
POTW: Paerdegat Basin
Conservation: BHS’s Maps Get Some TLC!
In our second post about the Library & Archives project Portal to the Past: Creating Brooklyn Historical Society’s Digital Map Collections, we are happy to announce we recently completed a significant milestone: conservation!One large facet of this project was being able to conserve a few maps in order to reintroduce them into our collection for researchers, scholars, and map enthusiasts. The Portal to the Past project team chose ten maps to conserve out of 1,600 based on four parameters: historical significance, uniqueness, state of decay, and those most in scope with our collection.…
POTW: Mozart in Concert Grove, Prospect Park
Emma, the Catablog
By Julie May and Maggie Schreiner Today, we announce the retirement of Emma, an interactive catalog of the archives and special collections held in the Othmer Library at Brooklyn Historical Society. For the last ten years, the staff at BHS have held Emma in high regard for the function it offered and the stepping stone it represents. Emma included basic records that described individual archival and special collections, and linked out to fuller, more complete descriptions such as finding aids and inventories when they were available. It was built using WordPress blogging software, hence…
POTW: Hotel Margaret
If You Can Make It Here, They Won't Take It Anywhere
They say you can’t go home again. But for a garbage barge called Mobro 4000, after months of sailing through much of the Northern Hemisphere and capturing the attention of the world, home was the only place it could go.
POTW: Prospect Park Picnic Ground
Teaching with Primary Sources: Bridges in Brooklyn
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection, focused on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. This blog post is part of a series from the Brooklyn Connections team, sharing skills and ideas for using archives primary source material in the classroom. As part of our work, we create freely available Primary Source Packets to help students and teachers access primary source material from the Brooklyn Collection about local history topics. Brooklyn is all…
POTW: Squibb Plant, Brooklyn
Last Suppers and Good Fridays
Our guest blogger Larry Racioppo is a lifelong Brooklynite and photographer who has documented Brooklyn and New York City for over 40 years. The Brooklyn Collection holds a collection of Racioppo's work and recently hosted a retrospective exhibition devoted to his career in conjunction with the release of his book Brooklyn Before. Racioppo was raised in a Catholic Italian-American family and has been documenting Good Friday ceremonies since 1974. Here, he shares some of that work and muses on Catholic iconography and community in general. We did not have art in our home. But we did have an…
Ronald Shiffman collection is open for research!
The Ronald Shiffman collection on the Pratt Center for Community Development (2013.023) is now open for research at Brooklyn Historical Society!
POTW: Brighton Beach Hotel, 1888
POTW: Stauch Baths in Coney Island
POTW: A Man Playing the Trumpet in Prospect Park
POTW: A Man and His Dog in Prospect Park
Teaching with Primary Sources: Women’s History Month
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection, focused on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. This blog post is part of a series from the Brooklyn Connections team, sharing skills and ideas for using archives primary source material in the classroom. As part of our work, we create Primary Source Packets to help students and teachers access primary source material from the Brooklyn Collection about local history topics. Each Packet contains one secondary…
POTW: Coffey Park, 1934
I Know What You Did Last Century
Since Brooklyn's inception it's residents have been employed in an array of occupations tailored to the needs of their growing community. In addition to addresses the early City Directories listed each resident's occupation as well, providing a unique opportunity to examine the labor needs of Brooklyn in the 19th century. Coopers, rope-makers, doctors, teachers, laborers, sailors and many others played a crucial role in the daily life of early Brooklyn. Looking through a directory by hand for every wheelwright, or blacksmith is an ardous, and labor intensive job though…
POTW: Dedication of Bronze Plaque on Samuel F.B. Morse Monument, April 27th, 1968
Forgotten History: Remembering Dr. Mary M Crawford and her Contributions to Brooklyn's History
For this Women’s History Month, Brooklyn Collection is spreading awareness about Dr. Mary M. Crawford, a woman who radically altered how the world viewed female doctors during the early 1900s. Not only did Doctor Crawford serve abroad during World War I as the only female doctor in the American Hospital in Paris but she was also the first female ambulance surgeon in Brooklyn who later became chief surgeon of the Williamsburg hospital.
POTW: Bedford Avenue YMCA
POTW: Manhattan Furrier
Teaching with Primary Sources: Black History Month
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection, focused on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. This blog post is part of a series from the Brooklyn Connections team, sharing skills and ideas for using archives primary source material in the classroom. As part of our work, we create Primary Source Packets to help students and teachers access primary source material from the Brooklyn Collection about local history topics. Each Packet contains one…
POTW: Juxtaposition
POTW: Flatbush Avenue
POTW: High Hopes for Snow!
The Fierce Women Skaters of Roller Derby's Heyday in Brooklyn
In honor of our current exhibit Empire Skate: The Birthplace of Roller Disco, I decided to look into some older roller skating history in Brooklyn. The sport of roller derby has seen a surge of women's teams and leagues emerge nationwide since its 21st-century revival in Austin, Texas in 2001. It was introduced to a wider audience with the release in 2009 of the feature film Whip It, which starred Elliot Page and was Drew Barrymore's directorial debut. What contemporary fans of the sport may not know is that its first heyday of mainstream popularity started in New York City in 1948, and…
POTW: Doing the Snow Dance!
POTW: Daisies
Teaching with Primary Sources: Community Organizing in Brooklyn
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection, focused on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. This blog post is part of a series from the Brooklyn Connections team, sharing skills and ideas for using archives primary source material in the classroom. As part of our work, we create Primary Source Packets to help students and teachers access primary source material from the Brooklyn Collection about local history topics. Each Packet contains one…
POTW: Cat named “Lazybones”
POTW: Happy New Year!
The Brooklyn Dodgers
In 2013 the Brooklyn Collection acquired several boxes of Brooklyn Dodgers memorabilia from Al Todres, a lifelong collector. Todres certainly wasn’t the only one actively collecting Brooklyn Dodgers material nearly 60 years after the team was transferred to Los Angeles. Why does a baseball team that left Brooklyn in the middle of the last century still inspire so much loyalty and curiosity? Every collector has a different answer, and it certainly goes beyond statistics and player performance. The team that would become the Dodgers played in Eastern Park when Brooklyn was still an independent…
POTW: Merry Christmas
POTW: Hand-colored photographs
Teaching with Primary Sources: Maps and Atlases in the English Classroom
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection. It focuses on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. This blog post is part of a series from the Brooklyn Connections team, sharing skills and ideas for using archives primary source material in the classroom. We’ve already talked about how much we love maps and atlases when we’re teaching with primary sources; this blog post looks at how we can use those in the English classroom by examining a lesson on the…
POTW: City Hall on Fire
Before "BROOKLYN BEFORE"
Our current exhibition "Larry Racioppo: A Retrospective" highlights the work of photographer Larry Racioppo, a native Brooklynite who has documented the borough of Brooklyn (and New York City) for over 40 years. It includes photographs from his collection, and features many of his Brooklyn-based photo projects such as Brooklyn Churches, Theatres, Coney Island and Prospect Park, as well as photographs and photographic equipment, books, ephemera and archival material from his storied career. His latest book "Brooklyn Before" shows the vitality of his native Brooklyn, stretching from historic…
POTW: Happy Hanukkah!
POTW: Lundy’s Restaurant
POTW: Happy Thanksgiving
Teaching with Primary Sources: Avoiding Plagiarism
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection. It focuses on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. This blog post is part of a series from the Brooklyn Connections team, sharing skills and ideas for using archives primary source material in the classroom. Using primary sources in the classroom shows us that we can access history through many different formats as long as we are grounded in historical thinking. When we’re using primary sources in the classroom,…
POTW: Prospect Park
POTW: Hurricane Sandy
Brooklyn For Peace and the Defense of Civil Liberties
By Library and Archives assistant Laura Juliano The papers of Brooklyn For Peace, which date from 1983 to the present, and consist of over 25 linear feet of organizational records, event ephemera and recordings, and subject files, are now available for research at Brooklyn Historical Society. The collection reveals both the history of the organization as well as the broader grassroots response to a wide variety of significant social and political issues at the local, regional, and national levels from the late twentieth century to the present. Brooklyn For Peace (BFP) was founded in 1984 as…
POTW: Pygmalion and Galatea
Seeking Tsuneko Tokuyasu
Here at the Brooklyn Collection, one of our biggest collections is the records of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle newspaper. The eagle statue from the newspaper's downtown building has perched in the lobby of Central Library for over 20 years on long-term loan from the Brooklyn Historical Society, and you might have heard that due to a post on this very blog, the eagle was recently made a permanent gift to the library, where it will nest in perpetuity. In addition to the eagle sculpture, we hold clippings and other materials from the Eagle offices, including over 200,000 photographs from their "…
POTW: Othmer Library
Teaching with Primary Sources: Claims and Counterclaims in History
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection. It focuses on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. This blog post is part of a series from the Brooklyn Connections team, sharing skills and ideas for using archives primary source material in the classroom. The ability to identify and analyze claims and counterclaims is key for students of all ages. Primary sources give us a terrific opportunity to identify claims and counterclaims of various voices…
POTW: Meserole House
The Faces of Halloween
October ushers in one of the most celebrated of Autumn holidays, Halloween - that historical mash-up of Celtic culture, popular culture, Christianity, pagan folk-lore, superstition, and Horror. In the Brooklyn Collection we have photographers that have captured the many aspects of this holiday, from the humorous to the mysterious, and from the gory, to the adorable. Lev Dodin Lev Dodin's work is distinguished by his composition and use of vibrant saturated colors. His demonic hobgoblins contrast vividly with the green and blue background, and his group…
POTW: Ramus Family Papers
POTW: Autumn
BHS Map Collection Update
Brooklyn Historical Society's Library & Archives team has an exciting project update to share! In 2017, BHS received a generous grant from National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) to support Portal to the Past: Creating Brooklyn Historical Society’s Digital Map Collection, a project that will increase public access to the institution’s extensive collection of flat and folded maps through conservation, digitization, and the creation of a web-based portal. The map collection at BHS is unique and robust in the content and historical sweep. Comprised of manuscript and printed street,…
POTW: Typewriting Class
Teaching with Primary Sources: Citing our Sources
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection. It focuses on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. This blog post is part of a series from the Brooklyn Connections team, sharing skills and ideas for using archives primary source material in the classroom. Using primary sources in the classroom shows us that we can access history through many different formats as long as we are grounded in historical thinking. Whether we’re using primary or sources in the…
POTW: William Koch Glass Plate Negatives
Housing in Brooklyn
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection. It focuses on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. As part of our work, we create Primary Source Packets to help students and teachers access primary source material from the Brooklyn Collection about local history topics. Each Packet contains one secondary source which provides a general introduction to the topic, followed by at least ten primary sources accompanied by document based questions. For the start of…
POTW: Packer Collegiate Institute
The Bridge: a book report
In the summer of 2018, Brooklyn Connections was delighted to have two of our student alumni join us as interns. Over the course of seven weeks, these interns learned about archival research and chose a topic of their interest to dig into in the Brooklyn Collection. They assembled their findings, and we're excited to share one of them with you on the Brooklynology blog! Intern Ashirah Newton chose to learn about the Brooklyn Bridge, and her research included a book report on a new book in our collection: The Bridge by Peter J. Tomasi, illustrated by Sara DuVall. The following…
POTW: West Indian Carnival
POTW: Drake Bakery photographs
POTW: The Cyclone
POTW: The Michael Shellens family collection
Processing Found Material: The Martha Gayle Collection
Archives acquire materials in a myriad number of ways; it could be through outright purchases, materials bequeathed by planned giving or estates; or donations from collectors who’ve run out of space, time or energy to continue their pursuits. There are those other times when people find material that they deem not useful to them but of enough sentimental or historical value that makes throwing items in the trash not an option. The Martha Gayle Collection falls into the latter category. Donated by George Camarda in 2016; it documents the life of a Caribbean immigrant Martha Gayle and her…
POTW: Brooklyn Storefronts
POTW: Happy Summer!
Teaching with Primary Sources: Notetaking Skills
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection. It focuses on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula.
This blog post is part of a series from the Brooklyn Connections team, sharing skills and ideas for using archives primary source material in the classroom. Using primary sources in the classroom shows us that we can access history through many different formats as long as we are grounded in historical thinking.
POTW: Lucille Fornasieri Gold Photographs
POTW: Marcia Bricker Photographs
POTW: Happy Fourth of July!
Brooklyn Historical Society Statement on Muslim Ban Ruling
As an institution dedicated to the history of Brooklyn, we are proud of the rich fabric of multicultural heritage in Brooklyn. Yesterday’s Supreme Court decision to uphold the government’s Muslim ban makes it even more imperative that we affirm our commitment to the histories of all Brooklynites. We want Brooklyn’s Muslim communities in particular to know that their stories, their struggles, and their contributions are embraced and deeply valued by the Brooklyn Historical Society. As part of our commitment, last year Brooklyn Historical Society launched a public history and arts project…
POTW: Spencer Memorial Church
Teaching with Primary Sources: How can we do research with political cartoons?
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection. It focuses on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. This blog post is part of a series from the Brooklyn Connections team, sharing skills and ideas for using archives primary source material in the classroom. Using primary sources in the classroom shows us that we can access history through many different formats as long as we are grounded in historical thinking. The Brooklyn Connections team loves…
POTW: Soccer in Brooklyn
Fostering Civic Engagement through Local History Research
Jen Hoyer and Julia Pelaez were thrilled to represent Brooklyn Connections at the 2018 American Library Association Annual Conference. They presented a session on fostering student engagement through local history research, which included a discussion about how local history research can spark civic engagement in students, and what tools we should equip students with so that they can succeed with their research. The goals of this workshop were to understand how local history is a unique and relevant entry point for guiding inquiry-based learning and civic engagement; to identify,…
Just When You Thought Everything was Destroyed: Street Art and Brooklyn’s Waterfront
POTW: Jackie Robinson Exhibition
POTW: American Sugar Refining Company
POTW: Brooklyn Dogs
A Look Back at Brooklyn's LGBTQ+ History
Happy Pride Month Brooklyn! Pride month is always tons of fun in Brooklyn. From the parades to the parties it’s a wonderful time to celebrate diversity, inclusion and visibility, the highlight of which is the Pride Parade. The Pride Parade was started in 1970 to mark the anniversary of the Stonewall Riots which were a series of spontaneous demonstrations by members of the gay community to protest the police raid of the Stonewall Inn. Historically Stonewall is often seen as the start of the Gay Pride movement, a veritable phoenix rising from the ashes, but even before…
POTW: Coney Island Boardwalk
POTW: Tony Velez Photographs
Teaching with Primary Sources: Asking Questions for Research
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection. It focuses on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. This blog post is part of a series from the Brooklyn Connections team, sharing skills and ideas for using archives primary source material in the classroom. Our big question is: How can we ask questions to help us with our research? Get Ready Asking good research questions is an important part of the research process. We love to explore how primary sources can…
POTW: Cherry Blossoms at Brooklyn Botanic Garden
Rambunctious Brooklyn boy falls for bridge
POTW: David C. Hurd papers and photographs
POTW: Brooklyn Gardens
First Communion Pictures
I’ve been photographing First Communions, one of the three Catholic Initiation Sacraments, since 1971. One of my first ‘serious’ photographs depicts my Aunt Millie and her son John standing in the rain outside our parish church. John has just made his First Communion and is proudly holding his little prayer book wide open for me. Over the years I often returned to photograph at this church St. Michael the Archangel in Sunset Park (where I had made my First Communion), and to St. John the Evangelist in South Brooklyn where I lived in the 1970’s and 80’s.…
POTW: Edna Huntington
POTW: Baseball
Teaching with Primary Sources: Using the Internet to find Primary Sources Online
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection. It focuses on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. This blog post is part of a series from the Brooklyn Connections team, sharing skills and ideas for using archives primary source material in the classroom. We all spend more time online than we can probably add up (or would like to admit?!), but are we experts at finding primary sources online? Moreover, how do we teach our students to become pros at digging…
An Ode to Brooklyn Poets
Happy Passover and Easter!
POTW: Luna Park
POTW: Spring
POTW: 24 Middagh Street
Teaching with Primary Sources: What’s a Primary Source?
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection. It focuses on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. This blog post is part of a series from the Brooklyn Connections team, sharing skills and ideas for using archives primary source material in the classroom. At Brooklyn Connections, we love to share ideas on how to develop skills for teaching and learning with primary sources. But let’s take a moment to step back and ask ourselves: what IS a primary source?? How…
Coney Island Season Is Here!
This guest post is in conjunction with the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce and their "Last Stop in Brooklyn" Contest. You can read the first post in the series here and enter to win a copy of "Last Stop in Brooklyn" here courtesy of Crown Publishing!
POTW: Drake Bakeries
POTW: Jacob Mann Photographs
The Eagle Above Our Doorway
POTW: Winter Sports in Brooklyn
POTW: Happy Valentine’s Day
Valentine's Day/Ash Wednesday: Musings & Photos
Photographer Larry Racioppo is back with another guest post for Brooklynology, this one musing on this year's rare congruence of Valentine's Day and Ash Wednesday. Today is the first time since 1945 that Ash Wednesday and Valentine’s Day fall on the same day. This rare occurrence has made me think about the significance of each day and what they symbolize: Ash Wednesday – death, Valentine’s Day – romantic love. What I learned about Ash Wednesday in Catholic grammar school is summed up here: “…we use ashes made form the burned palm branches distributed on the Palm Sunday of the previous…
Teaching with Primary Sources: Maps and Atlases
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection. It focuses on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. This blog post is part of a series from the Brooklyn Connections team, sharing skills and ideas for using archives primary source material in the classroom. With Google Maps available at the touch of a finger, students are more familiar than ever with using maps to get around. Exploring the ways we can use maps as informational texts leads to great classroom…
POTW: Eberhard Faber Pencil Company Collection
POTW: Harry Kalmus papers and photographs
Susan Smith McKinney Steward: Brooklyn's First Black Woman Physician
AllysonWelcome to Black History Month at the Brooklyn Collection! Last year our blog highlighted the good work of Hattie "The Tree Lady" Carthan. This year we want to share the story of another Black woman pioneer – Susan Smith McKinney Steward who was Brooklyn's first black woman physician (who also happened to be the third Black physician in the whole country.) Dr. Kinney Steward had a very successful practice with locations in Brooklyn and Manhattan but for her, medicine was more than just treatment. It was a means by which she could further elevate and impact the community she loved…
POTW: Empire Stores
131 Miles and Countless Stories: Finding the Lost Histories of Brooklyn’s Waterfront
Several years ago, in the thick of research and development for a Brooklyn Historical Society project about Brooklyn’s waterfront, I found myself calling a long list of New York City government phone numbers. My goal was simple but elusive – to figure out exactly how many miles of coastline there were in the borough of Brooklyn. I had scoured books and articles – to no avail. City reports on the waterfront are plentiful – especially in the years after the devastation of Superstorm Sandy – yet still no luck. But I’m a historian, and we historians can be pretty dogged about research. About ten…
Badges of Honor
Most of the exhibitions we create here in the Brookyn Collection are comprised solely of material from our numerous holdings - historical photographs, letters, prints, maps,etc. We took a slightly different approach with our curent exhibit, "Badges of Honor: Brooklyn's Protectors". The result is an exciting collaboration, pairing the Brooklyn Collection's resources, with the unique Brooklyn badge collection on loan from Art Sinai. Brooklyn born Art Sinai started acquiring badges in 1978 when he worked for the Treasury Department. His first badge was a gift from a colleague…
Call for Donations: Public Protest Materials
In January 2016, Brooklyn Historical Society (BHS) posted a call for Brooklynites to donate their Women’s March Posters. We received 50 contributions that now make up the Women’s March Poster collection. Brooklynites have a long history of actively participating in local, regional, and national events that have an impact on Brooklyn and the United States. As the one-year anniversary of the Women’s March and the 45th President’s Inauguration approach, BHS invites Brooklynites once again to help build our collections. We seek to broaden our scope by documenting Brooklyn’s history and…
Teaching with Primary Sources: Observations and Inferences
Brooklyn Connections is the education outreach program in the Brooklyn Collection. It focuses on cultivating 21st Century learning skills in students and supporting teachers on the incorporation of archives materials into curricula. This blog post is part of a series from the Brooklyn Connections team, sharing skills and ideas for using archives primary source material in the classroom. Archives are rich in primary sources that can be used for teaching valuable skills to our students. They key starting point to using primary sources in the classroom is teaching foundational skills of how to…
POTW: Brooklyn Academy of Music
POTW: Snowy Brooklyn
POTW: Frigid New Year
POTW: Season’s Greetings
POTW: Happy Hanukkah!
Deck the Blog: Staff Favorites from the Brooklyn Collection
Brooklyn is home to some of the most iconic winter tableaus in the world. Whether it's the ski worthy snow-capped hills of Fort Greene Park, the odd beauty of fire escapes adorned in holiday lights, or the faces of the brave souls who wait bundled and stoic for the B26 bus; Brooklyn winter is a special kind of wonderful! To celebrate the holiday season we’re decking the blog with some of our favorite seasonal photos from the Brooklyn Collection. We dug deep to find images that celebrate the character and vivacity of Brooklyn landmarks and people. There are hilarious snapshots from the Our…
POTW: Brooklyn Theatre Fire
POTW: Packer Collegiate Institute Records
POTW: Happy Thanksgiving!
POTW: Urban Archive
Brooklyn Historical Society (BHS) Launches website, The Packer Collegiate Institute: A Story of Education in Brooklyn
In 1845, a group of Brooklynites formed a committee to establish a school for "Female Education." This group established a board of trustees, raised money to build the school and it opened as The Brooklyn Female Academy on Joralemon Street in the Brooklyn Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn with increasing success year after year. A fire nearly destroyed the school's future in 1853, but Harriet Putnam Packer offered the funds to rebuild. The school was designed by Minard LaFever (also known for St. Ann & the Holy Trinity Church) and reopened as The Packer Collegiate Institute in 1854. The…
NYC Trash: Past, Present and Future
In this post, guest blogger, photographer Larry Racioppo shares with us a glimpse of his work photographing "Trash" in Brooklyn and NYC. His photos will also be on exhibit at the City Reliquary in their show "NYC Trash: Past, Present and Future" and will "present the stories behind New York City’s solid waste, from “one man’s garbage is another man’s gold” to the inventive ways New Yorkers are reusing and recycling." To view more of Larry's portfolio and his photos of trash in Brooklyn, visit us at the Brooklyn Collection! Natiba Guy-Clement,…
POTW: BLDG 77
POTW: Dodgers
A strange case of Widow's Mite, or the Ghosts Come Knocking
In a few days, Halloween will roll through the city, with the trick-or-treating gaggle of supermen, frankensteins, skeletons and witches roaming the streets. There will also be a fair amount of ghosts and ghouls among them. The gossamer-looking ghosts will be swaying by the front porches and windows even past October 31st, until the obligatory turkeys and pilgrims will replace them. Brooklyn loves a good ghost story and is protective of several such legends. All Brooklyn ghost hunters know of the haunted apartment on the corner of State and Clinton once occupied by none other than H.P.…
POTW: Happy Halloween
POTW: Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Arch at Grand Army Plaza
POTW: Hurricane Sandy
POTW: Telephone Booths
POTW: John D. Morrell photographs
POTW: Kindergarten class at Fort Greene Park
POTW: Eugene L. Armbruster photographs and scrapbooks
Discovering Gravesend
POTW: Tennis
Coney Island: America's Playground
Brooklyn Historical Society has partnered with over a dozen Brooklyn schools in the past decade to implement Cultural Afterschool Adventures (CASA) programs in partnership with NYC Council Members. In the Young Scholars program, our educators meet with a group of upper elementary school students over the course of the spring semester, culminating in the creation of a book on a pre-selected theme. These books are then distributed to students, their families, and their schools. A copy of the student work is added to the Othmer Library & Archives, memorializing the student work for…
West Indian Immigration and Carnival: Coming to Brooklyn
In the summer of 2017, Brooklyn Connections was delighted to have two of our student alumni join us as interns. Over the course of seven weeks, these interns learned about archival research and chose a topic of their interest to dig into in the Brooklyn Collection. They assembled some of their findings, and we're excited to share them with you on the Brooklynology blog! This post is by Emilia Boothe. Caribbean immigrants have been coming to New York in small but significant numbers ever since the 1960s. The 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act (also known as the Hart-Celler Act) had a great…
Park Slope: Recollections of Change
Brooklyn Historical Society has partnered with over a dozen Brooklyn schools in the past decade to implement Cultural Afterschool Adventures (CASA) programs in partnership with NYC Council Members. In the Young Scholars program, our educators meet with a group of upper elementary school students over the course of the spring semester, culminating in the creation of a book on a pre-selected theme. These books are then distributed to students, their families, and their schools. A copy of the student work is added to the Othmer Library & Archives, memorializing the student work for…
Women, Work, and World War II
Brooklyn Historical Society has partnered with over a dozen Brooklyn schools in the past decade to implement Cultural Afterschool Adventures (CASA) programs in partnership with NYC Council Members. In the Young Scholars program, our educators meet with a group of upper elementary school students over the course of the spring semester, culminating in the creation of a book on a pre-selected theme. These books are then distributed to students, their families, and their schools. A copy of the student work is added to the Othmer Library & Archives, memorializing the student work for…
POTW: West Indian Carnival
Caribbean Immigrants in Brooklyn: an American story
Brooklyn Historical Society has partnered with over a dozen Brooklyn schools in the past decade to implement Cultural Afterschool Adventures (CASA) programs in partnership with NYC Council Members. In the Young Scholars program, our educators meet with a group of upper elementary school students over the course of the spring semester, culminating in the creation of a book on a pre-selected theme. These books are then distributed to students, their families, and their schools. A copy of the student work is added to the Othmer Library & Archives, memorializing the student work for…
Stories of Our Brooklyn Firefighters
Brooklyn Historical Society has partnered with over a dozen Brooklyn schools in the past decade to implement Cultural Afterschool Adventures (CASA) programs in partnership with NYC Council Members. In the Young Scholars program, our educators meet with a group of upper elementary school students over the course of the spring semester, culminating in the creation of a book on a pre-selected theme. These books are then distributed to students, their families, and their schools. A copy of the student work is added to the Othmer Library & Archives, memorializing the student work for…
POTW: Anders Goldfarb Photographs of Coney Island
Love Letters from David C. Hurd, a Jamaican immigrant in Brooklyn
This post was written by Yingwen Huang, Processing Intern
“I only wish I could send you some of this nice cool weather along with some rain and hail that we are having just now; for it would do Kingston a world of good. Even a little snow wouldn’t do any harm.”
-- David C. Hurd to his pen pal Avril Cato in Jamaica, March 16, 1914.
POTW: Collection Storage
Dog Days of Summer
POTW: Brooklyn Storefronts
BHS DUMBO: Photographer Robin Michals reflects on the Brooklyn waterfront
Robin Michals is one of over two dozen photographers featured in the Brooklyn Historical Society DUMBO exhibition "Shifting Perspectives: Photographs of Brooklyn's Waterfront," on view through September 10, 2017. In this post, she reflects on what attracted her to the waterfront as a subject. Click here to learn more about the beautiful exhibition of Brooklyn waterfront photography.
POTW: Happy Summer!
POTW: Brooklyn Historical Society Pierrepont
POTW: 19th Century Photographs
POTW: Prospect Park
The Kosciuszko Bridge and the Changing Face of Brooklyn
Bridges are icons, creating unforgettable outlines across beloved skylines. The Kosciuszko Bridge may not often have been deemed postcard worthy, but the show-stopping cable-stayed design of its replacement (opened in April 2017) is drawing nostalgia over the soon-to-be-removed historic span. Taking a closer look at the Kosciuszko Bridge – and the many bridges that have stood in the same location through centuries past – paints a picture of a changing neighborhood in a changing city.
POTW: Happy Fourth of July!
Third Avenue Series: Scrap
Blogger One More Folded Sunset and photographer Larry Racioppo are working on a series of pieces on Brooklyn's Third Avenue. This is the fourth, about a visit to the 3rd Avenue Junk Shop. Click here for the first, second, and third, and stay tuned for more.
POTW: Cyclone
POTW: Pride
POTW: Penny-farthing
The Many Faces of the Brooklyn Bridge
Yesterday was the birthday of John Augustus Roebling, who designed the Brooklyn Bridge. In honor of that occasion, here is a selection of images of the bridge from our collections. Search our historic photographs here for more images of the bridge through the years.
POTW: Beach Season
Through His Lens: The photographs of Theobald Wilson
POTW: Kennedy Memorial
Dining under Gas Lamps at Gage & Tollner’s
This post was authored by BHS Library and Archives processing intern Yingwen Huang. Ying processed the Edward and Gertrude Dewey collection of Gage & Tollner records, which are now open and available to the public in our library. For more information, please see the collection’s finding aid. Walking down Fulton Street shopping district in the Downtown Brooklyn neighborhood, you can’t help but notice the striking building featuring two white Doric columns under a portico. This landmarked building was once Brooklyn’s iconic Gage & Tollner restaurant. Closed in 2004, the…
Third Avenue Series: Mystic Essentials of Brooklyn
Blogger One More Folded Sunset and photographer Larry Racioppo are working on a series of pieces on Brooklyn's Third Avenue. This is the third. Click here for the first and second, and stay tuned for more. It's loud on Third. Even in a changing city economy, with "makers" on the rise (how did we ever live without them?), and industry lighter than in earlier decades, that expressway traffic never goes away, and the cycles of delivery, spreading out across the city, roll on and on. Even when most of the businesses below bring down their shutters for the night, leaving only the…
POTW: Shifting Perspectives
POTW: BHS Dumbo
"Let Me Make This Perfectly Clear...": Photo Retouching in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle
Deborah
POTW: Happy Mother's Day
“Views of Nassau County” now online!
Brooklyn Historical Society received a generous grant from Gerry Charitable Trust in 2015 to digitize and catalog seven scrapbooks from the Eugene L. Armbruster photographs and scrapbooks [Arc.308]. Eugene Armbruster was an amateur photographer and historian during the late 19th century and early 20th century in Brooklyn. Following retirement from The H. Henkel Cigar Box Manufacturing Company, he became interested in local history and took thousands of photographs depicting buildings and street scenes throughout Brooklyn, Queens, Long Island, and neighboring states. His scrapbooks are…
The Other Side of the Park
Photographer Larry Racioppo, whose work is on display in our current exhibition on Prospect Park for the park's 150th anniversary, shares some memories and photos of the park in this guest post. Racioppo is also working on our Third Avenue blog series with blogger One More Folded Sunset. Prospect Park was a part of my life long before I became a photographer. Glued to the black construction paper pages of Racioppo and Tenga family albums are photos of my parents and their friends posing ‘dressed up’ in the park or just outside it, along its stone walls.…
POTW: Ambergill Falls
Brooklyn Historical Society (BHS) Launches Oral History Portal
POTW: Housing and Building Research
POTW: Brooklyn Pets
POTW: Aerial Photography
POTW: Jackie Robinson Exhibition
Third Avenue Series: At the VFW
Blogger One More Folded Sunset and photographer Larry Racioppo are working on a series of pieces on Brooklyn's Third Avenue. This is the second. Click here for the first, and stay tuned for more.
Miss Manhattan and Miss Brooklyn are back!
In January 2017, a new piece of art was installed at the intersection of Flatbush Avenue and Tillary Street, at the entrance to the Manhattan Bridge. Two snow-white resin sculptures representing “Miss Brooklyn” and “Miss Manhattan” were hoisted above the busy street traffic on two slowly rotating “Lazy Susans” supported by a stem-like post. Now, as they steadily revolve in opposite directions, they enjoy a 360 degree view of the area from whence they were banished nearly 60 years ago. The original “Miss Manhattan” and “Miss Brooklyn” were not rotating. Once upon a time, they were firmly…
The Story of Pinky
Women formed a central part of the abolitionist movement in the years that led up to the civil war and during war time. They participated in many varied ways, from writing and giving speeches to becoming conductors of the Underground Railroad and assisting union soldiers by organizing Sanitary Fairs around the country. There were others who participated in a more unconventional role that afforded them no agency. This is the story of one such woman, or rather, an enslaved girl of 9 years old, and her part in the abolitionist movement. Plymouth Church in Brooklyn Heights and its Reverend…
POTW: Spring
Bushwick and her Neighbors, Vol. 1-3 now online!
Brooklyn Historical Society received a generous grant from Gerry Charitable Trust in 2015 to digitize and catalog seven scrapbooks from the Eugene L. Armbruster photographs and scrapbooks [Arc.308]. Eugene Armbruster was an amateur photographer and historian during the late 19th century and early 20th century in Brooklyn. Following retirement from The H. Henkel Cigar Box Manufacturing Company, he became interested in local history and took thousands of photographs depicting buildings and street scenes throughout Brooklyn, Queens, Long Island, and neighboring states. His scrapbooks are…
POTW: Reliable & Frank's
POTW: Bernard Gotfryd photographs
Under the Expressway: Marking Time on Brooklyn's Third Avenue
Blogger One More Folded Sunset and photographer Larry Racioppo are working on a series of pieces on Brooklyn's Third Avenue. This is an excerpt from the first. In future posts, they'll be interviewing businesses owners, uncovering art, and continuing to find inspiration in the avenue's changing landscape. I'm drawn to city borders. Not 'edge of town' divisions, but the ones inside the city limits, where infrastructure, for better or worse, creates some kind of boundary: a rail track, a highway, an elevated train line. They're city landmarks, hardly ever for…
POTW: Smith-9th Street Station
Ina Clausen & Protest in Brooklyn
Ina Clausen (center), 1957, Prospect Park, Brooklyn. With the inauguration of Donald Trump in January, it seems that we have entered a renewed moment in the public sphere, with each week defined by protests, community meetings, and urgent calls to contact your elected officials. This moment, however, is not so very brand new -- there is of course a long and varied history of protest movements and resistance both in the United States and abroad. Given the current political climate, I thought it would be appropriate to mine the Brooklyn Collection for some local precedent. I turned to…
POTW: Family Research
POTW: Hunterfly Road Houses
Hattie "The Tree Lady of Brooklyn" Carthan
“We’ve already lost too many trees, houses and people…your community – you owe something to it. I didn’t care to run.” – Hattie Carthan Welcome to Black History Month at the Brooklyn Collection. As most of you know, many great artists, leaders, educators, activists and politicians contributed to Brooklyn’s rich and indispensable Black history. Today we thought we would highlight one of those activists, Ms. Hattie Carthan, a community leader and environmentalist who forever changed Bedford-Stuyvesant. Hattie Carthan moved to Brooklyn from Virginia, and was once described as “the best…
POTW: Brooklyn Sewers
POTW: Jackie Robinson
You Gotta Believe
Swimming is one of the best ways of keeping physically fit, and can be enjoyed by people of all ages. There are those that swim recreationally, and then there are those brave souls who test the limits of their capabilities by endeavoring to swim the English Channel. One such person was Mrs. Betty Cohn of 120 Ocean Parkway, who became the first grandmother to swim the channel when she swam from France to England in 1951. News of her swimming prowess was carried in newspapers around the world. like the Singapore Free Press, and Melbourne Australia's Argus newspaper where she said…
POTW: Blizzard of 1888
POTW: Paerdegaat Basin
Bedford-Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation oral history open to researchers in January, 2017!
Brooklyn Historical Society (BHS) and Bedford-Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation (Restoration) partnered on the Bedford-Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation Oral History project in 2007-2008 to celebrate the 40th anniversary of Restoration’s founding as the first community development corporation (CDC) in the United States. Fifty-six interviews were conducted with founding board members, supporters, activists, artists, tenants, and other community members. Audio clips from these oral history interviews were included in the exhibition Reflections on Community Development: Stories from Bedford…
POTW: Ektachrome Film Returns
Puerto Rican Oral History Project records now open to researchers
This collection includes recordings and transcripts of oral histories narrated by those in the Puerto Rican community of Brooklyn who arrived between 1917 and 1940. The Long Island Historical Society (now Brooklyn Historical Society) initiated the Puerto Rican Oral History Project in 1973, conducting over eighty interviews between 1973 and 1975. The oral histories often contain descriptions of immigration, living arrangements, neighborhood ethnicities, discrimination, employment, community development, and political leadership. Since their creation in the 1970s, the recordings had not been…
POTW: Second Avenue Subway
Oral histories of the West Indian Carnival Documentation Project records now open to researchers!
Brooklyn Historical Society launched The West Indian Carnival Documentation Project in 1994 to supplement existing photographs and histories of the event with personal narratives and life histories of Carnival participants. In cooperation with the West Indian American Day Carnival Association and the Brooklyn Museum, the project attempted to document different viewpoints from within the Carnival organization and the diverse participants. Since their creation in 1994 and 1995, recordings had not been fully processed and have been inaccessible to researchers, that is... until now! The oral…
POTW: Happy New Year
Listen to This: Crown Heights Oral History collection now open to researchers
Titled Listen to This by the donor Alexandra Kelly, this oral history collection includes interview audio and summaries created and collected within the context of a community project undertaken by project director Kelly and Paul J. Robeson High School interns Treverlyn Dehaarte, Ansie Montilus, Monica Parfait, Quanaisha Phillips and Floyya Richardson. These interviewers recorded conversations with forty-three narrators. In addition to the educational experience for the student interns, the oral histories were conducted as life history and community anthropology interviews. Topics of…
POTW: Happy Holidays!
Crown Heights History Project Oral Histories now open to researchers:
Also known as "Bridging Eastern Parkway," the Crown Heights History Project produced oral histories in audiotapes and transcripts within the context of an exhibition project undertaken in part by Brooklyn Historical Society (BHS) in 1993 and 1994. Three interviewers recorded conversations with over forty narrators. In addition to exhibition product value, the oral histories were conducted as life history and community anthropology interviews; topics of discussion include family and heritage, immigration and relocation, cultural and racial relations, occupations and professions, education and…
Bushwick and Her Neighbors, Vol. 1 is now online!
Brooklyn Historical Society received a generous grant from Gerry Charitable Trust in 2015 to digitize and catalog seven scrapbooks from Eugene L. Armbruster photographs and scrapbook collection. Eugene Armbruster was an amateur photographer and historian during the late 19th century and early 20th century in Brooklyn. Following retirement from The H. Henkel Cigar Box Manufacturing Company, he became interested in local history and took thousands of photographs depicting buildings and street scenes throughout Brooklyn, Queens, and Long Island. His scrapbooks are organized by subject and…
POTW: Electrification of Long Island Rail Road
POTW: Prospect Park Sea Lions
POTW: Brooklyn Storefronts
POTW: Happy Thanksgiving!
POTW: Brighton Beach Hotel Move
POTW: John A. Roebling Suspension Bridge
POTW: Brooklyn Bar
POTW: Brooklyn Heights Promenade
Gertrude Hoffmann's First Act
This week, guest blogger Sunny Stalter-Pace marks the 50th anniversary of dancer and choreographer Gertrude Hoffmann's death with a post sharing some information about Hoffmann's early life and career. Stalter-Pace is writing a biography of Hoffmann and has used the Gertrude Hoffmann Collection here at the Brooklyn Collection as part of her research. Gertrude Hoffmann (1885-1966) enjoyed a long career as a performer, choreographer, and producer. Brooklynology introduced the versatile vaudevillian in a blog post that’s now more than 5 years old; it followed that post with another on her…
Fashion, Fashion, Who's Got the Fashion?
Recently, I had a to check a number of microfilm reels of the Brooklyn Daily Times. As I scrolled through the reels, a recurring comic feature caught my eye. Modish Mitzi features stunning fashion illustrations and the trials and tribulations of the titular Mitzi, a wealthy fashionista who always has to have the latest styles. With the help of her equally stylish friends Polly and Adelaide, and of course, the funds from her very accommodating father, Mitzi somehow manages to both navigate her socialite lifestyle and always be wearing the most up-to-the-minute 20s and 30s fashions while…
POTW: Burton Sisters
Brooklyn on film at the Library of Congress
A couple of months ago, a colleague at the Brooklyn Museum Library tweeted that she had found a film reel in their collection with nitrate film. Since nitrate film is highly flammable and needs to be stored in special conditions in order to prevent it from catching fire, the library needed to identify the film quickly in order to decide whether or not to keep such a dangerous item. All they knew was the film's title, "Brooklyn Progress," the date range, 1933-1937, and that the content included a kind of tour through prominent Brooklyn sites.Photo courtesy J.E. Molly SeegersI offered to…
POTW: Scrapbooks
POTW: Fine Art Photography
POTW: Fall
POTW: Othmer Library
POTW: 19th Century Brooklyn photographs
AIDS/Brooklyn Oral Histories at Othmer Library now open to researchers
Conducted for an exhibition undertaken by the Brooklyn Historical Society in 1993, the AIDS/Brooklyn Oral History Project yielded an exceptional set of twenty-one recorded oral history interviews. The project attempted to document the impact of the AIDS epidemic on Brooklyn communities. Recordings, initially made on audiocassette tape and videotape, were with narrators who had firsthand experience with the crisis in their communities, families and personal life. For many years since the exhibition closed, the tapes had not been fully processed or digitized. Thanks to the generous funding…
POTW: Red Hook
POTW: Glass plate negative
POTW: Knickerbocker Field Club
POTW: East 25th Street
POTW: Red Cross
POTW: Nathan's
Tales of Another Cleveland Convention
I was working with our clippings collection the other day and came across the subject heading "Red-Headed Legion." Intrigued, I decided to explore this organization further. The trail led me all the way to the 1924 Republican National Convention which, like this year's, was held in Cleveland, Ohio. But let me start with the legion itself."Red-Headed Legion Holds Rally of Nine" announced a headline in the June 9, 1924 edition of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle. The nine who attended the rally comprised "four red-headed women, four red-headed men and one man with black hair and a red mustache." (…
POTW: Ferry Terminal
POTW: Masquerade
POTW: Sunbathers
David Attie's Champions
"... at a time when you could claim notoriety for posting videos of kitten climbing out of cardboard boxes, my father and his work had all but vanished.” On July 20th, a new exhibit opens at Brooklyn Historical Society that highlights the 1950’s Brooklyn street photography of the late fine art and commercial photographer David Attie. Despite a successful and wide-ranging career – which included frequent covers and spreads for Vogue, Time, Newsweek, Playboy, and Harper’s, portraits of everyone from Bobby Fischer to Lorraine Hansberry to Leiber & Stoller, and his own book of photographs,…
POTW: Happy 4th!
That's A Wrap
The school year has finally come to a close but, before students and teachers rejoice at the long summer days that lie ahead, they take the time to pause and partake in that time-honored celebration of achievement: the graduation ceremony. How have Brooklynites celebrated this singular milestone throughout the years? We have numerous graduation programs in our collection, and by studying their content, as well as the physical program themselves, we see how the ceremonies were a reflection of their era, and how they changed with the times. The early commencement programs were elegant…
POTW: Tintype
Everett and Evelyn Ortner papers and photographs now open to the public!
POTW: Summer
Colonial New York Close Up: Revisiting Bernard Ratzer's Plan of the City of New York
POTW: Joe's Restaurant
Children of the Dump
A few months back, the Brooklyn Collection provided some images and expertise to ABC News for a story about Brooklyn’s Dead Horse Bay. The story was most excellent – if you missed it you can check it out here. I used the video as a source for a note taking lesson and, during the lesson, my students kept peppering me with questions: What was life like for the people who lived and worked on the island? What was school like? How did the island's inhabitants navigate all that garbage? I could only answer their questions in adjectives: smelly, exhausting, backbreaking, dangerous,…
POTW: Elevated Train Station
POTW: Brooklyn Bridge
POTW: Memorial Day Parade
Goats Do Roam in Brooklyn
This spring, one of the most hotly anticipated arrivals to Brooklyn is a herd of eight goats. The animals are here on the loan from a Rhinebeck farm for the summer months during which they will help control invasive weeds in the Prospect Park. They will be deployed in the Vale of Cashmere (between Flatbush Ave and the East Drive) to graze on poison ivy and goutweed which have been taking over the area after Hurricane Sandy damaged it. The goats are already hugely popular; the park's free “Fun on the Farm” event this weekend – with a "bleet and greet" tour every 30 minutes – is booked to…
POTW: Idle
POTW: Cherry Blossoms
Refugees: In their own words
Brooklyn's Paper Trail
We are pleased to announce that we have completed a finding aid for our collection of Brooklyn letterhead stationery. The Brooklyn Letterhead Collection spans 200 years of business in our borough, from 1802 to 2002, with the bulk of the collection representing the 1850s to the 1960s. Several thousand different businesses, institutions, and organizations are represented in the collection, including carpenters, plumbers, painters, city agencies, religious institutions, and more. The finding aid includes a complete listing of the names, addresses, and dates from the letterhead collection,…
POTW: Streetcar
The Story of the Little Brown Jug
This week a guest blogger shares her story of how researching in our digital newspaper database, Brooklyn Newsstand, led her to a surprising discovery about her family history, and a new heirloom to boot! We librarians are always so happy to hear these kinds of stories, as we often don't get to learn where research in our collections leads after patrons exit our doors. Our guest blogger Joan Harrison is an artist and author. She is a Professor Emerita of Long Island University, where she taught for many years. One evening in early March as my husband was watching the PBS show "Finding Your…
POTW: Lucille Fornasieri Gold Photographs
POTW: Traffic
Sanders for (Student Body) President!
With the upcoming primary elections on April 19th, Brooklyn, all of New York City, and indeed all of New York State finds itself basking in the reflected glare of the white-hot spotlight that follows this season's presidential candidates. Trump, Cruz, Kasich, Clinton and Sanders are trotting all over the map this month, drumming up support for their causes and tasting some local delicacies along the way. Tomorrow Brooklyn's Navy Yard will host a debate between Democratic candidates Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders, drawing even more focus onto our patch of Long Island. As is widely…
POTW: Fire on Montague Street
POTW: A.I. Namm & Son Department Store
POTW: Bob Adelman photographs
John McCrae and the Mysterious Miss Packard
Our newest blogpost is written by a guest blogger Linda Granfield. It is published with her permission and that of the Guelph Historical Society (Guelph, Ontario, Canada). The article first appeared in Historic Guelph, vol. LIII. 2014-2015. Linda Granfield, a native of Melrose, Massachusetts, is the award-winning author of 30 history books for adults and young readers; John McCrae is the subject of two of those titles. She holds degrees from Northeastern University and the University of Toronto; Linda lives in Toronto, Canada. She invites anyone with further…
POTW: Scouts
POTW: Early Spring
New to the Library Collection: Tauranac New York City Subway Maps
Real Brooklyn, a day in our lives photographs now available at BHS
POTW: Car barn
POTW: Adrian Vanderveer Martense
POTW: Wood-frame Houses
POTW: Majestic Theater Follow-up
Our Martyr President: Theodore Cuyler on Abraham Lincoln's death
POTW: Love Lane
POTW: Willow Street
POTW: Majestic Theater
POTW: Martense Farm
POTW: Ambrotype
Teen Thursdays at BLDG 92 Part II
In 2014, NYC School’s Chancellor Carmen Farina announced a new program called Teen Thursdays, which pairs cultural institutions with middle schools to provide afterschool programming. Brooklyn Historical Society was proud to be a part of that pilot year, and to participate in the program’s expansion this year to our partner site at the Brooklyn Navy Yard Center at BLDG 92. They recorded their sessions on Tumblr (including a video of their final performance!). Last week, Janise Mitchell wrote about her experience with the Teens. Here, Heather Flanagan, School Programs Educator at BHS &…
Teen Thursdays at BLDG 92
In 2014, NYC School’s Chancellor Carmen Farina announced a new program called Teen Thursdays, which pairs cultural institutions with middle schools to provide afterschool programming. Brooklyn Historical Society was proud to be a part of that pilot year, and to participate in the program’s expansion this year to our partner site at the Brooklyn Navy Yard Center at BLDG 92. They recorded their sessions on Tumblr (including a video of their final performance!) Here, Janise Mitchell, School Programs Educator at BHS & BLDG 92, reflects on the program. …
POTW: Eberhard Faber Pencil Company collection
21st Century Teens at the Brooklyn Navy Yard
Since 2012, Brooklyn Historical Society has partnered with the Brooklyn Navy Yard Center at BLDG 92 to lead “Teen Innovators at BLDG 92”, an afterschool program serving local high school students (Check out their Tumblr of their experiences). The students come from nearby high schools and in the fall, visit tenants in the Brooklyn Navy Yard and conduct research projects under the direction of BHS museum educators. In the spring, through a generous grant from the Pinkerton Foundation and the support of the Brooklyn Navy Yard Development Corporation, the Teen Innovators will be placed in paid…
Now Showing at the Fox...
This summer, I was digging in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle “morgue” for information on one of Brooklyn’s long lost movie palaces, the Fox Theater. The morgue can be overwhelming, with thousands upon thousands of tiny clippings in equally tiny envelopes housed in rows of rather ominous looking file cabinets. That said, the multitude of clippings is exactly what makes morgue exploration so exciting. While digging for one thing you, can’t help but stumble across thousands of other things you didn’t even know you were looking for. Like this: Brooklyn Daily Eagle 28 Feb 1930. I found…
POTW: Happy New Year!
POTW: Where's the snow?
Need Help With Your Holiday Shopping?
Well, the Brooklyn Collection has got you covered. All you have to do is suit up in your best hoop dress and top hat and get yourself to downtown Brooklyn, and we promise all your holiday gift-giving woes will melt away. Okay, hang on to your bonnets, here we go! First stop: Fulton Street! “Christmas! Christmas! Christmas!” The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. 22 December 1860. You’ve just got to get back to W.H. Cornell for those fancy boxed prunes that were such a hit with Uncle Clarence last year. Everyone in your knitting circle surely needs a box! Next, you’ve got to find the…
Our Christmas Tides from Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church
My colleague John Zarillo, processing archivist here at BHS, recently announced the good news the Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church records have been processed and made available to the public. He also surprised me with what can only be described as a cataloger’s bonus: at least 8 boxes of the Church’s book collection to be cataloged and placed in a special collections area in the library. Upon opening the first box, I was immediately struck by the superb condition of the books, some more than 100 years old. At first glance, there are editions of the many books published by LAPC’s…
Mary Sandsted, a "typically American girl"
As it often happens, one stumbles upon a story by chance. While going through a stack of old portraits of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle editorial staff, I happened upon a portrait of a young woman, Mary Sandsted Igoe, a society reporter for the newspaper. Encased in a passe-partout freckled with age, the portrait was remarkable in more than one way. To start with, it was the only portrait of a woman in the whole stack. Other images were studio portraits of venerable gentlemen in formal suits, with grave countenances and carefully groomed moustaches. Mary Sandsted Igoe seemed incapable of…
POTW: Happy Holidays!
Cyclo-what?
If you read about a “cyclorama” in downtown Brooklyn, maybe you would think it has something to do with bicycles. Actually, a cyclorama is a form of entertainment that was highly popular in the late-nineteenth century. The word refers both to large panoramic paintings and the circular or hexagonal buildings that were custom-built to house such paintings. In an era before movies, cycloramas were considered one of the most engaging amusements on offer, and they were extremely popular. Almost every major American and European city had a cyclorama building at one point, and Brooklyn was…
POTW: Charles (Karl) Blieffert photograph album
POTW: Horse-drawn cart
POTW: Happy Thanksgiving
POTW: Lundy's Restaurant
POTW: Hand-colored photographs
POTW: Brooklyn Continuation School
Our Streets, Our Stories Community Scanning Update
The Our Streets, Our Stories introduction post found me preparing for my kick-off event at the Leonard library and putting finishing touches on the mobile digitization kit. Four months later I’m now preparing for my fifth community scanning event at the Clinton Hill library and working toward scheduling more spring events. Our Streets, Our Stories has been well received by the library community and public interest is steadily growing. As we host more scanning events in different neighborhoods, I'm adjusting my outreach efforts to reflect what I've learned along the way.…
POTW: Washington Park
Double Header -- two programs on Brooklyn's baseball history!
All of New York is buzzing about the Mets' impressive waltz into the World Series -- their first appearance in the championship since 2000 (their last World Series win was in 1986). If you're anything like us, your glee at their success is mediated by the pangs of loss still felt from when Brooklyn's beloved Dodgers decamped for Los Angeles. As it happens, October 4th was the 60th anniversary of the Dodger's World Series win against the Yankees in Game 7 -- the only championship the team won during its tenure in Brooklyn. If that paragraph got your heart beating a bit…
POTW: Cranston Family Photographs
POTW: Foffe's
What's wrong with your tongue?
Our colleague recently left for a new gig in Staten Island. We here at the Collection wanted to give her something to remember us by. We settled on a photo of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle’s eagle, the one who sat perched over the main entrance to the Eagle Building in Downtown Brooklyn from 1892 until the building was demolished in 1955. Brooklyn Daily Eagle Building, 192-?. The eagle is special partly because the bulk of the Brooklyn Collection is comprised of holdings from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle newspaper, which folded shortly before the building came down. What’s more, the…
POTW: Shipbuilding at Brooklyn Navy Yard
Long Island College Hospital School of Nursing Alumnae Association records now open to the public
A Whale's Tale
Don’t you love a heartwarming animal story? You know, the ones where dogs and cats put aside their instinctual differences to find their way home or children risk it all to rescue baby pandas? Those are excellent stories. This is not one of those stories. I found a photo of a large whale on a flatbed truck in a folder appropriately named “Animals.” The 1953 photo’s caption told of a seven year old, 75 foot, 70 ton fin whale named Mrs. Haroy. Naturally, I had some questions. "Where's Jonah?" Brooklyn Daily Eagle 30 Mar 1953. Print. With a bit of research, I found some answers…
POTW: Cat named “Lazybones”
POTW: Abraham - Straus
POTW: Ritter Painless Dental Co.
Preservation and Progress at the Brooklyn Collection
Brooklyn is in constant flux. Every day, it seems, someone comments that “the neighborhood is changing so quickly” or “five years ago none of this was here!” The Brooklyn Collection’s new exhibit, Preservation and Progress, explores those very statements. Pacific and Atlantic Photos, Inc. Municipal Building Under Construction, 1925. In conjunction with the Brooklyn Connections program, the exhibition looks at buildings that are long gone and buildings that have been landmarked by the Landmarks Preservation Commission; buildings that aren’t going anywhere anytime soon. Two…
POTW: Class Portraits
POTW: Ice in Brooklyn
POTW: Harry Kalmus Photographs
POTW: The Cyclone
POTW: Baby Prince
A Civil War of Our Very Own
General Ulysses S. Grant is an American hero. He commanded the Union forces during the Civil War and is today lauded as a military genius. What's more, he served two terms as President of the United States - that’s quite a resume. (Yes, yes, he made some mistakes during his time in office, but show me a president who hasn’t.) Grant died in 1885 and was buried in his tomb (the aptly named Grant’s Tomb) on Manhattan’s Riverside Drive. It's big. Thomson, Edgar S. "Grant's Tomb." 1895. Print. Brooklyn Public Library, Brooklyn Collection. Brooklyn didn't have a body to bury…
POTW: 1977 Blackout
East New York Then, Now, and in the Future
BHS hosted a panel discussion entitled “A Biography of East New York” on Tuesday, July 14, about how this Brooklyn neighborhood got to where it is today and where it is headed in the future. Moderated by Jarrett Murphy, the executive editor and publisher of City Limits, our panelists included Brandon Gibson, founder and CEO of Light Rock Holdings LLC, a real estate company that focuses on acquiring residential properties through NYC, Michelle Neugebauer, Executive Director of the Cypress Hills Local Development Corporation (CHLDC), Winston Von Engel, Director of the Brooklyn Office of the…
Leaving Brooklyn: Fuhgeddaboudit!
It has been an amazing five years here at the Brooklyn Collection. I will miss my job as Project Manager of Brooklyn Connections and I will certainly miss the students and teachers I have worked with. But most of all, I will miss all the friends I have made here at the Brooklyn Public Library. 2015 Brooklyn Connections Convocation I have learned so much more from the Brooklyn Connections students and teachers than I could have ever taught them—and I doubt they even know it! From our students I’ve learned to be patient (especially with our middle schoolers) and to look at…
POTW: Brooklyn Historical Society's building
Ginger Adams Otis and The Vulcan Society
On Tuesday, July 7, Brooklyn Historical Society hosted a book talk with Ginger Adams Otis, author of Firefight: The Century-Long Battle to Integrate New York's Bravest, a book about the traditions and infrastructure that shape the FDNY and the impressive men and women of color who have fought for institutional change. Otis was joined by three members of the Vulcan Society, an organization focused on increasing the number of minority groups represented in the FDNY. Members of the Vulcan Society included Regina Wilson, President of the Vulcan Society, Captain Paul Washington, former president…
POTW: Cabinet Cards
POTW: Daisies
POTW: Sheep in Prospect Park
Crow Hill Castle
New York's prisons have been in the news a lot recently: tragic deaths, racial bias, the promise of sweeping prison reform, and the Shawshank Redemption-like escape of two convicts from an upstate prison. It got me thinking about Brooklyn's own prison history - specifically that of the Crow Hill Penitentiary, a long since demolished landmark of Brooklyn's past. Thomson, Edgar S. Crow Hill Penitentiary. 1896. Print. Brooklyn Public Library, Brooklyn Collection. The Crow Hill Penitentiary, also known (and perhaps better known) as the Kings County Penitentiary, was an ominous…
POTW: Beach
The Giglio Feast
Every July a few typically sleepy residential streets in Williamsburg erupt into a festival of lights, food, music, and parades. This is, of course, the annual celebration sponsored by Our Lady of Mount Carmel Catholic Church, also known as the Giglio Feast. Since so many of us have enjoyed the sights and sounds (and funnel cakes) of this week-long event, it is only prudent that we take a moment to look into the origin and history of this Italian-American tradition. The Giglio Feast celebrates a selfless act of bravery by Bishop Paolino, who lived in the small Italian…
Recent Changing Demographics Challenge Racial Categories in America
On Wednesday, June 17th, we welcomed internationally recognized demographer and author of Diversity Explosion: How New Racial Demographics are Remaking America, William Frey, to talk about how multiracial marriages and internal migration patterns are changing American demographics. The event was programmed in connection with our Crossing Borders, Bridging Generations (CBBG) program, an initiative to collect oral histories from multicultural and mixed race Brooklynites and create public programs that provide an open space for engaging conversations on the dynamics of race. In his talk, Frey…
POTW: Brooklyn Sewers
Brooklyn Connections 2014-2015 Wrap-Up
The 2014-2015 school year has proven to be yet another great year for Brooklyn Connections. We're pleased to have served nearly 2,000 students in 76 classes from 33 schools in Queens, Manhattan and, of course, Brooklyn. Throughout the year, the Brooklyn Connections staff continued to support students by teaching 21st century learning skills and aligning our skill-based lessons with the Common Core Standards. After students learned and understood the research skills, they completed a project that had a visual, oral and written component. Students also visited the Brooklyn…
POTW: Summer
The Garden of Damascus in the Heart of Brooklyn
June is Immigrant Heritage Month and Brooklyn has long been a destination for new Americans. Shaped by historic waves of Germans, Irish, Italians, and Eastern European Jews, Brooklyn grew from a smattering of Dutch hamlets to a bustling industrial center rich in cultural heritage. Today, Brooklyn remains a hub of immigrant life; home to communities of more recent immigrants from places such as China, the Caribbean, and the Middle East. BPL is doing storytelling workshops and art discussions at the end of the month, so come see us and celebrate our collective heritage! (Oh, and we have a…
Our 4th Annual: What Are You? Sparked Dialogue on Identity and Mixed Heritage
On Monday, June 8th, we hosted our 4th Annual: What Are You?, an event initiated by our Crossing Borders, Bridging Generations (CBBG) program. From 2011 to 2014, CBBG collected oral histories of mixed-heritage Brooklynites and created public programs that provided an open space for engaging conversations on the dynamics of race, ethnicity, identity, culture, class, and sexuality. The What Are You? public program series in particular tackles the question that so often plagues people of mixed heritage - “What are you really?” - and highlights the personal stories and voices of people of color…
Our Streets Our Stories: Community Scanning Events
In collaboration with the Metropolitan New York Library Council and Queens Library, the Brooklyn Collection will spend the next year hosting an exciting new project. As a recent winner of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation’s Knight News Challenge, “Culture in Transit” will be working to democratize the cultural heritage of New York City. Here in Brooklyn, we will be operating under the name “Our Streets Our Stories,” working closely with Brooklyn Public Library's ongoing oral history project of the same name. Our Streets Our Stories has a…
POTW: Lucille Fornasieri Gold photographs
All the World's a Stage - Even the Confederacy - for Brooklyn Soldiers Fighting in Civil War
On the back wall of Brooklyn Historical Society’s critically acclaimed Personal Correspondents exhibition, under the heading “Facing Death,” resides a grim and tragic quotation from the letters of James Beith, a private in the 48th regiment, New York Infantry. There is nothing thought of a poor soldier when he gets killed, only for to dig a hole and throw him into it, then sometimes hardly cover him with enough of dirt. The quotation is from a letter which Beith wrote to his brother in May of 1864, while his regiment marched north through the brutal and desperate final months of the Civil War…
POTW: House Research
POTW: Memorial Day Parade
POTW: Coffee in Brooklyn
POTW: Glass Plate Negatives
Unlocking A Civil War-era Surgeon’s Kit
In April 2015, Brooklyn Historical Society opened a new exhibition, “Personal Correspondents: Photography and Letter Writing in Civil War Brooklyn”. The exhibition uses BHS’s evocative 19th century photography and correspondence collections to reveal the personal, funny, moving, and tragic stories of wartime Brooklynites at home and on the battlefield. As a research assistant on the exhibition, I was charged with researching many of the artifacts featured in the exhibition. The objects – from sewing kits to cannonballs to broadside posters – allowed me to experience the dramatic changes in…
POTW: Grand Army Plaza
Putting Out Fires Since 1865!
Our Firemen, 1887 2015 marks 150 years of the Fire Department of New York (FDNY) bravely serving New York City. I am proud to say my brother-in-law is a FDNY firefighter who started out as a volunteer firefighter. For years, Brian responded to fires whenever the loud siren was rung at the Oceanic Hook and Ladder Company No. 1 in Travis, Staten Island. As Staten Island's oldest volunteer fire house, Oceanic received its charter in 1881 and is today -- out of the ten volunteer fire houses in the city (here's a bit more about that) -- one of only two…
POTW: Cherry Blossoms
In the Shadow of the Bridge
“At times...I feel an enourmous power in me - that seems almost supernatural. If this power is not too dissipated in aggravation and discouragement I may amount to something sometime. I can say this now with perfect equanimity because I am notoriously drunk and the Victrola is going with that glorious Bolero.” – Hart Crane The poet Hart Crane may not have been born in Brooklyn (as so many of us aren’t), but his time here would radically change not only his life, but American poetics as well. Born on July 21, 1899 in Garrettsville, Ohio, Crane moved to the city when he was…
Narrows Sunday School: Religious education in 19th Century Brooklyn
The following post was authored by our Spring 2015 Library and Archives processing intern Stephanie Coy. It highlights one of several collections which she has cataloged this spring. In 1988, Brooklyn Historical Society purchased a manuscript that chronicled the weekly activities of the Narrows Sunday School during the period of 1834–1845. The Narrows Sunday School was founded by Dr. John Carpenter in the Village of Fort Hamilton in 1825. After three years of successful service to the village’s residents, the school moved to a chapel building adjacent to the Dutch Reformed Church in the Town…
A Night to Remember
It is once again upon us; that century-old ritual of courtly grace and sequins! Prom! Prom, short for 'promenade,' has been around since the late 19th century. Starting at colleges, the dances served as a more egalitarian version of the ever-popular debutante balls cherished by the upper classes. The dances were fancy, but usually more high tea than black tie. Because proms served as socialite training grounds, it makes sense to see them listed in Brooklyn Life's "Dances" section along with the other society happenings. The magazine, published weekly for Brooklyn's upper crust…
POTW: Personal Correspondents
50? That Bridge Doesn't Look A Day Over 25!
Every morning the Verrazano-Narrows bridge greets me and every evening it says goodnight, the lights twinkling like the city’s own stars. It’s one of the best things about living in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. (The worst thing being the very long R train ride home.) When I first moved to Bay Ridge, the bridge was an anchor of sorts. It told me, when I accidentally got off at the wrong subway station, which way was home. Walk this way, it said. Toward me. I might be biased but I think it’s a prettier than the George Washington; more elegant than the Brooklyn Bridge.…
POTW: Ebbets Field
Brooklyn Collection + Brooklyn Historical Society
The Brooklyn Collection is pleased to be joining forces with our counterparts at the Brooklyn Historical Society this spring to offer new programs exploring the fun and fanciful side of our borough's history. *Note that two of these three programs are happening at the Brooklyn Historical Society (128 Pierrepont Street in Brooklyn Heights) and some do charge an admission fee. Extreme Brooklyn Trivia: All Star EditionThursday, April 16th, 6:30pm at the Brooklyn Historical Society$10 General Admission / $5 for BHS and G-W MembersReserve tickets>>The result of an unprecedented d…
POTW: Sheepshead Bay
When Brooklyn Was Briney
Brooklyn Daily Eagle 18 April 1948. Remember when you were little and you'd put black olives on your fingers? Were you the type of kid who could only get one or two on before you'd snatch them off like a bird? Or were you like me, a ten-finger-all-or-nothing-go-big-or-go-home olive eater? I was the bane of all family dinners featuring tacos. Or maybe you hate olives? If that is the case, you can stop reading now. In 1890, Irving T. Bush built a warehouse on the banks of New York Harbor in today's Sunset Park. Within a decade what had started as a single warehouse was on the cusp of…
The Toy That Kills
Brooklyn in the early 1950s was a borough of rising crime, and the problem was steadily getting out of control. Cab drivers were held up, grocery stores robbed, and gangs fought for bragging rights in the streets. Stories of victimized residents and business owners were a regular feature in the newspaper. Something had to be done. Various community groups met to discuss strategies that would get weapons off the streets and out of the hands of the youth.Enter the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, which along with civic leaders, business leaders, and local precincts waged a three-year campaign, one…
POTW: Pilgrim Laundry
POTW: Hurricane Sandy
Accessing the Crossing Borders, Bridging Generations Oral History Collection through the Digital Humanities
I'm pleased to announce that the Crossing Borders, Bridging Generations (CBBG) oral history collection is now open for research! From 2011 to 2014, a team of oral historians sponsored by BHS conducted interviews with mixed-heritage people and families in Brooklyn. CBBG narrators and interviewers explored the themes of cultural hybridity, race, ethnicity and identity formation in the United States. The complete collection of over 100 oral history interviews is available for use in the Othmer Library and a portion of the contents are accessible online at the CBBG website. An exciting feature…
POTW: Brooklyn Bridge
Artist Talk-Jesus in Brooklyn: Four Good Fridays with Larry Racioppo
Larry Racioppo has been photographing Good Friday on the streets of Brooklyn for over 40 years. Join us on March 25th at 7:00 p.m. as this celebrated street photographer talks about his work documenting the public processions, and celebrations of faith of four neighobrhood churches. Greater Zion Shiloh Baptist Church St. John the…
POTW: Bickford's
POTW: In Bloom
POTW: City Hall on Fire
Cheers!
We hope that you'll join us next Wednesday, February 25th to hear Peter Thomas Fornatale and Chris Wertz as they present their new book, "Brooklyn Spirits and Cocktails: Craft Distilling from the World's Hippest Borough". They'll be discussing the history of distilled spirits in Brooklyn, and the new ways that restaurants, entrepreneurs, and bars are bringing back old recipes and methods, while adding their own twist to the enjoyment of cocktails. The talk begins at 7:00 p.m, and there will be a cocktail receiption at 6:30…
What's Up With Parkville?
I have a confession to make. Up until this past November I wasn't a Brooklynite. I've been teaching students to love Brooklyn but, for the past six years, I've been living in Astoria, Queens. Now, don't go thinking I'm ashamed - I have tons of Queens pride. But, in the spirit of having a shorter commute and fewer (read: zero) roommates, I've moved to South Brooklyn. I mentioned to a friend that I'd moved to Kensington and, upon telling him what my cross streets were, he retorted, "No, you live in Parkville." Naturally, I was offended. First of all, I teach kids about Brooklyn's history…
POTW: Sledding
Fred Snitzer collection of Kings County postal ephemera now open to the public
POTW: Sweethearts
A School for Girls and One for Boys
It's doubtful that you've heard of James W. Naughton but very likely you have walked passed one of his magnificent buildings. Naughton, an Irish immigrant, moved to Brooklyn when he was eight years old. He became an architect after apprenticing in Milwaukee at the age of fifteen and upon his return to New York, he studied at the Cooper Union. In 1879 he became Superintendent of Buildings for Brooklyn's Board of Education and designed more than one hundred buildings, including Brooklyn's first high school. Before Brooklyn had any high schools, it had grammar schools.…
POTW: Your Local Subway Station
Map of the Month--February 2015
POTW: Blizzard?
Film Screening and Discussion: "Battle for Brooklyn" -- Wednesday, January 28th, 7pm
As part of Brooklyn Transitions, a series of programs and events about neighborhood change in our borough, the Brooklyn Collection presents the film "Battle for Brooklyn". This documentary is an intensely intimate look at the very public and passionate fight waged by owners and residents facing condemnation of their property to make way for the controversial Atlantic Yards project, the development plan that created the Barclay's Center (home of the Brooklyn Nets basketball team) and the Pacific Park apartment towers that are currently under construction. Shot over seven years and…
POTW: Basketball in Brooklyn
The Mystery of PS 125
Looking at Google Maps, it is plain to see that PS 125 in Brownsville has been abandoned for quite some time. When did the oldest school in the neighborhood close, and why? This researcher started this blog assuming that these would be easy questions to answer. It turns out there is no clear answer to either one. From its creation in 1900, PS 125 was ill-equipped to handle the influx of Jewish, mostly Russian and Polish, immigrants streaming over the newly opened Williamsburg Bridge from the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Four new schools opened in Brownsville between 1905 and…
POTW: Polar Bears in Brooklyn
The Mermen of Brownsville
The Brooklyn Collection has rotating exhibits all year round showcasing gems from the Collection (including an annual exhibit of student work). Currently, we're exhibiting items relating to "The Education of Kings: A History of Brooklyn Schools!" It will be up in the collection until February 13th, so please stop by and check out the yearbooks, photos, and other rare and unique Collection items we have on display. In honor of our current exhibition, the Brooklyn Connections team has set out to detail the history of three Brooklyn Schools over the next three weeks. With that,…
POTW: Bitterly Cold
Teddy Bears from Brooklyn
The teddy bear has been a perennial gift favorite for at least a century. You may be surprised to learn that the invention of teddy bears is squarely rooted in Brooklyn. The holiday season is a good time to review the story of this adorable stuffed toy with which so many of us have a deep emotional connection. An early 20th century family photograph of Brooklyn-born sculptor Frederick MacMonnies' daughters Betty and Marjorie, flanked by their governess and their good friend, the teddy bear.My research was spurred, oddly enough, by a work of fiction. Karen Hesse’s…
Uncovering Historical Maps at Brooklyn Historical Society
As I wrap up cataloging the last few maps and polishing the last blog post for this phase of Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR)-funded map cataloging for BHS, the time has come to let everyone know what we have accomplished in the last 17 months. The purpose of a CLIR Hidden Collections grant is to ‘uncover’ ‘hidden’ collections, by making previously uncataloged collections available for discovery on the Web. For libraries, this goal is achieved by the creation of MARC (machine-readable catalog) records for each item in the collection for inclusion in local and international…
POTW: Merry Christmas
Brooklyn's Corporation Counsel records now open to researchers!
Free From Freakish Ideas
Parties, man. The worst. Who do you invite? Or more specifically, how do you invite everyone except for that guy? New Year's Eve parties? The worst of the worst. A day already filled with expectations, topped with anticipation, with a dash of nostalgia and/or regret. Thank goodness there are people who are paid to tell us what to do and what not to do to avoid garish social faux pas. Marie Manning, writing under the pseudonym Beatrice Fairfax, wrote the first newspaper advice column in the New York Evening Journal in 1898. The format proved an instant success, with other…
POTW: Festival of Lights
Shop Talk with Brooklyn Makers: In the Seam
Welcome to Shop Talk, our regular series highlighting some of the fantastic Brooklyn-made products (and their makers) available in the BHS Gift Shop, open daily from 12pm to 5pm!
They'll Say 'Aww, Topsy!' At My Autopsy!
Sometimes, all it takes is an episode of Bob's Burgers to ignite a historical research adventure! In the episode aptly named "Topsy," Louise devises a scheme to take revenge on an obnoxious science teacher who is obsessed with Thomas Edison. While researching for her science project at the local library, Louise and her siblings stumble across a video of an elephant being electrocuted by the Edison Electric Company. Louise cackles with delight at the idea of smearing the reputation of her teacher's beloved hero in front of the entire class, "I'm going to tell everyone the truth about Thomas…
POTW: House Research
December Staff Pick from the BHS Gift Shop: Park Slope Neighborhood & Architectural History Guide by Francis Morrone via Brooklyn Historical Society
Welcome to the latest installment of Brooklyn Historical Society STAFF PICKS, a fun way to explore our awesome gift shop! The BHS Gift Shop features many items crafted right here in Brooklyn, as well as an array of fascinating books on the history and culture of New York City and our favorite borough. Once a month we feature a staff member and their favorite book from our gift shop because, let’s face it, who better than our Brooklyn-lovin’ staff to give great gift ideas? This month we chat with BHS President Deborah Schwartz, whose favorite book in the BHS Gift Shop is the Park Slope…
POTW: Repeal Day!
Manure Freely: The Floral Stylings of Julius J. Heinrich
The Brooklyn Collection's ephemera files are pretty expansive, filled with an array of amazing (and sometimes random) documents tucked away into acid-free manila folders: programs, community newsletters, membership cards, and the like. We have a fair amount of newspapers and periodicals as well, including one well-loved booklet from 1889 entitled Henirch's Floral Instructor. I was drawn to the book due to the filigree on the cover and the floral-themed typeface. It is pretty, yes? As I started to gently flip through the pages I began to get some scents (Pun! Bad pun!) of late 19th…
Map of the Month - December 2014
POTW: Parades
POTW: The building of the Verrazano Narrows Bridge
Brooklyn Connections Professional Developments
We are pleased to announce the Brooklyn Connections 2014/ 2015 teacher professional development schedule. To register for any of the workshops, please email connections@bklynlibrary.org or visit our website. ------ Brooklyn Dodger Jackie Robinson--a great topic for this year's NHD theme: Leadership and Legacy What: Creating a National History Day Project with the Brooklyn Collection and the Museum of the City of New York When: Monday, December 1, 2014 from 5pm-7pm Who should attend: Teachers and parents who have students or children participating in National History Day or those who…
November Staff Pick from the BHS Gift Shop: A Tale of Two Cities: Disco Era Bushwick by Meryl Meisler
Welcome to the latest installment of Brooklyn Historical Society STAFF PICKS, a fun way to explore our awesome gift shop! The BHS Gift Shop features many items crafted right here in Brooklyn, as well as an array of fascinating books on the history and culture of New York City and our favorite borough. Once a month we feature a staff member and their favorite book from our gift shop because, let’s face it, who better than our Brooklyn-lovin’ staff to give great gift ideas? This month we chat with Lindsay Palmer Vint, BHS’s Visitor Services and Retail Manager, whose favorite book in the BHS…
POTW: In Honor of Our Veterans
The Brooklyn Hellfighters
The day was November 11th, 1919. At exactly 11:00am, on the one year anniversary of the armistice that ended the fighting between the Allies and Germany, all school children in Brooklyn were asked to place their pencils on their desks for a ten minute silence so that they could "realize vividly the significance which that moment had for America's embattled armies." Brooklyn Daily Eagle 11 Nov. 1919. The Brooklyn Daily Eagle reported on the events of the newly elected day of remembrance (not a national holiday until 1938 and not called Veteran's Day until 1954): parades, dinners, and…
Golden City USA
When New Yorkers dream of summer fun at an amusement park by the sea, most turn their thoughts to Coney Island. However, 100 years ago they might have been dreaming about Canarsie’s Golden City Park. The popular yet often forgotten amusement park opened in the summer of 1907 to a crowd of 25,000. Built on Jamaica Bay by Warner’s Canarsie Amusement Company, the park relied on the recently extended railroad system to deliver daytrippers from all over the city.
Map of the Month--November 2014
Shop Talk with Brooklyn Makers: Brooklyn Rehab
Welcome to Shop Talk, our regular series highlighting some of the fantastic Brooklyn-made products (and their makers) available in the BHS Gift Shop, open daily from 12pm to 5pm! Alyssa Zygmunt, the creator of Brooklyn Rehab, uses her daily observations of NYC culture to create inspired and unique products that make the perfect souvenirs for out-of-towners and seasoned New Yorkers alike. From key chains and salt and pepper shakers, to glass bottles with labels of local bodies of water, such as the Gowanus Canal (because that water must be tasty!), and 100% authentic New York City pigeon…
POTW: Food vendors at Wallabout Market
Brooklyn Bounty 2014 Taste Spotlight - Odd Fellows Ice Cream
In anticipation of Brooklyn Bounty, BHS’s premier fundraiser at 26 Bridge on October 22nd, we are profiling our participating restaurants and honorees of the Food & Heritage Awards. Below is a profile of OddFellows Ice Cream Company, one of the sweet and chilled participants in our evening’s tasting menu. Ice Cream is year-round! (left to right) : The OddFellows Team - Mohan Kumar, Sam Mohan, & Holiday Kumar Right on the corner of Kent Avenue and North 3rd Street in Williamsburg, Brooklyn is a small ice cream parlor with big flavors. OddFellows Ice Cream Co. is passionate about their…
POTW: Highland Park
October Staff Pick from the BHS Gift Shop – Motherless Brooklyn by Jonathan Lethem
Welcome to the latest installment of Brooklyn Historical Society STAFF PICKS, a fun way to explore our awesome gift shop! The BHS Gift Shop features many items crafted right here in Brooklyn, as well as an array of books on Brooklyn and New York City suitable for the whole family. Once a month we feature a staff member and their favorite item from our gift shop because, let’s face it, who better than our Brooklyn-lovin’ staff to give great gift ideas? This month we chat with BHS Processing Archivist John Zarrillo, whose favorite book is Motherless Brooklyn by Jonathan Lethem. He recommends…
Education at BHS: CASA/Young Curators at PS 32
The Young Curators is an after-school program led by Brooklyn Historical Society educators guiding students through a themed investigation of their school’s neighborhood using primary sources from BHS's collection and other resources. Based upon their given theme (i.e. Colonial Brooklyn or the Evolution of East New York), students create a three-panel exhibit that is eventually displayed at their school. Students write the text, recreate images through drawings, and choose images like maps and portraits to be included. They even work with a graphic designer for the colors, fonts, and design…
POTW: Autumn Harvest Season
Map of the Month--October 2014
Brooklyn Bounty 2014 Taste Spotlight - Brooklyn Winery
In anticipation of Brooklyn Bounty, BHS’s premier fundraiser at 26 Bridge on October 22nd, we are profiling our participating restaurants and honorees of the Food & Heritage Awards. Below is a profile of Brooklyn Winery, one of the delicious participants in our evening’s tasting menu. Photo by Rina Brindamour “Our job is to make people happy.” _____ Co-founders and wine entrepreneurs Brian Leventhal and John Stires have been working with grapes since 2010, when they opened one of the first hybrid winery and event spaces in Brooklyn, NY. Their interest in wine- making bloomed when John and…
POTW: Transformation & Discovery
Education at BHS: CASA/Young Curators at P.S. 276
The Young Curators is an after-school program led by Brooklyn Historical Society educators guiding students through a themed investigation of their school’s neighborhood using primary sources from BHS's collection and other resources. Based upon their given theme, (i.e. Colonial Brooklyn or the Evolution of East New York), students create a three-panel exhibit that is eventually displayed at their school. Students write the text, recreate images through drawings, and choose images like maps and portraits to be included. They even work with a graphic designer for the colors, fonts, and design…
Shop Talk with Brooklyn Makers: Build Your Block
Welcome to Shop Talk, our regular series highlighting some of the fantastic Brooklyn-made products (and their makers) available in the BHS Gift Shop, open daily from 12pm to 5pm! Brooklyn is an ever-changing borough, and whether you've been here your whole life or are just now calling it home, I think everyone can agree that it is a very special and exciting place to be. While new buildings are sprouting up around every corner, it is important that we take the time to appreciate and preserve the essence of classic Brooklyn. Our maker for this month, Patrick Chirico, found a unique way to…
Dirt for Dirt's Sake: the trials of Henry Miller's "Tropic of Cancer"
In observance of Banned Books Week, the Brooklyn Collection offers this tale taken straight from the institutional archives of Brooklyn Public Library. On July 11, 1963 a stern memo was distributed to every library throughout the borough of Brooklyn: "TO: ALL SERVICE AGENCIES FROM: THE ASSISTANT CHIEF LIBRARIAN RE: MILLER, HENRY - TROPIC OF CANCER The New York State Court of Appeals ruled on July 10, 1963 that TROPIC OF CANCER by Henry Miller is obscene under the New York State obscenity law. The following action must be taken immediately: No copy is to be loaned to…
POTW: Ready or Not . . .
September Staff Pick from the BHS Gift Shop – The New York Nobody Knows by William B. Helmreich
Welcome to the latest installment of Brooklyn Historical Society STAFF PICKS, a fun way to explore our awesome gift shop! The BHS Gift Shop features many items crafted right here in Brooklyn, as well as an array of books on Brooklyn and New York City suitable for the whole family. Once a month we feature a staff member and their favorite item from our gift shop because, let’s face it, who better than our Brooklyn-lovin’ staff to give great gift ideas? This month we chat with the wonderful Lead Visitors Services and Events Associate, Kate Ludwig, whose favorite book is The New York Nobody…
Brooklyn Bounty '14: French Louie
In anticipation of Brooklyn Bounty, BHS’s premier fundraiser at 26 Bridge on October 22nd, we are profiling our participating restaurants and honorees of the Food & Heritage Awards. Below is a profile of French Louie, one of the delicious participants in our evening’s tasting menu.
French Louie: All Things French, American and Brooklyn
The Great Trolley Strike of 1895 - Part 2
Map of the Month – September 2014
Brooklyn Bounty '14: Mast Brothers Chocolate
In anticipation of Brooklyn Bounty, BHS’s premier fundraiser at 26 Bridge on October 22nd, we are profiling our participating restaurants and honorees of the Food & Heritage Awards. Below is a profile of Mast Brothers Chocolate, one of the delicious participants in our evening’s tasting menu.
Mast Brothers Chocolate: Honoring Brooklyn and the Cocoa Nib
Williamsburg: Then & Now
Our collection of photographs by Anders Goldfarb are some of the most contemporary images in our holdings aside from those taken by Jamel Shabazz. However, unlike Shabazz who captures the personalities of Brooklynites, Goldfarb mostly captures the personalities of the borough's dilapidated buildings. In a 2012 interview with Goldfarb, Peter Mattei asked: "What emotion do you feel when you see these buildings? What makes you want to photograph them?" "It's a form of compassion I think I have for the building," Goldfarb replied, "because they're old and the old as a rule tend to perish and…
POTW: Walking with Eugene Armbruster
It’s shocking how fast July and August have slipped by, but at least the weather is still good. One of my favorite ways to enjoy both this weather and this city is to wander around with a camera. Based on the images in the Eugene L. Armbruster photographs and scrapbooks collection, that appears to have also been one of Armbruster’s favorite pastimes. Flipping through Armbruster’s photographs, it is easy to imagine him wandering around different neighborhoods in Brooklyn in the 1920s, taking pictures of whatever seemed interesting or beautiful in the moment. The four images above appear to…
Shop Talk with Brooklyn Makers: The Dynamic Duo of Boundless Brooklyn
Welcome to Shop Talk, our regular series highlighting some of the fantastic Brooklyn-made products (and their makers) available in the BHS Gift Shop, open daily from 12pm to 5pm! When it comes to handmade crafts, Brooklyn takes the gold medal. You can find almost anything made by hand, from soaps, to earrings, to cutting boards. Today, we get to know David Shulman and Terence Arjo, Brooklyn makers who specialize in DIY water tower models, magnets, coasters, t-shirts, and key chains. Much of their success is attributed to their ability to provide a product that is historic and beautiful, but…
The Great Trolley Strike of 1895 - Part 1
A Look at the Year Ahead: Brooklyn Connections
We at Brooklyn Connections are gearing up for our 8th year reaching out to local schools, teaching research skills and learning about local history. With an exciting two-year, $400,000 grant from the New York Life Foundation and additional generous funding from The Morris and Alma Schapiro Fund, David and Paula Weiner Memorial Grant, The Hearst Foundation, Inc., Tiger Baron Foundation, and Epstein Teicher Philanthropies, we can continue our efforts of teaching authentic historical research to students around Brooklyn! Students at PS/ IS 163 learned about transit history. They…
POTW: The Feast of San Gennaro
Brooklyn Bounty 2014: ReConnect Café
In anticipation of Brooklyn Bounty, BHS’s premier fundraiser at 26 Bridge on October 22nd, we are profiling our participating restaurants and honorees of the Food & Heritage Awards. Below is a profile of ReConnect Café, recipient of our Pioneer Award, and part of our tasting menu.
ReConnect Café: Coffee to Buzz the Neighborhood
POTW: Electrification of the Long Island Railroad in Brooklyn
POTW: The Brooklyn Postal Service
A Digest of a Different Sort
Last week I was looking for a piece of ephemera for a project packet I was creating on Brownsville when I stumbled across something different: a digest, if you will. This digest then went on to change the entire course of my day. How did one small magazine change the entire course of my day, you ask? Well, I immediately stopped looking for information on Brownsville, that's how. I spent the rest of the afternoon reading about sports, history, restaurants, and women in "The Magazine For Brooklyn, About Brooklyn, In Brooklyn." Brooklyn Digest Magazine was a small monthly magazine…
Brooklyn Bounty 2014: Brooklyn Oenology
BHS’s premier fundraiser, Brooklyn Bounty, is fast approaching. Held at 26 Bridge on October 22nd, it will feature an exciting array of Brooklyn chefs providing tastings of some of the best offerings from their menus! Purchase your ticket here. To whet your appetite, we are featuring the food and drink of several of our participating chefs and restaurants in the months leading up to #BKBounty14 on the BHS Blog. Enjoy!
Brooklyn Oenology: Celebrating Creativity with Wine
Map of the Month - August 2014
Shop Talk with Brooklyn Makers: Tina, the fearless lady behind TATTLY
If you think temporary tattoos are just for kids, then you haven't discovered Tattly yet, the Brooklyn-grown company that specializes in creating temporary tattoos even adults want to wear - everyone from Brooklyn hipsters to hip grandmas. And in addition to being a Brooklyn company, Tattly also supports artists! They employ artists from all over the globe to design tattoos which ranging from vegetables to comic book characters. Today we catch up with Tina, the fearless lady behind Tattly who took a design challenge and made it into over 100 amazing temporary solutions. What's the story…
Brooklyn Bounty 2014: Delaware and Hudson
Excitement is in the air for Brooklyn Bounty, Brooklyn Historical Society’s premier tasting benefit this fall! On October 22, at the impressive 26 Bridge Street in DUMBO, guests will treat their palates to tastings from Brooklyn’s finest chefs and restaurants. With this year’s theme, “Kings County Agricultural Fair,” we celebrate Brooklyn’s vibrant sustainability movement with delicious and exciting samples from all across the borough. In the next few months leading up to the event, to whet our appetites for what’s to come we will profile several of the participating restaurants, as well as…
On Vaccinations and the Small Pox epidemic of 1894
The Quiet, Colorful Moments of Irving Herzberg
Irving Herzberg (1915-1991) is perhaps best known for capturing personal, candid moments. The Brooklyn Collection houses Herzberg's life's work; over 2,300 images of day-to-day Brooklynites: a woman with her tired baby, a man looking at totem poles, and children stuffing their faces with cotton candy. The Brooklyn Collection also has some amazingly terrifying photos of the plane crash that shook up Park Slope in the winter of 1960 and a wealth of photos that he took of Brooklyn's traditionally closed Hasidic community. Herzberg spent 10 years, Sunday after Sunday,…
Before "organic" was even a notion...
In an unusual confluence of the World War I centennial observation and the height of harvesting season, a small, curious cache of photographic images found its way to the Brooklyn Collection. Twenty six lantern slides and seven photographic prints, presumably from 1919, depict a group of Brooklyn youngsters and their teachers tending vegetable plots. A couple of them feature the Park Commissioner John N. Harman as well. It was not only a tree that grew in Brooklyn, apparently, but also carrots, kohlrabi, beans, beets, radishes and corn. The pictures were taken at the Betsy Park…
Map of the Month--July 2014
June Staff Pick from the BHS Gift Shop - Rats by Robert Sullivan
Introducing Brooklyn Historical Society STAFF PICKS, a new way to explore our awesome gift shop! Our gift shop has been open for a little over a year, featuring many items crafted right here in Brooklyn, as well as an array of books on Brooklyn and New York City suitable for the whole family. Once a month we will feature a staff member and their favorite item from our gift store because, let’s face it, who better than our Brooklyn lovin’ staff to give great gift ideas? This month is all about Andy McCarthy, BHS Reference Librarian, and his favorite book from our gift shop: Rats: Observations…
Mapping the first Red Scare: Ohman's map of 'racial colonies'
POTW: She said, She said exhibition
It’s with great pleasure that I announce the opening of the exhibition She said, She said: Art and inspiration in the work of Nell Painter and Lucille Fornasieri Gold. If you weren’t already aware, Lucille Gold generously donated a set of 93 photographs to Brooklyn Historical Society in 2008. They are all available for your viewing pleasure here. She has been a favorite of ours for some time: we’ve offered her pictures as enhancements to fundraising events and gift prints to BHS staff; we’ve connected her to the documentarian of New York Street Games who used her photos in the film and to…
Summing Up a School Year with Brooklyn Connections
The 2013-2014 school year has proven to be a truly banner year for Brooklyn Connections. We're pleased to have partnered with over 2,000 students in 70 classes from 30 schools in Queens, Manhattan and of course, Brooklyn. Students from PS 131 before their visit to the Brooklyn Collection in January Throughout the year, Connections staff supported students by teaching Common Core-aligned research skills, including note-taking, text and photographic analysis, outlining, and writing a research question or thesis statement. All partner schools visited the Brooklyn…
Borough Park's P.S. 131, a trove of school history
Last fall the Brooklyn Connections staff was approached by two enthusiastic educators from P.S. 131 who had recently discovered fascinating artifacts at their Borough Park school. They hoped to use the artifacts to inform a school history research project with a select group of 5th grade students in collaboration with Brooklyn Connections. Given our love of school history (see To Number a School, We Don't Need No Education, Brooklyn Schools: A Look at Ephemera and More, Welcome to M.S. 57), it should come as no surprise to our faithful readers that we jumped at the…
POTW: Roller Skating
A Case of Mistaken Identity
POTW: Paul Leicester Ford (1865-1902)
POTW: Marianne Moore
Everybody Loves a Parade
Born in 1846, William Cody, better known by his stage name Buffalo Bill, was a jack-of-all-trades when it came to the American West. He rode for the Pony Express, scouted for the Union during the Civil War, and rode against various Native American tribes during the period of westward expansion. His stories would eventually find their way to the big top when, in 1882, Cody began his 45-year career as an entertainer and showman by creating a small show that would eventually morph into an extravaganza entitled Buffalo Bill's Wild West and Congress of Rough Riders of the World. He wooed audiences…
Map of the Month - June 2014
POTW: Memorial Day
Knish Knosh
Join us this Wednesday evening May 28th, when the "world's leading knish expert and author" Laura Silver will be with us to talk about her new book, "Knish, In Search of Jewish Soul Food". Ms. Silver will share with us her travels and research through various countries and communities, as she traces the origins and contemporary expressions of this ubiquitous culinary icon that once reigned from Brownsville to the Lower East Side. We'll have a knish reception at 6:30, with the talk beginning at 7:00 p.m.
Twin Track Stars Break Barriers
POTW: Ice Delivery in the City
A Magnolia Tree Grows in Brooklyn
The Brooklyn Cycling Tradition
Researching Reinhardt
If reports are to be believed, Brooklyn has been undergoing some kind of ground-shaking cultural renaissance for the past ten or twenty years. The borough -- once sleepy, then neglected -- is now a ballyhooed land barnacled with oft-parodied "artisanal" this-and-that shops, awash in alternative art-spaces, and peppered with the black and white "gear" of our recently dispatched cagers. Brooklyn is it! Brooklyn is cool! Brooklyn is a global brand, a baby's name! But if you Google "Brooklyn is" you will also see the gloomy auto-fill death of this shangrila not too far…
POTW: Bensonhurst, 1976
A Library for Children -- the Stone Avenue Branch
The Stone Avenue Library Branch has stood at 581 Mother Gaston Boulevard for 100 years, and has recently celebrated that fact with a renovation and re-opening party. Of course, the street wasn't called Mother Gaston when the branch was built -- that came later, after local activist Rosetta "Mother" Gaston opened the Heritage House as an education and community center in this very library. Another name change worth noting is that of the branch itself. Now known as the Stone Avenue Library, it first opened its doors in 1914 as the Brownsville Children's Library --…
POTW: Forgotten Professions
Map of the Month - May 2014
POTW: Horses in Brooklyn
Author Talk: The History of Pizza, Wednesday, April 30th 7pm
“The History of Pizza in New York” with Scott WienerWednesday, April 30th 2014, 7:00pm Brooklyn Collection, Second Floor, Central Library Everyone loves pizza. Scott Wiener, however, loves pizza more than most people. In fact, he transitioned from a pizza enthusiast who dragged his friends on pizza adventures to a nationally-known “pizza expert.” He runs multiple highly-rated tours of pizzerias in NYC, writes a column for a pizza trade magazine, holds a Guinness World Record for the largest collection of pizza boxes, and even wrote a book titled Viva La Pizza! The art…
POTW: April Snow Showers
Come see Doin' It In the Park
Come to the Brooklyn Public Central Library on Thursday, April 24, 2014 to see Doin’ It In the Park! The movie will play at the Dweck Center (follow arrows to the basement level). Showtime is at 7pm. Directed by Bobbito Garcia and Kevin Couliau, this independent documentary explores the history, culture, and social influence of New York City’s summer basketball scene. As we all know, pick-up baseball is a way of life in New York City – according to the filmmakers, there are 700+outdoor courts and an estimated 500,000 players. And despite the summer heat, there’s…
POTW: The Changing City
I recently visited my brother in Paris, and in preparation for this trip, I went to see an exhibit of historical photographs at the Metropolitan Museum – Charles Marville: Photographer of Paris. Beginning in the mid-19th century, a city planner named Baron Georges-Eugene Haussmann master-minded a program for the improvement and beautification of Paris, razing entire streets and neighborhoods in Paris with the same zeal that Robert Moses would adopt in New York City in the next century. The city of Paris hired photographer Charles Marville to chronicle the city’s transformation during this…
The Fight of the (Nineteenth) Century
Kingsborough Golden Anniversary
Brooklynology is happy to present a guest blogger this week, historian John Manbeck. After 32 years teaching English at Kingsborough Community College and eight years as Brooklyn Borough Historian, Manbeck continued to write a column for The Brooklyn Daily Eagle for another eight years. He has authored/edited nine books on Brooklyn history and is now writing fiction. Back in 1967, I was looking for a job. I had just returned from a two year grant as a Fulbright professor at Helsinki University in Finland and applied for a professorial position at Kingsborough Community College in Manhattan…
The Eagle has Landed!
Yes, the long wait is over! The Brooklyn Daily Eagle newspaper is available in its entirety (or as near as we can hope to get to its entirety) as a free, searchable database online. Those who have used our Brooklyn Daily Eagle Online database, which offered the Eagle from 1841 to 1902, will be pleased to learn that the second half of the Eagle, 1903 to 1955, is finally open for research online. You can search the database, browse specific dates of the paper, print or save articles, and share them through the social media outlet of your choice through our new historic…
20 Things You Probably Didn't Know About Brooklyn
We've become a monoculture of list readers. With the advent of Buzzfeed and the like, we've grown accustomed to sifting though these monotonous lists to identify if we saw that movie or had that toy as a child. Admit it, you totally read these articles. Did you see the one about the 58 worst things that happen on social media? Or the 19 questions people with moustaches are tired of hearing? And don't get me started on all the quizzes. Recently, while scrolling through my newsfeed, I came across a Buzzfeed article about the 60 things you probably didn't know about New…
Map of the Month - April 2014
POTW: Red Hook Library
More Than Just a Name: Overton Tremper
As an undergraduate studing history, I've enjoyed spending my past semester interning at the Brooklyn Collection. Because of my love for all things sports, I jumped at the opportunity to help create an exhibit focused on the history of sports in Brooklyn. I quickly realized that there's so much more to Brooklyn's sports history than the Brooklyn Dodgers! I sorted through hundreds of old photographs, newspaper clippings, and even yearbooks to create a diverse representation of sports in Brooklyn. Come check out the display in the Brooklyn Collection (on the 2nd floor balcony…
Brooklyn Connections Educators Take on ABQ for NCHE Conference
Earlier this month, Brooklyn Connections educators – Christine, Kaitlin and Brendan – descended on Albuquerque, New Mexico for the annual National Council for History Education (NCHE) Conference. Christine Kaitlin Brendan Excitement over this conference was twofold; well maybe three if you count the added bonus of temporarily escaping winter’s reach for a few glorious days … Santa Clara, NM … ok, twofold: 1) it offered the opportunity to replace our educator hats with those of students eager to soak up historical antidotes and best practices…
POTW: Portraits with Dogs
Brooklyn Bounce: book presentation and meeting with the author, Jake Appleman
The book "Brooklyn Bounce: The Highs and Lows of Nets Basketball's Historic First Season in the Borough" documents the first year of the Brooklyn Nets. The arrival of the team and the rise of the Barclays Center was accompanied by much public discussion, heated at times. The sports writer Jake Appleman shadowed the team for the first year in Brooklyn and chronicled its many (sometimes unexpected) highs and lows. To prepare yourself for the conversation, please take a look at the interview with Jake Appleman. Join us this Wednesday evening, March 26, at 7:00p.m. in the Brooklyn…
Prospect Park, Two by Two - Part Two
This is the second part of a two-part blog post on the Prospect Park Zoo, read the first part here. End radio silence. "The good ship West Point has been heard from. All fears that the prowling warships of the European combatants had intercepted it and carried off the animals, perhaps to provide amusement for the Kaiser's grandsons or the young Russian Grand Dukes, have been laid to rest" (Brooklyn Daily Eagle, November 7, 1914). A few days later the animals arrived safely but, on the day of the grand parade and exhibition, it rained. A lot. Commissioner Ingersoll postponed the opening…
POTW: Brooklyn Women
Brooklyn's Police Matrons
Prospect Park, Two by Two - Part One
I have always had a fondness for zoos. I used to work with a zoological park in Washington State and volunteered with one here in New York City. I love that even though we live in an urban jungle we can travel to a jungle in Asia or South America for the price of a subway ride (and general admission). Zoos were not always magical places. Many of the early menageries and zoos collected animals by trapping them in the wild and placing them in cramped cages that looked nothing like their native environment. Today, the Wildlife Conservation Society, which runs the zoos and the aquarium here in…
POTW: The Rooftops of Brooklyn
What do you see from your rooftop? Chances are, if you have lived in Brooklyn at any point in the last century, you have spent at least some time on the roof of your building. I have many fond memories of climbing through my window and scaling my fire escape to get to the sunlight and calm of my roof. The rooftops give you space to breathe, and at least the illusion of solitude. Most of the time I am completely alone – a rare and amazing feeling to have in the city – but I also sometimes see people on other rooftops sunbathing, or sitting with a friend, or barbequing, or doing yoga, or simply…
POTW: The Streets of Brooklyn Heights
Map of the Month - March 2014
Spring Teacher Professional Developments
We here at the Brooklyn Collection are pleased to announce two FREE professional development opportunities for teachers in spring 2014. The professional developments are open to all English Language Arts and Social Studies teachers who teach grades 4 - 12. Brooklyn and the Civil Rights Movement on May 15, 2014, 9:00am-3:00pm with special guest speaker Dr. Brian Purnell. Explore the Brooklyn Collection's original Civil Rights materials. Learn about the efforts of Brooklyn Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), which included protests, community clean-ups, marches,…
Brooklyn's Carnegie Libraries
This blog post looks at Andrew Carnegie's library legacy in the microcosm of one borough, but those interested in a wider-angle view of the philanthropist and industrialist are encouraged to attend a lecture by Carnegie biographer David Nasaw in the Dweck Center at Brooklyn's Central Library this Sunday, March 2nd, at 1:00pm. RSVP for free tickets here: http://brooklynpubliclibrary.brownpapertickets.com/. An eager line outside the Brownsville Branch library, 1908. In the Brooklyn Collection we have a few boxes of photographs documenting that special, revered category of library --…
The Emancipation Proclamation: Copperheads Respond
In conjunction with a current exhibit, the Brooklyn Historical Society blog is featuring a series of blog posts called “The Emancipation Proclamation: Americans Respond.” Learn more here. The American political landscape was marked by many different and complicated factions during the Civil War. One group, often dubbed "Copperheads," remain the most misunderstood. Copperheads were Unionists affiliated with the Democratic party who opposed the Civil War. For reasons including a fear that emancipated slaves entering the labor force would threaten the livelihoods of northern white workers,…
Science Fiction and Multiraciality: CBBG Event Recap
Crossing Borders, Bridging Generations (CBBG), a project of Brooklyn Historical Society, is an oral history project and public programming series that examines the history and experiences of mixed-heritage people and families, cultural hybridity, race, ethnicity, and identity in the historically diverse borough of Brooklyn. On December 14th, 2013, BHS’ Crossing Borders, Bridging Generations program hosted a fantastic, creative and well-received event titled Science Fiction and Multiraciality: From Octavia Butler to Harry Potter. This event allowed New Yorkers to critically engage with…
Coney Island Aflame
Author Talk: "Come Out Swinging: the Changing World of Boxing in Gleason's Gym" with Lucia Trimbur -
Please join us this Wednesday, February 26th, for an evening with Lucia Trimbur, author of Come Out Swinging: the changing world of boxing in Gleason's Gym. Founded in the Bronx in 1937, Gleason's Gym moved to Brooklyn's DUMBO neighborhood in the 1980s and remains there to this day, even as redevelopment and an influx of wealth transformed the waterfront area. A holdover from the "golden age" of boxing, Gleason's itself has transformed through the years; the changing demographic of its clientele reflects broader trends beyond the roped boundaries of the boxing ring. …
And the Medal Goes To...
After watching the Winter Olympic games in Sochi for the last two weeks, I got to wondering, how many individuals from Brooklyn had participated in the winter spectacular? I mean, let's face it: Kings County and Alpine skiing don't really go hand in hand. Where would people practice? I know, I know, there is Prospect Park, and I have seen people on cross-country skis there. But one slide down Mt. Prospect and a mogul skier is headed straight for Eastern Parkway, or over Copley Plaza. I suppose with all the snow and ice lately, officials could turn Flatbush Avenue…
POTW: Portrait of Mrs. Henry T. Fleitman
The Emancipation Proclamation: Black Soldiers Respond
In conjunction with a current exhibit, the Brooklyn Historical Society blog is featuring a series of blog posts called “The Emancipation Proclamation: Americans Respond.” Learn more here. As I discussed a few weeks ago, the promotion of black military service was among the Emancipation Proclamation’s most controversial and significant provisions. Black men were eager to join the Union military from the start of the Civil War. Freedmen penned letters to President Lincoln and other officials calling for black recruitment as early as 1861. Rarely did officials respond to these poignant letters (…
Closing Reception for Artist-in-Residence Elizabeth Felicella, Wednesday, February 19th, 6:30pm
Please join us this coming Wednesday, February 19th, at 6:30pm for a special closing reception. We've had the deep pleasure of working with photographer Elizabeth Felicella during her residency at the Brooklyn Public Library and we invite the public to meet the artist and view some of the images she's captured in her months-long exploration of Brooklyn's Central Library building. The Brooklyn Collection is located on the 2nd floor balcony level of the Central Library at Grand Army Plaza. Wine and cheese will be served.
POTW: Happy Birthday, Mr. Lincoln
The Emancipation Proclamation - Abraham Lincoln Responds
In conjunction with a current exhibit, the Brooklyn Historical Society blog is featuring a series of blog posts called “The Emancipation Proclamation: Americans Respond.” Learn more here. For 150 years, historians have debated Abraham Lincoln's motivations, feelings, and beliefs about slavery and emancipation. What motivated him to issue the Emancipation Proclamation? Did he free slaves in rebel states for political expediency, or for moral reasons? What did Lincoln think or say in the moments before he signed the document that declared "forever free" over 3,000,000 enslaved men, women, and…
A School Grows in Brooklyn
I'll See Your Polar Vortex and Raise You a Blizzard
Over the past few weeks, it seems as though every other day a mess of snow, sleet, and rain has fallen on our fair city, only to become a sheet of treacherous ice in the days following. New Yorkers have been running to the local supermarkets to buy the necessities ('necessities' being an incredibly subjective term: milk and bottled water for one person might be chips and a bottle of wine for another) and stopping at the hardware store to purchase the last remaining bag of salt and a leftover garden trowel, the only shovel to be found in a twenty block radius. Even though we've been…
POTW: Constructing the Brooklyn Sewers
Map of the Month - February 2014
Documenting Sandy: Photographer Highlight - Robin Michals
Our Documenting Sandy exhibition is up in our 3rd floor gallery, featuring photographs by professionals and amateurs during the devastating aftermath of Superstorm Sandy. This is the third installment of our photographer highlight series. In it, we tell you more about the photographers who contributed to the exhibition. Robin Michals is a professional photographer who has been chronicling views of the de-industrialization of the waterfront in New York City. For several years she has also been working on the series Castles Made of Sand that illustrates the locations around New York City that…
POTW: Vamping Horns
The Emancipation Proclamation: White Minnesotans Respond
In conjunction with a current exhibit, the Brooklyn Historical Society blog is featuring a series of blog posts called “The Emancipation Proclamation: Americans Respond.” Learn more here. The Civil War obscures a concurrent war fought by the Union, also on American soil: the Dakota War of 1862. What sparked the violent outbreak between the Dakota (also known as the Eastern Sioux) and white Minnesotans? Increasing numbers of white settlers encroached on Dakota territories, especially after Minnesota gained statehood in 1859. Additionally, the Union’s failure to promptly submit the annuity…
Brooklyn Film Night -- Wednesday, January 29th, 7pm
After a brief holiday hiatus, the Brooklyn Collection is happy to kick off another year of public programming next Wednesday, January 29th. On this evening we will take an audiovisual tour through some previously unscreened gems from our 16mm film collection as well as introduce new content from a collection of Umatic videos created by Brooklyn Public Library staff in the 1980s. All fans of vintage Brooklyn are welcome! Come by at 6:30 to pick up free tickets and mingle during our wine and cheese reception. Screening starts at 7:00pm. All programs are held in the…
POTW: Building the Manhattan Bridge
The Emancipation Proclamation: A Kentucky Soldier Responds
In conjunction with a current exhibit, the Brooklyn Historical Society blog is featuring a series of blog posts called “The Emancipation Proclamation: Americans Respond.” Learn more here. Most Americans think about the Civil War in terms of the Union north and the secessionist south. But perhaps no states played as decisive a role in the war as Delaware, Maryland, Missouri, and Kentucky, the "border states." These were slave states that fought for the Union. For strategic and political reasons, the loyalty of these states proved essential to a Union victory. Kentucky, with its abundant…
It Came From the Sewers
Documenting Sandy: Photographer Highlight - Nick Lakiotes
Our Documenting Sandy exhibition is up in our 3rd floor gallery, featuring photographs by professionals and amateurs during the devastating aftermath of Superstorm Sandy. This is the second installment of our photographer highlight series. In it, we tell you more about the photographers who contributed to the exhibition. Nick Lakiotes is a graphic designer who lives in Gerritsen Beach, Brooklyn with his wife, 6-year old daughter, and infant soon. Nick’s story of his Hurricane Sandy experience is vivid, and scary. Nick and his family didn’t think their residence would sustain much damage or…
POTW: Ansonia Clock Company
The Emancipation Proclamation: Junius C. Morel Responds
In conjunction with a current exhibit, the Brooklyn Historical Society blog is featuring a series of blog posts called “The Emancipation Proclamation: Americans Respond.” Learn more here. This week, BHS opens a major long-term exhibition, "Brooklyn Abolitionists/In Pursuit of Freedom." The exhibition, part of a public history partnership with Weeksville Heritage Center and Irondale Ensemble Project, explores the unsung heroes of Brooklyn’s anti-slavery movement. Among those unsung heroes was a man named Junius C. Morel. Born in North Carolina, Morel lived and worked in Philadelphia before…
POTW: Pining for Warm Weather
The Emancipation Proclamation: Jefferson Davis Responds
In conjunction with a current exhibit, the Brooklyn Historical Society blog is featuring a series of blog posts called “The Emancipation Proclamation: Americans Respond.” Learn more here. It should not surprise readers that the President of the Confederate States of America did not respond positively to the Emancipation Proclamation. In a long and florid speech to the Confederate Congress on January 13, 1863, President Jefferson Davis portrayed the proclamation as a crime against humanity that would be decried and reviled throughout history. “We may well leave it to the instincts of that…
A Brief History of a Blonde Bombshell
While researching the Queen of Tots pageant at the Infants Home of Brooklyn, I stumbled upon a photo of Hollywood icon Carole Landis crowning one of the young queens. Queen Crowns Queen, Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 1954. I could have Googled her and gotten an immediate summary of her life and work, but that's not how we roll at the Brooklyn Collection. I went downstairs into our archive to see if I could find a small envelope with her name on it amidst the myriad of file cabinets. Lo and behold, I am not the only person who has taken an interest in Ms. Landis. I found a whole mess…
Map of the Month - January 2014
POTW: Happy New Year
POTW: Merry Christmas
The Emancipation Proclamation: The New York Times and Martin Delany Respond
In conjunction with a current exhibit, the Brooklyn Historical Society blog is featuring a series of blog posts called “The Emancipation Proclamation: Americans Respond.” Learn more here. The Emancipation Proclamation was considered the most radical of the Union’s war initiatives, not in the least because it publicized the legalization of black men’s military recruitment--publicized, not legalized. The Militia Act of 1862, issued weeks before Lincoln's September 1862 preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, first sanctioned black military service in the form of armed combat and manual labor.…
BHS December Staff Pick: Left Field Cards
Name: Lindsay Palmer Vint Role at BHS: Retail Coordinator Pick of the month: ANYTHING by Left Field Cards! This week we started carrying a line of hip, playful baseball inspired cards and gifts by Greenpoint, BK designer Amelie Mancini. Each card is handcrafted using linoleum block printing and a traditional letterpress. Humorous, well-crafted, and beautiful colored, these unique cards make great gifts! They also have a unique story: Mancini is a French-born painter and printmaker who moved to New York in 2006. When she arrived in the States, she didn't know what a curveball was until a…
Stocking Stuffers from the BHS Museum Store!
Great Gift Ideas from the BHS Museum Store!
Still looking for a unique holiday gift for HIM? We have the perfect gift. Come by and shop our unique selection of products made by the Brooklyn Brewery! We carry The Beer Soap Shaving Kit, made with Chocolate Stout ($18), a Brooklyn Brewery Bar Mat to complete your home bar ($16), and even a Beer Making Kit, the perfect gift for that Do-It-Yourself type of guy ($55). Need an environmentally friendly stocking stuffer? We even carry Brooklyn Brewery notebooks made with recycled packaging from your favorite beer. Carry your Brooklyn Brewery pride with you every day! Stop by our store this…
POTW: The Healthcare Dilemma
The Emancipation Proclamation: Frederick Douglass responds
In conjunction with a current exhibit, the Brooklyn Historical Society blog is featuring a series of blog posts called “The Emancipation Proclamation: Americans Respond.” Learn more here. A month after President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, famed abolitionist Frederick Douglass reflected on the moral impact of emancipation on all Americans. “We are all liberated by this proclamation. Everybody is liberated. The white man is liberated, the black man is liberated, the brave men now fighting the battles of their country against rebels and traitors are now liberated… I…
Toddlers in Tiaras of Yesteryear
Brooklyn has crowned many a beauty queen in its day. The Queen of Beer? Yes. The most beautiful grandmother? Of course! It turns out Brooklyn was crowning beauties of all ages. The Infants Home of Brooklyn, originally located in a private home at 1356 56th Street which was later demolished to make room for a new, more permanent building, hosted an annual beauty pageant to crown the Queen of Tots. The Infants Home opened in 1919 as an emergency shelter for five children left homeless by a fire in Borough Park. It was specifically a home for Jewish children until a 1947 plea by the Welfare…
Williamsburg Cattle Rustlin'
The Emancipation Proclamation: The Brooklyn Daily Eagle responds
In conjunction with a current exhibition, the Brooklyn Historical Society blog is featuring a series of blog posts called “The Emancipation Proclamation: Americans Respond.” Learn more here. Two days after the Emancipation Proclamation was issued, the Brooklyn Daily Eagle took a dim view of Republican Abraham Lincoln’s leadership and of the impact that emancipation would have on the reunion of north and south. “The truth is, the proclamation tends only to embitter the strife, and to render all but impossible a restoration of the Union. The chances of Union were remote enough without this…
POTW: Repeal Day is Here!
The Emancipation Proclamation: Americans Respond
In October, BHS opened an exhibition featuring a rare edition of the Emancipation Proclamation. The document, which includes the signature of President Abraham Lincoln, has offered many visitors to our institution an opportunity to reflect on the remarkable events that took place in the United States during the 1860s. Lincoln did not sign the Emancipation Proclamation in a vacuum. Americans of all backgrounds and beliefs influenced the President's decision and responded to the proclamation with a range of emotions, from jubilation to outright horror. BHS's exhibition captures the cacophony…
Map of the Month - December 2013
POTW: Happy Thanksgiving
The Dreaded Banana Peel
Documenting Sandy: Photographer Highlight - Nathan Kensinger
In case you missed it, our Documenting Sandy exhibition is up in our 3rd floor gallery, exhibiting photographs taken by professionals and amateurs in the devastating aftermath of Superstorm Sandy. A couple times a month, we’re going to tell you more about the photographers who contributed to the exhibition, and what their experience was like as both an observer and a participant. Nathan Kensinger is a professional photographer and filmmaker who hails from San Francisco and now resides in Brooklyn. I first saw some of Nathan’s work at a Brooklyn Public Library exhibition showing a side of…
Speakeasies Abound in Prohibition Era Brooklyn
Prohibition has always held a certain level of fascination in my mind and, dare I say, I'm not the only one. Long has the era been immortalized by Hollywood through movies, TV shows and the fashion trends they inspire. However, living in the current day and age that we do one might find it difficult to navigate what's real from what's merely a romantic reinterpretation of a profound, if not completely befuddling, time in our nation's history. Brooklyn Daily Eagle, March 6, 1928. The Morgue hosts not one, but three drawers stuffed with newspaper clippings from the prohibition era…
That green branch cut down
When the Brooklyn Daily Eagle shut its doors in 1955 the borough lost an important conduit for receiving news of the world and for investigating and editorializing on community developments. After the paper's short-lived revival finally sputtered out in June of 1963 -- just a few months before John F Kennedy was killed in Dallas -- Brooklynites had to turn to smaller neighborhood newspapers for reports on the assassination and to see their grief reflected back to them in stunned print encomiums for the recently dead president. In addition to the entirety of the Eagle, we also have…
Storewide Sale on November 30th!
Exhibits are not the only curated space at Brooklyn Historical Society! Last month we unveiled our brand new store: a space dedicated to all things for and about the city’s most famous (and maybe even infamous) borough, Brooklyn! Explore our artfully chosen mix of uniquely Brooklyn-centric gifts, books, souvenirs, toys and artisan goods. You’ll find the serious, silly, irresistible, charming and of course, tasty, all brimming with Brooklyn history and character. This month we offer a brief introduction to some of the artists and designers. MEET OUR MAKERS: Brooklyn Owl business owner Annie…
Brooklyn's Plymouth Church in the Civil War Era - Wednesday Evening Author Talk
Statue of Reverend Henry Ward Beecher with Mrs. Rose Ward in flowered hat (1927). Mrs. Ward's freedom had been purchased by the congregation of Plymouth Church during one of Beecher's sermons in 1860. During the years leading up to the Civil War, Brooklyn had the distinction of being one of the strongest abolitionist cities in the nation. And led by the fiery and passionate preacher Henry Ward Beecher, Plymouth Church became a central site in the abolitionist movement. From electrifying sermons and fund-raising concerts, to harboring escaped slaves, Plymouth Church…
Map of the Month - November 2013
Researching Your Family Tree: Monthly Genealogy Workshop
When our doors swing open here at the Brooklyn Collection they are likely being pushed apart by the determined hands of a genealogist. Whether looking for the Williamsburg address of a great aunt or hunting down the high school yearbook photo of Dad, the Brooklyn Collection is where many an ancestor sleuth starts her journey. In order to better assist these researchers, and to introduce a whole new phalanx of patrons to the genealogy trade, we are teaming up with historian and genealogist Wilhelmena Kelly to offer monthly genealogy workshops in Central Library's ground floor…
POTW: It’s November!
POTW: An Old Saloon
Brooklyn's Ice Palace
It's not often we take patrons to the "Morgue," but during our recent Educator Open House, we took a group of teachers down to the basement of the library to see the old clippings and photographs of the Brooklyn Eagle. Close-up of Celia Mallon and Connie Richichi working in file room or library at Brooklyn Eagle in Downtown Brooklyn. 1953. While we were down there, I pulled a folder to show the teachers some of the remarkable photographs we have. I pulled, "Klopfer, Sonya*Ice Skater," and as the teachers made comments about the photo, I was more interested in learning about…
A Conversation with Brooklyn Public Library's First Artist-in-Residence, Elizabeth Felicella -- Wedn
Elizabeth Felicella will discuss her work as an architectural photographer with Brooklyn Collection archivists Ben Gocker and Ivy Marvel, with special attention to how it relates to her photographs of the library archive that are included in the current exhibition, Brooklyn Public Library: An Open Book. An archive is typically deemed a repository of the past, compiled for the sake of posterity, the future; this public conversation, which is grounded in the collaborative relationship between photographer and archivist that has developed during Felicella’s time as Artist-in-Residence…
Brooklyn Opens a Street (Through Your Backyard)
Map of the Month — October 2013
High School Newspapers Make Headlines
Some people would rather die than have their high school experiences splashed across the (blog) pages of one of the world's most widely read newspapers, but we imagine that Janet Yellen, who was recently nominated to head the Federal Reserve, has more important things on her mind. The Brooklyn Collection, however, is not above basking for a moment in her reflected glory, as we've recently made news because we hold not just Ms. Yellen's Fort Hamilton High School yearbook, but also her high school newspaper, the Pilot, of which she was an editor. These heretofore unregarded…
POTW: Food!
Open House and Tour of the Brooklyn Collection
Every year the Archivists Round Table of Metrpolitan New York organizes a week of lectures, tours, workshops and open houses at cultural institutions around the city and calls it, fittingly, Archives Week. The Brooklyn Collection will be participating in the festivities this year, with an open house and exhibit tour on Monday, October 7th, from 6 - 8pm. The event will include an introduction to our collections and programs, including the school outreach initiative, Brooklyn Connections. Visitors will also tour the exhibition "Brooklyn Public Library: An Open Book", which is on…
Brooklyn Public Library: an Open Book
As we've recorded in the webpages of this blog before, the Brooklyn Collection serves as the defacto institutional archive for the Brooklyn Public Library. We keep the annual reports, the retired library cards, the book plates, the program flyers, and all the other flotsam and jetsam one would expect to be generated by the fifth-largest library system in the United States, serving a population of over 2.5 million Brooklynites. It is not often that these materials see the light of day, so we are very pleased to announce a new building-wide exhibit at the Central Library…
POTW: Science stuff
POTW: Autumn Avenue
Fall Educator Programs
We are pleased to announce two FREE educator programs for the fall. The events are open to all teachers and educators from across the city and offer a unique opportunity to tour and explore the Brooklyn Collection. Both events will take place in the Brooklyn Collection, 2nd Floor, Central Library. Please join us for our Open Educator House on October 2, 4pm-6pm. Tour our facilities, including the Brooklyn Daily Eagle "morgue" and other restricted areas. View thousands of primary sources that are available to you and your students. Access our…
Brooklyn's Vitagraph Studios: an author talk with Trav S.D., Wednesday, September 25th, 7pm
The Brooklyn Collection will kick off its fall season of lectures with a look at Brooklyn's contribution to film history. In the early years of cinema, Brooklyn (Midwood, to be specific) was one of America’s great film production centers thanks to the early establishment there of Vitagraph Studios by J. Stuart Blackton in 1907. Above, a 1913 image of a fashion shoot at Vitagraph Studios. Brooklyn writer Trav S.D. (Travis Stewart), author of the new book Chain of Fools: Silent Comedy and Its Legacies from Nickelodeons to Youtube, will talk about the central role the studio played…
POTW: Sustained thoughts about swimming
The March
With the country's eyes turned toward the past today to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington we thought it only appropriate to turn our own eyes to a few items from the Collection dealing with this historic event. Below you will see scans of an Organizing Manual, a Bus Captain's name tag, and pages from the Lincoln Memorial Program. All of these materials come from the Civil Rights in Brooklyn Collection donated by the recently departed, and sorely missed, Rioghan Kirchner. Because of people like her history was not only made, but also preserved for future…
Brooklyn Connections Continues to Connect Students to Local History
The Brooklyn Collection is pleased to announce that it has received funding to continue the Brooklyn Connections program. Our generous funders, the David and Paula Weiner Memorial Grant, the Morris & Alma Schapiro Fund, and the Tiger Baron Foundation have ensured the program will go on! The program will continue to be available at no cost to Brooklyn classrooms for the 2013-2014 school year. We are proud to be in our seventh year of operation. Thanks to our generous funders, Brooklyn Connections will be able to expand in several important ways: *Additional…
Celebrating the March on Washington from Brooklyn
Next week, America celebrates the fiftieth anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. On August 28, 1963, between 200,000 and 300,000 people gathered at the Lincoln Memorial to rally for black civil and economic equality. Present at the historic event were several Brooklynites who, as members of the Brooklyn branch of the Congress of Racial Equality (Brooklyn CORE), walked from the County of Kings to Washington, D.C.
Rioghan Kirchner
Thomas; Brooklynology Editorial Staff
We at the Brooklyn Collection are very sad to announce the passing of a great friend to the library, Rioghan Kirchner. Visitors to the collection may recall seeing Rioghan at her volunteer post in our reserve room, where she spent every Tuesday afternoon indexing the Black News newsletter (a resource that she donated) with her faithful dachsund Teddy waiting patiently at her feet. Her warmth and humor will be missed by all who knew her. In addition to her work with us in preserving the history of the civil rights movement in Brooklyn, Rioghan was herself an activist in that…
Brooklyn Schools: A Look at Ephemera and More
At the Brooklyn Collection, we have a large assortment of Brooklyn school ephemera, newspaper clippings, photos, yearbooks and even school newspapers. I've written a few entries about schools the Brooklyn Connections program has partnered with: Erasmus Hall (STAR Early College), MS 57 and PS 26 (Brooklyn Excelsior). Recently as I was doing some research for yet another Brooklyn Connections partner school, I came across this: School Diary, Primary School 3, 1878. The flip side of the Diary states, "New and improved series of school records adapted for public of private…
Shaking Up the History of Canarsie with the Young Curators of P.S. 276!
Gabriella Kula served as an Educator for the Young Curators program at P.S. 276 in the Spring of 2013.
As an educator for the Young Curators program, my goal was for the students of P.S. 276 to gain new insights into their local heritage and Canarsie’s past. We began our time together by coming up with a list of questions, and we looked at artifacts, images, and primary sources to discover historical and cultural content that has left the students more connected and committed to their neighborhood than ever before.
The Young Curators of P.S. 133 Uncover the History of Revolutionary Brooklyn
Kayla Goodson served as an Educator for the Young Curators program at P.S. 133 in the Spring of 2013. She is a four-year veteran of the Brooklyn Historical Society's team of museum educators. This past spring, I had the pleasure to work with an incredible class of 4th and 5th graders from P.S. 133 for the “Young Curators” program in order to design a professional history exhibit in their school. Each week, we worked together as historians to piece together the events and experiences of the Revolutionary War in Brooklyn. While much of the class was acquainted with the American Revolution,…
The Young Curators at PS 32 Take a Walk Around the Block
Erin Boyle served as an Educator for the Young Curators program at P.S. 32 in the Spring of 2013. On a very cold afternoon all the way back in February, I led a joyful crew of 4th and 5th graders from PS 32 in Gowanus on a walk around the block. When we set off for the walk, The Young Curators had spent two class sessions scouring photocopies of an historic map from the BHS collection and had planned out a route—a simple square path that would take them from their school on Hoyt Street, across the Union Street Bridge and back across the Carroll Street Bridge to complete the square. Together…
POTW: Floyd Bennett Field
Death in the Air
Accurate or not, it's fair to say that in the popular imagination the Brooklyn Dodgers are remembered as a rag tag bunch of lovable lunks, both object of their zany fanbase's opprobrium as well as affection. What other sports team wore so sour an epithet (dem Bums!) as proudly as the Dodgers? Yet, for all of the organization's sweet buffoonishness, there have been times when an ill-starred pop-up has darkened the outfield. One such instance, and one which is perhaps little known to all but those who bleed blue, occurred in 1935 -- in a private plane, in the skies above Toronto.…
POTW: Cemeteries can be fun
Map of the Month - July 2013
Writings from Racial Realities
New Collection: The Linewaiters' Gazette
It is always exciting to accession a big new collection, as it brings the promise of new researchers, new information, and because it's just fun to dig around in new stuff. Our latest big new collection is the Linewaiters' Gazette, the official bi-weekly newspaper of what is likely the world's most famous grocery store, the Park Slope Food Coop. Perhaps you've heard of it? The Park Slope Food Coop was established as a members-only, collectively-run buying club in 1973, housed in the Mongoose Community Center at 782 Union Street (where the Coop continues to operate). …
POTW: Summer Camp
July Program -- Mailer╙│ Brooklyn -- Wednesday, July 31, 2013 7:00pm
Brooklyn Public Library and the Norman Mailer Center present a discussion of American writer Norman Mailer and his impact on the literary culture of Brooklyn. Having spent 40 years of his career living and writing in his Brooklyn Heights home, Mailer’s rich history of iconic literature contributed over 30 pieces of fiction, non-fiction, and plays to the American canon, including his second novel, Barbary Shore, which was written during this time in Brooklyn. Brooklyn author, Evan Hughes, Literary Brooklyn: The Writers of Brooklyn and the Story of American City Life, will lead this…
Teacher Workshop with Green-Wood Cemetery
In early June, Brooklyn Connections had the pleasure of welcoming 24 educators from throughout the city for a teacher workshop on local history in partnership with Green-Wood Cemetery. Green-Wood Cemetery gates in an 1894 photograph taken by Edgar S. Thompson. The day started with an introduction to the Brooklyn Collection and the resources it can offer to teachers who are interested in creating lessons and units about Brooklyn. We developed a set of worksheets, lesson plans and examples of primary sources that teachers could use to help them devise a unit about any neighborhood they might…
Happy Fourth of July!
Adieu!
After twenty years under sail as a Brooklyn Public Library crew member, your blog editor will be jumping ship on Friday 28th June, leaving in her wake a trail of 92--count 'em--92 blog posts on everything from Pigtown to alcoholic turtles. With an eye to the future, yet, as befits a local history librarian, with feet firmly anchored in fine examples from the past, let me now look forward to life beyond the library.
For an old special collections dame, collecting is going to be an attractive pastime.
Selections from the 16mm Film Collection -- Wednesday, June 26th, 7pm
You are by now most likely aware of the phenomenon that is Hot Bagels, a lovely little vintage film that pays copious homage to the king of all round baked goods (in my opinion). We've featured it on this blog before, and on the strength of its charm alone it has racked up more than 100,000 views on YouTube. So perhaps Hot Bagels is old news, but, much like a day-old bagel itself, it is no less delicious for being a bit stale: What you may not know is that Hot Bagels is just one of 42 vintage Brooklyn films we've had transferred from the original 16mm film format to…
Graduations Galore
The graduation ceremonies, at every step from kindergarten to elementary school, to middle school, to high school, to college and on--have come and gone. Enshrined here in our collection are many celebratory moments from graduations past--so here are a few of them. Probably never before have the public schools of Brooklyn made so fine a showing in their graduating classes as the records for the term just closed present~ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, July 6, 1899 Kindergarten graduate of Public School 133 in 1953…
POTW: Happy Summer!
Let's Get Trivial! Part II
In April we hosted a trivia night at one of our favorite (not to mention most convenient, as it is just steps from the Central Library) watering holes, Bar Sepia. It was a memorable evening; along with the usual fine beers and smooth wines contestants tasted the salty brine of competition, the bitter tears of defeat, and, for the victors, the robust, thirst-slaking flavor of a free bar tab! A good time was had by all who sought to disprove the notion that only the dead know Brooklyn. No boxing allowed. No children, either, as this will be at a bar…
A Reflection on Brooklyn Businesses
Post written by Mark Daly, Reference Intern, May 2013 My reference internship at the Othmer Library has been a highlight of my library school education. I have enjoyed the opportunity to pick up new skills, meet researchers of all types, and -- not least -- learn more about my home borough. One subject I wish I'd spent more time investigating is the history of commercial enterprise in Brooklyn. When I see stories in the news about the borough's funky tech start-ups and co-working spaces, I begin to wonder what the library's collections can tell us about the businesses of yesteryear. As part…
We Don't Need No Education
Summer is just around the corner, with its balmy breezes and skin-licking sunshine, prompting among Brooklyn youth the understandable urge to break free from the confines of a drab schoolday and spend the afternoon lolling in the park, strolling down the avenue, or staging a massive protest at City Hall. At least that was one way of reading the events of late April 1950, when thousands of students all over the city spilled out of their schools and into the streets, disrupting the school day, traffic, and life in the city in general. An estimated 1,000…
Finding Answers to the Impossible at the Brooklyn Historical Society
Post written by Jeff Edelstein, Reference Intern, May 2013 As my internship at the Brooklyn Historical Society’s Othmer Library approaches its end, I have been looking over the dozens of queries that I have responded to since my arrival at the beginning of the academic school year in September, and I am struck by the number of times when at least some information to seemingly impossible questions was available using resources readily available in the library. Two such resources that I consulted frequently are the Brooklyn & Long Island Scrapbooks collection of newspaper clippings and the…
Ridgewhat?
Early last year we received a generous donation of some 650 postcards depicting all manner of the visually mundane so typical of that epistolary medium: a statue of U.S. Grant attended by a shadow and a cloud; the empty interior of Johnny Johnston's steakhouse on Church Avenue; and this one from 1908 -- a few kids, black dog in tow, palling around on the street. There's nothing much remarkable about this postcard, at least from the standpoint of this non-deltiologist, but what did catch my eye is the location of this particular street scene: That's: Woodward Avenue West from Gates.…
Loosely collected thoughts: Digital Cultural Heritage and User Experience
"You can't back up the Internet." That was from Aaron Straup Cope, and he was talking about digital preservation, but it could have been the subtitle for the whole day last Friday, at the Digital Cultural Heritage and User Experience symposium. You can't back up the internet: it is a forward moving thing, a live performance. This year is Brooklyn Historical Society's 150th anniversary, and it’s a point of pride that we could play a role as a host, stakeholder, and instigator in this symposium. Brooklyn Historical Society is an urban history center in a landmark building. It has made a…
Matthew Lewandowski: Design Drawings and Die-sets
BHS actively collects documents, artworks, and artifacts that support our mission ad collection development goals. In librarian and museum parlance, we call this acquisition and accessioning. Accessioning has its etymological roots in Latin, as a concept in property law (think “accessory”, as in the property added to an estate) but for libraries, archives, and museums, it’s just as useful to think of accessioning as providing access, the act of making something usable by researchers. In the months ahead, we’ll be featuring a few of our recent acquisitions, and pulling back the curtain to give…
Shore Acres--inside a Shore Road Mansion
A recent article on the discovery of a Paris apartment left untouched since the beginning of World War II reminded me of how rare and precious are our images of nineteenth- and early twentieth century interiors. While our collection contains hundreds of photographs of exteriors of that period, The Peet Residence and the Pope Mansion are two among only a handful of houses whose interiors are preserved for us today through the magic of photography. So it was particularly delightful to come across an album containing exterior and interior shots of a grand house…
Capstones and Cornerstones
It's quiet in the library for a few more minutes. The staff will start to arrive around 9, the first school tour will flow in around 10 am, soon enough the doors will open for researchers, and then at 5, we'll strike the set and prepare for tomorrow's symposium, "Digital Cultural Heritage and User Experience". There are all sorts of reasons to be excited for this event. It's a great lineup of our smartest friends, digging into the way we work now. There will be notes and remarks to follow on the website and live responses all day on Twitter and Facebook. The symposium marks the culmination of…
LICH: following the paper trail
The Long Island College Hospital is safe, for now. Last week SUNY Downstate withdrew its plan to close the historic beloved cash-strapped hospital. LICH will still need to find a suitable partner, but for now because of the alliance between the community and staff, LICH can continue serving the Red Hook, Boerum Hill, Cobble Hill and Brooklyn Heights neighborhoods as it has since 1858. Emerging from the Brooklyn German General Dispensary, LICH’s founders were the first to bring the concept of a teaching hospital to the U.S., training …
Map of the Month - May 2013
The detail that I chose to be the focus of May's Map of the Month comes from "Map of New-York and Its Vicinity. Drawn by D.H. Burr for New York as it is in 1835" -- "Ft. Lafayette."
May Day vs. Loyalty Day
May 1st is a day that means different things to different people. For some, it is a day to celebrate the glory of spring with a dance around the maypole. For many, it is known variously as International Workers' Day, Labour Day, or simply May Day -- a commemoration of the Haymarket Riot of 1886 and an acknowledgement of the strides made by the labor rights movement since then. For a smaller subset, May 1st is Loyalty Day, a day to pledge allegiance to the flag and reassert one's "love and devotion to the nation." It is of course no coincidence that the latter…
Listen!
The Listening Project: Midwood is a collection of gripping oral history interviews collected by documentary film maker Dempsey Rice during a residency at the Council Center for Senior Citizens in Midwood. If you think of oral history as long-winded wallowing in nostalgia, think again--these interviews are riveting stories distilled from long lives and told with grace, humor and panache. There are so many wonderful interviews to choose from that I urge you to explore the site. Here to whet your appetite is Harriet Solomon recounting the story of how she almost died on…
The Merchant Marine, Sheepshead Bay, and Richard Avedon
Just a year after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, Brooklyn saw the opening of the largest United States Maritime Service training station at Sheepshead Bay. Built for $8,500,000 on old beach, bath, and amusement grounds once owned by John P. Day, the station was equipped to pump out 30,000 trained merchant seamen a year. At the opening ceremonies on December 12, 1942 more than 10,000 men, officers, and guests assembled to hear Telfair Knight, director of the Division of Training of the War Shipping Administration, read a laudatory message on behalf…
The History of Brooklyn's Waterfront with John Manbeck, Wednesday April 24th 7pm, Central Library's
Please join us this coming Wednesday, April 24th, for our latest author talk with former borough historian John Manbeck. He'll discuss the Brooklyn waterfront's rich history and how its use influenced the development of Brooklyn's industries and communities, from ship-building to ferries, factories, and beaches. The city continues to look for new ways of utilizing the waterfront today with plans under way for new housing, parks, and business projects. Manbeck has written several books on various aspects of Brooklyn history, many of which are available in the…
Emily Warren Roebling in the Press
There is a tired cliche that "behind every great man is a great woman". This has always seemed to me to be a way to shoehorn women into the mostly-male narrative of history as we learn it. The wives of presidents and inventors are rarely given their own space in history, and are usually seen as appendages of the men they married. When researching prominent women in history, it is very likely that you will at first find more information about their husbands. The same is not true for Emily Warren Roebling. I was first drawn to her when researching news coverage of her husband's illness,…
Brooklyn Dodgers 1955 Championship Banner Displayed for 100th Anniversary of Ebbets Field at Barclays Center
On April 9, 2013 the Brooklyn Nets home game vs. the Philadelphia 76ers began with a rare treat: a presentation of the one and only Brooklyn Dodgers 1955 Championship Banner. This special display of the banner was all part of the centennial celebration of Ebbets Field, which opened its doors one hundred years ago on this same date in 1913. The Banner itself has quite an interesting history! When the Dodgers moved to Los Angeles in 1957 the banner went with the team. In 1959, during a press conference a group of New York journalists decided that the banner belonged in New York, and not out on…
Let's Get Trivial!
Two trivia contestants battling for the crown of Brooklyn's Smartest Nerd Very rarely here at the Brooklyn Collection are we able to combine three of our most indefatigable passions: showcasing our broad knowledge of Brooklyn's past; partnering with local businesses to bring fun and free events to the public; and enjoying a drink or two with friends. But now, thanks to a new partnership with Sepia, a local bar just steps from Central library's door, we can pursue all three passions simultaneously in the form of a... Trivia Night! So here's what you need to…
POTW: Two hunters in a field of haystacks
Map of the Month - April 2013
Sometimes it is the small details that spark research missions for me; or at least this happened when I looked at this tiny map that is jam-packed with details.
Secret and long suppressed records of the Froebel Society.
This blog post comes with an audio accompaniment. Please put in your ear-buds or ensure that your speakers are turned on, click here, skip the obnoxious ad, and press start before reading on. All will become clear as we go on. Slowly but surely the manuscripts and archives housed in the Brooklyn Collection are rising out years of obscurity complete with finding aids and arranged into sparkling new acid-free folders. The records of the Froebel Society are the latest to be dusted off and brought into the light of day. It was in 1957 that the ageing members of the…
POTW: The Long Island Historical Society in 1964
Pinball Gets Blackballed
Call it morbid fascination, call it a sadistic thrill, or call it plain old curiosity, but for better or worse our eyes are often drawn toward scenes of discord and mayhem like moths to a flame. For evidence one need only note the traffic jams that build up around gory car accidents as passers-by slow down to gawk or the tabloid tales of misfortunes fallen on the otherwise rich and famous that fly off supermarket shelves. I can only speak for myself here, but I will admit to taking some small pleasure from a moment of glorious, utter destruction.…
Map of the Month - March 2013
This month's featured map was published by the German publishers Wagner & Debes circa 1900. It likely reflects the high volume of German-Americans residing in Brooklyn at the time. According to Montrose Morris of Brownstoner, by the end of the 19th century, German Americans were the most successful ethnic group in New York City. In trying to date this particular map, we looked at the various clubs that are listed in the key at the bottom left, one being the Germania Club. As Morris notes, the Germania Club was founded in 1859 and was originally located on Atlantic and Court Streets. …
POTW: Women’s Motor Corps in Flatbush
Mapping Brooklyn's Baseball Heritage
For the past couple of days I've been laying the groundwork for a map of Brooklyn's baseball past. It's a daunting task, our borough being so rich in baseball lore, but with the help of many terrific books in our collection, the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, and our directories I've managed to come up with quite a few points of interest. Thanks to Google maps I've been able to overlay these historic baseball sites with the locations of our branch libraries, with the hope that the wandering baseball scholar will find herself -- if in need of reference materials or a restroom --…
Brooklyn Connections Teacher Workshop
On Monday, 3/11/13, Brooklyn Connections had the pleasure of welcoming 28 educators from throughout the City for a teacher workshop on the Civil Rights Movement in Brooklyn. The day started with a lecture from Dr. Brian Purnell, an Assistant Professor at Bowdoin College who has just published Fighting Jim Crow in the County of Kings, a book examining the impact of the Brooklyn Chapter of Congress Of Racial Equality (CORE). The Brooklyn Collection has been fortunate enough to have had Dr. Purnell come and speak at similar events several times before, and it is always a pleasure to hear him. As…
POTW: Ruby’s Bar
11,713 Photos of the Week: Brooklyn Visual Heritage has Launched!
We are happy to announce the Brooklyn Visual Heritage (BVH) website, http://www.brooklynvisualheritage.org. The website was created through Project CHART, a 3-year collaborative project funded by the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) that began in 2010 between the Pratt School of Information and Library Science (Pratt-SILS), Brooklyn Historical Society (BHS), Brooklyn Museum (BM), and Brooklyn Public Library (BPL). Project CHART supports a diverse group of Pratt-SILS students who take series of courses focusing on digital libraries and work with the staff of these distinguished…
Brooklyn Visual Heritage
Brooklyn Visual Heritage is here! A collaborative digitization project that aims to make historic images of Brooklyn more accessible, Brooklyn Visual Heritage was created as part of Project CHART, which you can read more about here. Brooklyn Visual Heritage includes digital images from the archival collections of Brooklyn Public Library, Brooklyn Historical Society and the Brooklyn Museum. While it does not include all of the digital images available at each insitution, it does bring together over 10,000 images of Brooklyn culture, landscape and history. With free text…
POTW: Spring Training
Nazism in 1930s Brooklyn
We have grown accustomed--too accustomed perhaps--to thinking of Brooklyn as the borough that integrated baseball, a borough dominated politically by Democrats, in which liberal and left-wing politics historically have flourished. But a recent acquisition brought home the fact that other points of view--including some many of us would now find repugnant--have gained a foothold here in the not so distant past. The drumbeat of Fascism in the 1930s could be heard all over Europe. It should come as no surprise that Brooklyn in that era also had its share of Fascist sympathisers. On…
Faces on the Path with Photographer Jamel Shabazz, Wednesday, Feb. 27th, 7pm
We are pleased to welcome one of our most popular speakers back to the Brooklyn Collection this Wednesday, February 27th, for the latest installment of our monthly lecture series. Join photographer Jamel Shabazz as he talks about his experience coming of age in Brooklyn as a young photographer. Through his images he will share stories about his growth into manhood and his desire to document the lives of the people who impacted his life. Shabazz's photography is currently on display throughout the Central Library building and in the Brooklyn Collection. You can also see…
POTW: Old Woodpoint Road
POTW: Who’s your Valentine?
New Digital Exhibits at the Brooklyn Collection
I'm happy to announce a new addition to the Brooklyn Collection's roster of online exhibits -- the Generation Preservation Project. The project was created by Philip Bond in 2009 during his time at the Macon Library in Bedford-Stuyvesant, which is also home to the African-American Heritage Center. Using that historic Carnegie library as a backdrop, Bond invited the neighborhood in to have "family" portraits taken. Participants were given a copy of their portrait and, with permission, the portraits were also donated to the Brooklyn Collection to serve as a lasting documentation of the…
Map of the Month - February 2013
This month's featured map shows Long Island ca. 1860s. It was "sold for" Charles Magnus, a New York City-based lithographer, publisher, mapmaker, bookseller, and stationer active from 1850-1899. The map illustrates Long Island's industrial and commercial development, from the railroad lines connecting towns to the water stations pumping fresh water into Brooklyn. Interestingly, the map provides quite a bit of detail about Brooklyn. If you look closely, you will see the following Brooklyn-based names: Bushwick, Williamsburg, Bedford, Gowanus, Flatbush, New Utrecht, Flatlands, Gravensend,…
Intro to Buildings Research Workshop, Feb. 20th, 7-9pm in the InfoCommons
As you may have heard, the library has opened a beautiful new workspace and learning center in our Central location -- the Shelby White and Leon Levy InfoCommons. The InfoCommons offers much-needed space for laptop users as well as computer workstations with specialized software like Photoshop and Dreamweaver. More exciting to us is the Lab adjacent to the InfoCommons. This classroom space comes equipped with laptops and A/V equipment, and affords us the new opportunity to lead workshops in topics relating to Brooklyn history. Our next workshop is coming soon! …
The Library Rap is Here
Let's take a moment for ourselves, shall we, Brooklyn Public Library? Rather than blowing the dust off yet another Eagle story or manuscript collection -- holdings which, don't get me wrong, we are proud to preserve and promote here at the Brooklyn Collection -- let's navel gaze a bit to see what archival lint we've been storing up ourselves. So... to the morgue we go where, a few months ago, we found this. This thing here (never mind that this is a scan of the thing) is a 3/4" Umatic S video cassette, one of the earliest video cassette formats. Unfortunately for us, when we found it in the…
POTW: Self Portrait
Urban Exploration as a Tool for Teaching & Learning with Stephanie Krom
I'm pleased to introduce returning guest blogger, Stephanie Krom, who worked with BHS's education department as a graduate student intern in the fall of 2012. In her post below, she describes her experience with two of BHS's urban exploration programs: One of the aspects of Museum Education that initially drove me to become a museum educator was the hands-on teaching and learning that takes place when kids engage with history through material culture. As a student, I find that I connect with history best when I feel physically close to it - when I am standing on the ground on which history…
POTW: Where is our snow?
Renovation Report - Behind the Scenes
Welcome to Renovation Report, the first installment in a monthly series of blog posts to provide progress reports on Brooklyn Historical Society’s (BHS) current renovation and to highlight the fascinating features of our landmark building. Designed by architect George Post and opened in 1881, Brooklyn Historical Society’s building was ahead of its time, and will be once again.
The right to bare arms
W hrd tht sm f y r hvng prblm wth r spllng f th wrd Bklyn n r nw lg. Lt m jst sy, chll! Pprntly y hv nvr trd t lrn Hbrw. If by chance you are thinking that the title above confirms your suspicion that some people--I might even say, some libraries--cannot be trusted to follow generally accepted rules of spelling--you would be wrong! We have people here who are walking dictionaries, nay, ambulant lexicons! And we can run spellcheck! Nor, I might add, are are we foolish enough to embroil ourselves here in an argument over gun control. No, our subject…
POTW: Volunteerism
Go, logo, go!
If you've used the library website in the last few days, you may have noticed that Brooklyn Public Library sports a snazzy new logo and color scheme on its homepage. Gone is the sad little black box that for so long meekly defined our presence in the digital realm. There's something invigorating about the facelift that comes with rebranding -- it seems to signify a fresh start, a new direction. The library has gone through several such reincarnations over the years, and today's blog post concerns itself with the various iterations of the our logo, from classic to retro to ultramodern.…
Map of the Month - January 2013
This month's featured map shows a plan for the Parade Ground, laid out just south of Prospect Park. Parade grounds served a significant purpose in the 19th century by providing large expanses of land where the military could conduct drills and exercises. Originally, the park's designers Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux proposed that the park's parade ground be located in East New York, but they later settled on an area south of the park. Completed in 1869, about two years after the park opened to the public, the Parade Ground served the military's needs while protecting the grasses…
POTW: Food Trucks
Mail on the Mind
Mail is on my mind. Perhaps it's because of the holiday season, or perhaps it is because every day I walk by this: This beautiful mail slot next to the Brooklyn Collection's offices always makes me wonder about the story of Brooklyn's mail service. Has sending and receiving mail changed through the years? It is commonly said that we live in a culture of instant gratification, from texting to emailing to tweeting; we want an answer and we want it now. We look fondly on the "olden days" when, we imagine, life was slower and more relaxed. But was it really? Perhaps a look…
POTW: Skiing in Prospect Park
Happy New Year from the Brooklyn Collection
Meet our new mascot CheeChee the Chihuahua, who charmed readers in the December 31, 1954 issue of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle. We added the noisemaker ourselves.
POTW: Holiday Carolers
Last Minute Holiday GIF!
Like our holiday GIF? You can make your own! Just browse our catalog for the photograph of your choice, do some fancy editing, and then upload the files to a GIF-making website like makeagif.com or picasion.com We'd love to see what you come up with! Happy holidays from your friends at the Brooklyn Collection!
To Number a School
The New York City school system has over 1,700 schools and while numbering them may seem simple, it is actually fraught with difficulties. Because there are so very many schools, sometimes school numbers are doubled or even tripled. The repeating numbers are partly due to the fact that before the Department of Education was consolidated, Staten Island, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, and Manhattan had their own school systems. To alleviate the confusion after consolidation, letters which represented each borough were added to the end of all public school…
POTW: Fulton Ferry Landing
The hundred dollar handkerchief.
Perhaps you are like me. As you approach the season of giving, the cold hard fact dawns that you have done nothing to prepare. No tree adorns your living room, no lights brighten your window, your child's only presents were sent by family members more thoughtful than you, and it is too late now to mix a Christmas cake with a sixpence in it for luck--even if you had a sixpence, which you don't. So now that all is pretty much lost, why not procrastinate a few moments more--or, if you prefer, consider it a creative form of gift research, inspired by items available a century ago--by…
Progress on Documenting Sandy, from the Director of Library and Archives
The history of Brooklyn contains many stories of resilience and reinvention and Hurricane Sandy adds another chapter to that account. Brooklyn has come out in force to help this recovery and Brooklyn Historical Society is committed to doing its part by making sure there is a thorough and publicly available collection of material that will document the preparations, response, and recovery efforts. Soon after Sandy made landfall, Brooklyn History began using email and social media to collect photographs. Our November Photo of the Week series featured “before and after” photo essays about areas…
On View Now: Jamel Shabazz
Last September it was our great pleasure to host Brooklyn-born photographer, Jamel Shabazz, at our monthly lecture series. He spoke at length about his personal history, his work, and the passions that drive him to document life, not only in Brooklyn, but all around the world. After his appearance here at the Brooklyn Collection we began working with Mr. Shabazz to bring his photographs into the Collection with the aim of preserving them for future generations while giving the Brooklynites of today a chance to access his tremendous archive. As part of our job to make Mr…
POTW: Happy Chanukkah Hanukkah Channuka?
Map of the Month - December 2012
This month's featured map is a reproduction of Hooker's Map of the Village of Brooklyn in the Year 1827. The reproduction was made in 1861 for Brooklyn reporter Henry McCloskey's Manual of the Corporation. Hooker's map is one of the earliest detailed maps of Brooklyn, showing wards, churches, the Brooklyn Navy Yard, the marshlands of Gowanus, and even Andre Parmentier's Garden, one of Brooklyn's earliest botanical gardens.
POTW: Repeal Day Celebrations
Out with the old, in with the... old?
Note: This post is from 2012. Please use the current catalog on the Brooklyn Public Library website for the most up to date information.If you've visited our library catalog recently, you may have been surprised to see that a quiet revolution has taken place. In place of the clunky old catalog homepage there is a slick new interface that more closely resembles an online shopping hub or social networking site than the physical card catalog of yore. New features allow for more interactivity -- you can tag books with keywords and rate your favorites -- and a robust, behind-…
POTW: A Sandy Plumb
Though I have lived in New York City for 12 years, it took me a while to realize that this city is not exclusively a dominant fortress of pavement and hi-rise buildings. I knew as most others do about Coney Island, Brighton Beach, Staten Island – the biggies – and rightfully so. But there are little swathes of land that a lot of people speed by on the way to JFK that have a long and often lovely history that get lost. Plumb Island, now known as Plumb Beach, is one such place.This past summer, I took a staycation in Brooklyn that included a bike ride to the beaches of Fort Tilden every other…
Teacher Professional Developments
This winter, Brooklyn Connections is pleased to provide two FREE professional development workshops for NYC teachers and educators. The workshops are open to all teachers if the five boroughs and offer a unique opportunity to tour and explore the Brooklyn Collection in a small group with our dedicated staff and special guest historians. ***************************************************** Photography and Archives: An Interdisciplinary Approach Thursday, December 13, 2012, 9:00am - 3:00pm Learn how to use photography and primary sources to uncover the history of Brooklyn. Joined…
Author Talk: Henrik Krogius on the Brooklyn Heights Promenade, Wednesday November 28th, 6:30pm
Please join us tomorrow night, Wednesday November 28th, for the latest installment of our lecture series. Brooklyn Heights Press editor Henrik Krogius discusses his book The Brooklyn Heights Promenade. Krogius' latest book takes us on an intimate look at the history and beauty of the promenade and the role it played in the ambitions of Robert Moses. A wine and cheese reception commences at 6:30pm, with the lecture starting at 7pm. Seating is limited to 40 people. Tickets will be given out 30 minutes before the lecture. While you're enjoying refreshments, we welcome you to…
Handmade in Brooklyn
Handwoven rugs in festive stripes, meticulously crafted straw brooms, and faux-rustic woven baskets attractively arranged in a narrow storefront under an ornate tin ceiling... the photo above looks like it could be a modern-day Instagram of any number of home decor boutiques or Brooklyn Flea stalls that have popped up in our borough's recent artisinal renaissance. And it certainly does fit into that tradition, as the items were all made in Brooklyn by skilled craftsmen and -women. But this photo, undated but most likely from the 1930s, shows the handiwork not of…
POTW: Sunset Park Pays it Forward
While Hurricane Sandy’s gale forces downed trees and wreaked havoc on power and internet lines, the neighborhood did not see the extensive water damage that Red Hook, DUMBO, and the Rockaways did.
Stranger than Turkey
It's part of my job to recommend books to patrons -- something on Native American walking trails in New York City? Try this; flora of Prospect Park? This should do it; a judo how-to by the president of Russia? No problem -- but today I'd like to stretch my advisory wings and offer some more timely recommendations: recipes from our collection that will be sure to spice up your Thanksgiving feast! Let's begin with the Victory Memorial Cookbook which, as you can see from the title page above, was published by the Women's Auxiliary of the Victory Memorial Hospital at 7th avenue and 92nd…
Teens Explore History & Innovation at the Navy Yard
Once again, I'm pleased to introduce a guest post by Fall Education Intern, Stephanie Krom. Stephanie is a student in the NYU Archives and Public History MA program. This semester in the Education Department, Stephanie has worked with K-12 students on school tours here at BHS and she has helped facilitate our brand new after school program that debuted at the Brooklyn Navy Yard Center at BLDG 92 this fall, "Teen Innovators." The teen innovators will show off their work at the culminating event tonight at BLDG 92, so check out Stephanie's inside look at the work they have done along the way…
An all too familiar sight
This engraving from Harper's Weekly dated February 28, 1885, comes from our collection of 19th century engravings. These images form a vital link in the visual record of 19th century Brooklyn. You can see the full list of our prints here. Also, did you know that finding aids to many of our collections are now online? Check them out here. The list is growing, so check back from time to time to see what's new.
POTW: Red Hook beating Sandy back
Well, Red Hook was slammed by Hurricane Sandy. There are several photographs on our Storify page documenting the high water line that submerged many businesses and homes along the waterfront.
Documenting Sandy, From the Director of Library & Archives
I moved back to Brooklyn in April to join the staff of the Brooklyn Historical Society as the Director of Library and Archives. Over the last few months, I have met many people with a stake in Brooklyn and the work that Brooklyn Historical Society does for the borough, supporters who have asked me a lot of insightful questions about our plans for the Othmer Library. In the last few weeks, the question of what we do as a library and archives has taken on an added urgency. One of the essential jobs of libraries, archives, and museums is to help communities remember, and disasters are important…
Making the Stars Shine
Marilyn Monroe, Jayne Mansfield, Marlene Dietrich, Kim Novak and Judy Garland were stage and screen stars whose names evoke a glamour and mystique that has never been duplicated. Central to projecting that mega-watt star power through their clothing, was a young fashion designer from Brooklyn by the name of El Gee (or Elgee) Bove. Bove, who grew up on Kings Highway, began designing clothes at the tender age of 12. Five years later in 1951, while still a senior at Samuel Tilden High school, he was working as an usher at the famed R.K.O.…
POTW: Carroll Park after Hurricane Sandy
Our public historian, Julie Golia, tweeted a downed tree just outside of Carroll Park caused by Hurricane Sandy.
POTW: It’s the Great Pumpkin!
A Hen Goes to Brownsville
In the early years of the 20th century, the building of the Williamsburgh Bridge encouraged garment workers and other Lower East Side residents to move to Williamsburg and Brownsville. In the interwar years, Brownsville, its population about 75% Jewish, was thrumming with cultural activity; not only theaters but newspapers, the labor movement, the Hebrew Educational Society, schools and synagogues all provided cultural enrichment in hard economic times. For many of these Brownsville residents, Yiddish would have been the language spoken at home, a fact that is reflected in print…
POTW: One of the many photography studios in Brooklyn
POTW: Pug Love
Clubbed to death
Club officers and rules, 1900-1901 As I leaf through the gilt-edged pages of the the twenty-pound tome, The Eagle and Brooklyn edited by Henry W.B. Howard in the 1890s, I am struck first by an almost total absence of images of women (whereas portraits of men--all white of course--abound.) And secondly, by the prominent role played by clubs in the social life of the community. The Hamilton, the Germania, the Brooklyn, the Union League, the Lincoln, the Oxford, the Montauk, the Carleton, the Eckford, the Midwood, the Laurence, the Constitution--for years these clubs were a…
New Exhibition at Brooklyn Collection: "Brooklyn, Then and Now" Photography Project
This year we’ve had the pleasure of once again working with two high school interns through the Multicultural Internship Program (MIP). Emal and Erfana spent the months of July and August shadowing our reference staff, learning about our collections, and conducting their own research into Brooklyn history. As in the past two years, the culmination of the interns’ time with us is the Brooklyn, Then and Now photography project. In this endeavor, interns choose old images from our photograph collection and then visit those sites to take a contemporary snapshot of the same location.…
POTW: A Kennedy at the Navy Yard!
Brooklyn Navy Yard at War
We are very pleased to see Brooklynites Carmela Zuza and Clarence Irving featured in this great video as part of New-York Historical Society's new exhibition WWII & NYC: You can see more from this exhibition on The New York Home Front here. And you can hear full interviews with Clarence Irving and Carmela Zuza and over forty other people who worked in the Brooklyn Navy Yard at BHS in the Othmer Library: Brooklyn Navy Yard Oral History, 2006 - 2011. Teachers: Bring your students to the Brooklyn Navy Yard Center at BLDG92 and check out the new Ingenious Inventions at the Brooklyn Navy Yard…
Map of the Month - October 2012
This month's featured map shows the Gravesend and Coney Island areas in 1787. Hand-copied by Teunis G. Bergen in 1861 "from an old map" that was "probably used in a suit ... in relation to fishing rights," the map features property, names of landowners, and landscape features. A prolific map maker and surveyor, Teunis G. Bergen made hundreds of maps during his lifetime, many of which can be viewed in the BHS Map Collection and the Teunis G. Bergen and Bergen Family Collection. Bergen was also an active historian and genealogist, and served as a U.S. Representative in Congress during the…
POTW: The Beeches in Bay Ridge
The Little Fugitives Part II
When we last left our little 1950's runaways, Eugene Hart was returned happily to his Bushwick home with his Mama, never to roam so far, at least by accident, again. But, there are more tales of childhood derring-do, escape, and adventure that have woven their way through the streets of the city. I'll Take Manhattan …
"Hey Down in Front"
Last week they cut the ribbon on the new arena on Flatbush and Atlantic. Phone booths around town have been promoting today's opening date.
Welcome to MS 57
Now that the new school year has started, Brooklyn Connections is in full swing again. To prepare for the scores of middle and high school students we work with, over the summer I went through some of the most interesting lessons I taught last year--including one that was particularly exciting to a group of middle schoolers in Bedford-Stuyvesant. After a lesson using primary sources including a rendering of their school, students from Middle School 57 became engrossed in the history of the building. Thankfully, I had come prepared, and…
My Brooklyn, documentary screening and talk with Director Kelly Anderson, Wednesday, Sept. 19th, 7pm
Our monthly programming series is back! Please join us this coming Wednesday, September 19th for our first event of the fall, a screening of the new documentary film directed by Kelly Anderson and produced by Allison Lirish Dean, "My Brooklyn". MB trailer 2012 from Kelly Anderson on Vimeo. "My Brooklyn" is a documentary examining Director Kelly Anderson’s personal journey as a Brooklyn “gentrifier,” and her efforts to understand the forces reshaping her neighborhood along lines of race and class. At the heart of the film is the Fulton Mall and the…
All Wet
From the windows in the Howard Golden Reserve Room here in the Brooklyn Collection you can see a wall. The wall, running behind the library from Flatbush Avenue to Eastern Parkway, features, along its topmost portion, a pattern of waves done in shallow relief. As much as someone can wonder about a wall, I've wondered about this wall. Why a watery motif? Does it mean anything? Whether or not directly related to it, I had a hunch that this design had something to do with what once stood on the grounds now occupied by Mount Prospect Park: the Mount Prospect reservoir. Here you…
Brooklynites at the 1948 National Republican Convention
While reviewing some photographs for the new Project CHART website I came across this photograph of Brooklynites at the Republican National Convention in 1948. The most enduring image from this election shows Truman holding a newspaper that announces, erroneously, “Dewey Defeats Truman.” But I had never given much thought to events in the election prior to that misstep. One of the things that interested me specifically about the picture below was that these people were clearly campaigning for Governor Dewey--the convention did not begin with a presumptive…
Map of the Month - September 2012
This month's featured map is the oldest item in the BHS Map Collection, dating from approximately 1562. It was created by the Italian cartographer Girolaneo Ruscelli, based on an 1548 map by Giacomo Gastaldi. The map shows the eastern coast of the United States and Canada, from Florida to Labrador. Its main focus is what we know today as the Mid-Atlantic, New England, and Nova Scotia. "Angoulesme" is likely New York Harbor, "Flora" is likely the southern coast of Long Island, and "Brisa" is probably Block Island. It is interesting to note that the map does not show the coasts of either modern…
Expanded Hours
Around here, we think there's nothing quite so discouraging as a pair of closed library doors. Especially when, as in our case, those closed doors are glass, allowing you to see, from afar, all the wonderful books, maps, prints, and photographs that you can't get to! We try to put as many of our materials as is possible online, so that you can look up your ancestors in city directories, search for old pictures of your neighborhood, or read through 19th century newspapers from the comfort of your home at all hours of the day. Still, nothing beats a visit to…
Edwin Roberts: Photographer, Tennis Enthusiast, Man of Mystery
By my latest reckoning, the Brooklyn Collection has so far uploaded more than 15,000 photograph records to our catalog. It's a sliver of the more than 200,000 images in our holdings, to be sure, but it is nonetheless no small feat, especially when you consider that the meticulous description of these images (in numerous MARC fields including title, author, date, physical description, summary, notes, subject headings, etc) is handled by just two catalogers, Ron and Stephen. Whenever I've prepared a new collection for the catalog, I hand it over to either of them and a few weeks later, like…
Make that a double...
Some pictures cry out to be shared, and this is one of them: TRIPLE PLAYERS--The Yerves triplets, Tommy, Denny and Gerry, age 2 1/2...Brooklyn Eagle, Mar 9, 1953 The Yerves triplets were born in the Bronx, but we do notice a Dodgers banner on young Denny's chest (or is that Gerry, or Tommy?) The fact that they are all wearing pinstripes might indicate a subtle preference for the Bronx Bombers. In any event, this photograph got me thinking about our Brooklyn multiples, of whom we see more and more--and more. Twins, triplets and the rare quadruplets have always drawn…
Philip's of Coney Island
Ask any long-time resident of Coney Island about Philip's Candy Store and you're bound to hear pleasant stories of the shop with red and white awnings, that welcomed visitors to the park's amusements. You'll also hear about the homemade salt water taffy, peanut brittle, cotton candy, and friendly staff welcoming customers year-round. Photo: Irving I. Herzberg, 1974 Philip's candy store started as a small stand on Coney Island's boardwalk in 1916, owned and operated by Philip Calamaris. It remained a stand until 1930 when it reached its new home under the Stillwell…
Map of the Month - August 2012
This month's featured map of Brooklyn's Prospect Park was first posted on our blog by Allison back in May 2010 - but it is so beautiful that we wanted to showcase it again. An 1871 design from Olmsted, Vaux & Co, Landscape Architects, the map was made while the park was both open and still under construction. Today the central branch of the Brooklyn Public Library and Mount Prospect Park sit on what was the reservoir’s land. Also of interest is the land for sale around the reservoir -- part of which makes up today’s Brooklyn Botanic Garden.…
Brooklyn Hero : Burton Turkus and the Murder Inc. Trials by Guest Blogger Abby Rubin
If you didn't know better, you might think that names like "Dimples" Wolinsky, "Bugsey" Goldstein, "Trigger Mike" Cupola or "Kid Twist" Reles belonged to characters in a gangster movie with all of the usual trappings--a crime syndicate, a murder ring, hard-faced New York gangsters and the city's D.A. going after them with a mission to convict. But before the movies dramatized the fight against organized crime, the prosecution of Murder Inc., one of Brooklyn's most famed crime syndicates in the late 1930's-40's, provided a model for these epic legal battles.…
Brooklyn Olympians
The Olympic Games start this weekend and Brooklynites will no doubt be rooting for hometown star Lia Neal, the most recent Brooklynite to join the elite list of Olympians. 17-year-old Neal is only the second African-American female swimmer from the United States to make Team USA. Neal will swim the 4x100-meter freestyle competition on Saturday, July 28. With the announcement of Neal making the team, I wondered about other Brooklynites who were selected for the Olympic Games. Brooklyn has had its share of Olympians including basketball stars Michael Jordan and …
A Freeman is Hard to Find
Who is your favorite Brooklyn architect of the past? Raymond Almirall? W.B. Tubby? Montrose Morris? The Parfitt Brothers? Frank Freeman? Or do you have simpler, ancient tastes, eschewing the renowned builders of yesterday for some long-gone anonymous practitioner of the Walloon vernacular, perhaps? If you were Norval White (and I presume you are not) -- architect, architectural historian, and co-author of the oft-consulted, exhaustively comprehensive, brick-thick AIA Guide to New York City -- you'd probably say Frank Freeman. White, after all, thought him to be Brooklyn's greatest…
The Little Fugitives Part I
Running away from home at a young age is hardly ever a good thing, especially now, in a world in which evil waits on every corner to prey on the young and vulnerable. An illusion it may be, but from our perspective the fifties seem a simpler, more innocent time, when wandering children for the most part made it back home again, safe and sound. While looking through…
The Photography of Anders Goldfarb: A Form of Compassion
Anders Goldfarb: Buildings as Buildings (cut 9) from pm on Vimeo. Peter Mattei's short interview with our old friend Anders Goldfarb captures his wry humor and provides insight into the genesis of his stark worldview. The son of Holocaust survivors, Anders has spent most of his career photographing Brooklyn's neighborhoods, particularly Greenpoint, in black and white, with his Rolleiflex and Leica cameras. Some of his photographs can be seen here in Brooklyn Public Library's Brooklyn Collection. Look for more on Anders here soon!
The Laura C. Holloway Letters
Laura Carter Holloway (also known as Laura Holloway Langford) has appeared before in the pages of Brooklynology, as a founder of the Seidl Society, provider of the Brighton Beach Concert series of the 1880s, and as a correspondent of Susan B. Anthony. Now at last the full finding aid to the Laura C. Holloway Letters is available online. As well as the Susan B. Anthony letters, the collection contains an extensive file of letters relating to Holloway's book, The Ladies of the White House, several letters from poet Ella Wheeler Wilcox, one from Harriet Beecher Stowe, and…
Map of the Month - July 2012
This month's featured map is attributed to Matthaeus Seutter and Augustine Herrman and dates from approximately 1740. It is the 3rd state (or edition) of the map, and is part of the Jansson-Visscher series of maps (for comparison, look at Nicholas Visscher's Novi Belgii Novaeque Angliae nec non partis Virginiae tabula, which was featured on Map of the Month in March 2011). For more information on early maps of the eastern United States (including the Jansson-Visscher series), please see this description from Fordham University Libraries. The map includes a decorative cartouche, illustrations…
Sing (and dance) The Body Electric!
Walt Whitman is quite literally one of Brooklyn's most celebrated (former) residents. We continually name buildings to honor him, including a middle school, a library branch, and a housing project, along with commemorating him annually with marathon readings of his epic poem, Leaves of Grass. Some suggest we take the adoration even further and rechristen our new NBA basketball team in homage to this pioneer of free verse. That seems unlikely to happen, but just as unlikely, perhaps, was the tribute mounted by Brooklyn College…
There's No Place Like Home
Brooklyn has a long and storied relationship with the homing pigeon. Who can forget Marlon Brando's portrayal of Terry Malloy in "On the Waterfront"? At once strong and nurturing, Terry mirrored the care and passion of hundreds of pigeon racers throughout the borough. Homing pigeons are not to be confused with the gad-about slackers that have long held the top spot on the nuisance list of most New Yorkers. These are avian athletes, bred for speed and endurance, who with their remarkable…
Kings Castle
Ocean Parkway. Photograph by Irving I.Herzberg, c.1970s. Brooklyn Public Library--Brooklyn Collection As a child I looked forward to weekends at my grandparents' house, not only for grandma's homemade lasagna, but also for the chance to watch people playing chess along Ocean Parkway's promenade, across the street from their apartment. As I watched, I often became engrossed in the games, paying close attention to the carefully formulated moves. On the call of "Checkmate!" the players would usually smile and promptly start a new game. Brooklynites have…
Semipro
The Zambonis and skates have all been packed away, basketballs are only around to get dribbled and dunked for another week or so, and the summer Olympics have yet to begin. With this doldrums in the sports calendar, what's a fan to do? Oh yeah...I almost forgot...our national pastime, baseball! And on the train this morning baseball seemed to be all around me. I had my head buried in The Natural, which I was just reading for the first time, and as Roy Hobbs was stuffing his gut with lobster salad, milk, corned beef, anchovies and hamburgers, and Judge Banner was putting his shady…
Whotypes? Albertypes!
How many early photographic printing processes can you name? I'll bet Daguerreotypes would be on the list, maybe tintypes, and enthusiasts will name ambrotypes, collodion prints, albumen prints, cyanotypes. A small collection of ours consists of 21 Albertypes showing Brooklyn scenes from 1904. They seem to have been published in an album, from which the pages have now been detached, by A. Wittemann, Publisher of American Views, 250 Adams St, Brooklyn NY. What, you may ask, is an Albertype? According to Beaumont Newhall's History of Photography, it is a process that depends on bichromated…
Class of 2012
Every May, we celebrate the accomplishments of Brooklyn Connections students with a Recognition Ceremony and Celebration in the Dweck Auditorium located in the Central Library, and this year was no different. We also hold on to some outstanding work and put it on display inside the Brooklyn Collection during the summer. Although our beloved Program Coordinator, Leslie Shope has moved on, the exhibition is in place, ready for your viewing pleasure. This year's projects comprised the most eclectic topics and intricate displays to date. The projects ranged from exhibit…
Map of the Month - June 2012
Titled "Panorama of the Great Metropolis," this month's featured map actually consists of three maps and two bird's-eye views. The maps shows the city of New York, the city of Brooklyn, and the Hudson River, while the views and illustrations provide images of New York City, including tourist attractions such as Union Square and the Latting Conservatory. Although this piece isn't dated, it's likely that it was used to promote the Exhibition of the Industry of All Nations, a World’s Fair held in New York City in 1853.…
The Peet Residence
It is not often that one comes across a group of 19th century photographs that show both the exterior and the interior of a private residence. The Pope Mansion photographs are one such collection, but charming as it may be to see the white peacock that once woke the residents of Bushwick with its screeches, those images lack one significant element--there are no pictures of the residents of the house. What would we not give to see the profligate George Pope and his sensible sister, who wished to live within her modest means? Now another small collection has crossed our…
Tragedy at Sea: The Sea Witch and Esso Brussels crash in 1973
While going through the Frank J. Trezza Seatrain Shipbuilding collection, I got intrigued by one of the images of a very damaged container ship named the Sea Witch. This led me to find out more about the ship and what happened. On June 2, 1973, just after midnight, the SS C.V. Sea Witch, built by Bath Iron Works was leaving New York harbor when the ship lost steering control and collided into the fully loaded tanker SS Esso Brussels, right under the Verrazano Bridge. The 31,000 barrels of crude oil released from three ruptured tanks ignited and the resulting fire engulfed both ships. A…
Spread Love, It's the Brooklyn Way
At the end of the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz, just before she clicks her heels three times, Dorothy takes a moment to say goodbye to those who helped her on her journey. Each one played a unique role in her success, and she shares a brief moment with each. But to the Scarecrow, whom she saves for last, she whispers just one short sentence, "I think I'll miss you most of all." Ok.... maybe it's a little harsh for the other characters. But we all know that feeling when we're saying goodbye. There are many, many things we miss when we leave a job, move away or…
Holidays, Observed and Otherwise
I've recently had the great pleasure of preparing for cataloging our Brooklyn Daily Eagle photographs documenting local celebrations and holidays. With Memorial Day just around the corner, I'd like to share some images of Memorial Days past in Brooklyn. Children barely contain their excitement as the 1941 Memorial Day Parade marches down Eastern Parkway. The holiday traces back to the years after the close of the Civil War. An Eagle article from May 20, 1870 describes the meeting of a group of citizens who were then considering observing Decoration Day, a holiday created…
Byrd's Eye View
Admiral Richard E. Byrd, October 17, 1932 Much has been written about Richard Evelyn Byrd, the scientist and explorer who led courageous voyages to Antarctica and daring flights over the Poles. Although he was not a Brooklynite, he was no stranger to the borough and his travels were well documented in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle over the course of two decades. Floyd Bennett, 1928 Prior to his noteworthy southbound trips, Byrd was a Naval Aviator. In 1926, he went on leave from the Navy, and with Brooklyn resident and aviator Floyd Bennett at his side, took off to attempt…
Ex Lab 2012: Get Ready to Say Cheese!
I'm pleased to introduce a guest post by new-bloggers, David Estevez and Crystal Lau. David and Crystal are both students at Brooklyn Technical High School and part of BHS's Exhibition Laboratory (or "Ex Lab") after-school museum studies program. The Ex Lab students have been meeting twice a week since February to create the newest exhibit for Brooklyn Historical Society, Say Cheese! Portraits to Pics. Here's a sneak peek from David and Crystal about what they've been working on and what you can expect to see in the exhibit (opening June 6th)! Connect to the Ex Lab-ers on twitter @…
The Glory of Brooklyn's Gowanus
Tomorrow evening Wednesday May 23rd, the Brooklyn Collection will host photographer Leslie-Arlette Boyce and numerous other artists as they talk about the Gowanus Canal and the influence this historic waterway has on their work. This event starts at 7:00, with a wine and cheese reception as well as distribution of tickets at 6:30. Seating is limited to 40.
The Rainone Family Papers: Italian Americans in Brooklyn
How do people decide what to keep for posterity? Why hang onto the 1932 guidelines for Civil Service exams, a letter from an Italian gentleman you never even met, a dinner invitation, a letter congratulating you on a job well done? These questions came to mind forcibly as I worked briefly this week with a small collection donated to us by the Archives at Queens Borough Public Library a couple of years ago. This small collection of papers belonging to several members of the Rainone family, and their brother-in-law Ernest Morra, throws light on the immigrant journey of…
I Hear A Song Comin' On
If you should ever decide to delve into the Brooklyn Sheet Music Collection, you will be amazed at the variety of styles and genres that songwriters have used to celebrate the borough of Brooklyn. We've got Marches, Waltzes, Cake-walks, Rags and Two-Steps, celebrating everything from Coney Island to Bushwick High School; and quite possibly the first song ever written about a logjam of people crossing a bridge:The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Bridge Crush March. The music in our collection dates from 1869 with Crossing on the Ferry all the way to 1987 with No Sleep…
Brooklyn's Artful Dodgers
Brooklyn used to be lousy with dips. They were everywhere filching anything they could get their filthy paws on, these dips were. The Eagle ran one story back in the 1930s about a gang of dips posing as a bunch of grieving mourners so they could snatch some easy loot away from the unsuspecting weepy-eyed bereaved at a Jewish funeral. Dips were the lowest of the low. At least a hold-up goon had the decency to plug you with a gat. Not the dip. The dip was a sneak. The dip was a rat. But wait...what's a dip you might ask? Well -- you know -- a fobber, a jostler, a sometime lushworker…
Brooklyn Documentaries
To help celebrate their one year anniversary DocumentaryStorm, a New York City-based website for documentary lovers, hand picked and organized a selection of documentaries focusing on Brooklyn and its community. BHS is proud to share this selection of documentaries with you. The Brooklyn Bridge: This documentary gives a contemporary twist to the story of the legendary Brooklyn Bridge. Completed in 1883, the Brooklyn Bridge was the longest suspension bridge in the entire world for the rest of the century. An excellent documentary about one of the wonders of modern architecture, the Brooklyn…
A Black Church in Williamsburgh
Leslie's recent post on the Italian marionette theater reminds me that research can be rewarding--a useful reminder, because sometimes one's best efforts bring only moderate success, or worse. I discovered this anew while investigating the next stop on our continuing tour of the Center for Brooklyn History's manuscripts, the A.M.E. Zion Church Collection. This unassuming handful of mortgages and receipts, while superficially uninteresting, actually provides us with rare evidence of the activities of one of the earliest black churches in Williamsburgh. But finding further…
Map of the Month - May 2012
This month's featured map is from the Gazzettiere Americano, an atlas published in Livorno, Italy in 1763. The map shows New York Harbor and surrounding areas, and includes a number of Brooklyn references. If you look closely, you will see the following names on the Brooklyn area of the map: Bushwick, Brockland, Redhook, Flatland, Flatbush, Gravesend, Utrecht, and Coney Isola. The small numbers on the map are called soundings and they represent water depths. Soundings were commonly featured on early nautical charts and maps and are still used today in navigation.…
The Mystery of Dennet Place in Carroll Gardens
When I first walked down Dennet Place to visit a friend, I immediately felt like I was in a magical place. This hidden alley street in Carroll Gardens is a rare gem, made more distinguished by the basement level apartments with half-size doors which give it an almost fairy-tale like quality. Lucky for me I managed to find and rent one of these basement apartments! My friends jokingly call my place the "hobbit home." After moving in I've become more and more interested in the history of the little street, and also perplexed by the name of the street itself. …
Searching for a lost art...
Late last year, I had the pleasure of watching the documentary, Rehearsal for a Sicilian Tragedy at BAM, which was shown as part of the "Puppets on Film" festival. The film followed actor and Brooklynite John Turturro as he visited his ancestral homeland of Sicily to study the traditions of Sicilian puppetry with puppeteer Mimmo Cuticchio. It was an interesting film that included great scenes of a master "puppa" at work. I found the art of Sicilian puppetry, or Opera dei Pupi, fascinating. The art form, passed down from generation…
Baseball in Brooklyn: Author talk with Andrew Mele
Andy Mele, author of The Boys of Brooklyn:The Parade Grounds-Brooklyn's Field of Dreams, and The Brooklyn Dodgers Reader will be with us tomorrow evening, Wednesday, April 25th at 6:30 p.m, for our monthly series. He'll talk about the many players - famous and not so famous that played at the Parade Grounds, and of course those Brooklyn Dodgers. Please join us. The Brooklyn Collection is on the 2nd floor mezzanine of Brooklyn Public Library's Central branch, at Grand Army Plaza. A wine and cheese reception, as well as distribution of tickets is…
No Alligators or Ninja Turtles 'Round Here
I had the opportunity over the past months to help process a major collection at BHS: the records of the Brooklyn Bureau of Sewers (ARC.235). Sure, it does not sound especially appealing, but the collection has lots of useful documents, perhaps especially maps. The bulk of the collection consists of the documents compiled by the Bureau of Sewers principally for the purpose of establishing the tax levy to be assessed on those connecting to newly-laid sewer lines from the late 19th century to about 1960. So in addition to information about the expanding sewerage infrastructure in Brooklyn, the…
The Letters of James W. Vanderhoef
Avid followers of the Brooklyn Collection's activities over the last several years --we know you are out there--may be familiar with a web site by the name of Brooklyn in the Civil War, funded by an LSTA grant and created by Brooklyn Public Library staff. This week I'd like to dust off one of the collections at the core of that site, the Letters of James W. Vanderhoef. A new finding aid for the letters, containing a few nuggets of information recently mined from online sources, can now be accessed via our web site, and the biographical note is reproduced for you here: "Sources…
Not my family's story
A beginner in genealogy, I recently set out to explore my family's history. Knowing they have lived in Brooklyn for generations, my first idea was to head downstairs to "the morgue," the dead files of the old Brooklyn Daily Eagle newspaper that closed its doors in 1955. (Library staff will do similar searches for anyone who wants them. Just call the Brooklyn Collection during our open hours 718 230 2762.) When the trip led me to a clipping titled "Dahl, Theodore--Dead," I thought I had found information on my great-grandfather, Theodore Dahl. But it turned out instead to…
Digitized City Directories
I'm writing today to introduce you to one of the underappreciated workhorses in our collection -- the city directories. These are the ancestors of the big, cumbersome yellow page directories that land on your doorstep and often linger there, unused, until you finally carry them to the trash bin. These days the print directory may seem an outdated relic of the past, what with geolocating, dynamic, user-specific directory services like Yelp and GoogleMaps just a few clicks or finger flicks away. And who lists their telephone number in the white pages anymore?…
Who are you?
Sometimes you just can't say no. Having recently suffered this kind of aphasia here at the Brooklyn Collection, we are now the custodians of a mysterious trove of photographs. Last month we received an email from a photo archivist at a well-known New York newspaper, with the subject "accession query." The email went on to describe a small collection of photos discovered in a Brighton Beach dumpster, just outside of the Trump Village apartments, by a filmmaker who teaches at a New England College. Knowing that Irving Herzberg lived in that same Trump…
CBBG Sneak Peek!
Crossing Borders, Bridging Generations (CBBG) is BHS's oral history project and public programming series examining the history and experiences of mixed-heritage people and families, cultural hybridity, race, ethnicity, and identity. We are very excited to give you a sneak peek at the project's website-in-progress: cbbg.brooklynhistory.org You can learn more about CBBG, upcoming Events, Project News, Who's Involved, and we're continually adding new oral histories you can Listen to via the online archive. Also check out the first digital exhibit on the site: Interracial Brooklyn by…
Brooklyn City Directories Online!
We'll tell you all about it later, but for now, here are digitized directories for 1856-1967. Spread the word!
Map of the Month - March 2013
This month's featured map was published by the German publishers Wagner & Debes circa 1900. It likely reflects the high volume of German-Americans residing in Brooklyn at the time. According to Montrose Morris of Brownstoner, by the end of the 19th century, German Americans were the most successful ethnic group in New York City. In trying to date this particular map, we looked at the various clubs that are listed in the key at the bottom left, one being the Germania Club. As Morris notes, the Germania Club was founded in 1859 and was originally located on Atlantic and Court Streets. …
Brooklyn's Congressman for half a century, Emanuel Celler
It has recently been my pleasure to arrange and describe a small collection of photographs and papers that belonged to Brooklyn's longtime congressman, Emanuel Celler. These items--principally photographs and laws written by Celler and framed along with the Presidential pen used to sign them--as far as we know came from his apartment just across the road from the library, on Prospect Park West. For those unfamiliar with Celler and his work, allow me to plagiarize from my own finding aid: Sumner Ave, Brooklyn "Emanuel Celler was born on May 6, 1888 in a frame house on Sumner Avenue…
Map of the Month - April 2012
This month's featured map dates from 1828 and features the "country thirty miles round the city of New York," including all five boroughs as well as portions of New Jersey, Long Island, and Connecticut. Drawn by J.H. Eddy of New York, this map is a new edition with edits by William Hooker and E. Blunt. While the map shows traditional elements such as roads, topography, and names of landowners (including the Lefferts, Cortelyou, and Vanderveer families in Brooklyn), it also shows more unusual things like taverns. The map appears to have been dedicated to Dewitt Clinton, Governor of New York,…
All Fools' Day
March has gone out more like a lamb than a lion--and another April Fool's Day has come and gone. On no other day are you allowed to play pranks on your loved ones, friends and co-workers and have a built-in excuse. While the origins of the tradition are unclear, some have theorized that it is a remnant of the Roman festival of Hilaria or "Roman Laughing Day," which celebrates the resurrection of the god Attis. Others have hypothesized that the holiday relates to the Holi, an old Hindu festival celebrated to welcome the new season. However, the prank-…
Map of the Month - January 2013
This month's featured map shows a plan for the Parade Ground, laid out just south of Prospect Park. Parade grounds served a significant purpose in the 19th century by providing large expanses of land where the military could conduct drills and exercises. Originally, the park's designers Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux proposed that the park's parade ground be located in East New York, but they later settled on an area south of the park. Completed in 1869, about two years after the park opened to the public, the Parade Ground served the military's needs while protecting the grasses of…
Hair
Brooklyn ladies have always taken pride in their hair. Whether they wear it long and wavy short and curly Brooklyn women take full advantage of all the hair options available. And now since the weather has turned relatively warm, we can look forward to not dealing with the dreaded "hat hair" and can release our locks from their prisons of winter hats. Each new season of course brings with it a fresh …
She's Mad Real: Author Talk with Oneka LaBennett Wednesday, March 28th, 6:30pm
Please join us for our monthly author talk series this Wednesday, March 28th, at 6:30pm. Our guest this month is Professor Oneka LaBennett, who, in her book She's Mad Real, discusses the ways in which teenage girls in Flatbush and Crown Heights successfully carve out and create their own individuality in a world dominated by popular culture. The Brooklyn Collection is on the 2nd floor mezzanine of Brooklyn Public Library's Central branch, at Grand Army Plaza. A wine and cheese reception, as well as distribution of tickets is at 6:30 p.m. Seating is limited…
A Vanished Vista: the Changing Landscape of Prospect Park's Vale of Cashmere
Brooklynology is pleased to welcome guest blogger Garry R. Osgood. Garry is a software developer and web designer, who potters as a recreational historian of things Brooklyn. In March 1893, Frederick Law Olmsted's friend and colleague Daniel Burnham said of him, "An artist, he paints with lakes and wooded slopes; with lawns and banks and forest covered hills; with mountain sides and ocean views." And what better example of this artistry could one find than the vista in the northern reaches of Prospect Park overlooking a glacial kettle, not more than a few minutes' walk from the…
From the children's book shelf
Writers abound in Brooklyn: you trip over them in the park, bump into them in the street, stand beside them on the subway. And among them, writers and illustrators of children's books form an honorable sub set. There are also those writers who draw on memories of Brooklyn but have abandoned their native borough for reasons I cannot fathom. This week the children's bookshelf of the Brooklyn Collection has received two new additions--which reminded me that there are some fine older titles resting on it too. When a harried parent with a toddler must finish an assignment,…
In Memory of Elsie Richardson
Research, Writing, and Art: P.S. 312's Fourth Graders Curate a History of Bergen Beach
Along with Educator Emily Gallagher, BHS Educator Alex Tronolone is working closely with a team of “young curators” at P.S. 312 to uncover the history of their Bergen Beach neighborhood this spring. The work the students create will ultimately go into three professionally-designed museum panels to be displayed at the school. BHS’s after-school program “Young Curators” is made possible by a Cultural After-School Adventures (CASA) grant from City Council Member Lewis Fidler. I’m happy to introduce today’s guest blogger, Alex, and his insights on getting students engaged with history.…
Mapping Weeksville
Recently, BHS staff had the privilege of touring the historic Hunterfly Road Houses at the Weeksville Heritage Center (WHC) in Bedford-Stuyvesant. The houses are original structures dating from the 1840s to the 1880s, and offer an intimate look into the lives of African Americans in Brooklyn. Founded by James Weeks in 1838, Weeksville was a free African American community with an independent infrastructure, including schools, an orphanage, churches, and newspapers. Below are some images that I took during our visit to WHC:…
Return of a Native
Before leaving us for Australia about a year and a half ago, one of our former Research Assistants, Tara Cuthbert, livened up the pages of this blog with charming posts about little-known Brooklynites: birthday dancers, parrot fanciers, a legendary cyclist, and a homemade submarine builder, to name just a few. Living in the morgue during her days here at the Brooklyn Collection, Tara was able to discover these and other stories from the Borough's past by combing through the extensive photo collection housed down there in row upon row of filing cabinets. And now, having put a copy online of…
New Online Home for Brooklyn Connections!
We are thrilled to announce the launch of our brand new Brooklyn Connections website: Our new site is a hub of information where students and educators can learn more about our program and access the wealth of materials we have developed over the past five years. On the Teacher Page, you will find information about our signature research project program; announcements for upcoming teacher workshops; and downloadable lesson plans, project outlines and more. And for those schools interested in becoming a partner, our new online…
The Longest List
Tommy Senko, 4, of 1622 New York Ave.,...in yesterday's summer heat and humidity, cooling off under a shower. June 26, 1949 It is well known among people who care about these things, that the Brooklyn Collection is Brooklyn's premier center for historic photographs of the borough, with over 20,000 of them digitized, catalogued and available for reproduction and use. Less well known are our photographs of everywhere else--and everyone else--deposited in the library's basement in 1957 after the auction of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle's assets. Al Schacht, "Clown…
Map of the Month - March 2012
This month's featured map was created by the Ohman Map Co., a New York-based map company located at 258 Broadway, in the early 1900s. One of only a handful of maps in the BHS Collection to show ethnic communities in Brooklyn, it features various groups, from Europeans to African Americans to people of mixed heritage. It is clear from this map that early 20th century Brooklyn was a diverse community of people, just as it is today.…
Manhunt!
On the morning of January 3, 1947, groggy Brooklynites rolled out of bed, brewed their morning cup of coffee, and settled down at their kitchen tables to be greeted by the hard stares of nine men glaring out from above the masthead of the Brooklyn Eagle with this warning: "Keep your eyes peeled for these escaped felons. Call the police immediately if you spot them." The nine fugitives had broken out from Brooklyn's decrepit Raymond Street Jail the day before, January 2nd, and by the time the Eagle's morning edition came out the next day, news of their escape had…
"Young Curators" at P.S. 276 Dig Into Canarsie's History
This spring, students from P.S. 276 are working with Educator Emily Gallagher to uncover the history of their neighborhood, Canarsie, through BHS’s after-school program “Young Curators.” This program is made possible by a Cultural After-School Adventures (CASA) grant from City Council Member Lewis Fidler. I’m very pleased to introduce our guest blogger, Emily, and her experience working with her great team of “young curators.”
Greenpoint Iwo Jima
Working six days a week for three years, seven men in Greenpoint constructed what was reportedly the world's largest bronze sculpture. And though it's difficult to determine what exactly qualifies a sculpture as being the largest of its kind -- is it how tall it is, how long, how wide, how heavy -- this sculpture was no doubt huge: 78 feet high and over 100 tons of huge. Or, in human terms, that's about as tall as 10 Shaquille O'Neals and about as heavy as 615 of those same Shaquille O'Neals. But this was not a work of art dedicated to that…
Brooklyn's secret garden?
I love learning about Brooklyn through the BHS Map Collection. Looking at early 19th century maps reveals a very different landscape from our modern Brooklyn, one filled with farms and streets that have long since disappeared. My favorite discovery from this period is Brooklyn's first botanic garden, which was located at the junction of the Jamaica and Flatbush Turnpikes, in what is now the Fort Greene/Prospect Heights area. The garden was created by Andre Parmentier in 1825 and consisted of twenty-four acres, featuring fruit trees and bushes, flowers, and other plants. The following map…
Most Beautiful Grandmother
Nowadays you can enter a contest for practically anything--funniest comedian, best essay, most original song, and the ever popular eating competitions. The Nathans Annual Fourth of July Hot Dog Eating Contest, in which participants race to consume more hotdogs than their competitors in ten minutes, is nearing its centennial--though not without controversy. In 2010, former Nathan's champion Takeru Kobayashi was arrested on a number of charges including trespassing, for storming the stage and engaging in a tussle with police officers…
Beyond Weeksville: An Evening with Genealogist and Author Wilhelmina Kelly, Weds. February 29th, 6:
Please join us on Wednesday, February 29th, for an evening with genealogist and author Wilhelmina Kelly, who will explore the early history of Black Brooklyn through its burial grounds, organizations, and neighborhoods. Kelly will also show participants how to research their own New York roots using resources found at the library. The wine and cheese reception begins at 6:30. Seating is limited to 40 people, with tickets being given out at 6:30. The program will begin at 7:00 p.m.
Emma Toedteberg Bookplate Collection, 1701-1982 (2012.004)
To view the Emma Toedteberg Bookplate collection finding aid click here. If you would like to view any materials from this collection please email library reference to schedule an appointment. "I'm stingy grown What's mine's my own" -motto, unknown bookplate. A bookplate is a label pasted to the inside cover of a book that indicates ownership in a personal or institutional library collection.…
Famous Brooklyn Alumni -- Revealed!
Earlier this week I presented a Brooklyn Collection puzzler for our readers to solve. I presented four blurred-out high school yearbook photographs of now-prominent former Brooklynites, along with a clue to their identity. Hundreds, no, thousands, no, a small number of you responded with your guesses, and now is the moment of truth. Prepare to be amazed! Alumna #1 Clue: This petite, plucky actress was a singer at Lafayette High School, and after graduating in 1964 went on to gain fame not for singing sweet melodies, but for cracking wise on a popular TV sitcom. Answer:…
Storytime
As you mount the granite steps to enter the Central Library, your gaze may be drawn to two imposing columns sculpted by C. Paul Jennewein on each side of the doorway. Look up, and you will see above this entrance an enormous grille that rises some fifty feet, adorned with fifteen panels in black and gold, created by another sculptor, Thomas Hudson, depicting some of the great characters of American literature. The columns and gilded bas-relief panels announce to the visitor that the library is a special…
Famous Brooklyn Alumni
I've been working steadily for the past few weeks to prepare a guide to our Brooklyn yearbook collection, which, as faithful readers will recall, has been mentioned before in the pages of this blog. Knowing that Brooklyn has been home to so many famous people throughout the years, I couldn't help but wonder if we were perhaps sitting on a goldmine of before-they-were-famous photographs of Brooklyn-bred geniuses. Could Woody Allen's (that is, Allen Konigsberg's) senior picture from Midwood High be tucked away in our stacks? How about candid shots of Neils Diamond and Sedaka…
Postscript: the Coney Island House Register
For those of you fascinated by the idea that Poe, Melville and friends might have met at Coney Island, and for those certain they could not possibly have done so, here is a scan of the full page of the hotel register for Wednesday September 5th, 1849.
Map of the Month - February 2012
This month's featured map was created by the prolific Brooklyn surveyor Teunis G. Bergen, who copied it from an "ancient map." According to Bergen, there was no date or surveyor's name on the "ancient map," but it was probably made before 1750. The map roughly covers modern-day Brooklyn Heights south to the Gowanus and shows buildings and names of landowners. Please note that any writing on the map with an asterisk was added by Bergen and not found on the original map. If you're interested in learning more about Bergen, the BHS archive has an amazing collection of his writings and maps.…
Happy Groundhog Day!
Although it has been a bizarrely mild winter thus far, we would be remiss if we failed to seek the wisdom of nature's own weatherman, the groundhog. The news is already out that Staten Island Chuck didn't see his shadow, which ensures we will glide comfortably into spring. Unless you subscribe to the Punxsutawney Phil forecast, which claims we're in for six weeks of real winter weather, the likes of which we have yet to see this year. No need to worry, groundhogs have disagreed before. Dissension among the rodent ranks, 1931. It seems that the general logic behind the…
The Coney Island House Register: a literary mystery
The register of Coney Island's first hotel, Coney Island House, is a hefty volume. Its morocco leather trim, raised bands, gold-leaf detailing and marbled endpapers proclaim it as the record of an establishment that is unpretentious yet of solid worth. Coney Island House was built by the Gravesend and Coney Island Road and Bridge Company on land procured from Court Van Sicklen in the 1820s. Those who know the area today may find it hard to imagine the shore as it must have been then--a wild beach with a single road leading up to it, frequented…
POTW: Boys at Fort Hamilton
It's still full of cats in there.
Details from a photograph of Red Hook's greased-up toughs battling cops with pop guns? Little Dodger fans unhappy to find a heap of Preacher Roe's stinky socks? A dare-devil pilot heading towards his experimental plane at Floyd Bennet Field? Or none of those things? Well, if you said none of those things you'd be right. All of these details come from the same photo, and one which, when I happened upon it, struck me as deeply mysterious. The last detail, below, which occasioned the convergence of all these Brooklynites doesn't help to clear up the riddle either,…
The New Brooklyn Cookbook: Author Talk with Melissa Vaughan and Michael Harlan Turkell, Wednesday, J
Please join us next Wednesday, January 25th, for this latest (and most certainly delicious) installment of our monthly lecture talk series. Author Melissa Vaughan and photographer Michael Harlan Turkell take you on an exciting culinary tour of some of Brooklyn’s most vibrant restaurants, by way of their celebrated collaboration, The New Brooklyn Cookbook. They’ll introduce you to the restaurants, recipes, and entrepreneurs that make Brooklyn dining fit for a King. As an additional treat for this food-centric event, we are happy to have the support of several local…
The Changing Shape of Coney Island
Even with the best of technology and intentions, early mapmakers didn't always get it right. Browsing through the map collection a few weeks ago, I noticed that the shape of one of Brooklyn's most iconic features, Coney Island, appears drastically different from one map to another. While it's easy to think of maps as authoritative, scientific representations of geographic space, looking at these helps me to remember that maps are also interpretative. As such, they are affected by the historical context in which they were created and may reflect biases or contain inaccuracies. Either that, or…
POTW: Furman Street
The Flying Dutchman
When I learned the Brooklyn Connections program had partnered with the Erasmus Campus, I was thrilled to have the opportunity to work in the historic Flatbush institution that boasts an impressive list of alumni, including Barbra Streisand, Neil Diamond, Joseph Barbera (of Hannah-Barbera), chess Grandmaster Bobby Fischer, actress Mae West--just to name a few. On a personal note, it is the school my father attended from 1971 to 1975. Erasmus Hall exterior. Photo by Irving Herzberg, 1957 From outside, the building on Flatbush Avenue resembles a medieval college building in…
POTW: Horse-drawn Carriage
Subway Art
There are transit buffs and then there are transit buffs...and then there is Philip Ashforth Coppola. Coppola's beautifully illustrated and obsessively compiled multi-volume masterpiece, Silver Connections: A Fresh Perspective on the New York Area Subway Systems, is probably my favorite set of books in our collection. And for anyone interested in the history and aesthetics of our city's transit system, they are essential reading, covering as they do the design and artwork of numerous city subway stations. There really are no other books like these. Cover of Volume 1 Cover of Volume 2…
Map of the Month - January 2012
This month's featured map dates from approximately 1776 and shows the routes of American and British troops throughout the New York area before, during, and after the "Engagement on the Heights" of August 27th, 1776. Known alternately as the Battle of Long Island, the Battle of Brooklyn, and the Battle of Brooklyn Heights, this event was a significant moment in the Revolutionary War. Some historical sites relevant to the battle can still be visited today, including Battle Pass in Prospect Park, the Prison Ships Martyrs Monument, and the Old Stone House. Enjoy!…
Birth Records for the Enslaved: 1799-1801
JuneTo find the birth records for Kings County during the 19th century, we usually refer people to the Municipal Archives. There you will find the names of people born in Brooklyn from 1866 to 1909. But here we are fortunate to have some earlier records as well. Donated by St. Francis College some years ago, these microfilmed records span the years 1799 - 1801 and they chronicle births in Flatbush, which at the time was its own municipality. The records are written in meticulous, precise calligraphic handwriting.…
Happy New Year!
As the year comes to an end the staff at Brooklyn Historical Society would like to wish you a very Happy New Year! In honor of New Year’s celebrations this weekend, here is a sample of festive images from Brooklyn’s past.
New Year's Resolution: Take the Plunge
Every New Year's Day morning, when most people are nursing hangovers (or still imbibing the drink that will ensure a hangover, later) dozens upon dozens of hardy souls converge on Coney Island to observe a ritual more than one hundred years in the making -- the annual Coney Island Polar Bears' New Year's Day swim. As Polar Bear Club members will attest, there's nothing like a dip in frigid Atlantic waters on a cold winter's day to get the blood pumping, and as I can personally attest, there's no better way to kick off a new year than an invigorating brush with hypothermia. …
Three Brooklyn Memoirs
The sub-genre of the Brooklyn memoir--often inexpensively self-published in paperback, with little editing--can be a valuable source of information on folk ways, street games and customs, while at the same time fleshing out the bare bones of the borough's history with narrative life. Titles on our shelves that dip into memories of childhood and youth include Michael Gordon's Brooklyn Beginnings. A Geriatrician's Odyssey; Gerald Chatanow and Bernard Schwartz's Another Time Another Place; Mike Getz's Brooklyn Boy: A Memoir; and Estelle Breines Brooklyn Roots. A tale of pickles and egg…
You better watch out, you better not cry...
Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus. And apparently he's been to Brooklyn on many occasions. Early evidence of Santa's presence in Brooklyn can be seen in this 1878 issue of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle. That year, Santa and his reindeer set up his HEADQUARTERS at Rogers, Peet & Co on Fulton Street. Although he was probably quite busy getting ready for his big night, the advertisement goes on to point out that all children were welcome to come visit him. Santa seems to have had similar relationships with several department stores over the years. In…
Can you solve the map mystery?
When I catalog historical maps, I always try to figure out the modern geographic area that they cover, ideally down to the neighborhood level. Usually, I can find the answer, but the following map has me stumped. It likely covers some part of Brooklyn, but that's about as much as I can figure out. So I'm sending this out to all you map sleuths with the hopes that you can solve the mystery. Thanks for your help!
Susan B. Anthony to Laura C. Holloway
In its general look and feel the library's web site may not appear to have changed much in the past week, but under that smooth surface design, a small revolution has taken place: a new content management system will allow Brooklyn Collection staff to effect changes to our web page instead of having it done at one remove. So, here is our first photo of the week--just in case you missed our article on Brooklyn's one and only full matador. And even more exciting, here are the finding aids we have deemed good enough to share. And now that we have a simple way to share them, more…
Literary Brooklyn: Author Talk with Evan Hughes, Weds. December 14th, 6:30pm
Please join us this Wednesday, December 14th, for the latest installment of our monthly series of author talks. This month we are pleased to welcome Evan Hughes, author of Literary Brooklyn. Please note that the program is on the second Wednesday of the month, as opposed to the usual fourth Wednesday, due to the busy holiday season. Literary Brooklyn uncovers the borough's -- and a nation's -- history through the minds of its greatest writers. In it, Hughes not only traces the origins of Brooklyn's contemporary literary scene but illuminates a revealing slice of…
The Lefferts family goes digital
In 2010, the Lefferts historic house donated a rich collection of Lefferts family papers to Brooklyn Historical Society. Included were genealogies, bibles, recipe books, financial papers, personal recollections, and many other documents that offer an intimate glimpse into the lives and labors of one Brooklyn family over four centuries. Thanks to a generous grant from the Leon Levy Foundation, BHS spent much of 2010 and 2011 conserving, organizing, and processing these materials. The goal: to make these unique artifacts available to researchers, students, and museumgoers, and to preserve their…
Walk the Walk
We have a number of prints here in the Collection, most of which come from old issues of Harper's or Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, covering all manner of Brooklyn life. Some of my favorite images come from the Sports folder, showing as they do the great diversity of early sporting activity in the borough. Here we can find young men playing handball in stripped-down handball togs, polo dandies in candy-striped jerseys wrangling their horses around the desired ball, and women in feather-caked hats drawing their bows in Prospect Park archery tournaments. But…
Map of the Month - December 2011
This month's featured map depicts the New York City subway system in 1955. Published by the Union Dime Savings Bank, the map shows various subway lines, stations, and sites of free transfer. Another interesting feature of the map is that it advertises banking by mail, calling it "the quickest and easiest way to open an account." Enjoy!
It's what's for dinner
"Amid wild scenes of face-slapping and hair-pulling, police today quelled a stampede among 3,000 women fighting for places in line... The line had formed as early as 1:30 a.m... some women brought their lunches, their knitting, and their babies." It may sound like the standard consumer zealotry we're accustomed to hearing about this time of the year, as usually sane citizens spend their Thanksgiving vacation camped out for hours, or days, in front of retail stores in hopes of snagging deals on big-screen TVs, videogame systems, and other toys... the kinds of products they'…
Adrian Vanderveer Martense's Lantern Slides
As an intern for the IMLS CHART project, I have been working on scanning and cataloging lantern slides from the Adrian Vanderveer Martense collection. Containing some 130 slides, it is a popular collection at Brooklyn Historical Society, since the photographs depict A.V. Martense (1852-1898), other family members, and extends far beyond the lantern slides. As early Dutch settlers, the Martense family established a homestead and farm in Flatbush, part of which now is Greenwood Cemetery.…
What It Means to Be Hapa
To Brooklyn and Back
Join us this evening as Aziz Rahman of the Brooklyn Film & Arts Festival presents the film, "To Brooklyn and Back - A Mohawk Story" In this hour-long documentary filmmaker Reaghan Tarbell traces her roots from the close-knit community of Kahnawake in Quebec to the bustling community of Mohawk steel workers in Boerum Hill Brooklyn. …
More Brooklyn Navy Yard!
Courtesy of John Cloud and NOAA Central Library, below is an image of the Navy Yard and Wallabout Bay in 1845. According to Cloud, "The gap between 1827 and 1900 was a time when the U.S. Coast Survey was most active in mapping New York Bay and Harbor and the Environs, as they put it." Below "is a crop from the Survey's first published charts of New York, Sheets 1 through 4 in 1844, and Sheets 5 and 6 in 1845. We particularly like how the Survey was attempting to differentiate agriculture in Brooklyn down to symbolizing different crops and farming row techniques in different ways."…
Calling all Teachers!
This winter, our Brooklyn Connections program is proud to present two professional development workshops for NYC teachers. These events are the first in a new series of teacher workshops to be held at the Brooklyn Colleciton during the academic year. Our workshops are open to all teachers in the five boroughs and offer the unqiue opportunity to explore the Brooklyn Colleciton in a small group with our dedicated staff and favorite guest historians. ****************************************************** Local History 101: Brooklyn's Past (and Present) in the Classroom…
Shirley Chisholm Day!
Celebrate Shirley Chisholm Day 11/30/11 by checking out The Shirley Chisholm Project's online collection of oral history interviews with people who knew her well, including Richard Green, founder of the Crown Heights Youth Collective, who worked on Chisholm's campaign; and feminist and journalist Gloria Steinem, who ran as a Chisholm delegate to the 1972 democratic convention. January 25, 2012 will mark the 40th anniversary of Shirley Chisholm's historic run for president, and launch a year-long, borough-wide celebration of this important Brooklynite - stay tuned! Intrepid political leader,…
New Exhibit Opening and Film Program, Weds. November 30th at 6:30pm
IvyPlease join us on the evening of Wednesday, November 30th for the opening of a new exhibit in our display space and a screening of the documentary To Brooklyn and Back: A Mohawk Journey. The exhibit, Brooklyn, Then and Now, is the culmination of the efforts of our summer interns, Kristi and Anastasiya, who worked with us through the Multicultural Internship Program (MIP) for Brooklyn teenagers. After gaining familiarity with our photograph collections, Kristi and Anastasiya picked historic images depicting their own neighborhoods as they were thirty, fifty, or even a hundred years…
Thanksgiving at Emmanuel House
Wallabout Bay and the Brooklyn Navy Yard
Earlier this week, BHS staff toured BLDG 92, the newly opened history center and museum at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. BLDG 92 explores the fascinating and changing history of the Yard, from the Revolutionary War to the present day. In honor of BLDG 92, this post will showcase maps from the BHS collection that feature Wallabout Bay and the Yard. The first map is a reproduction of a portion of Bernard Ratzer's "Plan of the city of New York..." (the Ratzer Map), which was surveyed in 1766 and 1767. This 20th century reproduction was created as an advertisement for the East Brooklyn Savings Bank,…
A Day to Give Thanks
Ronald Klepner, 1950 Thanksgiving, a favorite holiday among the Collection staff, is this week. Thanksgiving dates back to colonial times as a day for religious observance and celebration of the season's harvest. In 1817, it became a legal New York holiday and in 1863, it was proclaimed "a day for national thanksgiving praise and prayer" by President Lincoln. While Thanksgiving was typically observed in November, there were some years in the 19th century where it was held in December. Brooklyn Daily Eagle, November 28, 1883 Since FDR's presidency, it has…
Welcome Home, Soldier.
As World War II came to an end, the Eagle pointed out that "war is not ended with the defeat of the enemy's arms." Life in Brooklyn would continue, but it had to adjust to the return of its brave soldiers. 326,000 men had served in the war, 12% of Brooklyn's total population and, more staggeringly, 58% of Brooklyn's males between the ages of 18 and 37. While Brooklynites were thrilled to have their boys back home, there was a question as to where all of these returning citizens were going to live. Demand for housing was high across…
Otto C. Dreschmeyer's Brooklyn, 1965-1968
The bullfighter from Brooklyn
Among the strange and impressive stories of self-invention that stream out of the streets of Brooklyn, that of Sidney Franklin, a student of Brooklyn's Commerical High School, must be one of the strangest. Franklin was born in 1903 just down the road from here, at 14 Jackson Place, one of those cozy little blocks that run parallel to the numbered avenues, between 16th St and Prospect Avenue. His father, Abram Frumkin, came from Minsk and put in 25 years as a patrolman in the area now known as the 78th precinct--a trajectory perhaps less unusual than his son's, but one that took…
Jungle Fever
https://youtu.be/kZ64smS4Lyk We're getting ready for the 20th anniversary screening of Jungle Fever (1991) at BAM next Tuesday 11/15 7PM. People who haven't seen the film an awhile remember that awesome Stevie Wonder song and that it was Halle Berry's first film role: We're interested in talking about how gender, race, and interracial romance play out in this film and we're curious about how people will receive the film 20 years later - especially a Brooklyn audience who will know why it's particularly relevant that Angie Tucci (Annabella Sciorra) is not only white, "H-bomb," says Cyrus (…
Veteran's Day: Oral Histories from Brooklyn Soldiers
Last year at this time I posted a story on our blog about Private Justin Grishman. He was serving in the Korean War and stationed in Japan, where he worked as a radio operator. Sifting through Eagle clippings and photos from our collection, I tried to piece together the story of a most unique and sentimental request made by the young soldier: he wanted Borough President Cashmore to send him a street sign from the corner of Flatbush and Church Avenues, so that, though half-a-world-away, he could still feel at home. If you watched our new video introducing the Brooklyn Collection this will…
Down with washtubs!
Located on the corner of Fourth Avenue and President Street, Public Bathhouse no. 7 opened in 1910. The structure was designed by Brooklyn resident Raymond F. Almirall, whose works include the Emigrant Savings Bank and four branches of the Brooklyn Public Library; Bushwick, Eastern Parkway, Pacific, and Park Slope. The bath boasted the largest indoor pool in the City and showers for up to two hundred people. Before the days where in-home showers were common and deodorant was a hygienic necessity, bathhouses were used year round as public washing facilities and during the summer,…
Museums and the Common Core: What's Your Role?
Last Tuesday, Brooklyn Historical Society hosted the New York Museum Educators Roundtable (NYCMER) in an event dubbed “Museums and the Common Core: What’s Your Role?” The event was open to NYCMER members and the public and the audience wound up being museum educators from across New York and beyond. Common Core refers to the new Common Core Learning Standards which are being rolled out by the State of New York and the NYCDOE.
Map of the Month - November 2011
This month's featured map dates from 1946 and shows Native American communities in Kings County. It was created by James A. Kelly, who served as the Borough of Brooklyn Historian from 1944 to 1971. If you are interested in learning more about Kelly, his papers are available in the BHS Archives. Enjoy! (View this map as a PDF file to show more detail) Interested in seeing more maps? You can view the BHS map collection anytime during the library's open hours, Wed.-Fri., from 1-5 p.m. No appointment is necessary to view most maps. Our cataloged maps can be searched through BobCat and our map…
Mr. Death
Now is the time when skeletons walk hand-in-hand with Super Marios and candy-hungry princesses trailed by zombie retinues are as regular a sight as dollar vans barreling down Flatbush. October is for lovers of the weird and morbid, and there is perhaps no better setting for our darker speculations than the bone tenanted grounds of a cemetery. In the course of doing research for a patron I came across the story of a lesser-known Brooklyn cemetery, the long-gone Union Cemetery in the Eastern District. It embodies a timely bit of ghoulish history which should serve…
Haunted Brooklyn
During this time of year, with darkness falling earlier and earlier every night, with cold winds whispering under collars and up shirtsleeves, with miniature ghouls and goblins trolling the streets and demanding candy sacrifices, a person's mind quite understandably entertains superstitions of ghosts and hauntings. In a city as aged as New York, it does not take a stretch of the imagination to start seeing ethereal appartitions in the dimmed windows of brownstones, to start hearing centuries-old horse hooves clapping against cobblestones, or to start smelling the decaying rot of…
A response to the Goos Map ...
Bushwick Avenue: A Preservation Plan. Weds Oct 26 at 6:30 P.M.
Students from the Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture and Preservation Planning talk about their research uncovering the rich architectural history of Bushwick Avenue, and the preservation plan they produced as a result. Illustrated talk begins at 7 p.m. Wine and cheese reception precedes the talk at 6:30 p.m. in the Brooklyn Collection Reserve Room, 2nd floor, Central Library, Grand Army Plaza, Brooklyn NY 11238. Seating is limited to 40 people. Tickets will be handed out at 6:30.
The Philanthropist, His Oil, His Institute, and a Library
On October 6, 1887, a humble little advertisement ran in the classifieds column of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle: "Applications for enrollment in classes in mechanical and freehand drawing, designing and modeling, will be received on and after October 10. Class work will begin October 17. Circulars giving general information furnished on request. Personal interviews at office of Institute 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. and 7:30 to 9 P.M." A little over a week later, on October 17, 1887, twelve intrigued students attended the aforementioned drawing class, and thus Pratt Institute was born…
The Double Life of Don Francione
I didn't mean to imply anything sinister by the title of this post about Don Francione. I'm just pointing out that he was able to do something in life that many of us only dream about--to spend our lives doing the things that we love to do. We all know how hard it is to work a full time job and pursue other interests. In New York, it's even more of a challenge because there's always so much to do here; your own creative energy often gets stymied by merely going-out-on-the-town-- 'cause this is one "helluva town." Photographer Don Francione figured out how to do it. Through the small but…
From the 16mm Film Collection: the Library, a Family Affair
In the webpages of this blog, we have never missed an opportunity to praise the efforts of our mother institution, the Brooklyn Public Library. Be it by cheering the library's legacy of bookmobile visits to underserved communities, by drawing attention to the efforts of our staff in difficult economic times, or by noting our various initiatives and collaborations with the Multicultural Internship Program, Project CHART, and Brooklyn Connections, we are unfailingly willing to toot our own horn. Today's post is no exception. From the 16mm film collection, we present…
Digging Deep Into Brooklyn's Past
When I was a child, I was convinced for awhile that I would one day grow up to become an archaeologist. That is of course until I came to the cruel realization that archaeological work tends to involve a lot less of this, and a whole lot more of this. Unlike me, Terry Lymon was deterred neither by the tedium of some archaeological work, nor by a lack of professional training and education in the field, and his papers are one of my favorite collections that we’ve uncovered over the course of the hidden collections project. Little is known about Terry Lymon, a New Jersey native, Brooklyn…
Map of the Month - October 2011
This month's featured map dates from 1666 and covers New Netherland and the English Virginias from Cape Cod to Cape Canrick [i.e. Hatteras]. Attributed to Pieter Goos, this beautiful nautical chart is an excellent example of early cartography and map printing. Enjoy!
Blowing our horn
Today's New York Times article about Rabbi Levi Meisner, master of the shofar and teacher to aspiring shofar blowers of the world, inspired us to seek out shofar experts recorded in our Brooklyn Daily Eagle files. The shofar, a horn trumpet blown to celebrate Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, has been seen and heard more than once on the library's plaza. And we have, it turns out, an embarras de richesse of shofar photographs; in fact if proof were ever needed that the art of blowing the shofar has deep roots in Brooklyn, it is right here in the Eagle files. Here…
Farm maps
On Wednesday, Sept. 21st, BHS held its annual fundraiser Brooklyn Bounty, which is a wonderful event celebrating the borough's food culture and sustainability movements. This year we also displayed historic maps illustrating Brooklyn's farming history and pre-industrial landscape. In this post, I will be highlighting one my favorite maps showcased at Brooklyn Bounty. Titled "Plan of large & small gardens at the Pierrepont Homestead, Brooklyn," this manuscript map was created by William C. Pierrepont in 1821. First, an image of the map in its entirety. Although it may be underwhelming at…
Back in the Days: Author Talk with photographer Jamel Shabazz, Wednesday Sept. 28, 6:30pm
The Brooklyn Collection's lecture series is back from summer hiatus! Please join us for our first author talk of the season, with Jamel Shabazz. This legendary Brooklyn photographer talks about his life and career as he celebrates the 10th anniversary of his book Back in the Days, a photographic look at New York's hip-hop culture during the late seventies and eighties. Wednesday, September 28th, Brooklyn Collection, 2nd Floor, Central Library, 10 Grand Army Plaza, Brooklyn NY 11238 Wine and cheese at 6:30. The talk starts promptly at 7:00. Seating is limited…
Gotta go to Mo's
With nine branches scattered throughout the borough, Modell's sporting goods stores are a familiar sight to most Brooklyn residents. Although the chain's first store opened on Cortlandt Street in Manhattan, Brooklyn played an important role in the company's development. Henry Modell, November 12, 1946 Morris A. Modell founded the company in 1889 as a discount clothing shop. Morris's son Henry inherited the business after his return from World War I, and renamed it Henry Modell & Company. He purchased spare World War I army clothing from the Federal Government at a huge…
Annals of a Brooklyn Cop
Those who read this blog regularly or follow our Twitter feed religiously are no doubt familiar with the diary of public transit enthusiast, Brooklyn Dodger fan, and assiduous scribe of the everday, Arthur Lonto. His daily observations, scrawled in minute cursive or blocky capital letters, range from the mundane to the monumental -- the news that Jackie Robinson debuted as the "FIRST NEGRO to PLAY ON A MAJOR LEAGUE TEAM" shares a page with the less historically important note that Lonto spent the day polishing his family's car. This is the value of diaries as…
What Are You?
Today's guest post is by Jen Chau, founder of Swirl, a multi-ethnic, anti-racist organization that promotes cross-cultural dialogue. "What are you?" is one of those questions like "Where are you from, I mean from from?" that people pose (sometimes ungracefully) when they are curious about someone's racial/ethnic identity. What Are You? is also the title of an upcoming event (Monday, September 26th at 7pm), part of the Crossing Borders, Bridging Generations series, hosted here at the Brooklyn Historical Society and co-sponsored by Loving Day. BHS is learning more about Brooklyn's overlapping…
The Chewing Gum King
1885-1886 Brooklyn Directory In the late 1860s, Thomas Adams carried out a series of experiments with chicle, which is extracted from Mexican Sapota trees, hoping he could make the rubber-like substance into toys, boots or bicycle tires. The trials were a failure. He was just about to throw the chicle into the East River when he remembered that his boss, who was the ex-dictator of Mexico, regularly chewed it. Experimenting by adding sugar, he created a better tasting gum than any other available at that time. How Chewing Gum is Made. Brooklyn Daily…
Map of the Month - September 2011
This month's featured map dates from 1933 and shows the Brooklyn Heights area. Published by the Garden Place Association, this charming map is indexed to show places of interest. Enjoy!
Cropsey's Cap: Discovering Brooklyn's Civil War History
Each semester, the BHS Education Department asks our interns to research at least one object on display and present their findings. I'm very pleased to introduce the following post by guest blogger, Chelsea Trembly, and her excellent research on "Cropsey's Cap," now on display in Inventing Brooklyn.
Thanks, Chelsea!
Cropsey's Cap: Discovering Brooklyn's Civil War History
Teen Genius
Last summer Cecilia put together a great post on the yearbooks of Manual Training High School (once John Jay and now the Secondary School for Law, Journalism, and Research) and, due to a patron request, I had cause to retrieve the boxes housing these books from the morgue once again. I'm happy I did. Along with the Prospect yearbooks, Manual Training also produced a "Literary-Art Issue" of the Prospect, and therein I found a number of striking drawings which serve to illustrate stories, poems, and scripts. Without too much commentary, I figured I'd post some of my favorites along with the…
New Funding Promises a Bright Future for Brooklyn Connections!
The Brooklyn Collection is thrilled to announce that it has received an exciting two-year, $200,000 grant from the New York Life Foundation for the Brooklyn Connections program! With additional generous support from the Morris & Alma Schapiro Fund, the Tiger Baron Foundation and Epstein Teicher Philanthropies, the program will continue to be available at no cost to Brooklyn classrooms through the 2012-13 school year. We are especially pleased to acknowledge this renewed support from New York Life Foundation, whose initial funding made it possible to pilot the program in 2007…
A Lump of the Old Jersey
That infamous hulk, the Old Jersey prison ship, in which upwards of 11,000 American prisoners lost their lives during the Revolution, lay rotting in the Wallabout mud for over a century. And well it deserved to rot. Crowded between airless decks, starved or compelled to eat raw meat and drink filthy water, infected with smallpox, yellow fever and dysentery, the prisoners died by the dozen. Their bodies, hastily thrown into trenches on the shore, were often washed out by the waves at high tide, so that the whole Wallabout beach became a bone-littered charnel house. Among the keys,…
The Eagle Cookbook and the Brooklyn Diet
I first picked up The Eagle Cookbook from 1922 with every intention of writing a blog entry on recipes from the early 1920s. But as I carefully flipped through the pages, I found myself distracted from the recipes by the countless advertisements for pre-packaged, pre-processed and unexpectedly modern grocery items. While the editors proudly present a collection of recipes that were "handed down from generation to generation" in families across the United States and Europe, the advertisements tell a slightly different story about the 1920s Brooklyn diet. For example, you could…
Brooklyn's Imagined Communities
I have always been interested in America's 19th century social reform movements. Maybe it's my Quaker heritage, but I find the history of Utopian communities fascinating and moving. In a century of great change and upheaval, many 19th century Americans sought comfort and stability through community. Whether these groups expressed their identities through conservative or radical ideas, they shared similar desires to live humanely, raise families, and care for each other. To my great surprise, I have found reform groups represented in the BHS map collection. From temperance groups to housing…
Luna Parks Galore
Brooklynology readers will not be fooled by this picture of an ersatz Luna Park culled from my latest holiday snaps. This one is not in Brooklyn, of course, but in Scarborough, an attractive windswept seaside town in North Yorkshire, UK. Our own grand original opened in 1903 and burned down in 1944, but in the interim "Luna Park" became synonymous with "amusement park" across the nation and even further afield. Just as Brooklyn itself has spawned other Brooklyns across the globe, the name Luna Park has become a proxy for places providing imaginative amusement, off-the-…
BHS's New Blog for Brooklyn Bounty
Want to know all of the latest news regarding chefs, food and guests attending this year's Brooklyn Bounty Cocktail Party? Check out BHS's newest blog, Brooklyn Bounty. This year's cocktail party will include tastings of food and drink from Brooklyn growers, chefs and purveyors; historic cocktails in our beautiful library; storytelling by local people from neighborhoods far and wide across Brooklyn; viewings of historical and new maps and materials related to local food and agriculture; a creative silent auction of unique Brooklyn prizes and experiences; and music by The Blue…
Crossing Borders this Fall
Does your family, relationship, or identity cross borders of race, ethnicity, or culture? We're learning more about Brooklyn’s overlapping, interweaving communities. Join the conversation at these upcoming events, on Twitter using #cbbg, and at brooklynhistory.org/cbbg. What Are You? a discussion about mixed heritage Monday, September 26, 2011 7 p.m. Othmer Library, Brooklyn Historical Society 128 Pierrepont Street, Brooklyn Heights Free Participate in this discussion about mixed heritage co-sponsored by Loving Day, a global network fighting racial…
For Those Who Would A-Wheeling Go
Such hyperbole could only come from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, which printed this notice on June 26, 1896, the eve of the grand opening of a new bicycling path connecting Prospect Park to Coney Island. Twenty-thousand cyclists were expected to ride in a parade down Eastern Parkway to the path's head in Prospect Park, with thousands more spectators cheering from the sidelines. Leading the pack was the distinguished Brooklyn Park Commissioner Timothy L. Woodruff, who would later serve as lieutenant governor under Theodore Roosevelt. This photograph by …
Peter Cooper and his Glue
By 1899 Newtown Creek had become so gummed up with pollutants that men could walk atop the water as if it were earth. The odors themselves that hung in the air were so substantial that children could perch upon them as though sitting on the wooden ostriches and horses of a carousel, to circle above the copper smelters, oil tanks, and tallow shops of the creek. And in order to sink pylons for new docks, laborers had to use handsaws to cut holes in the grime-thick water, the gelatinous bricks they extracted being sent off to the candle makers who carved their wares from the…
The Frank J. Trezza Brooklyn Navy Yard Collection
Brooklyn takes to the Skies Part II
When one thinks of Brooklyn, airline travel usually isn't the first thing that comes to mind. But in the late 1940's Brooklyn's business leaders and the Brooklyn Eagle wanted to change all that, and after years of campaigning, the lease was signed to open the first ever Brooklyn Airlines Terminal in the lobby of the Hotel St. George. The new terminal would provide information, ticket and limousine service to Brooklyn executives and vacationers alike. Eight airlines in all were represented in the attractive newly designed…
On the Road with the Eagle
Summer is in full swing and hopefully for many of our readers the word VACATION is coming to mind. While daydreaming of my own escape from the daily grind, I came across a scrapbook in excellent condition that chronicles a journey taken by a group of Brooklynites exactly 92 years ago today. The National Parks Tour, organized by the Eagle, was open to the public and advertised in the paper during the early months of 1919. Headlines such as "Western Cities Rival in Offers of Hospitality to Eagle Tour; Unique Drives Programmed," attempted to lure all of…
Map of the Month - August 2011
This month's featured map shows the village of Williamsburg as it was laid out in 1827, though the map itself was published in 1833. Surveyed by D. Ewen, this map shows names of property owners. Please note that the map is oriented with north to the lower left. Enjoy!
"We Live in Brooklyn, Baby"
Several weeks ago I attended the Roy Ayers concert at SummerStage (here's the live performance) in Central Park. It was a gorgeous evening, with a crowd that probably represented six of the seven continents. When Ayers played Harry Whitaker's song, We Live in Brooklyn, Baby (originally recorded on Ayers' 1971 album, He's Coming), everyone knew it. The entire audience sang in unison "We live in Brooklyn, baby. We're trying to make it, baby. We wanna make it, baby. We're gonna make it, baby." (link to the 1971 version) It was an amazing feeling when we--people from Brooklyn, Manhattan, the…
The Excellent Acoustic Properties of a Sewer; or, Mayor Low's Wild Ride
Raw sewage weighs heavily on the minds of many Brooklynites these days, ever since a massive load of the stuff (about 200 million gallons) was flushed into the Hudson River last week. Four of the city's beaches have been closed due to unsafe levels of bacteria and icky things, including Brooklyn's own Sea Gate Beach. It's unpleasant enough to think about all that voided matter clogging up our river and carrying that awful offal to the ocean, but it's more unbearable still for such a thing to happen during one of the hottest weekends on record. In the…
Beat the Heat! Visit the Brooklyn Collection's New Exhibit!
Looking for an excuse to utilize BPL's air conditioning for a little while longer this week? Why not stop by the Brooklyn Collection to view our latest exhibit from the Brooklyn Connections program: This year, our exhibit focuses on the ways in which our Brooklyn Connections participants became historians while completing research projects on their favorite Brooklyn topics. Each case is dedicated to a step in the research process, from developing an initial question to reflecting on what they learned. Included in this year's exhibit, you will see glimpses of projects…
Road maps
As a little girl, I went on many summer road trips with my family. I distinctly remember my dad plotting our courses with the help of a battered old atlas and a collection of road maps, all of which he kept in the glove compartment of our car. I loved looking at these maps with my dad, who would patiently explain to me the basics of reading a map, from what the legend was to how you could tell where the Appalachian Mountains were by looking at relief. This type of map is one of my favorites, not only for nostalgic reasons, but because it can provide a surprising wealth of information. In this…
HEAT WAVE!
Brooklyn is no stranger to that sadistic summer visitor, the heat wave. But we're tough. We can take it. We know how to cope. And because the Central Library is a designated cooling center here in the borough, and since just visualizing something cold can help ease the pain, I figured I'd share some photos from our collection of Brooklynites taking summer's worst in stride. Who cares about the heat? Not this quintet of Coney Island bathers; dashing into the surf are, left to right, Frances Friedenthal, Lee Krush, Maureen Haver, Nettie Thomas, and Bea Resnikoff. Small fry…
Gardens of Brooklyn Part II: Victory Gardens
In the 1930s, Relief Gardens, also called Subsistence Gardens, run by the Works Progress Administration (WPA) helped hundreds of Brooklyn Families put food on the table in the depths of the Great Depression. In 1944, President Roosevelt called on all Americans to grow gardens to help compensate for the increased food requirements of forces at the fronts during World War II. The Civilian Defense Volunteer Office (CDVO) encouraged people to plant vegetable gardens, facilitating the use of vacant land, and educating gardeners into the mysteries of crop rotations and…
Historypin in Brooklyn
Our talented and hardworking intern from the Multicultural Internship Program has been pinning at a great rate. Check out what's up there already. And for those not yet familiar with Historypin, five minutes of exploration will unlock most of the mysteries of the site. The little icon that looks like an eyeball with a line through it is the key to seeing then and now images. Just move the little red dot up and down. It's magic!
No Ancestry.com in Reserve Room July 25-29 due to Storycorps interviews
The Brooklyn Collection will be partnering with Storycorps for Brooklyn Week from Monday July 25 to Friday July 29. Interviews will be held in the Reserve Room of the Brooklyn Collection on the Second floor of the Central Library. If you are interested in participating, or would like to learn more about the project, please contact StoryCorps at: 646-723-7020 ext. 27 or at: nyc+brooklynweek@storycorps.org Interviews can be scheduled for anytime during the hours listed below. Monday, July 25th: 12pm - 6pm Tuesday, July 26th: 10am - 4pm Wednesday, July 27th: 10am - 4pm Thursday,…
Gardens of Brooklyn Part I: 1930s WPA Subsistence Gardens.
Long gone are the days when, according to Gertrude Lefferts Vanderbilt, "The head of every family in Flatbush, with few exceptions, was a farmer...they cultivated their land in the most careful manner, and were among the best farmers in the state." Still, even in the 1880s, market gardeners of Kings County sent considerable amounts of food to the tables of New York City. But by 1900 a precipitous rise in development entailed a corresponding decline in the amount of available farmland. By 1924 there were 24 farms left in Brooklyn, by 1930 only 11, but the depression and World War…
Rumble on the Docks: teen warfare hits Brooklyn
The Nits, the Jolly Stompers, the Brewery Rats, the Tigers, the Presidents, the Shamrocks, the Beavers, the Midtowners, the Robins, the Majesties, the Garfield Gang, the South Brooklyn Boys, the Socialistic Gents, the Midget Socialistic Gents, the Bishops, and the Hawks; ranging from intimidating to clever to unexpectedly silly, these names struck dread in the hearts of policeman, civic leaders, teachers, and Brooklynites of every stripe. These were the names of just a few of the gangs of adolescent boys and girls who turned the borough into their battleground in the 1950s. …
Information for Busy People: The Brooklyn Eagle Library
The Proposed Constitution of the State of New York; Full Report of the Proceedings of the 80th Annual Meeting of the American Board; The New Primary Law; Brooklyn Church Semi Centennial; Directory of Educational Institutions; Mortgage Tax Law; Life Insurance; The War Revenue Bill. Not exactly beach reading, is it? And yet I can see him now, our anthropomorphized Brooklyn eagle, from whose library these titles come, under a parasol on Jones Beach, zinc on his beak, poring over the new Sanitary Code of the Board of Health, totally absorbed, waves lapping his talons, a cold soda wrapped in his…
The 1977 Blackout
On July 13, 1977 at 9:34 pm, the lights went out in New York. This wasn’t the first blackout in New York City—the “where were you when the lights went out?” blackout of 1965 was a fairly recent memory—and it wouldn’t be the last, but it did leave an indelible mark. Caused by a series of lightning strikes to various components of the city’s electrical generation, transmission, and distribution system, the blackout left parts of New York without electricity for up to 24 hours. Per an article by Victor K. McElheny from the July 16, 1977 edition of The New York Times, “one factor in the slowness…
July 11th-July 14th 1977: The Week a Little Girl was Born in Flatbush, Brooklyn and the Lights Went Out Across NYC
This post was written by Chantal Valencia Lawrence, a recent volunteer at BHS and a Brooklyn native. When I think of the 1977 Blackout that took place in New York City from July 13th-14th, I reminisce about a ritual that my mother would perform annually on July 11th. On this day in 1977, my mother, grandmother and the maternity staff of Brooklyn Jewish Hospital and Medical Center welcomed a baby girl named Chantal into the world at 4:05pm. From my birth in 1977 till her death in 1993, my mother would pull out an old photo album that contained an article from The Star newspaper and read to…
StoryCorps at the Brooklyn Collection: July 25th - July 29th
We are very happy to announce a new partnership with StoryCorps, a national nonprofit oral history organization. During Brooklyn Week, which runs from July 25th to the 29th, we will team up to record the stories and experiences of everyday people who live and work in the borough. If you are interested in participating, or would like to learn more about the project, please contact StoryCorps at: 646-723-7020 ext. 27 or at: nyc%2Bbrooklynweek@storycorps.org Interviews can be scheduled for anytime during the hours listed below. Monday, July 25th: 12pm - 6pm Tuesday,…
Map of the Month - July 2011
This month's featured map dates from 1889 and shows Long Island, including political divisions and railroads. It was published by the prolific firm of G.W. & C.B. Colton, who were located at 172 William Street in Manhattan. Enjoy!
Taking it to the Streets: Bookmobiles and Brooklyn
It is a happy day for public libraries across the city! Another nerve-wracking round of budget negotiations has come to a close, with the city of New York restoring record amounts of funding to the New York Public Library, Queens Public Library, and our very own Brooklyn Public Library. After months of tireless advocacy efforts by library staff and supporters, this celebratory moment seems an opportune time to put our feet up, munch on some popcorn, and think back on the good work we do here. Roll the clip! This film, Who Grows in Brooklyn, is part of the Brooklyn…
Introducing College Students to the Joys of Archival Research
Mapping the Heights
For the last two weeks, I've been cataloging 19th century manuscript maps of Brooklyn Heights. These maps represent our collection's earliest detailed views of the area; they show property ownership, street and waterfront development, businesses and more. I am very excited to be sharing one of these beautiful maps. The following map was hand-drawn by William C. Pierrepont in 1825. It covers the area north from Joralemon St. to Waring St. and east from the East River to Fulton St. Although the map mainly shows Hezekiah B. Pierrepont's property, it also shows sold lots, S. Jackson's Wharf,…
Brooklyn takes to the Skies. Part I
Mrs. Virginia Mullen - Miss Brooklyn Aviation 1947 By 1945 the World War II was winding down, and the population of Brooklyn had swelled to nearly 3 million residents, many of whom were eager to travel. In this atmosphere the business and civic community decided to gauge the public's feelings about travel, especially air travel, and to see if the time was right for a new centrally-located state-of-the art Air-Rail-Bus Terminal, that would whisk…
Chris Webber talks about James W.C. Pennington, Fugitive Slave and Black Abolitionist. Tonight!
Tonight, Wednesday June 22, 2011 in the Brooklyn Collection, second floor Central Library. Only the first 40 attendees will be seated. Tickets will be handed out at 6:30 P.M. and only people with tickets will be allowed in. This is a new method of preventing overcrowding in our small Reserve Room location. Refreshments will be served between 6:30 and 7 P.M.
New Eagle Online tutorial narrated by resident Brit
How weird is that? A Brit showing people how to navigate the Brooklyn Daily Eagle Online! I detect a northern twang. But do look for more Youtube tutorials coming soon on all aspects of the Brooklyn Collection's web offerings--to be narrated in a rich variety of voices.
19th Century Kitchen Tools: Lecture by Harry Rosenblum
From the annals of Brooklyn's musical history: BAM in the early 1930s
Stars of the musical firmament blazed over Brooklyn during the concert seasons from 1930 to 1934 in concerts arranged under the auspices of the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences, which at that time included the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM). Sergei Rachmaninoff, Fritz Kreisler, Paul Robeson, tenor Roland Hayes, The Fisk Jubilee Singers, and pianists Walter Gieseking, Robert Goldsand and Jose Iturbi all performed at BAM, as did Australian pianist and composer Percy Grainger, by then a naturalized American living in White Plains. The Brooklyn Daily Eagle files hold…
Anthony Fiala: Soldier, Explorer, Artist
If the three piece suit and rifle don't make you a believer, maybe a few headlines will convince you that Anthony Fiala, in his own time and in his own way, was one bad dude. New York Times May 6, 1928 Brooklyn Daily Eagle October 13, 1922 Brooklyn Daily Eagle February 8, 1928 Brooklyn Daily Eagle August 29, 1927 Ok, maybe racing canoes is a stretch, but the following clipping, which appears beneath the page-long and inch-high headline: "Fiala Plans Hunt for Live Mammoths in Siberia" from a 1927 Eagle may just provide the best glimpse of this man's character.…
BHS Celebrates Loving Day All Year
It's #AskArchivists Day!
Were you aware that today is International Archives Day? On this day in 1948, the International Council on Archives was created by the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), charged with the mission to "promote the management and use of records and archives, and the preservation of the archival heritage of humanity around the world." Today is a day when archives all over the world can toot their respective horns to raise awareness of the myriad of collections they have to offer. With enough of us tooting, we hope to raise a veritable…
A Season to Forget: 1951 Scandal Mars LIU Basketball Program, by Nora Almeida
Our guest blogger this week is Nora Almeida, whom we're happy to have working with us through the Project CHART grant. Nora recently digitized the crime photographs collection from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle files, and turned up this story in the process. People love a scandal—particularly a public scandal involving the rich and famous. A few weeks ago, the front page of the Sunday New York Times ran a story called “The Gossip Machine,” which exposed just how lucrative the gossip industry has become thanks to our ever growing “appetite for dirt.…
Map of the Month - June 2011
This month's featured map dates from 1892 and shows a design for Bushwick Park, now called Maria Hernandez Park. The BHS collection has similar maps of Carroll Park, City Park (now Commodore Barry Park), Winthrop Park (now Msgr. Mcgolrick Park), and Tompkins Park (now Herbert Von King Park). Enjoy!
The Brooklyn Shore
Once described as the "nation's playground," (well, at least in the image above) the Brooklyn shore used to be the hot place to holiday. Except, back then, it was less Snooki, and more on par with a holiday Monsieur Hulot would take. As the BHS archives and photograph collection survey project enters its second summer, we've uncovered much in our collections, as well as uncovered so much Brooklyn history. The photograph collection tells volumes about Brooklyn. For example, beginning in the 1820s, but largely from the 1880s to the 1930s, people vacationed in Brooklyn--and not just tourists.…
Ex Lab Preps Students for College
As the Ex Lab students put the finishing touches on their exhibit, Christina Valdez took a moment to share some of the ways working on Ex Lab has helped her prepare for the challenges of college.
Thanks, Christina!
Open to the Ideas of Others Working on Ex Lab
The Brooklyn Bridge Centennial: Party like it's 1983!
May 24th, 1883 is a date that looms large in Brooklyn history; it is the birthdate of this borough's beloved icon, the Brooklyn Bridge. Over the past 128 years, the bridge has been immortalized dozens of times over, in countless studied histories and gorgeous photography books that aim to capture both its cultural impact and its architectural grace. The bridge's popularity extends far beyond this borough, as well. On any weekend the bridge is glutted with tourists from all over the globe snapping pictures, and we've heard that even aliens like…
Raising Brooklyn: An Illustrated Talk by Tamara Mose Brown, Wednesday May 25th, 7pm
Tamara Mose Brown discusses her new book Raising Brooklyn which offers an in-depth look at the daily lives of women of Caribbean descent who provide childcare for white middle- and upper-middleclass families, examining the roles they play in the families whose children they help to raise. Though at first glance these childcare providers appear isolated and exploited -- and this is the case for many -- Mose Brown shows that their daily interactions in the social spaces they create allow their collective lives and cultural identities to flourish. Research for the book was largely…
Racing across Brooklyn
In honor of the Brooklyn Half Marathon, we've uploaded a portion of a film from the BHS collections, entitled Walking Race: Heel and Toe Artists Hoof it to Coney Island. It shows a group of men race walking across the Brooklyn Bridge, as well as the arrival of the winner in Coney Island. The silent film is from a 16mm reel that was made around 1930 and found at a garage sale in the 1990s. The reel also contains a series of similar (but not Brooklyn-related) newsreel-style clips, all of which were recently conserved and digitized with a grant from the National Film Preservation Foundation.…
Brooklyn by any other name ...
Recently, I was speaking with Julie Golia, our public historian, who wanted to know if we had early maps that showed different spellings of the name Brooklyn. As I was looking through the collection to identify the most interesting spellings, I was surprised by the variations in nomenclature for our area. But I think I speak for most Brooklynites when I say that whether it's the Dutch "Breuckelen" or the anglicized "Brookland," we just call it home.…
From Records to Data: Seeing and sharing digital cultural heritage collections differently with Reco
Recollection is a free and open source web application for generating and customizing views, allowing scholars, librarians and curators to explore digital collections in novel and intuitive ways. This demonstration by Trevor Owens, Digital Archivist at the Library of Congress, will show how content can be ingested from spreadsheets, sets of MODS records, or RSS and Atom feeds, and then used to generate a range of interactive visualizations. Funded by the IMLS CHART Project Thursday May 19, 2011, 3:00 P.M.-4:30 P.M. Dweck Center, Central Library, 10 Grand Army Plaza, Brooklyn NY 11238
Out in the Cold: Part II
Before turning the page on Brooklyn's own polar explorer, I figured we might as well give the good doctor his full due and take a look at a few other items in our collection related to his life and work. In going through the materials related to Frederick A. Cook one photograph jumped out at me immediately. Having lived in Bushwick and having worked at the DeKalb branch for 2 years, I was more than a little excited to find this: Though the area surrounding it today looks different, there was no mistaking that this was the same three-story red brick mansion still standing in the shadows…
Defying Fate: the macabre antics of Brooklyn's Thirteen Club
"It never before looked as it did last night. It never will again. The blinds were drawn, the only light being from a dozen candles, which flickered in burnished holders, placed around a big coffin in the center of the room. The walls were draped in black. Grinning skulls beamed down upon the bones which were strewn along the coffin top, and the figure of a skeleton dangled from an invisible wire..." Thirteen gentlemen in long black robes solemnly marched into the chamber and seated themselves around the immense coffin; their leader seated at the head, and a…
Green Spaces and Moody Places
Out in the Cold: Part I
A portion of the Leslie's page -- a little hard to see. I couldn't get a good scan of the September 30, 1909 page from Leslie's Weekly which I wanted to show you, so I'll try to describe it: in the upper left hand corner there is a photo taken from the back row of a fairground bandstand looking out at a string of promenading milk cows; beside it, in the upper right hand corner of the page, is a photo of a tubby U.S. President tomahawking the air with his right hand as he delivers a speech on the postal service from a bunting-swathed stage; beneath that photo, center-right of the page, is a…
Bicycling in Brooklyn
As you may know, it's bike month in the U.S. and Brooklyn cyclists and our streets tend to be big participants. Once again, I'd like to highlight more of the photographs from our historic collection that depict the bikes of our past. As you'll see, not much has changed. People still take their bikes to picnic in Prospect Park, lounge by the beach, and trek over our many bridges. Happy Bike Month everyone -- be sure to check out the many activities going on: http://bikemonthnyc.org/events
How sweet it was...
Let us consider for a moment that fount of dietary evil, refined sugar. A cursory search today brings up hundreds of web sites decrying the noxious effects of sugar upon health. One site lists 146 different ways the seductive crystals can make your life a misery, from causing arthritis and asthma to bringing on toxemia and eczema. The industry's apologists back in 1916 thought otherwise. One unnamed English "expert" is quoted as saying, "There have been few more important additions to our dietary, or which have done more to promote the health of the rising generation, than our…
The Invention of Brownstone Brooklyn: An Illustrated Talk by Suleiman Osman, Weds May 11, 7 P.M.
Considered among the city's most notorious slums in the 1940s and 1950s, brownstone Brooklyn by the 1980s had become a post-industrial landscape of hip bars, yoga studios and beautifully renovated town houses. Author Suleiman Osman, Assistant Professor of American Studies at George Washington University, discusses his new book, offering a groundbreaking history of this transformation. Brooklyn Collection, 2nd floor, Central Library, 10 Grand Army Plaza, Brooklyn NY 11238 Wine and cheese at 6:30 P.M. The talk starts promptly at 7 P.M.
Map of the Month - May 2011
This month's featured map dates from 1896 and shows the Bay Ridge Channel, Red Hook Channel, Buttermilk Channel, Gowanus Canal, and Gowanus Creek Channel. Created to accompany the annual report of H.M. Adams of the U.S. Corps of Engineers, the map documents the Corps' planned improvements to the area. Enjoy!
The Answer to All of Life's Problems
The Brooklyn Daily Eagle was, for its entire run of over 100 years, a fount of crucial information for Brooklynites. Covering news both local and global, it was a busy newspaper serving a busy metropolis. But the Eagle was not content to merely report on the outer world; it wanted to tackle the thorny issues of the inner world as well. Or so we can assume, once this headline began appearing in 1933. Although these are questions many people struggle over for several years, if not an entire lifetime, the Eagle sought to solve these conundrums for its readers once and for…
Tearin' It Up
This past summer I had the opportunity to teach a collage class. This four week workshop sponsored by the Brooklyn Collection and AMMS (the Arts, Media, Music and Sports Division) was open to anybody of any age and skill level, from accomplished artists to absolute beginners. The overarching theme was "What I like about Brooklyn." To get things started we looked at the wonderful collage panels of Romare Bearden called "The Block," his homage to Harlem. Following in Bearden's footsteps, our intrepid group, which ranged from ages 8…
Inventing This Year’s Ex Lab Exhibit: People, Stages, Progress
This spring, BHS's fifth annual Exhibition Laboratory after-school museum studies program is underway. The fourteen participating high school students are hard at work co-curating BHS's newest exhibit. A few of the students wanted to give you the inside scoop on what it's been like to work on the project. It's my pleasure to introduce guest blogger, Brooklyn Technical High School junior Neil Alacha. Thanks, Neil! Inventing This Year’s Ex Lab Exhibit: People, Stages, Progress…
Hispanic Genealogical Society of New York to present on April 27th
Charlie Fourquet of the Hispanic Genealogical Society of New York will give a free illustrated talk on how to explore your Hispanic roots here in the Brooklyn Collection, second floor, Central Library, on Wednesday April 27, 2011 from 7-8 p.m. Wine and cheese will be served from 6:30 to 7.
Guide to African-American Archival Materials at Othmer Library
In February, I first posted a new document to Emma, Brooklyn Historical Society’s catablog: the Guide to African-American History Archival Material at the Othmer Library. You might be interested in knowing a little of the context for this Guide. The Guide is an early outcome of the In Pursuit of Freedom project. Those readers who keep up on BHS’s many doings are already aware of the project. For those unfamiliar with it, In Pursuit is a multi-faceted public history project memorializing the history of abolitionism, anti-slavery and the Underground Railroad in Brooklyn. It aims to provide new…
Gertrude Hoffman, Outlaw Dancer
I wrapped up last week's introduction to the early 20th century dancer, Gertrude Hoffman, with a promise of more tales of scandal and glamour to come. As usual, a trip to "the morgue" unearthed several gems from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Gertrude Hoffman made her first major impression on New York audiences in 1908, when a debacle erupted over her interpretation of the "Salome" dance at Oscar Hammerstein's Roof Garden in Manhattan. The dance was based on the biblical story of the execution of John the Baptist; more to the dismay of prudish audiences, it…
Kosher for Passover
During the 1960s and 70s, amateur photographer Irving I. Herzberg spent his Sundays among the Hasidim of Williamsburg becoming a familiar and trusted figure in the community. While his interests were varied, ranging from subway scenes to the Coney Island boardwalk, Herzberg's Williamsburg photographs are among the most cherished in our collection, attracting ongoing interest among the descendants and friends of many of the subjects. To celebrate the season, here is a selection of Herzberg's Passover photographs. To see almost all the Herzbergs in the Brooklyn Collection, click…
Are You Related to Royals?
House Hunting, 1800s Style
When I first moved to NYC, I was fascinated by the real estate ads posted in shop windows. Whenever I passed by one, I was compelled to stop and gawk at where I could be living. Of course, I knew I couldn't afford a $2 million townhouse in Park Slope, but it was nice to dream of having 3 bedrooms and room for a dog! As I've discovered from working with the map collection at BHS, posting real estate advertisements around the city is not a new phenomenon. Our collection has a substantial amount of 19th century auction maps that show property for sale throughout Brooklyn. These maps demonstrate…
Introducing Gertrude Hoffman
Ladies and gentleman, we are pleased to present to you, appearing for the first time on this stage, with athletic abilities that will amaze you and natural grace that will charm you, the internationally famous, world renowned and much beloved... ...Gertrude Hoffman! Here at the Brooklyn Collection, we are fortunate to house the personal papers, photographs and scrapbooks of the early 20th-century dancer, Gertrude Hoffman. Her name may not roll as readily off the tongue as that of Ruth St. Denis or Isadora Duncan in a discussion of modern dance pioneers, but she was…
Happy National Bookmobile Day!
Though we're a little late to the party on this one, the BHS library and archives staff would like to wish everyone a very happy National Bookmobile Day! Designated as the Wednesday of the American Library Association's (ALA) annual National Library Week, National Bookmobile Day celebrates the vital role that bookmobiles and other direct-delivery outreach services play in providing underserved communities with access to valuable library and information resources. Here's an image from our postcard collection of some young residents of the Glenwood Houses checking out books from the Brooklyn…
From the annals of Brooklyn's musical history: The Tollefsens.
Carl Tollefsen and his wife, Augusta Schnabel-Tollefsen residing at 946 President Street, stood at the center of Brooklyn's musical life for upwards of four decades in the first half of the 20th century. Tollefsen was born--to my utmost surprise-- in my home town of Hull, UK, in 1882, immigrating to the U.S. at the age of 6. Founder of the Brooklyn Chamber Music Society, an active music school and the Tollefsen Trio, Carl Tollefsen was also a storied collector of musical instruments and manuscripts. His manuscript finds included early versions of one of Schumann's best-known…
In Like a Lion, and Out Like a Lamb?
Summers of Fear
Summertime--the name alone conjures up images of days filled with fun and freedom. Warm lazy days spent at the beach, or by the pool eating ice cream, going to the amusement park, or catching fireflies. The daily pace slows down just a little and childhood takes on a more carefree feeling. But as a new decade began, summertime in the 1950's was anything but carefree for Brooklyn families. Something had stolen the "joie de vivre." It was the continuing threat of infantile paralysis, or polio. Polio slowly…
Map of the Month - April 2011
This month marks the Civil War Sesquicentennial. In honor of this event, I would like to showcase one of our Civil War maps. Published in 1961 for the Centennial Celebrations, it shows major troop movements, battle sites, and portraits of important figures. It also features historical commentary and illustrations of flags, artillery, and uniforms. If you’d like to view more Civil War-related items, you can search the BHS collections or preview the National Archives’ upcoming exhibit Discovering the Civil War.…
The Reverend Obadiah Holmes Clock at the Brooklyn Historical Society
I received an email some three years ago about a clock that was rumored to be standing in the main floor of the library at the Brooklyn Historical Society. The person asking happened to be a descendent of the original owner of this clock (which was given to the Long Island Historical Society (now known as the Brooklyn Historical Society) in May of 1869. I looked downstairs and saw no clock and could not recall ever having seen a clock (except for the plastic one on the ref desk) in my tenure at BHS. After a bit more head scratching, card catalog searching, and widespread questioning I located…
A VERY QUIET FURY
Very few photos exist of the little-known anarchist, vegetarian, and amateur photographer Heinrich Bollinger. Unlike his more celebrated comrades -- Johann Most, Alexander Berkman, and Emma Goldman, who all lived in Manhattan and with whom he consorted -- Bollinger spent his entire Brooklyn life living in an old stone house near Coney Island. His life, oddly enough for a self-professed anarchist, was a quiet one: he earned his daily bread selling sand worms and renting boats. Bollinger collected the stones for his house just off the shores of Coney Island, enlisting the help of local…
A Few of my Favorite Maps
This past year I’ve had my hands on many different maps. As one of the map catalogers for our CLIR Hidden Collections grant I’ve gone through and closely examined much of our collection. Every map is interesting and historically valuable, but some have stuck in my mind more than others. Yes, I have favorites. These are not necessarily the rarest or most valuable pieces in our collection – they’re just maps I’ve had fun poring over. I hope you enjoy them too.…
The Loneliness of the Skyscraper Window-Washer
"He was strapped to a window frame just a few feet under the huge clock. The cold of a November morning swept away from the gilded dome of the Williamsburgh Savings Bank above him. He shifted his weight. The wind snapped at the chamois strung around his neck. Below, toy-like cars and tiny figures wove a crazy pattern in front of the Long Island Rail Road station." This vivid, poetic storyline from the November 16, 1952 issue of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle describes not the antics of some real-life Spiderman, but rather the daily grind of one humble 34-year-old…
Is it un-American for mothers to work?
There is no question that World War II had a major impact on the role of women in the work place. Brooklyn's female task force was no exception to this trend--particularly given the amount of labor needed at the Brooklyn Navy Yard "to make the weapons to beat the Axis." For many, the choice to seek employment meant sacrifice--particularly when children were involved. Enter the Mayor's Committee on Wartime Care of Children. It was the duty of the committee to provide support, advice and childcare options for "temporary widows" (i.e. wives of soldiers)…
Gentrifiers and Nannies: two new books, two upcoming author talks
The intermittent stream of new books with significant content relating to Brooklyn has recently delivered to our desks two substantial volumes that will be of interest to our readers. Suleiman Osman's The Invention of Brownstone Brooklyn: Gentrification and the Search for Authenticity in Postwar New York (New York: Oxford University Press, 2011) offers a history of Brownstone Brooklyn's transformation from the run-down slums of the 1940s and 1950s to the current landscape of beautifully renovated houses and apartments selling for millions of dollars. The "…
Worth 1,000 words and sometimes a smile
I always enjoy working with the photography collection, and finding an unusual or unexpected image tends to make my day. The sentiment of the majority of portraits from the late 19th and early 20th centuries could lead you to believe that very few people had fun in those days. With scant smiles and rigid posture, how could they? So, here are some examples from the BHS photo collection to prove that notion wrong. Take this portrait of an alumni association known as the Old First Class of Wilson Street School (now P.S. 16 in Williamsburg). At quick glance, it's just a group of middle-aged men…
Una Furtiva Lagrima
Enrico Caruso's golden chord, which kept the world so enthralled, first began to fade at the Academy of Music in Brooklyn on December 11th 1920. There, in the first act of Donizetti's opera, L'Elisir d'Amore, leaning on the shoulder of whichever chorus member happened to be closest to him, Caruso filled handkerchief after handkerchief with blood as he struggled to sing through the pain of a hemorrhaged vessel in his throat. During a prolonged 45 minute intermission Caruso was examined by his physician and forbidden from continuing with his performance. As the intermission dragged on, the…
High Iron
Last December, the Landmark Preservation Commission proposed to designate a section of Downtown Brooklyn as the “Borough Hall Skyscraper District.” The buildings in the district, described here, were mostly built between 1901 and 1927, when Brooklyn was believed to have a future as a financial hub, but the district also includes landmark status for Borough Hall, where at one time the old Mayor of Brooklyn held office - so if it is a strange mis-characterization to refer to any part of Brooklyn as a "Skyscraper District" - as if Brooklyn ever cared for skyscrapers - at least the district…
Brooklyn's Vitaphone Studios
Jack Benny about 1930. The woman on the right may be Mary Livingstone, Jack Benny's wife and comedy partner. The photograph collections of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle are stored in two locations in the library: the 30,000 or so showing Brooklyn scenes are maintained for convenience in file cabinets in a small room close to the Brooklyn Collection reading room. These are the images that are most in demand with our patrons, and it is these that we have made available online where copyright issues permitted. At some time in the distant past these photographs must have been separated…
The Joy of Processing: a peek into the Bernard Green Collection
Composer, writer, and fan of mothers everywhere, Bernard Green (bottom, with telephone) and associate. In our Brooklynology articles, we often draw from several sources to flesh out each story about Brooklyn history, including our prints collection, our ephemera files, reference books, and the Brooklyn Daily Eagle photographs and clippings. These are the same materials that we are most often serving to the researching public that visits the Brooklyn Collection. A feedback loop begins to emerge -- a researcher requests Eagle photographs, for…
Map of the Month - March 2011
I'm very excited to introduce "Map of the Month," a new feature on the BHS Blog. Every month, we will showcase a different map from our collection, from subway maps of the 1940s to property maps of the 1820s. Look for our featured maps on the 1st Monday of every month. For March, I'm starting with a personal favorite. This map dates from approximately 1684 and shows New Netherland and New England. It is attributed to Nicholas Visscher and is lavishly illustrated, containing drawings of wildlife and Native American villages, as well as a view of New Amsterdam. Enjoy!…
Students and Faculty in the Archives
Connecting to Universities The Brooklyn Historical Society has officially kicked off our Students and Faculty in the Archives (SAFA) project. The BHS has long been committed to introducing students of all ages and backgrounds to our remarkable facilities and collections. SAFA is a three-year, US Department of Education Fund for the Improvement of Post Secondary Education (FIPSE) grant that will create a replicable pedagogical model for collaboration between museums like BHS and institutions of higher learning. In the first year, we will be working with local partners from New York…
Handsome Devils, or, Whiskers and the Men Who Wore Them
As we on the CLIR survey team have discovered in the hundreds of photographs we have encountered since beginning our work last April, the gentlemen and ladies who strolled the streets of 19th-century Brooklyn took great care to stay up on the hottest fashions of the day. For the gents, this often involved the sporting of some truly impressive and daring facial hair styles. I thought I might take this opportunity to share but a modest sampling of the mustaches, beards, and sideburns that have evoked our admiration and/or bewilderment. Let these photographs be a testament to the hidden power…
How photos get from the archives to the web site by Micah Vandegrift
The Brooklyn Collection is a goldmine of resources for teaching and learning the history of our borough. As you probably know, we have extensive collections of documents, ephemera and photographs that are housed here at the Central Library and made available for research. What you may not know is that there are ongoing efforts to digitize our materials in order to make them more widely accessible through our website and across the internet. So how does it all happen? Previous digitization projects--using LSTA funds to digitize 18,000 photographs, or the IMLS project to scan…
The Duke
The Yankees had Mickey Mantle, the Giants had Willie Mays, and dem Bums had the Duke. From 1947 to 1957 New York City experienced a golden age of baseball, and the play of these three centerfielders made for some of the headiest rivalries the sport has ever seen. For ten out of those eleven years, at least one New York team made the World Series, with the Yankees and Dodgers meeting six times. On each of those Dodgers teams, Duke Snider was as valuable as his cross-river counterparts, usually leading the club in base hits, runs, home runs, and RBIs. On Sunday February 27th, this titan of…
Of Equal Rights and Legal Forms
We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal.... Even before the ink used to write the Declaration of Independence dried on the paper, it was clear that these stirring words reflected both the promise and the paradox of America: that while the unalienable rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness might form the very foundation of our nation, many Americans would also be systematically denied their equality and their rights. The promise has often been realized: the abolition of slavery, the extension of the vote to women, the elimination of restrictions…
Presidents Don't Use Rain Delays
On October 21, 1944, as heavy rain and autumn winds pelted the five boroughs, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, approaching an election for an historic fourth term, toured through fifty-one miles of New York City streets in a large motorcade. With his wife Eleanor at his side, the aging President defied terrible weather to greet his fellow Americans from an open car (and sometimes without a hat). "There was no doubt," the Times wrote, "that he wanted to be seen by as many New Yorkers as possible." For Brooklyn, considered one of FDR's…
Memories of MetroTech
Days of Wine and Onions: Garrett & Co and Virginia Dare
Original Virginia Dare Extract Company invoice for flavorings dated Apr 15, 1936. Brooklyn Public Library--Brooklyn Collection. One of the more interesting companies to have occupied premises in Bush Terminal is Garrett & Co, makers of Virginia Dare wine and flavoring extracts. Long-time readers of Brooklynology may remember a post called the Grapes of Brooklyn in which I drew attention to early efforts at viticulture and wine-making in Brooklyn. Garrett & Co kept the flag of Kings County oenology flying for 45 years, from its quarters in Building 10 in the…
A Taste of The Lefferts Collection
One of the most fun aspects of working with the Lefferts family papers for me was getting to see some of the cookbooks the collection contained. In particular, the handmade and handwritten cookbook that likely belonged to Maria Lott Lefferts (1786-1865) with some possible contribution from her daughter Gertrude Lefferts Vanderbilt (1824-1902).
Dodger Babies
Here at the Brooklyn Collection, we have a large collection of photographs of Brooklyn's much-missed local baseball team, the Dodgers. These are mostly images snapped by Brooklyn Daily Eagle photographers, depicting the players on the field, at training camps, and in locker rooms -- their faces flushed and euphoric with victory, or grim with defeat. Though these images are fascinating -- especially for a Brooklyn transplant like me, who never knew the borough's glory days of hometeam baseball -- I've become more engrossed by the photographs of the players'…
Black News
I floated a Twitter balloon the other week looking for feedback from our followers regarding topics they might like to see us cover here on Brooklynology. Of our 754 devotees (and I use that word loosely) only three responded; but their suggestions were all excellent and deserving of our attention. Of the three which you can see above I decided to address @brooklynhistory's request for more 20th century posts first -- and not merely because we are kindred cultural institutions (@brooklynhistory is the Twitter account for the Brooklyn Historical Society)…
The Battle of Long Island in Maps
I was in Greenwood Cemetery a couple months ago and spent some time lounging in my favorite spot: Battle Hill. Doesn’t it have the greatest view? I could sit there for hours. The history of Battle Hill is just as interesting as the view. It was here that Maryland troops kept the British forces distracted while Washington evacuated the rest of his army to Manhattan. We have a few maps in our collection that cover this battle, and I thought I’d take the opportunity to post a couple now.…
From the Ephemera Files: an Imperfect Paradise in Brooklyn
Walking into work today, I overheard the plaintive cry of a cabin-fevered fellow Brooklynite, "Ah, why can't it be just be warm outside?!" Grimly, inwardly, I had to agree with her helpless complaint. Facing the icy depths of February, the mind can't help but wonder if there's a happier place. A warm, welcoming place, with bright sunshine, sandy beaches, luxury accommodations, and maybe even world-class entertainment to round out a glorious day in paradise. A place like... Manhattan Beach! Browsing through our ephemera files, I found this…
The Blizzard of 1888
Interested in seeing more photos from BHS' collection? Visit our online image gallery. Use this database to search for individual photographs. Currently a small number of our images are available online, but we regularly add new photographs. You can also visit BHS' Othmer Library Wed-Fri, 1-5pm to search through our entire collection of images.
The Many Faces of Henry Ward Beecher
In the pages of the nineteenth century illustrated magazines, certain Brooklyn-related subjects seem to have been of perennial interest. One was the Brooklyn Navy Yard, a huge source of prestige and employment for the city (as it was until consolidation with New York City 1898.) Another was the controversial figure of Henry Ward Beecher. A thoroughly respectful engraving depicting the young HWB. From the Drawing Room Gallery of Eminent Personages, [c.1860] From his early days as a slim young preacher, to his more corpulent middle-aged presence as a master of oratory and Pastor of Plymouth…
Archives and Religion
As anyone who’s spent an afternoon looking through one of the archival collections at the Brooklyn Historical Society undoubtedly knows, archival research is an imaginative exercise. Scrapbooks, ledgers, letters, pamphlets, record books, collectibles, photos – such things work primarily to provoke the imagination, pointing to the human activity that may have produced them. And if one is willing to take the time to look carefully through them, archives can show us important things about a particular historical social world: what was important to the people in that world, where some of their…
White Wings and Dream Stuff
In the summer of 1951 New York City was a marijuana jungle. From underpasses in the Bronx to empty lots on Avenue X, the razor-toothed fronds of 10 foot tall Cannabis sativa plants could be seen all around the city happily waving in the wind like any other innocuous and legal weed. But for all their persistence in invading the city's forgotten horticultural corners, these plants were likely waving farewell: New York was no friend to pot. Over the course of the summer about 41,000 pounds of marijuana were uprooted and destroyed during a campaign to eradicate the psychotropic stuff from…
The Demon Barber of Brooklyn
He struck without warning, descending quickly upon unsuspecting adolescent girls and committing his dastardly deed with one efficient stroke. Before the victims even had a chance to cry out, his evil work was finished, and the bandit disappeared deftly into the bustling Brooklyn street crowds with his prize in hand... a fistful of hair. In the late 19th century, the man who would be known as "Jack the Snipper" allegedly lopped off the braids and pigtails of nearly a dozen young girls in Brooklyn and Manhattan. His bizarre crimes sparked a minor hysteria among the teenagers…
Pfizer Family Products--a Window Into The 1950s, by guest blogger Christine Modica.
Recently a friend of the family, who was something of a collector, passed away. Among the items he had accumulated over the years, my mother found a box of Pfizer medicines in near perfect condition, labeled “Family Products.” The contents include: • Visine eye drops • Viterra vitamins and minerals. “A smaller capsule for your convenience’ • Terramucin Ointment for minor burns, wounds or abrasions • Candettes cough syrup • Candettes cold tablets • Candettes cough-jel • ACM “New Improved” •…
The Ratzer Map 1770
Listen to historian Barnet Schecter, author of The Battle for New York: The City at the Heart of the American Revolution, and conservator Jon Derow discuss the historical importance of this rare and recently conserved map of New York City made by Bernard Ratzer in the late 1760s.
You can read more about the Ratzer map in this recent article in The New York Times (1/16/2011).
The Tale of January 1871
The Brooklyn Historical Society has a largely complete run of the Proceedings of the Board of Aldermen of the City of Brooklyn—bound volumes for much of the late nineteenth-century that detail the week-by-week proceedings of the Brooklyn city government. The Tale of January 1871 So what can the Proceedings provide for the researcher?—I thought it would be fun to find out. I decided to look at just one month, January 1871, in the volume that covers proceedings From January 2 to June 26, 1871. I found a bunch of entertaining incidents that illustrate Brooklyn in 1871 -- the Street Commissioner…
More than just a pretty map
Recently, I was speaking to a woman about what I do. After I told her that I work with maps, she responded, I love maps! They're so beautiful. I'd love to get a framed one for my living room. To me, this comment highlights a shift in the way that we view maps. Now that we live in the era of GPS and Google Maps, the printed map has become more valued for its aesthetics than its functional capabilities. This is not necessarily a bad thing, but it made me want to highlight some of the maps in our collection that I think are interesting because of the data that they impart, as opposed to the way…
Fort Greene / Clinton Hill Audio Tour
Strange as it May Seem
Long before "The Tonight Show" started featuring "Headlines", (the segment of the show running humorous advertisements and signs sent in from around the country), the Brooklyn Daily Eagle had a similar column. "Strange as it May Seem" highlighted images the Eagle photographers had taken of amusing and peculiar signs around Brooklyn. Here are a few from the Fall of 1933. …
When the Boro's Milk Vanished
In the early 1950s, with post-war families booming across the United States, no single food item may have been as important as milk. This was certainly the case in Brooklyn, where milk was needed to feed infants and supply children with necessary nutrients. Milk was even a key ingredient in many housewives' favorite recipes--everything from meatloaf to tuna casserole to chicken pot pies to pound cake needed milk! Demand for milk was so high that dairies had production and distribution plants right here in the borough. Borden's, Sheffield's and other familiar names were…
Engineering Love
As the Archives Survey Team enters into our ninth month on the CLIR survey project, we've had our share of surveying interesting archival collections, be they large or small. Recently we've come across a surprisingly fantastic little collection, the Brooklyn Engineer's Club publications (ARC.156). As you may have realized by now, we here at BHS love our Brooklyn architecture. But this collection reminds us that behind every great building, structure, or city infrastructure project, stands an engineer. Forever in the shadows of architects who get all the love and adoration (especially today),…
E.W. Bliss Co: Torpedoes and Telegraph Codes
Among the much-appreciated gifts that have found their way to my desk in recent weeks, is one from Michael D. Barber of Leeds, U.K. Mr Barber's parcel contained a 1901 catalogue of the products made by Brooklyn's E.W. Bliss Co, bearing a bookplate from the "Projectile Co. (1902) Ltd, of New Road, Wandsworth, S.W., sole agents for E.W. Bliss Co, , Brooklyn, NY, Presses, Dies and Special Machinery." There must have been a ready market for Bliss products in industrial West Yorkshire, and so it is in no way strange that the 534 page catalogue of heavy machinery should have…
Hit Parade, January 4, 1947
It's been a while since we dipped into the Diary of Arthur Lonto. Mr Lonto wasn't one for expressing on paper his innermost thoughts. His entries are all comings and goings, working and mending and studying and paying bills and going to mass and taking the subway for the fun of it. And then, now and again, he gives us the hit parade. In case it's hard to read his handwriting, here is what we might have been listening to at this time back in 1947. 1-Buttermilk Sky 2-Old Lamplighter 3- For Sentimental Reasons 4-Gal in Calico 5 Zippity Doo da 6- Whole World's Singing My Songs 7-…
Big Appetites, Little Pizzas
Brooklyn is justifiably world famous as a hot spot for delicious pizza, so much so that we even have our own style of pizza--thin-crusted slices cut so big you can fold them in half while you eat them. The borough is peppered, or, perhaps, "pepperonied", with beloved neighborhood pizza joints serving quality slices to loyal fans, who debate endlessly over which excellent pizza place is the best pizza place. And if you haven't yet known the pleasures of a coal-fired Totonno's slice, a fresh-from-the-oven DiFara's pie, or a delightfully doughy L & B…
Happy New Year from BHS!
In honor of upcoming New Year's celebrations, here is a sample of "celebratory" images from Brooklyn's past. Happy New Year everyone!
A Class Sister Act
During the period between the 1930's and 1950's the entertainment field was filled with many talented sister vocal groups. There were the McGuire Sisters from Ohio, the King Sisters from Utah, the DeCastro Sisters all the way from Havana, Cuba, and the Andrew Sisters from Minnesota. Not to be outdone, the borough of Kings was represented in song by the Five DeMarco Sisters who began their career in the 1940's as teenagers. The sisters got their start when their father…
Celebrate Forefathers Day!
My favorite holiday of the year is nearly upon us, and I think the time is right for a celebratory BHS blog post! Sure, while there are many holidays populating the month of December, I think we can all agree that there is one that obviously outshines all the others. That day, of course, comes on December 22nd, when we unite in celebration of Forefathers Day, the anniversary of the Pilgrims’ landing at Plymouth Rock in 1620!
Irving Herzberg and the Plane Crash of 1960
New York City accomodates all juxtapositions. Spend enough time here and no two things paired together, however odd, will seem unusual. This is the city where nothing can be out of place however willy-nilly the arrangement may be: from the gently surreal sight of a coyote cowering beneath a SUV in Manhattan, to the more terrible and spectral image of ash covered workers wandering the daytime streets of the Financial District. Whether it is welcome or not, the city will make room for it. But for all this open-armed receptiveness -- allowing this or that to suddenly and irrevocably appear and…
A Brooklyn Child's Christmas List, 1953
In November 1953, Abraham & Straus Department Store opened its annual holiday Toyland with a party for children from the Brooklyn School Settlement. Activities included visits with Santa, music by an accordion quartet, a doll fashion show, and an appearance by local child "movie star" Richie Andrusco at a "Coke-Tail" party in the store's restaurant. But the biggest moment of the day was when the children took a first look at Toyland intself. As the Eagle reported, the children from the Settlement "lost themselves." Even a movie star like…
Brooklyn Air Disaster, December 16, 1960
I remember first coming across a box with the label "Brooklyn Air Disaster, December 16, 1960, Scrapbook" a couple of years ago. Of course with a title like that I had to open and view the contents. I was shocked then to learn that there had been a plane crash on Seventh Avenue and Sterling Place, right in the middle of Park Slope Brooklyn. Since then we have from time to time gotten reference questions asking about the exact location of the crash. Now that the 50th anniversary is approaching this Thursday, the questions have increased.…
A Movement Grows In Brooklyn. The Civil Rights and Black Power Movements. Wed Dec 15 2010, 7:00 p.m.
Brooklyn was the location of one of the most important northern urban civil rights movements of the 1960s. Brian Purnell will describe the activities and impact of the Congress for Racial Equality (CORE) in Brooklyn, where protesters and activists demanded jobs, improved schools, clean neighborhoods and citizenship rights. Brian Purnell is Assistant Professor of Africana Studies at Bowdoin College. Refreshments will be served from 6:30 to 7 p.m. Brooklyn Collection, 2nd floor, Central Library, 10 Grand Army Plaza, Brooklyn NY 11238.
Gimme Coffee!
Listed in the 1900 Trow Business Directory for Brooklyn and Queens between Coal Miners & Shippers and Coffin Dealers (which listing precedes the now-connotatively-complicated Coke Dealers) you'll find listings for the cleaners, polishers, purveyors, importers, and roasters of coffee. At this time in Brooklyn there were 6 Coffee Cleaners and Polishers; 2 dealers in or makers of Essence of Coffee; 7 Coffee Importers; 9 Coffee Roasters; and 1 dealer in Coffee Pots, Tea Pots & Urns. Not yet listed among these caffeinated capitalists was the name of Edward Dannemiller, a Canton, Ohio…
Church of the Saviour
Patricia had a great post recently discussing Brooklyn architecture and architects materials among the Historical Society’s collections. Brooklyn was once characterized as “the city of homes and churches” and while Patricia’s post certainly pointed out some examples of homes and commercial buildings exemplifying a portion of the range of Brooklyn’s architecture, I wanted to focus on a specific instance of the latter half of that characterization with a great example of Brooklyn’s church architecture in our collections. While working on the records of the First Unitarian Congregational Society…
The Night the Lights Went Out in Brooklyn
It was February of 1946. Brooklynites were recovering from years of privation and separation brought on by the only recently ended World War II. Servicemen and women were readjusting to civilian life in the warm bosom of their families just as winter was seizing the borough in its usual icy grip. And then, on February 7th, Mayor William O'Dwyer declared a state of emergency in the city, ordering strict rationing of coal and fuel oil. Four days later, another proclamation from O'Dwyer ordered all "motion picture houses, theaters, night clubs, bars and grills,…
Calling Fort Greene / Clinton Hill
In Search of the Brooklyn Gridiron
Having watched a lot of football in my formative years, particularly as a college student, I am always in search of local football stories. Yes, we have two professional teams to root for here in New York. Yet, sometimes the distance to New Jersey takes away that "hometown" feel - hence my desire to search for traces of actual Brooklyn ball in our collection. (I should take a moment to note that not everyone feels as I do. For my neighbors who honor every Giants game with a party and backyard BBQ, the NJ/NY divide is no such hurdle.) The early…
Repeal Day is this Sunday!
For those of you who are unaware, let me tell you that Sunday is an important date in United States history. Sunday is Repeal Day. 77 years ago on December 7, 1933 the 21st Amendment reversed the 18th Amendment enforced by the Volstead Act and referred to as the Noble Experiment, the Great Illusion, and possibly some other names I should not list here. The 21st Amendment ended 13 years of illegal activity related to the sale, distribution, and public consumption of alcohol. If the culture of New York City was anything like it is today, how could our pickled residents of yore have…
Apple Pie
Of all the wonderful foods that are made for Thanksgiving, apple pie is my favorite. New York State produces about 29 million bushels annually, and some of that harvest winds up at the Green Market here at Grand Army Plaza. At other markets too, New York's farmers proudly advertise mouth-watering varieties such as…
152 Henry Street
152 Henry Street, a four story red-bricked Greek Revival multiple dwelling, could be the last Single Room Occupancy in Brooklyn Heights from the 19th century.
Floyd, the Tippling Turtle at the Toddy Inn
In 1954 when this photograph was taken, Floyd the turtle had been making annual springtime visits to the Toddy Inn at 7913 Fifth Avenue in Bay Ridge for over twenty years, since 1933. The turtle migrated annually from his hibernation spot in a nearby back yard to the floor under a particular booth in the tavern, where he stayed for a week, taking naps and short walks around the bar. Then out he went, not to be seen again until the next year. According to tavern legend, it all began when a customer brought Floyd into the bar in 1933 along with two other pet turtles. At…
Other Brooklyns--a Postscript
Brooklynology readers may not remember a post about other Brooklyns written in September 2009 that has so far drawn zero comments except for the daily computer-generated spamming from a shoe company I will not name, because that is what they want. "Cheers for sharing these helpful content material! Hope that you simply just just will carry on accomplishing advantageous file this type of as this." Or, more thought-provokingly: "We've got loved searching the content material." The end of that post described the "Brooklyn Adopts Breuckelen Project" which…
Artist and Artifact exhibit - artists interpret Brooklyn's history
BHS is really excited about our new exhibit, Artist & Artifact: Re|Visioning Brooklyn's Past, presented in partnership with our neighbor BRIC Rotunda Gallery, the contemporary art space of BRIC Arts|Media|Bklyn.
Of Hair Pins and Independents: Brooklyn's Lady Bowlers
As the days grow colder in autumn's inexorable march toward winter, a lady's fancy turns to... bowling. Or mine does, anyway, because my bowling league's season is winding down, and I'll have just a few more chances to hurl my trusty ten pound ball before we adjourn for the holidays. Ours is a co-ed league, and every week I'm impressed at the grace and skill of my fellow female pin-toppers. It leads me to wonder: How long have women been bowling? A trip to our Brooklyn Daily Eagle clippings files turned up some interesting answers. Lady of the lanes -- …
Tourist maps
First off, let me admit that I am new to New York. I've been in the city for almost a year, and while I've learned to navigate the streets pretty well, sometimes I still turn a corner and find myself hopelessly lost. So I am very sympathetic to all the tourists wandering around BHS and Brooklyn Heights, struggling to find their way. Unfortunately for tourists, Brooklyn Heights does not have a great deal of signage to help them find the neighborhood's landmarks, or even the way to the Promenade or the Brooklyn Bridge. In response to this, a professor from Parsons the New School of Design gave…
VETERANS DAY: BROOKLYN IN KOREA
From the Battle of Brooklyn to the building of battleships at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, Brooklynites are no strangers to the demands of war. And as any soldier deployed abroad can surely attest, one of the most familiar feelings brought on by military service is one of homesickness. Looking for some sign of home while stationed in Japan in 1951, one Brooklyn-bred soldier, Private Justin Grishman, took it upon himself to write a letter to the Eagle requesting just that -- a sign -- a street sign to be exact. Says Pvt. Justin Grishman, 45 Martense St., who is now in Korea, 'I would like a street…
Brooklyn Life Magazine, 1890-1931
= WHAT DID SHE MEAN? -- MR DE BOER: Miss Emma, perhaps I ought not to call during Lent, for I understand you deny yourself all amusement. MISS E: Yes, I do Mr. de Boer. Come as often as you like. Genealogists and others who come to the Brooklyn Collection are often familiar with the Brooklyn Daily Eagle in its various forms--online, microfilm, morgue. But the Brooklyn Collection carries many other serials on microfilm, including 63 local newspapers. Lacking an index, these are of little use unless researchers know the date of the article they are seeking. But Brooklyn Life…
Emma Toedteberg, Librarian Extraordinaire
Part of what I love about working as an archivist is getting to peek in at lives of the past, and getting to know the Brooklynites who walked the streets decades, and centuries, before us. What’s even better (and yes, even nerdier) is learning about a woman who helped build the collections at BHS that we use today. A few months ago, my teammate Patricia and I surveyed a collection from BHS’s third librarian, Emma Toedteberg. If you’re a regular patron of the archives, then you may have already heard of Emma—she’s the namesake of our catablog. Her collection is slim, but it gives us some…
Wild About Maison Foffe
Venison, anyone? How about some wild pheasant? No, this ghastly tableau doesn't depict a horrible roadkill incident but, rather, an invitation to dinner. Decades ahead of the current trends of locally-sourced food and organic meats, Alfred Foffe was serving wild game in his tony Brooklyn Heights restaurant, Maison Foffe. These suspended carcasses signal to those in the know that Foffe is back from his annual hunting trip with a menu of fresh-from-the-wild animals to serve his customers. The story of the Foffe family's establishment as Brooklyn restaurant…
Everything Bagel
When I began to write this post, it was going to be just about bagels. It will still be about bagels, dear reader, however, I've added something very special to the end. It's worth the wait, I promise! The Brooklyn Collection must be thinking about food lately -- specifically round breads with a hole in the middle. Tara wrote a fantastic post about the doughnut and now I'm writing about the bagel. While the bagel was not an original Brooklyn creation, we're close enough to the Lower East Side to practically have a mirrored history. Immigrants who moved…
So Long, Brooklyn.....Hello, Brooklyn. A Farewell post from Tara.
It feels bittersweet that my time in Brooklyn is coming to an end, as I am moving to Australia with my husband to have a child and begin a new life chapter. I will certainly miss my job as the Research Assistant in the Brooklyn Collection, and the pleasures of discovering fascinating Little-Known Brooklyn Residents in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle Morgue. My days of unearthing photos of cats dressed up in princess outfits, pipe-organs in apartments, and youthful treasure hunters are behind me, and I will remember these days fondly. Happy days working in the morgue Although there is…
Tonight! October 27th at 6:30pm BUSHWICK FARMS: Imagined Genealogies and Conceptual History.
What happens when art meets history and genealogy? Tara Cuthbert and Stuart Solzberg, creators of the Bushwick Farms project, will describe their ongoing art project as it nears the end of one phase and enters another, in an illustrated talk at 7 p.m. on Wednesday October 27th in the Brooklyn Collection, Central Library. Click here to learn more and prepare to be surprised and delighted. As usual, we will ply you with astonishingly good cheese and wine starting at 6:30 p.m. before you take your seat.
And They're Off! - Part 2
In this second part of And They're Off we look at the role that the racing industry played in establishing the Sheepshead Bay African-American community and the First Baptist Church of Sheepshead Bay. …
Brooklyn Architecture and Architects
As part of the CLIR team surveying the archival, manuscript, and photography collections at BHS, we’ve come across several collections that document either iconic Brooklyn architecture or local Brooklyn architects. With the recent conclusion of the 8th annual Open House New York, I’ve been thinking about architecture, the multitude of buildings I encounter everyday, and my relationship with them. From the Hotel St. George where the subway lets me out in the morning, to the George B. Post landmarked building I work in at BHS, to the sprawling Concord Village I walk past everyday on my way to…
Project CHART - Digitizing Brooklyn History
Brooklynology is pleased to welcome Micah Vandegrift for this guest post. Micah is the Coordinator for Project CHART (Cultural Heritage Access Research and Technology) at Brooklyn Public Library where he will be supervising interns in the digitization of historic photographs, and co-managing CHART's development as a cultural heritage curriculum. Looks like Bedford these days too! View this image in our catalog. It is not difficult to imagine what Brooklyn would have looked like in the recent past. Many of the buildings, landmarks and neighborhoods retain the characteristics of…
Centenarian Faity Tuttle!
BHS is happy to see Brooklynite Esther Leeming "Faity" Tuttle celebrated in The New York Times among fellow centenarians! Hear Faity talk about John's Group, a playgroup for children in Prospect Park, Brooklyn accents, and how John narrowly avoided being struck by the 1960 plane crash in Park Slope: Faity was born in 1911 and she grew up in Brooklyn Heights, on Henry Street. She became a professional actress, appearing on Broadway with Humphrey Bogart, among others. In 1944, she moved to Park Slope with her husband, Ben, and their three children. She's a longtime supporter of the Brooklyn…
Pictorial Maps
I love a good pictorial map. When maps use pictures, rather than symbols or text, to show points of interest, it always adds a little something for me. Sometimes the "something" is humor, sometimes it's a better sense of the map's time and place. Below, a few examples from our collection.
Drama on the High Seas
A colleague here at BHS recently informed me that the National Archives of the UK has made its collection of Royal Navy surgeons' journals entirely accessible online. This immediately reminded me of a small collection of nautical journals that the CLIR team recently uncovered, in which a ship's surgeon is also featured, only not quite in the way you'd think. The journals were kept by Henry W. Dodge, a New Yorker who served on a number of highly-publicized expeditions to explore the Arctic before passing away suddenly in a saloon on Fulton Street in 1874. His journal kept aboard the…
Move over Costco
Stores like BJ's and Costco have brought to many present-day Brooklynites an irresistible combination of consumer emotions, making us feel simultaneously rich and frugal by allowing us to cram our tiny New York City dwellings with discounted consumer goods. For maybe seventy percent of the regular price, plus the price of your annual membership, you can lay up industrial quantities of frozen cod fillets, kitchen towels, and bottles of detergent so large you can barely lift them. You can buy two dozen eggs at once and watch them ageing in the…
Little-Known Brooklyn Residents: Birthday Dancers Joseph Notarfrancesco and Laura Louise Ottomanelli
On October 12, 1951, the Brooklyn Daily Eagle reported that the family of 89 year-old Joseph Notarfrancesco caught him climbing onto his garage roof with the intent of making repairs with a hammer. His family urged him down in a hurry, concerned that he should not be doing such activities at his age. "Pop can't stand still," his granddaughter said, "...he always has a hammer in his hand." The Eagle reported "...for a nonagenarian the elderly man is indeed active. He reads avidly, writes letters, goes to church every Sunday, and even dances the rhumba." Just two days later on his 90th birthday…
Map Scam?
Here at BHS, my job is to catalog maps. We have a wonderful collection of Brooklyn maps from the 1700s to the present; however, when I first started looking at the collection, I noticed that some of the maps were very similar to each other. So similar, in fact, that if you were just casually glancing at them, you'd think they were duplicates. In particular, I became interested in a group of maps of Brooklyn published by A. Brown in the 1860s and 1870s; 3 maps, with virtually identical content...what was going on? Turns out, producing maps in the 1800s was very expensive, and map publishers…
Found in the Morgue: Efforts to Elevate the Humble Doughnut
The humble doughnut is often considered lowly food in the landscape of American snacks. During the 1940s and 1950s several efforts were made to elevate the status of the doughnut, and the Morgue of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle records these efforts well. Following are three examples found in the Morgue photo files. In 1955, Miss America's Wanda Jennings was the spokesperson for a nationwide campaign to "encourage housewives to serve families more nutritious snacks." Doughnuts and milk were promoted as "Wholesome Pals" -- "a good nutritious food and all important mid-morning or…
Delicious: The Event
Last night BHS' trivia event whipped more than 120 trivia buffs into a frenzy. We covered the gamut from Biggie Smalls to shuttle stops and team "Culver Express" proved unstoppable. Congrats to our winners and thanks to everyone who came. Perhaps you'll all want to swing by BPL tonight for an encore? From trivia to delectable local food, BHS isn't stopping anytime soon. If you are a fan of the borough's amazing fare, you'll want to join us this coming Thursday, October 7 for Brooklyn Bounty, our fall fundraiser that celebrates local food makers. Red Hook Winery, Brooklyn Brewery, Madiba…
Vanquish your neighbors, win prizes: The Brooklyn Trivia Challenge
TONIGHT! Wednesday, September 29th 7:00 p.m., 6:30 for wine and cheese Something must be in the air, some twin wind blowing and doubling everything up; in another instance of eerie coincidence, it looks like we have, unbeknownst to us, planned a trivia night the evening after a similar event is slated to be held at the Brooklyn Historical Society. Oh well. I guess good things come in pairs, especially if you love rattling your brain trying to answer questions about Brooklyn history. And besides, anyone who knows Brooklyn knows that one trivia night could never get at all of the strange…
The Atlantic Antic
The Atlantic Antic, Brooklyn's largest street fair, stretches along Atlantic Avenue from Hicks Street to Fourth Avenue. This Sunday (the 26th) will be the 36th year of the event. Some photos in our collection show the table that BHS had at the Antic in 1977 - the fourth year of the fair. BHS was still called the Long Island Historical Society, because we didn't change our name until the mid-1980s. Our display that year was in front of the old Independence Savings Bank building, which is now Trader Joe's. These days, the event draws crowds of more than a million people, with all kinds of food…
Little-Known Brooklyn Businesses. S. Gumpert & Co.
When first I pulled this recipe booklet from S. Gumpert & Co. out of its file, the synthetic orange and pink sherbert colors of the cover illustration suggested a company that manufactured cheap water ices. But to open the booklet at any page was to realize that in this instance, Gumpert's interest was less in the ices themselves but in their ingredients. A glance at a recipe shows that this sorbet is destined for no puny domestic freezer. The secret to fine water ices, it turns out, is a substance produced by the Gumpert Company called "Textor."…
Little-Known Brooklyn Residents: Parrot Fanciers Jeremiah O'Shea and William Musella
Jeremiah O'Shea, a 1950 Red Hook resident, owned a parrot with a special talent -- the ability to swear in four languages. When Jeremiah made a trip to the pet store for birdseed one morning, he returned to find his front door open and his parrot Polly missing from her cage. He searched the neighborhood and the police investigated too, with no success. Almost a month later two teens were pulled up for causing a disturbance and after police questioning, the teens admitted that they had broken into Jeremiah's home and sold Polly to another local bird fancier. To O'Shea's delight Polly was…
School days of Brooklyn's past
The passing of Labor Day is always a sign that fall is near and school is back in session. All of the excited students—and the not-so-excited students—I’ve seen with backpacks and books this week got me thinking about school items the CLIR team has found during the survey of archival, manuscript, and photography collections. While you can browse yearbooks from Brooklyn schools in the Othmer Library, family papers and manuscript collections also have photographs, homework, and ephemera that give us an idea of what school was like in Brooklyn way-back-when. The James Atkins Noyes collection…
Ephemera #2: All hail the fastener, that master of combination and order.
Not being a part of the things which it binds, a fastener is neither here nor there. Unless it's not there but needs to be, or it's breaking down and shouldn't be, a fastener usually goes unnoticed. It's an entirely forgettable little piece of hardware in this world, but not in the least is a fastener inconsequential. On the contrary, it can be the very thing upon which consequence depends. After all, if it weren't for those two staples punched into the 12 months of your wall calendar, would October really follow September? We should pause to thank those puny, bendable wickets for they…
Four Must-See Exhibits
Time Out New York has named BHS' exhibit Painting Brooklyn Stories of Immigration & Survival as one of Four Must-See Exhibits this Fall! Opening Reception: Thursday, September 16. 5:30 - 7:30 pm. Exhibit dates: September 17 – February 27, 2011
Mystery surrounds Society's second librarian...
Reading Brooklynology's great post on our first librarian, Henry R. Stiles, inspired us to post about our second librarian, George Hannah. From 1863 to 1889 George served as head librarian of the Society.
Brooklyn Weddings
Sometimes you can't ignore a good coincidence. Around the time that I was planning my own wedding, I opened a drawer in the Eagle morgue labeled "unsorted." Inside I found lovely ladies smiling up at me, some in wedding gowns and some who looked as if they were posing for school photos. Reading through them, I found that they were all wedding and engagement photos! We have since rehoused the images in folders and will be listing them so that anyone wanting to add to their family photo album may be able to find an image or two here at the Brooklyn…
Seen from Brooklyn, September 11, 2001. Photographs by Anders Goldfarb.
From 1072 Lorimer St, Brooklyn, 9:10 a.m. Near Flatbush Ave, crowds walking home. Williamsburg, Brooklyn, on Bedford Ave northside Corner of Calyer St and Manhattan Ave, Greenpoint, Brooklyn
Un-hiding our Collections
I am beyond thrilled to be writing a post to tell you about a grant the BHS library received a few months back from the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR). The grant, awarded as a part of the CLIR Hidden Collections program and funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, will make possible a project called Uncovering the Secrets of Brooklyn's 19th Century Past: Creation to Consolidation. It is a big and exciting project for us to undertake. Over the next two years, we will be working to catalog many, many maps and survey and catalog a huge array of materials in our archival,…
Little-Known Brooklyn Businesses. The Bilnor Corporation
In the 1950’s the Bilnor Corporation was a leading manufacturer of swimming pools and water toys. From their location at 300 Morgan Avenue in East Williamsburg, they turned out summertime recreational products made from plastic. In 1954 they expanded upon their seasonal merchandise by creating portable ice rinks. Made of Krene, (a popular plastic developed in the 1940's) these winter weather contraptions required only water and freezing temperatures. "Ice Rink In a Package -- A new portable ice…
Ephemera #1: Locks, Olives, and Hats
We have filing cabinets full of ephemera -- campaign materials, menus, ticket stubs, old library cards, beer coasters -- all the typical daily detritus which, through our careful selection and preservation, we have saved from the trash bin. But a filing cabinet is no place for what are, more often than not, strikingly designed historical materials. So in an attempt to air out these easily overlooked treasures, we here at the Brooklyn Collection will start posting images of our favorite flotsam and jetsam every week to offer an unglossed peek at some of the surviving bits…
Gentrification in Fort Greene
Check out Story #1 on this City of Memory tour! You'll find a painting by Nina Talbot and oral history interview from the Weeksville Heritage Center's collections which are both featured in BHS' upcoming exhibit Painting Brooklyn Stories of Immigration and Survival which opens here Thursday, September 16. Curated by Nina Talbot, painter, in collaboration with Rachel Bernstein, public historian at New York University, the exhibit presents striking stories of Brooklyn residents through paintings, oral histories, poetry and personal effects. These different modes of expression offer multiple…
Brooklyn, Then and Now Exhibit....curated by teen interns.
Stop by the Brooklyn Collection to view our new exhibit, "Brooklyn, Then and Now." This new exhibit was curated by our teen interns, Arelis and Eva, who joined us this summer through the Multicultural Internship Program. We were very lucky to have two eager interns help us with tasks throughout the collection. Their primary project was to create a series of "Then and Now" pairs, which match a historic image from our collection with a photograph taken from the exact same spot today. From day one, Arelis and Eva helped us with this project by…
Leprosy on Kingston Avenue
Although many have heard of Kings County Hospital, the huge medical center that sits right in the middle of Brooklyn between New York and Utica Avenues, few now remember the name of the Kingston Avenue Hospital, which occupied a site bounded by Kingston and Albany Avenues to the west and east, and Rutland Road and Winthrop Street to the north and south. And the reason we have heard of it here in the Brooklyn Collection, is that a doctor by the name of Boris Schleifer photographed the hospital and some of its inmates and staff during the 1930s. The resultant collection of over…
Little-Known Brooklyn Residents: Charles M. Murphy
Charles M. Murphy was one of the greatest riders in bicycle history. On June 30th, 1899, he completed a famous bicycle ride behind a Long Island Railroad train, covering an entire mile in the record-breaking time of 57 4/5 seconds. This record earned him the nickname of "Mile-a-Minute Murphy." Mile-a-Minute Murphy The event took place at Maywood, Long Island, where board track was placed over the railroad tracks, and visitors piled in by the hundreds to watch the event. On the following day, the Brooklyn Daily Eagle reported "the ride was thrilling and…
Found in the Morgue: Seven Special Cats
We have a great folder of vintage cat photographs in the collection of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle Morgue; below are some of my favorites. Barbara Baiena's Brooklyn kitten had a special talent -- sipping her milk through a straw in tandem with her owner. These three kittens were found inside a furniture crate shipped from Los Angeles to Brooklyn, discovered at the end of their transcontinental trip. Susie, who lived on a wharf at 57th St., chased a rat that dove into the water and Susie went in after it. Workmen tried to rescue her for more than six hours after she scrambled onto a crossbeam…
Was it standard to have gun racks in libraries in 1959?
Ever since Chela mentioned offhand at lunch the other day that the BHS library had once had gun racks, my imagination was captured. I once helped move insanely heavy boxes of muskets in our storage and wondered where and when they'd been on exhibit.
Well, thanks to the "Random Images" button in our online photo search of the John D. Morrell collection, an image popped up which quelled my curiosity.
Dr. Bob (In Memory of Bob Vadheim)
You Must Have Been a Beautiful Baby
On a recent beach vacation I discovered that many towns along the Jersey shore hold a 'baby parade' each summer. I was intrigued by the idea of a parade of babies, but I chose an afternoon of lounging over further investigation -- bloggers get vacations too! After returning home, a thought occurred to me: "If baby parades existed in New Jersey, maybe there was one in Brooklyn too." It's not that I think everything ties back to Brooklyn. It's just that through my posts I have become familiar with Brooklyn's tendency towards the…
Bob Vadheim, 1920-2010
Dr. Robert H. Vadheim, preservationist, music lover, and longtime friend of BHS passed away on July 16 at 90 years old. I interviewed Bob at his home in Brooklyn Heights in 2008 for the BHS Oral History collection and remember feeling so inspired as he talked about Robert Johnson, his partner of 43 years, and the wonderful music salons they would hold in their home. Over tea after the interview, Bob and I got to talking about all kinds of things, favorite songs (Someone to Watch Over Me), movies (I had just discovered William Powell) and what life was like for a gay man in the 1950s. He…
Peacock in Bushwick: The Pope Mansion
Some years ago we purchased a small collection of photographs of an opulent house known as the "Pope Mansion" at 871 Bushwick Ave. Mostly interior shots showing crushing amounts of Victorian clutter, the photographs are credited to H.G. Borgfeldt and dated c. 1909. A search for information on the house and the family revealed a fascinating story of tobacco wealth and family feuds right in the heart of Brooklyn. The Pope parents immigrated to the U.S. from Bavaria. It was their son John, born around 1857, who was the founder of the family fortunes.…
Bundle of Fun
If you make regular use of our collection it is likely that the name Henry Reed Stiles rings a bell -- a very small, rusty, cracked, nearly inaudible bell -- but a bell nonetheless. At the time of his death in 1909, Stiles was widely recognized as the first historian of the city of Brooklyn; his three volume History of the City of Brooklyn was published between 1867 and 1870 and covers everything from Hudson's first Manhattan visit to the consolidation of the cities of Williamsburgh, Brooklyn, and the township of Bushwick. He was this borough's Herodotus -- and though a photograph is an…
Whitney Museum: History Plays at BHS
This summer, Whitney Museum Artist-in-Residence, Colin Gee, filmed a series of History Plays in response to works in the Whitney's permanent collection. Three pieces, In Transit, What, and Lobby, were filmed here at BHS. Here's Lobby, which is a response to Eva Hesse's Untitled (Rope Piece), 1969–70:
Collage Workshop: Picturing Your Neighborhood
A summer art workshop jointly sponsored by the Brooklyn Collection and the Art, Music Media and Sports Division (AMMS), with Artist and Librarian June Koffi. Central Library, 2nd floor meeting room, 11:00-12:30. Registration required. 718-230-2708 Week One, Wed. August 4. What makes a Collage? What makes a neighborhood? In this session participants will brainstorm about what makes their neighborhood unique. We'll also go over collage techniques and the various materials that will be used. Week Two, Wed. August 11. Looking for Images. Week two will be spent gathering and selecting images from…
The National League of Women's Services, 1918
In 1970, 80 year-old Dorothy L. Betts of Park Slope (in 1918 at the right), donated a set of eleven photographs featuring the National League of Woman's Service. From the census, I learned that Miss Betts was an only child who grew up in a stately brownstone on 8th Avenue between 1st Street and Garfield (the same residence she occupied at the time of her donation). Miss Betts was born in 1890. In 1918, she would have been 28 years old and an ideal candidate for joining the National League of Woman's Services. The National League of Woman's Services was a…
Vegetarians vs Meat Eaters
One of our readers some time ago suggested we explore the subject of vegetarianism, and so Brooklynology eagerly takes up the challenge. In its early years the Brooklyn Daily Eagle treated vegetarianism as a joke, summing up vegetarians as inauthentic and bloodless bores. One of the first references to vegetarianism appears in 1851 in an article on angling, in which those objecting to the sport on grounds of cruelty are termed "canting vegetarians," a phrase that sets the tone for the next fifty years. An 1853 article suggest that a vegetarian diet is all very well in the…
Home Base on NY1
Check out this NY1 video feature about Ebbets Field and the BHS exhibition Home Base - plus interviews with two Ex Lab students: Borough reporter Jeanine Ramirez visits the former site of Ebbets Field where its legacy continues to make its presence known: The housing complex on Bedford Avenue in Crown Heights looks similar to others in the city. But it's no ordinary location. It's the former site of Ebbets Field -- the home of the Brooklyn Dodgers until 1957, the place where Jackie Robinson broke baseball's color barrier and the site of numerous World Series showdowns. Brooklyn…
Little Known Brooklyn Residents: eden ahbez
Although not exactly "little known", and a California resident for much of his life, songwriter eden ahbez was Brooklyn born and bred. You may not immediately recognize his name (spelt in lower case as he believed the only words that deserved capitals were Nature, God, Happiness and Life) -- but you will certainly be familiar with a song he wrote, made famous by Nat King Cole. Nature Boy was a major hit when it was released in 1947, and has since been performed by scores of recording artists. Portrait of eden ahbez The Brooklyn Daily Eagle reported that eden ahbez was born in Brownsville,…
What's in the Cards?
On the surface, trade cards -- those little slips of card stock intended to advertise a business--send a simple message. "Come here and buy my wares," they say in various tones from respectable to louche. Today, the subject matter of trade card imagery tends to be connected to the trade being promoted. A card for a paint store might show a can of paint; a pet food purveyor might show a cute cat or dog. So much seems self-evident. But in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, merchants would sometimes choose stock images for their cards that had no apparent connection to…
Check out our 2010 Student Projects slideshow...
To further celebrate the accomplishments of our Brooklyn Connections students, we've posted some of their best projects and quotes to share online. We're still hoping that all you Brooklynites out there will stop by the Collection to see our exhibit of student work this summer. But for our long-distance fans, we hope this little slideshow will provide you with a nice summary. We are proud of all of our students and are already planning for 2010-2011. And if you're a teacher, administrator or parent who would like to get your class involved in Brooklyn…
Brooklyn and the New York City Draft Riots
This month marks the 147th anniversary of the New York City Draft riots. For three days in July of 1863, rioters turned Manhattan upside down in protest against the Civil War Draft. How did Brooklyn residents react to orders to fight for the Union forces in the Civil War? In the early months of 1863 the National Conscription Act was passed and enforcement was planned for Brooklyn and New York City in July of 1863. The Conscription Act stated that all single men aged 20-45 and married men up to 35 would be enrolled in the draft lottery. The act also contained language for drafted men to…
Little-Known Brooklyn Residents: Dorothy and Richard Minnich
Living in New York, we are accustomed to living in very close proximity with our neighbors, sometimes hearing more than we'd like to from the people living around us. I've been known to complain about my noisy upstairs neighbors, but after discovering Mr. and Mrs. Minnich's pastime, perhaps I have little to complain about. The Minnich's rescued organ, complete with built in bar In 1953, Dorothy and Richard Minnich rescued a 1,500 pound pipe organ from a mortuary chapel in Manhattan, and reinstalled it within the living room of their 3 1/2 room apartment in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. The organ --…
Brooklyn Dog and Horse Parade
I recently came across some photographs that were newly uploaded to the Brooklyn Public Library catalog, and since they are pictures of animals, I had to write about them. On a lovely day in late June of 1935, the Brooklyn Daily Eagle and the ASPCA of Brooklyn hosted the Dog and Horse Parade. But before I go into all the fascinating details about the parade, I must give a brief account of the history of the ASPCA in Brooklyn. The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals began as a small group of concerned citizens in New York City. In 1866, the American…
And They're Off! - Part 1
At this time of year thoroughbred horses and their jockeys race around the storied tracks throughout the country--Hialeah Park, Churchill Downs, Belmont Park, Saratoga--names that conjure up the mystique, tradition, and excitement of horse racing. But there are names that are all but forgotten in racing lore. For during the late 1800's to the early 1900's the County of Kings was also home to the "Sport of Kings". With …
Remembering First Grade
BHS partnered with the Brooklyn School of Inquiry (BSI), a citywide gifted and talented school located in Bensonhurst, to conduct oral history interviews with all of the students in the school's first First Grade class. Although these narrators are only 6 or 7 years old, their interviews add much to BHS's Oral History collection, documenting important things about life in Brooklyn in 2010, including details that can only be captured by youthful candor. Students will receive copies of their interviews when they graduate from 8th Grade in 2017. Check out this video from BSI's series A School…
Brewed in Brooklyn: A History of Fermenting Barley in New York's Favorite Borough
Did you know that Brooklyn was once home to 48 breweries or that 10 percent of the nation's beer was made in the borough? Join David Naczycz and Cindy VandenBosch of Urban Oyster for an entertaining, in-depth look at how beer has played a pivotal role in the history of Brooklyn. A beer and cheese reception precedes the event at 6:30 PM. ***Please note that all 45 seats have already been reserved for this program*** If you'd like to place your name on a waiting list please call: 718.230.2723 The program will take place in the Brooklyn Collection's Reserve Room.
How fun is this?
How the Architectural Walking Tour Built the Preservation Movement
The Borough of Homes and... Oysters?
As the school year comes to a close, I find myself weeding through the many notes I have accrued while planning student projects this year. Most projects were based on topics that were familiar to me. But in some cases I had to become an "expert" on a new field. Such was the case with what become known as "the oyster project." IS 14 in Sheepshead Bay received a special grant this year that required them to create a multi-disciplinary curriculum focused on the local marine environment. So when I came to them in the fall, they were desperate to connect the…
The Loyal Order of the Moose
Like the Shriners mentioned some time ago in Brooklynology, the Loyal Order of the Moose has long had a presence in Brooklyn, raising money for good causes while promoting pleasant social intercourse among its members. Founded in 1888 by Dr John Henry Wilson, who admired the way the moose protected the young and old of its species, the Order was originally nothing more than a social club. But according to its web site, it soon began using membership dues to offer benefits to members in need, providing "security and protection for a largely working class membership."…
Card Parties and Lunching Ladies
Flipping through our Eagle photograph collection, you see a lot of patterns: children looking cute, attractive women at Coney Island, enthusiastic Dodger fans, exteriors of churches and schools and so on. But my favorite "genre" is the party planning committee shots. There's no shortage of pictures in our collection that look like this: Or this: Or this: (Don't they seem to be having fun together?) At first glance, these images seem trivial, if not humorous. Just exactly how many hat-wearing party planners lived in this borough? I …
Brooklyn Beatmakers
The Brooklyn Historical Society is proud to announce Brooklyn Beatmakers, a showcase with headliner The New School Sun Ra Arkestra, led by 22-year Sun Ra arkestra musician, master jazz trumpeter, and music director of Sistas' Place, Ahmed Abdullah! Joining the Arkestraʼs “21st century, interplanetary sound and philosophy” made famous by the legendary composer-bandleader Sun Ra, will be emerging songwriter and emcee Imani Kairee, the dub diva Honeychild Coleman, and the Bushwick teen hip-hop collective Nine 11 Thesaurus. The New School Sun Ra Arkestra “represent[s] a milestone in the…
Found in the Morgue: Five Local Snake Stories
While searching in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle morgue, I came across the following photo, which spurred a hunt for local snake stories. Reverend Dr. Hugo E. Meyer Reverend Dr. Hugo E. Meyer, Pastor of Christ Lutheran Church in Woodhaven, Queens, had a long-standing pastime of hunting snakes. He collected snakes for his personal specimen collection, which he housed in hundreds of jars in the cellar of his Ozone Park home. His capture method involved throwing himself at the snake and "just about smothering it", using his stomach to field the blow, making sure to have a "hypodermic needle and…
Empty Shelves, Empty Reference Desks
I'm sure, good readers, that you have all been watching the New York State and New York City budgets closely. Many of us in the Brooklyn Collection, and at Brooklyn Public Library as a whole, have been watching the budget negotiations compulsively. Budget mania is nothing new to the libraries in New York City and I write that with a sigh because libraries are easy targets over and over again. As archivist of the Brooklyn Collection, my work allows me to sort through photo folders and photocopied newspaper clippings and pieces of ephemera. I'm glad to say…
Crown Heights Oral History Exhibit
Library Layoffs May Hit Brooklynology.
Many of you may know that New York City's three library systems are currently under threat of crippling budget cuts--so crippling, in fact, that about a third of the library's workforce received provisional pink slips last week, pending the finalization of budget negotiations. Three of the Brooklyn Collection's staff are under the gun, and two of them -- Olivia and Ben--are Brooklynology bloggers. So here today are three of the actual faces of the budget cuts. They represent 50% of the Collection's librarian staff and 33% of our overall staff. Olivia, who has two masters…
Little-Known Brooklyn Residents: Dr. Ida Mellen
In the first half of the 20th century, Brooklyn was home to one of the world's most respected authorities on the ailments of fish. Dr. Ida Mellen, lived most of her life in the borough of Brooklyn, working for many years as chief aquarist and ichthyologist at the New York Aquarium. Dr. Ida Mellen The Brooklyn Daily Eagle reported that during Dr. Mellen's time at the New York Aquarium, she "nursed penguins with bronchitis, turtles with tumors, and alligators with fungused snouts." Her scientific research caused intense excitement within the marine science world, when she discovered a rare type…
Reflections on Times Past: High School Yearbooks
June is upon us and it brings with it a most important milestone in teenage life: "HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATION"! Thinking about my own graduation and all of the people I graduated with led me to the Brooklyn collection morgue and our collection of High School yearbooks. We have yearbooks from a few Brooklyn high schools, for example the Flying Dutchman from Erasmus Hall, The Blue & Gold from Girls High and an almost full run (1901-2006) of the Polyglot from Poly Prep. The Prospect, the yearbook of Manual Training High School, is the one that whetted my appetite…
Early Views of Prospect Park
Tupper Thomas announced her retirement as administrator of Prospect Park just as we were beginning a project to catalog our 19th Century map collection. The collection includes a number of maps covering the progress of Prospect Park from early proposals to today. In honor of both Ms Thomas and the beautiful park she has worked to preserve, here are a few interesting pieces: An early plan by Egbert Viele. Note Flatbush Avenue cutting directly through the middle of the park. Land was purchased based on Viele's plan, but plans changed as time passed and the park ended up looking very different…
Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbets Field
Through archives, photos and oral histories, Home Base: Memories of the Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbets Field explores the connection between Ebbets Field, the Dodgers and the Brooklyn community. This exhibition is curated by high school students from Brooklyn Technical High School, Cobble Hill School of American Studies, The Packer Collegiate Institute and Saint Ann’s School as part of the Brooklyn Historical Society's Exhibition Laboratory (Ex Lab) after-school museum studies program. Ex Lab introduces high school students to the art of exhibition development: conducting…
Little-Known Brooklyn Businesses: The Meyer Saddlery Corporation
Thanks to Tara, we've been having fun learning about "Little Known Brooklyn Residents" lately. So why not a spin-off series about the businesses that kept these residents employed? For example, if it weren't for the Meyer Saddlery Corporation, where would Al Sharp (below) have cultivated his years of experience in the bridle making trade? The Meyer Saddlery Corporation, like so many Brooklyn businesses, was a family affair. It was founded around 1852 by German immigrant George Meyer near Kings Highway. Mr. Meyer had a unique angle that separated …
New Luna Park opening in Coney Island on May 29th
With the grand opening of the new Luna Park in Coney Island this Saturday, May 29th, we thought it would be cool to post of some of the great photographs of the original Luna Park from our collections. The original Luna Park opened up in Coney Island on May 16, 1903 (and closed in 1944). A New York Times article that covered the opening stated that 45,000 individuals showed up to the park's first day. Many of the park's attractions seemed to have surrounded around performance. For a mere 5 cents visitors could witness something titled "The Fatal Wedding": There was also a daily fire,…
Celebrating another year of Connections!
This morning, 150 students, teachers and parents filled the Library's Dweck Auditorium for our annual Brooklyn Connections Recognition Ceremony and Celebration. On stage, outstanding students presented their final Brooklyn History projects and received certificates of achievement from the Library. In our lobby, students and their guests enjoyed a catered reception while viewing presentation boards and other materials representing the hard work of students from 10 middle schools across the borough. Although the event has quickly come and gone (without…
Hard Times Revisited by Guest Blogger Rich Reyes-Gavilan
It's been one year since the appearance of the blog post detailing the sorrowful history of budget cuts to Brooklyn Public Library. Sadly, the recurring theme has become a recurring nightmare as we once again find ourselves threatened with deep cuts that will devastate our ability to provide service. This year's proposed budget could result in a $20 million reduction to BPL, meaning the closure of 16 branch libraries, fewer books, fewer programs, fewer computer sessions, and massive layoffs. We continue to ask our supporters to write their elected officials and advocate on behalf of the…
The Brooklyn ???
When the Dodgers left Brooklyn 53 years ago they not only ripped out our hearts and guts they also took away the borough's only major league sports franchise. We all know this sad story, so let's not dwell on it here; better for Brooklyn sports fans to turn their attentions to the hardwood machinations of a spindly Russian billionaire, Mikhail Prokhorov, majority owner of the soon-to-be Brooklyn Nets. Or, I should say, the Brooklyn Somethingelses. At a recent press conference Prokhorov hinted that the nickname Nets might stay behind in Newark when the team moves to the Barclays Center…
Little-Known Brooklyn Residents: Elizabeth Hughes
On October 31, 1950, the front page of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle ran an article including a startling action photograph of 65 year-old Mrs. Elizabeth Hughes. "I just went swoooosh!" - Elizabeth Hughes Mrs. Elizabeth Hughes, a B.M.T. subway ticket agent, "scared the daylights out of a husky six-foot-tall bandit who thrust an automatic pistol in her face and sent him packing", the Eagle reported. She re-enacted her quick response for the Eagle photographer, illustrating how she swooshed a nearby pan of water on the would-be-bandit and chased him away from her ticket booth. Elizabeth…
Lost children and leeches.
The recent announcement by Verizon that they will no longer be distributing telephone directories in print form made me think about how the directory has evolved or--some might say--regressed--over the course of the last 200 years. We recently acquired a group of four Brooklyn City Directories, all in wonderful condition, from 1839-1840, 1840-41, 1842-43 and 1844-45. Yes, they all exist on microfilm, but the convenience of a print directory is equaled only by its ability to conjure the atmosphere of an era. Aside from the listed occupations that no longer exist, the addresses that…
Don't Know Why There's No Sun Up In The Sky
This past Sunday, May 9th, legendary singer, actress and activist Lena Horne, passed away. She was born in Brooklyn and as a child lived at 189 Chauncey Street in Bedford Stuyvesant. Lena attended P.S. 35 and then Girls High School on Nostrand Avenue. She only stayed there for a few years, leaving to work at the renowned Cotton Club in Manhattan. She made it into the chorus line there, and the rest, as they say, is history. Hollywood and the world…
Genealogy Group Tonight Wed May 5, 6 p.m.
Come and join our genealogy group with Wilhelmena Kelly tonight at 6 p.m. in the Brooklyn Collection. All welcome.
The Diary of Arthur Lonto Pt 2
At the end of April and the beginning of May, Arthur Lonto repeated rituals taking place all over Brooklyn--he planted his garden, and he enjoyed the beginning of the baseball season with the Brooklyn Dodgers. He was never idle. Here are a few more extracts from the busy realtor's journal. "Wednesday, April 30, 1947 Dodgers lose 1st game at Ebbets Field to Chicago. Jerome & I took Jitterbug lesson at 6 p.m.--Miss Young. Thursday, May 1, 1947 New family moves into 1431 E. 7th St from Park Slope. Called Rickerman, man, wife and young daughter Saturday, May 3, 1947 Father & I…
May Queens and Cherry Blossoms
The delicate cherry blossom is so ephemeral! This poor blossom wilted as I walked from the park to my office, and the trees bloom for just a few short weeks in early spring. In my previous post, I wrote about Brooklyn's official flower, the Forsythia. I like to think that the cherry blossom is one of Brooklyn's unofficial flowers because Brooklynites have celebrated this symbol of spring for many, many years. The cherry trees of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden have been celebrated since their planting, some as early as 1912. The garden boasts around 42 varieties of…
Horsecars and trolleys and plank roads, oh my
One of my favorite things about being an archivist at BHS is all the different people I get to meet in the library. Researchers and their work are fascinating, and with each new person I work with, I get to learn something new. When I first started working as an archivist, I was amused to make the connection that libraries and archives have regulars-- folks that come in often enough that you know their names (and sometimes their stories and their quirks)-- just like the bars and coffee shops and restaurants I'd worked at in the past. At BHS we have some great regulars, either because they…
Brooklyn Goes to the Movies. A talk by Theater Historian Cezar Del Valle. Wednesday, April 28, 7 PM,
During the Golden Age of cinema, Brooklyn had over 200 movie houses. Many of these theaters, originally used for vaudeville acts, found new lives with the advent of moving pictures. Theater historian Cezar Del Valle willl host a lively lecture about these movie houses of yesteryear. Please come early as seating is limited. Wine and cheese social from 6:30-7:00 and the talk begins promptly at 7:00. The Brooklyn Collection is located at the Central Library at Grand Army Plaza on the second floor. Come and join us for this free and fascinating program! In addition to the program,…
Little Known Brooklyn Residents: Emil Kulik
From his workshop at 240 Bedford Ave in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, Emil Kulik spent more than three years and a decade worth of savings to realize his dream -- inventing a diving apparatus like no other, seen in this image below. His invention, completed in 1932, resulted in a 3 1/2 ton device -- a cross between a diving bell and a solo submarine. The chief feature of his invention was that the diving apparatus operator would be able to work inside the diving bell for long periods of time, at normal air pressure with little or no help from the surface. The robot arms protruding from the front…
Julius Wilcox Cyanotypes: Exhibit in the Brooklyn Collection
Readers of this blog will be familiar with the name of Julius Wilcox, one of several late 19th century photographers in our collection. Wilcox was interested in architecture, engineering and celebrations as well as the seamier side of New York Life--the world of Mulberry Bend, the Tombs, and Silver Dollar Smith's Saloon. In this exhibit we have chosen to focus on the compelling social commentary that makes Wilcox's work a worthy counterpoint to that of his better known contemporary, Jacob Riis. These new digital prints from the original cyanotypes will be on display in the…
Stories from Puerto Rico
Writing in 1975, Angelo Falcón, founder of the National Institute for Latino Policy and currently a professor at Columbia University, said: The more than century-old presence of a politically active Puerto Rican community in New York City has been curiously obscured, afflicted by what Russell Jacoby calls 'social amnesia’ and with serious consequences. (Puerto Rican Politics in Urban America, 1984) 35 years later, last Friday, BHS celebrated the newly accessible Puerto Rican Oral History, 1973-1975. This oral history project, initiated in 1973 by John D. Vasquez, then Director of Puerto…
Found in the Morgue: Six Special Canines
There are many wonderful photographs and stories hiding in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle clippings and photographs morgue, silently waiting to be rediscovered. I've been keeping an eye out for interesting photos and stories on dogs, as a follow up to Olivia's charming post on cats in the Long Island Cat Club. We have two folders filled with images of Dogs at War, from which these first two images were found. Below is an image of Mike, guarding the weapons of Marine Corps recruits in training at Parris Island, S.C. recruit depot. Sinbad, a Coast Guard pup, sailed more than one million miles…
You may not quite recall my name, but certainly you ought to...
On Sundays, beginning sometime around 1895, there began to appear in the pages of the Eagle a column called Tricks and Puzzles. Unlike Sam Loyd's eponymous puzzle column which first appeared in 1896, Tricks and Puzzles was not the work of one riddling mastermind, but rather a column created by Eagle readers for Eagle readers. However, don't think that this column was proof of some conundrum-loving community of puzzle-heads bound by the mysteries of five-letter double diamonds and scriptural enigmas; the motivating factor here was rather simple: cold hard cash. For the contributor offering the…
The Things They Carried
BHS and Queensborough Community College hosted a reading and discussion last Saturday of Tim O'Brien's The Things They Carried, a collection of short stories about a platoon of American soldiers in the Vietnam War. This event was part of The Big Read, an initiative of the National Endowment for the Arts designed to encourage reading and cultural conversation. Joseph Giannini, Joan Furey, and Anthony Wallace, three veterans featured in BHS's exhibit In Our Own Words: Portraits of Brooklyn Vietnam Veterans, read from their own writings and generously shared stories about their…
Brooklyn's Flower
Is there anything better than walking through Grand Army Plaza, around Prospect Park, or down Eastern Parkway in the spring? Our eyes are so ready for some color, and at last the delicate daffodils appear, and tiny buds on the trees float in a green haze above us. And then too there are the skinny branches shooting from the ground covered with buttery flowers swarming the stalks--Forsythia! Seventy years ago Mrs. Florence A. Blum lobbied to make Forsythia Brooklyn's official flower. To her, Forsythia was "a symbol of unity and brotherhood at a time when world…
Hancock Street in Bedford-Stuyvesant
There are certainly some architectural gems in Bedford-Stuyvesant. A researcher in the library today researching her block for the purpose of landmarking it and The Brownstoner making 247 Hancock Street the Building of the Day drew me into another section of our Photography Collection. In the early 70s, BHS president James Hurley, with others, photographed this beautiful block of Hancock Street.
Mr Lonto and Jackie Robinson
We have recently acquired one volume of the diary of Arthur Lonto, a noted authority on transit and a former President of the Electric Railroaders Association. A World War II veteran, Mr Lonto worked in insurance and real estate until he was hired by the MTA, eventually becoming a transit management analyst. At the time the diary was written, Mr Lonto lived on East 7th Street between Avenues M and N. He notes indefatigably and compulsively every journey taken by public transportation, but more importantly, he abstracts news items of interest and follows the fortunes of the Brooklyn…
Genealogy Workshop Tonight April 7, 6 p.m.
Join us in the Central Library's Brooklyn Collection at 6 p.m. to uncover the secrets of your family history with genealogist Linda Jones.
Brooklynology Featured in New York Archives Magazine
I would tell everyone to rush out to the news stand immediately to pick up your copy of the Spring issue of New York Archives magazine, but--attractive as this publication of the New York State Education Department is--I don't think you can find it on every corner. Still, we are pleased to have rated a two-page spread in the "Archives Around New York" section of this well-designed organ of the Archives Partnership Trust. Hoping we can be forgiven for a moment of self-reflexivity, we offer a paragraph from the article, entitled Blogging the Archives, for the special…
Of Brooklyn Ferries
Crowds of men and women attired in the usual costumes!how curious you are to me!On the ferry-boats, the hundreds and hundreds that cross, returning home, are more curious to me than you suppose;Any you that shall cross from shore to shore years hence, are more to me, and more in my meditations than you might suppose.Walt Whitman, "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry" Looking at an image like this makes me pine for the era when travelling by ferry was the norm. While we have reference materials that will give you a thorough history of the ferry system (the many stops and…
Arts and Skills for Veterans
In 1944, as more and more American soldiers were returning home from war, the American Red Cross established a new volunteer sector: the Arts and Skills Corps. This program is included in the Eagle's post-war publication, Staging Area Brooklyn. It states that the Corps "resulted from increased awareness of the therapeutic problems of convalescents. Skilled and craftsmen, wearing the Red Cross uniform, helped men fill the long hours of convalescence with activities ranging from sculpture to photographs, programs that kept minds and hands busy in the fights against boredom…
Dropping Anchor in Brooklyn
Watch this great video of a giant anchor arriving home to the Brooklyn Navy Yard where it will soon become part of the exhibition at the Brooklyn Navy Yard Center at Building 92. Since 2007, BHS and BNYDC have partnered on an oral history project documenting the important work that happens in the Navy Yard. We are currently interviewing people who worked in they Yard in the 1950s and 1960s and for any of the private shipbuilders after the 1966 decommissioning. You can listen to some clips from WWII-era interviews here. And to suggest someone we should interview please contact the…
The Brooklyn Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children
Annual reports of charitable institutions do not usually make riveting reading matter. The annual reports of the Brooklyn Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children form a compelling yet disturbing exception to the rule. Aside from the inevitable statistics and lists of donations, they contain photographs of some of the children brought to the notice of the Society, each one accompanied by a brief report of the circumstances surrounding the child's misfortune. Here are a few, offered without commentary: "From the Report for 1891 Case No. 9641--The…
Postcard craze
The recent New Yorker blog post "Off the shelf: Folk Photography" by Rollo Romig about the popularity of postcards renewed my enthusiasm for our collection at the Brooklyn Historical Society. Widely printed, mailed, and collected, we have thousands of postcards depicting a long ago Brooklyn and from one Brooklynite to another. Not only are the images great to see, they show a Brooklyn from years ago that may or may not still exist and the correspondence is fascinating to read. They are somewhat like the tweets, text messages, and emails we send today. At only a penny to send, why not,…
Little Known Brooklyn Residents: Grandma Logan of Greenpoint
I am very content to live and work in the borough of Brooklyn, and wholeheartedly enjoy my provincial lifestyle. Occasionally months will pass before I travel across the river -- a running joke with my husband who commutes into Manhattan frequently. This probably reveals why the following headline caught my attention, from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, dated June 19, 1927. Mrs. Mary A. Logan lived a long, happy and peaceful life within the confines of three city blocks of Greenpoint, Brooklyn. When she first arrived in Greenpoint from Ireland in 1859 at the age of 21, the district was a…
Walter O'Malley and Robert Moses: The Loss of the Dodgers Reconsidered
Join us on Wednesday night March 24th, at 7pm for an illustrated talk by Robert E. Murphy. Lamenting the removal of the Dodgers to Los Angeles in 1957 has been a major pastime among traumatized fans for 53 years. But who was to blame? After poring relentlessly through archives, original news stories, and government documents, Robert Murphy, author of After Many a Summer: The Passing of the Giants and Dodgers and a Golden Age in New York Baseball, gives the most fully-researched answer to that question yet offered. Seating is limited so come early to meet the author and enjoy wine and cheese…
Taylor Branch at BHS Library Dinner
On March 8, 2010 Pulitzer Prize-winning author Taylor Branch spoke at the Brooklyn Historical Society's Annual Library Dinner. Taylor Branch is a native of Atlanta, Georgia and author of the King Era Trilogy, a narrative history of the U.S. during the Civil Rights era which includes Parting the Waters: America in the King Years 1954-1963 winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award for Non-Fiction and the Pulitzer Prize for History. His most recent book is The Clinton Tapes: Wrestling History with the President (Simon and Schuster 2009), a presidential memoir based on secret late-night…
That's Using your Noodle
Brooklyn was once renowned for producing beer, sugar, ships, and much more, but not many people know that it was also once famous for the manufacture of pasta. Brooklyn was pasta's gateway into America, as documented in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle in 1886: …
Loyd's Puzzles
It’s nice to find some other visual specimen to rest the eyes upon in the ant nest that is late 19th century newspaper text—an illustration of crustacean jelly molds and cake tins, a diagram of celestial bodies in spring skies, the thoraxes of some silhouetted country home pitchers; anything to give a respite from that headachy, inky and—now—digitized type. That's why when I came across these images on page 26 of an 1896 Sunday edition of the Eagle I felt as though I had found some uninhabited moon world, as though the editor of the…
E.E. Rutter
Some may find this hard to believe but--librarians can make mistakes. Sometimes we know very little about the photographers whose works we find in our collections. Photographs by E.E. Rutter can be found not only in the collection of Brooklyn Public Library but also in Queens Borough Public Library and the Brooklyn Historical Society. A recent telephone call from a colleague in Queens alerted us to the fact that we may have been perpetuating a mistake as to Rutter's first name. In several documents in our control file he is named Edward E. Rutter. His images are often signed simply "Rutter"…
Over Here! New York City During World War II Exhibit at the Central Library
The Central Library at Grand Army Plaza is hosting an exhibit based on the book Over Here! New York City During World War II by Lorraine B. Diehl. Many photographs from the Brooklyn Collection archives are on display for the very first time to the public. The images show the first day of work for female employees of the Brooklyn Navy Yard, Brooklyn war bond fundraisers, and the Sheepshead Bay Maritime Training Station. Don't miss this chance to see treasures from the Brooklyn Collection on display, along with original posters, photos, and World War II…
Basketball in Brooklyn
Bats, Balls, Nets and Hoops: Stories of Sports in Brooklyn is the latest in a series of educational curriculum kits from the Brooklyn Historical Society (forthcoming Spring 2010). Organized around four case studies, the kit is packed with more than 50 primary source documents from the BHS archives, including newspaper articles, photographs and oral histories of Brooklyn athletes born between the 1920s and 1950s. Each case study comes in a separate folder with critical thinking questions and document-analysis activities to help students observe, question, analyze and interpret the material.…
Little Known Brooklyn Residents: Treasure Hunter, Jay Erlichman
While researching in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle morgue, I came across this curious image of a young Brooklyn resident digging in rubble. Brooklyn Treasure Hunter Jay Erlichman hard at work hunting treasure. On January 16, 1950, a small article ran in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, with this image titled "Youthful Treasure Hunter". By the time it went to print, nine-year old Jay Erlichman had been digging for treasure with his broken shovel for "about four years". Up until this date, his efforts had dug up a total of $1.27 and "an enormous collection of rusty bottle caps, tin cans, broken glass and…