Tuesday, December 21, 2010
Tour of Willow Lake Preserve at Flushing-Meadow Park on December 19th...
From Eyeful to Eyesore: Book Traces Queens' New York State Pavilion's Decline by Nicholas Hirshon - NY Daily News
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| The New York State Pavilion in Flushing Meadows Corona Park. |
Friday, July 30, 2010
NYPD: Man Killed by LIRR Train in Flushing - Newsday
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| Emergency vehicles respond at the Broadway stop on the LIRR in Flushing, N.Y., where a man was struck by a train according to New York City police. Photo credit: Adam Abramson |
A man was struck and killed by an LIRR train in Flushing on the Port Washington line, according to New York City police.
The incident occurred at the Broadway station late in the evening rush, and at least a dozen emergency vehicles responded to the scene.
There are 10 to 15 minute delays in both directions on the line, according to the Long Island Rail Road website.
Sunday, July 25, 2010
Queens Merchants Blast Plan To Sell, Develop Municipal Lot by CeFaan Kim - NY1.com
Business owners in downtown Flushing held a rally Saturday over a plan to turn a municipal parking lot into a mega-million dollar mixed-use development. NY1's CeFaan Kim filed the following report.
Nearly a hundred small business owners marched on downtown Flushing's largest municipal parking lot Sunday. A proposal to sell the land to a private developer could be approved by the City Council in a few days. The plan is to transform the lot into an $850 million mixed-use development with residential and retail space. But merchants say losing the parking spaces will cripple their businesses.
"If there's no parking spaces, we're going to go out of business. I mean that's a simple fact. People from the city keep saying 'it's going to be okay, it's going to be okay.' No it's not going to be okay," said small business owner Ikhwan Rim.
Developers of the project say lack of parking will not be a problem. The current lot has space for 1,100 cars. Flushing Commons would hold 1,600 but would also add 620 condominiums.
"We do not need anymore gridlock. Flushing is congested enough, think about it, we have the third highest foot traffic and one of the busiest transportation hubs in our city," said SJ Jung of the MinKwon Center.
The project will also include a new home for the Flushing YMCA, a hotel and open green space. It's expected to create 2,000 construction jobs and 2,000 more permanent jobs. The plan is supported by Mayor Michael Bloomberg and by local Council member Peter Koo.
The other issue is how much parking will cost. Developers have agreed to a below market cap for the first five years. Merchants are worried the price will skyrocket in year six.
"Is anybody willing to spend $7 or $8 parking to spend lunch time in this area?" said small business owner Daniel Kung.
Developers say they will not raise parking fees that will drive away business, and that in order for the project to succeed it must attract customers.
The full City Council will vote on the plan Tuesday. Sources say the proposal will likely pass with an overwhelming margin.
Sunday, July 4, 2010
Archeologists Urge for Dig to See if Methodist Cemetery Sits Below Site for Flushing Commons by Nicholas Hirshon - NY Daily News
Queens College Prof. James Moore says it’s important to 'take another look' for remains at Flushing Commons site, although a 1954 city check found no evidence of an old graveyard. Pace for NewsBut in 1954, after a perfunctory excavation failed to find human remains there, the city chalked up the cemetery to local lore - and paved it over for a parking lot.
Decades later, that decision is facing renewed scrutiny from archeologists who want the city to dig up the plot yet again - believing bodies still rest where a complex is set to go up next year.
"I would urge that they take another look," said Queens College anthropology Prof. James Moore. He called the case an issue of "heritage, historic preservation and just simple respect for the dead."
The city Economic Development Corp. has dismissed the calls for excavation as thinly veiled attempts to halt construction of Flushing Commons, a mix of housing and retail on the site of the municipal parking lot.
An EDC spokesman, David Lombino, argued that opponents of the project - who fear its effect on small businesses and traffic - will jump on anything to stop it before a looming City Council vote.
"There are no plans to revisit that determination" of a nonexistent graveyard, Lombino said.
But a Daily News investigation has found the city Corporation Counsel's decision to deem the graves "nonexistent" on Feb. 3, 1954, may have been hasty.
A spokeswoman for the Law Department said that records of the excavation - two weeks of hand-digging in 1953 that did not turn up any bones - were "not readily available" last week.
The spokeswoman, Connie Pankratz, vowed to search in off-site archives in coming weeks.
The EDC insists the cemetery does not exist - though their officials cannot produce records showing how the Public Works Agency carried out the excavation.
"It's hard to say, without reading the [1953] report, whether the hand-testing was adequate," said Christina Rieth, the state's official archeologist.
Moore and Rieth both argued that the modern means of finding graves - including ground-penetrating radar and topsoil stripping - would prove more reliable than hand-digging did in 1953.
They also noted that attitudes toward long-lost cemeteries were much less sensitive in the 1950s - an era before city laws on cultural resources and landmarks existed.
And they figured a lack of detailed record-keeping at the time has left many lingering questions about the 1954 designation.
The city declared the cemetery "nonexistent" despite 20th-century accounts of tombstones in the Brooklyn Eagle and Long Island Daily Press.
A 1950 story in the Long Island Daily Press even reported two specific burials in church records: "C. Silliman" in 1846 and "Hutson grandchild" in 1857.
A city report in 1988 indicated that some bodies from the Methodist graveyard were reinterred in Flushing Cemetery between 1853 and 1867.
A Flushing Cemetery superintendent, however, told The News last week that he could not find any records of the Methodist reinterrments - exposing another potential flaw in the city's stance.
Even if the exhumations took place, the 1988 report suggested at least 30 bodies were unaccounted for. They could still lie beneath the parking lot - and at the center of one of the most controversial projects in Queens.
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Borough President Marshall Wants Bowne House to be a National Landmark by Connor Adams Sheets - YourNabe.com
One of Queens’ most historic structures, the Bowne House in Flushing may have federal protection soon if Borough President Helen Marshall gets her way.
Marshall has asked that the 1661 house, believed to be the best-preserved example of Anglo-Dutch vernacular architecture in the United States, be designated a National Historic Landmark.
The house at 37-01 Bowne St. is currently listed on the National Register of Historic Places and has been designated a New York City landmark, but the national recognition would make the building eligible for grant money, free inspections and other protections that only federal landmark status can bestow.
“The house embodies how a 17th century early settler in the colony of New Amsterdam lived and serves today as a window into the past for young and old to appreciate and enjoy,” Marshall wrote in a letter to Director Paul Loether of the National Historic Landmark Program at the National Register of Historic Places. “Today, more than ever, we need to keep in mind what has happened in the past, so that we build a better future.”
The house, the oldest building in Queens and one of the oldest in New York City, was home to John Bowne, a Quaker who established the principles of religious freedom later codified in the Bill of Rights.
In 1662, while New York was under the rule of Dutch Gov. Peter Stuyvesant, John Bowne openly defied a ban on practicing any religion other than that of the Dutch Reformed Church and allowed Quakers to hold services in his home.
Bowne was arrested and jailed and when he refused to pay a fine or plead guilty, Stuyvesant banished him to Holland, where he successfully argued his case before the Dutch West India Co. Stuyvesant was ordered to permit dissenting faiths to worship freely and Bowne returned to the Bowne House in 1664.
Despite its illustrious history, the home — a museum since 1947 filled with its original furniture — needs extensive work to be restored to its full glory. Plans for a three-phase restoration are under city review and work should begin next year, according to Anne Pal, the Bowne House’s volunteer coordinator.
“We’re really excited about getting National Landmark Status. It will help us finish the restoration because we will have access to federal funds,” Pal said. “Bowne House is an important place historically and this is a big step forward.”
The house was transferred to the city in 2009. Once the drawings are complete, the work will be put out for bids and the exterior improvements will begin, followed by plumbing, electric, fire safety and other interior renovations.
For more information about the Bowne House or to plan a visit, log on to bownehouse.org, e-mail office at office@bownehouse.org or call 718-359-0528.
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
Queens Students Sickened, Probably by Contaminated Water by Sharon Otterman - City Room Blog - NYTimes.com
Children waited for their parents to pick them out outside P.S. 20 John Bowne Elementary School in Flushing, where dozens of students became ill on Tuesday. Uli Seit for The New York Times About 80 children at Public School 20, an elementary school in Flushing, Queens, became ill Tuesday afternoon, apparently after drinking from water fountains that were contaminated by an air-conditioning chemical, the Department of Education said.
The children began complaining of stomach aches and nausea at about 1:30 p.m., and the school’s principal, Victoria Hart, called 911, said Marge Feinberg, a Department of Education spokeswoman.
Emergency services took 71 children to area hospitals, asking the Metropolitan Transportation Authority to assist with two city buses, said Frank Dwyer, a Fire Department spokesman.
Though some children were vomiting, Mr. Dwyer described the symptoms as minor and said that emergency officials expected all of the children to be released from the hospital later Tuesday.
The school, on Barclay Avenue, is also called the John Bowne school. It has 1,450 students and a new wing with central air-conditioning that was not working Tuesday morning. The school called a contractor, Bayside Refrigeration, to fix the problem, officials said.
Workers went on the roof around noon, “and it looks like some of the air- conditioner chemicals went into the water supply from the roof,” Ms. Feinberg said. Bayside Refrigeration could not be reached for comment late Tuesday.
Dr. Glenn Asaeda, an official at the Fire Department’s Office of Medical Affairs, told reporters that emergency workers and hospital personnel were working under the assumption that the children had ingested propylene glycol, a chemical commonly used as a coolant that can be toxic in large concentrations.
The ill children told teachers and medical personnel they had drunk from water fountains at school. While the incident is being investigated, the school’s water has been turned off, and the school will provide bottled water to the children, Ms. Feinberg said.
Officials said the episode was under investigation by the Department of Environmental Protection, the Department of Health, and the Department of Education.
Sunday, May 23, 2010
Video Shows Queens Rape Suspect Reported by Ti-Hua Chang - My Fox New York
Fox 5 News has exclusively obtained security camera footage of a man suspected of beating and raping a 23-year-old woman in an alley off Main Street in Flushing, Queens, on Sunday.
The victim came from China two months ago to work at a nail salon in New York. She wanted to save up money and study law, according to a report.
Her attacker apparently picked her at random.
Sources said the attacker dropped his weapon, a pipe, in some bushes after the assault.
A local lawmaker said that other security camera video shows that several people ignored the woman's cries for help and didn't help her.
Police have arrested a suspect, Carlos Salazar Cruz, and have charged him with attempted murder.
Friday, May 21, 2010
Thug Bashes Chinese Woman with Pipe, Assaults Her in Queens: Cops by John Lauinger - NY Daily News
A 23-year-old woman is on life-support in a Queens hospital after a weekend attack by a pipe-wielding rapist two months after she arrived in New York from China, cops said.
Officials are working desperately to get a visa for the woman's mother, who lives outside Beijing, so she can come to Queens to face the awful task of deciding her daughter's fate.
The young woman was returning from grocery shopping in downtown Flushing around 9:30 p.m. Saturday when a drunken Queens man smashed her in the head with a pipe and dragged her into an alley, authorities said.
Once inside the alley along 41st Road, Carlos Salazar Cruz, 28, removed the woman's clothing from the waist down and raped her with the pipe, according to court papers.
Two months ago, the young woman, who dreamed of becoming a lawyer, traveled from her native China on a student visa. She moved in with a distant uncle in Flushing.
"She was working in a nail salon, saving up money. She was going to start attending school," said Assemblywoman Grace Meng (D-Flushing). "She had good grades in China. That's why her parents wanted her to come and expand her horizons."
Now, the woman who once dreamed of a better future is in the intensive care unit at New York Hospital Queens. She suffered a fractured skull, bleeding on the brain and trauma to her vaginal area.
Meng said she and Rep. Gary Ackerman (R-Bayside) are working to expedite a visa for the woman's mother. Cops collared Cruz a few blocks from the crime scene after a witness, who saw him drag the woman into the alley and then emerge alone - called 911. Police later recovered the pipe about a block from the alley.
Cruz, who did not have a criminal record, emigrated from Mexico two years ago and found work at a Manhattan fish market.
He was arraigned late Tuesday on a slew of charges, including a top count of attempted murder. Prosecutors vowed to upgrade charges if the woman is removed from life-support.
Cruz's family said he claims he blacked out drunk and doesn't remember the incident.
"He woke up and found himself cuffed to the hospital bed," said his stunned sister, Patricia Salazar, 26. "He never acted violently....We just don't know why he would do this. We can't explain it."
Monday, March 22, 2010
New York City Comptroller John Liu, Assemblywoman Meng Endorse Gillibrand for Senate
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Joined by Asian American community leaders, New York City Comptroller John C. Liu and Assemblywoman Grace Meng (D-Flushing) formally endorsed Kirsten Gillibrand for U.S. Senate this weekend, touting her work to rebuild New York’s economy by increasing lending and cutting taxes for small businesses to create thousands of new jobs immediately.
"Senator Gillibrand's vision and priorities clearly place New York families and small businesses first," said Comptroller John C. Liu. "She has the right ideas and a strong legislative strategy to rebuild our economy so it works for all New Yorkers. Within her first year, Senator Gillibrand has pushed forth proposals that promise real and wide-reaching results, like federal tax credits for small businesses who hire new workers and grow jobs.
Comptroller Liu continued, "Over the past year, the Senator has also demonstrated a strong understanding of how the broken immigration system has an enormous impact on New Yorkers. Beginning with her support for the Dream Act, Senator Gillibrand's consistent commitment to more humane, comprehensive immigration reform and creating paths to citizenship is reinvigorating and good for New York. This is why I am proud to endorse her for U.S. Senate."
“Kirsten is exactly the kind of fighter we need right now in the U.S. Senate,” said Assemblywoman Grace Meng. “She understands the challenges families are facing and she has shown she will never back down from a fight. Kirsten has spent time in our communities, hearing from local leaders, business owners and everyday families. She has been a leader in fighting to provide every child with the opportunities they need to succeed – from healthier school meals to better after-school programs. In these tough economic times, Kirsten is the right voice to help get our families back on track, and that’s why I am proud to endorse her for U.S. Senate.”
“I am honored to have the support of Comptroller John Liu and Assemblywoman Grace Meng,” said Senator Gillibrand. “Comptroller Liu has been a fighter for New York families his entire life, from affordable housing to access to health care he has worked tirelessly for our communities. As Comptroller, he has hit the ground running working hard to ensure that small businesses thrive. Assemblywoman Meng's commitment to change, excellence in government and providing quality education is an inspiration to all of us in elected office. I am proud to be working with Comptroller Liu, Assemblywoman Meng and all the leaders of New York City to rebuild our economy and move New York in the right direction again.”
Comptroller Liu and Assemblywoman Meng are the latest of dozens of New York City’s leaders standing with Kirsten Gillibrand. From elected officials to community leaders, to teachers, doctors, nurses, environmental leaders, pro-choice advocates and civil rights leaders, thousands of New Yorkers are supporting Kirsten’s campaign.
Click here for the latest information about who has endorsed Kirsten’s campaign.
Saturday, November 21, 2009
Assemblyman Lancman at the Broadway-Flushing Homeowners' Association 45th Anniversary and International Buffet...
Thursday, October 1, 2009
Bowne House Rehab Will Proceed Despite Funding Threats, Says Parks Commissioner by Nicholas Hirshon - NY Daily News
The long-awaited restoration of a 17th-century Flushing home will proceed "full speed ahead" despite funding woes that had threatened to derail rehabilitation, city Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe said Tuesday.
Plans to construct a visitor's center beside the Bowne House - the oldest structure in Queens and a symbol of religious freedom that was recently donated to the city - are also on target for 2012, Benepe said.
"We probably have a pretty good shot," Benepe said of finishing the restoration and the new visitor's center on time.
The project is funded with $5 million from the city, state and private groups.
Repairs to the Colonial-era home seemed headed for delays when the city announced it was deferring $628,000 allocated by Councilman John Liu until 2013.
But Benepe said the city will "have enough money to do all the pressing work."
He also hailed the stability that comes with the site's transfer from the private Bowne House Historical Society to the city - a move which will be feted today at an 11:30 a.m. ceremony.
"Going under the umbrella of the Historic House Trust will afford all kinds of services and protection and sort of a backstop for bad times," Benepe said.
The wood-frame landmark is known as a symbol of religious freedom because its owner, John Bowne, was arrested in 1662 for allowing Quakers, a banned faith, to worship there in defiance of New Amsterdam law.
Bowne successfully fought to overturn the rule.
Last fall, experts studying the timber-frame design said parts of the house appeared to have been built years before the long-accepted 1661 start date, perhaps making it the city's oldest building.
Rosemary Vietor, president of the Bowne House Historical Society, viewed the handover to the city as the dawn of a new age for the edifice, which has been closed to visitors since 2000.
"I hope we'll be able to have something available to the public before [2012], if not the whole house," Vietor said.
Sunday, July 5, 2009
Woodhaven Writer Choked By Bandits - Murdered As He Slept In Vehicle by Robert Pozarycki www.timesnewsweekly.com | Times Newsweekly
Two teenagers were arrested last week and charged in connection with the robbery and strangling death of a 49-yearold Woodhaven journalist who was killed while sleeping inside a double-parked car in Flushing, it was announced.
Law enforcement sources identified the suspects as Chris Levy, 17, of Harlem and Cory Azor, 16, of East Elmhurst, who allegedly murdered and robbed David Kao, 49, of 76th Street in Woodhaven early on the morning of Saturday, June 6.
A third individual—Kevon Wilthshire, 17, of Corona—was apprehended with them last Monday, June 8, after police found him operating the victim's vehicle, which was reportedly stolen by the two other suspects.
All three individuals were previously arrested for robbing a 42-yearold man inside a Flushing apartment on the night of May 27, Queens District Attorney Richard A. Brown stated.
"While all three defendants are accused of preying on Asian men to rob, two of [them] are charged with a senseless and brutal crime that, by their own alleged actions, shows a complete disregard for human life," Brown said in a press release. "This case will be vigorously prosecuted."
According to law enforcement sources, the murder occurred at around 1 a.m. on Saturday, June 6, as Kao—a reporter with the Chinese language newspaper World Journal—slept inside a 2000 Lexus SUV that was parked in front of a home on Colden Street between Franklin and Cherry avenues.
Reportedly, Levy and Azor entered the vehicle and placed the victim in a chokehold, eventually pulling him over the driver's seat into the rear. There they continued to choke and punch the victim about his body until he was dead.
Prosecutors said the two teens al- legedly drove the Lexus to a location in the vicinity of Barclay Avenue and 147th Avenue, where they dumped Kao's body. The suspects then fled from the scene in the SUV.
Members of the 109th Precinct apprehended Levy, Azor and Wilthshire on June 8 in Flushing, inside the vehicle registered to Kao. During a search, the victim's wallet and credit cards were found in the suspects' possession.
Regarding the May 25 robbery in Flushing, law enforcement sources said the three teenagers allegedly confronted and mugged a 42-year-old man at around 8:50 p.m. inside an elevator at an apartment house on Ash Avenue.
Reportedly, Wilthshire grabbed the victim from behind and placed him in a chokehold while Levy held a silver pistol to the man's head and demanded cash. Police said the three teens allegedly removed a cell phone and wallet before fleeing from the scene in an unknown direction.
Prosecutors noted that the phone was later discarded by Wilthshire, who allegedly told detectives that he didn't like the device.
Levy and Azor were charged with second-degree murder, first- and second degree robbery and third- and fourth-degree criminal possession of stolen property. Wilthshire was booked on first- and second-degree robbery and third-degree criminal possession of stolen property.
They were each arraigned in Queens Criminal Court last Wednesday, June 10, according to court records. Levy and Azor were remanded without bail, while Wilthshire was ordered held in custody on $75,000 bail.
The three are scheduled to return to court on June 25. If convicted, they each face up to 25 years to life in prison.
The case is being prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney Suzanne D. O'Hare of the D.A.'s Homicide Investigations Bureau, under the supervision of Assistant District Attorneys Peter T. Reese, bureau chief, and Peter J. McCormack III, deputy bureau chief.
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Queens Preservationists Hoping for Reel Deal on RKO Keith's Movie Theater by Nicholas Hirshon - NY Daily News
Preservationists who want to buy a shuttered Queens movie palace are hoping its debt-saddled owner will lower the $24 million asking price to cut his losses - or even donate the structure to them for a tax break.
Representatives of Brooklyn developer Shaya Boymelgreen insisted he "would not consider a sizable reduction" on the price tag nor making a donation of the historic RKO Keith's theater in Flushing.
But far-flung fans of the landmark movie house - who want to transform it into a multicultural performing arts center - think Boymelgreen may change his mind, given a host of publicized financial woes.
The Israeli business newspaper Globes reported Monday that Boymelgreen was nearing a debt-rescheduling deal with his firm's largest creditor, Mizrahi Tefahot Bank, because he can't afford an upcoming $2.4 million interest payment.
Globes also reported that Boymelgreen investors are expected to convert part of their bonds into shares, diluting Boymelgreen's 89.8% stake in the company.
Boymelgreen brass told Globes that a bondholders' agreement was pending, but wouldn't disclose details. Boymelgreen's daughter, Bassie Deitsch, who is the group's marketing director, refused to discuss the Globes story with the Daily News.
"He's got so many problems," said Flushing-raised comedian Ed Tracey, founder of the Friends of the RKO Keith's Flushing. "If you look at what he owes, it's almost better for him to donate it."
Jerry Rotondi, a preservationist who is advising Tracey, figured the cash-strapped Boymelgreen would drop the price for the theater, which opened in 1928 and closed in the late 1980s.
"I don't think he particularly cares who he sells it to as long as he gets the money," Rotondi said. "My gut feeling is right now - it's more than a gut feeling - is that it's overpriced."
ReMax broker Erez Daniel, who is representing the RKO Keith's with colleague Kwan Cheung, said the two have fielded calls from potential buyers hoping to turn the perennial eyesore into everything from a mall to a 200-unit condo to a movie theater.
Daniel questioned the legitimacy of Tracey's group, which plans to incorporate and earn nonprofit status. But Daniel said he remains "open-minded to all ideas."
"If the right person will be coming in and will be interested in restoring the theater, nothing would make us happier," he said.
Boymelgreen bought the theater from scandal-plagued landlord Tommy Huang in 2002.
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
Willow Lake in Flushing Meadows Park...
Wednesday, March 4, 2009
Catholic School Crime Spree - Burglars Steal Cash from 7 Sites in 4 Months by Leigh Remizowski - NY Daily News
THIS CRIME spree started at the Gate of Heaven, but whoever is responsible may be heading straight to hell.
A burglar, or burglars, have ransacked seven Catholic schools in Queens during the past four months, using similar methods to break in and making off mostly with cash, police said.
The unholy spree began at St. Mary Gate of Heaven School in Ozone Park on Nov. 22, when an undetermined amount of cash was looted from the administrative office, police said.
The most recent burglary was on Feb. 10 at Holy Family School in Flushing. The school's safe was carried off.
"The safe had to have weighed three to four hundred pounds," said Principal Mary Scheer. "Needless to say, it was a little shocking."
Because the safe was so hefty, Scheer believes the heist was the work of more than one burglar.
The safe contained $2,000 to $3,000 cash and more than $16,000 in tuition checks, she said. Parents were notified immediately and told to cancel the checks, Scheer said.
Hours earlier, thieves had broken into Our Lady of Lourdes School in Jamaica, but nothing was stolen, police said.
Each time, the burglar or burglars break in through a window or door, police said. All of the heists have occurred during late night or predawn hours.
Our Lady of Grace School in Howard Beach was hit twice, police said. The burglars stole cash from the main office on Dec. 14, said Principal Barbara Kavanagh. The second break-in occurred Jan. 15, but no money was taken.
"The worst part wasn't missing a few hundred dollars," Kavanagh said. "It was the damage that was done and the mess that was left."
Since the burglaries, Our Lady of Grace has installed surveillance cameras.
Sunday Porcelli, a mother of two students there, said she has received memos assuring parents there is no cash kept in the school.
St. Helen School in Howard Beach, Sacred Heart School in Glendale and Our Lady of the Snows in Floral Park also were burglarized.
Porcelli said she hopes this is "a wakeup call to the Diocese" to keep schools secure. But her biggest concern is that the culprits be caught before they disrupt more schools.
"There is a special place in hell for people who rob churches," she said.
Thursday, August 21, 2008
Latimer House in Flushing Now Under Historic Trust by Stephen Stirling - Howard Beach Times - YourNabe.com

The Lewis Latimer House in Flushing has officially joined the Historic Housing Trust, the city Parks Department announced last week.
The move transfers the landmarked home, at 34-31 137th St., from the control of the city Cultural Affairs Department to the Parks Department, a move which could open up more funding possibilities for the historic home of inventor Lewis Latimer.
As an official member of the trust, Parks will now collaborate on the house's conservation, interpretation, promotion and property along with the current operator, the Lewis H. Latimer Fund Inc.
The petite Queen Anne-style home was constructed in the late 1880s and home to Latimer from 1903 until his death in 1928. The house remained in the Latimer family until the 1960s and was threatened with demolition in the 1980s until receiving its landmark status and being moved from its original home on Holly Avenue.
Latimer was a black inventor and an electrical pioneer who collaborated closely with men like Thomas Edison and Alexander Graham Bell. He is most famous for his work on the incandescent light bulb, which he improved when he invented and patented the carbon filament — an innovation that vastly improved the bulb's lifespan.
Today the Latimer House serves as a museum celebrating the life of the inventor. Under the supervision of its new director, Vivian Millicent Warfield, and through its new collaboration with the Historic Housing Trust, the museum hopes to expand its hours and programing.
Beginning Sept. 2, the museum will extend its hours to Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. for tours of the house and its garden.
During the fall, the Latimer House plans to start an after-school program and host a series of special events in honor of the inventor's 160th birthday, each targeted at highlighting the importance of Latimer's and other blacks' contributions to science and technology and city history.
Reach reporter Stephen Stirling by e-mail at Sstirling@timesledger.com or by phone at 718-229-0300, ext. 138.
Monday, May 5, 2008
Two Queens Projects Ready to Move Forward by Daniel Massey - Crain's New York Business
Following a major victory on a controversial plan to rezone 125th Street in Harlem, the Bloomberg administration is about to seek approval for two signature Queens redevelopment projects—a move sure to stir further debate.
The city intends to certify the Willets Point and Hunters Point South plans into the land-use process on Monday, setting the stage for a seven-month battle as the projects are scrutinized by the communities, the City Planning Commission and the City Council.
Willets Point business owners have been simmering since last May, when Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced a $3 billion plan that would displace them and remake the hardscrabble blocks near the Mets' new Citi Field. There, the city would build 5,500 housing units, a hotel, a convention center and 2.2 million square feet of office and retail space.
The Hunters Point project—which calls for 5,000 units of housing along the East River in Long Island City—has been less controversial, because it does not involve relocations. But since 60% of the residential units would be reserved for middle-income New Yorkers and the rest would be sold at market rates, the plan has drawn the ire of activists who say low-income Queens residents will be priced out.
The Bloomberg administration has already won approval for 80 rezonings, and last week's win on a key vote concerning the Harlem project means that another authorization could soon be on the way. But the mayor, whose time in office is winding down, is far from finished with an ambitious development agenda that also includes Coney Island, Moynihan Station and a two-block stretch of East 125th Street.
Local councilman opposed
The mayor's economic development team has decided to press forward on Willets Point, despite many unresolved issues. The 61-acre redevelopment had been scheduled for certification in February, but the city temporarily backed off when City Councilman Hiram Monserrate, D-Queens, withdrew his support. He remains opposed, saying he wants the administration to guarantee the inclusion of middle- and low-income housing units, require livable-wage jobs and agree not to use eminent domain to take over properties.
“They have now put a real short-term clock on this project,” says Mr. Monserrate. “And that clock begins to tick on Monday.”
The city's decision to kick-start the land review is sure to intensify the opposition, which will focus on the relocation of 275 Willets Point businesses and their nearly 2,000 workers. Earlier this month, business owners filed a lawsuit charging the city with intentionally neglecting Willets Point in order to make it easier to take property via eminent domain.
Another potential obstacle emerged Friday, when Queens Borough President Helen Marshall got an advance copy of the environmental impact statement. Ms. Marshall, who had been a staunch supporter of the project, was “very disappointed.” She says a plan for developing the land if negotiations with owners stall could eliminate the convention center and compromise the environmental remediation of the site.
The city's Economic Development Corp. has a large group assigned to the Willets Point project, including staffers who are working full-time on business relocation.
“Our intention is to compensate everyone fairly,” says President Seth Pinsky.
Business owners say the city has not provided them with viable relocation options.
“I don't intend to uproot and move and be put in the middle of nowhere,” says Danny Sambucci Jr., whose father opened Sambucci Bros. Auto Salvage 57 years ago.
By law, to maintain the possibility of seizing property, the city will hold off on designating a developer until after the land-use process plays out.
The Hunters Point redevelopment has been less contentious, but the project does have its detractors.
“If the mayor wants to help our communities, he has to make affordable housing affordable to the people in that neighborhood,” says the Rev. Lancelot Waldron, president of Queens Congregations United for Action.
The bigger hurdle with this plan could be financing. The city can't issue bonds for residential developments because it isn't setting aside 20% of units for low-income families.
The Department of Housing Preservation and Development applied for federal approval to create a nonprofit organization that would issue tax-free bonds to build middle-income housing, but a decision isn't expected for months.
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Saturday, April 12, 2008
Falling Into a Queens Time Warp by Corey Kilgannon - City Room - Metro - New York Times Blog
I called Robert A. Miller, an amateur local historian in Queens, because I heard that the Long Island Motor Parkway, which once stretched from Queens out to Lake Ronkonkoma on Long Island, was about to celebrate its centennial.
True, said Mr. Miller, they began building the parkway in June 1908. And yes, it is widely recognized as the country’s first parkway, and the setting for the Vanderbilt Cup, the first major auto event in the country.
And yes, he’d be happy to meet me on Thursday, on the several-mile stretch of the long-defunct parkway still remaining in eastern Queens. But first, he had another centennial to tend to: Preparing for the 100th anniversary of The Times Newsweekly, a weekly paper covering western Queens and founded in 1908 as The Ridgewood Times.
Wondering how many centennials a man can fit into one day, I arranged to meet Mr. Miller at the Newsweekly’s offices on Fresh Pond Road in Ridgewood, where he and his brother, Arthur Miller, and an unrelated friend, George Miller, of the Greater Ridgewood Historical Society, were helping the paper prepare an anniversary commemorative insert by pulling news and photos from 100 years’ worth of newspapers.
They were sitting with the paper’s managing editor, Bill Mitchell, and its publisher and editor Maureen E. Walthers, 73, a hard-boiled, wisecracking newsgal who has worked at the paper since 1976. They were all eating lunch, corned beef and cabbage.
“We do things right around here,” Ms. Walthers said, and then they went back to work.
“All the knowledge these three guys have, it’s more than an encyclopedia,” Ms. Walthers said. “They’re mixing all the ingredients and soon it will be cake.”
She picked up a framed copy of the first edition of the paper, published on Aug. 1, 1908 — half in English, half in German — and with a newsstand price of 2 cents. On a box on the upper left is the motto, “Advertise Your Wants In The Times.”
The group was reviewing papers from 1934. The Feb. 9 issue had an article about Lt. Gov. Franklin Haven visiting Ridgewood. The Feb. 16 issue had an article about a local law crated to keep “peddlers, vendors, hawkers and hucksters from the streets of Ridgewood and Glendale.”
“Hawkers and hucksters,” Ms. Walthers said, cackling. “Guess that includes us.”
There was something on Ridgewood’s Knights of Columbus opposing the showing of “immoral pictures and the enactment of the birth control bill.” And an article with the headline “Favor Park on Site of Ash Dumps,” about building what is now Flushing Meadows-Corona Park.
A headline in the Feb. 23 issue reported: “Survey Shows H.S. Students Not Influenced By Jazz Age.”
Ash heaps. Jazz Age. Fitzgerald, anyone?
The March 3, 1934, copy informed readers that, “Queens Tax Rate, Set At $2.83, Is Highest in City.”
Were the articles so different than today’s, asked Arthur Miller?
“It’s so old it’s new again,” he said.
But Robert Miller observed that they had run across an unusually high number of articles about women falling out of apartment windows. The cause was often omitted. The men wondered what it could be: Were the women waving to the ice man? Closing the shutters? Was it the heavy clothing? The lack of window guards?
The Times Newsweekly circulation is roughly 25,000, Ms. Walthers said, including about 2,000 copies sent to subscribers in Florida, mostly former Queens residents now retired.
Ms. Walthers told her favorite journalism parable. She came to work at the Timesweekly with no experience (”My experience was stirring a pot in the kitchen — barely finished high school.”) After several years as a reporter, she tried taking a journalism class at Columbia University, she said, and found herself sitting around a table with a professor and students much younger than her.
The professor asked what was the most important thing in journalism, and the students answered Truth and Justice. Finally, Ms. Walthers gave her opinion: “Advertising.”
“The professor took me aside after class and said this may not be the best class for you.” They refunded her tuition and several years later, she bought the Newsweekly, whose cover this week was emblazoned with the usual bold banner headlines:
HE’S SHOT IN BEEF AT A BODEGA
BREAK–IN BID BUST
THEY BEAT HIM DOWN FOR PHONE
Then it was on to the Motor Parkway’s centennial. Mr. Miller and I drove to the remaining stretch of the Motor Parkway and parked in a lot in Alley Pond Park across from Creedmore Psychiatric Center at the corner of Union Turnpike and Winchester Boulevard. We walked past the Alley Pond Tennis Center and past a group of men practicing cricket in a tennis court.
It is basically the east end of a three-mile stretch of what remains of the parkway in Queens, although there are remaining segments on Long Island, said Mr. Miller. It was built by William K. Vanderbilt Jr., a great-grandson of Cornelius Vanderbilt, the railroad tycoon.
“Willie K” wanted a race-road for him and his tycoon friends. The annual Vanderbilt Cup soon drew an international field and crowds of 300,000.
The private 45-mile highway from Flushing, Queens, to Lake Ronkonkoma was built between 1908 and 1911. The architect was John Russell Pope, who later went on to design the American Museum of Natural History in New York and Washington’s National Gallery of Art. It is listed with the National and New York State Registers of Historic Places in 2002, but never recognized as landmark by the city.
The parkway closed in 1938, and parts are run by the city’s Parks Department as a path for walking and biking and enveloped by a woodsy canopy. Although it is surrounded by busy roads like Union Turnpike and the Grand Central Parkway, it’s handsome banks and curves pull the eye off into the distance, back to an earlier time of sporting chaps in gloves and caps, driving chugging motorcars.
Mr. Miller speaks passionately about its swashbuckling history: The drama and danger of the open-road motorcar races; how rum-runners used the parkway because it was privately owned and not patrolled; how Mr. Vanderbilt had dramatic jurisdictional showdowns over rights of way with Robert Moses, who was building the Grand Central Parkway; the 1910 race that drew 300,000 people and killed several mechanics and spectators; how Mr. Vanderbilt’s vision changed Long Island’s roadways and the shape of the automotive world
“When this opened, there had never been anything like it in the world. It had more reinforced concrete than all the rest of the roads in the United States. Combined!.”
He regrets never meeting “Willy K,” who died Jan. 8, 1944, “two-and-a-half months before I was born.”
Mr. Miller is a retired Queens Library employee who for the past 40 years been studying and giving tours and talks about the parkway. As a young man, he read an article about the parkway and set out with car and bicycle exploring it in Queens and Long Island.
“For 40 years, I’ve tried to make people more aware of it,” said Mr. Miller, 65, whose voice becomes imbued with a touch of regret as he talks about why he never married. “Things just never worked out,” he said, staring down the old parkway narrowing into the distance. “I’ve given just about my whole life to this thing. I guess it’s the romantic in me. I love the way it curves around. It’s like a time warp.”
Friday, December 14, 2007
Queens Chronicle - Remonstrance Welcomed As Beacon Of Democracy by Liz Rhodes

The 350-year-old Flushing Remonstrance came home to Queens last week, along with 40 descendants of the document’s signers.
The charred parchment (it was burned in the state archives in 1911) is now on view for a month in the Flushing Library, where people can see the first written document proclaiming religious freedom in this country.
Written in 1657 and signed by 29 men, mostly farmers and tradesmen of English background, the Remonstrance was sent to Dutch Gov. Peter Stuyvesant, protesting his ban on meetings by the Quakers.
At an opening ceremony at the library on Thursday evening, public officials and descendants spoke eloquently about the significance of the document and the men who signed it.
Borough President Helen Marshall called the Remonstrance the cornerstone of democracy, while Congressman Gary Ackerman said the signers “stood up to power and stepped up to the plate.”
He added that people today should be inspired by the document to stand up to power and not to deride anyone.

Christine Ward, state archivist, called the document an iconic record, adding, “Your attachment to this document is greatly infective.”
She noted that the document would return to the borough in the spring. It will be at the library through Jan. 7 and in the spring at the Queens Museum of Art from April 6-June 29.
Many in Queens, however, want it to remain here permanently, rather than be locked up in a vault in Albany where no one can see it. State officials say the document is too fragile and could not be kept at the museum on view for any great length of time.
The Rev. Nicholas Tweed, of the Macedonia AME Church in Flushing, is one proponent of keeping the Remonstrance here. “This document is very important especially with the current climate,” he said. “It reminds us this is the birthplace of religious freedom.”
Tweed added that the document should be here and questioned the archivists’ statements. “Tell us what we need to do to make it climate-controlled at the museum,” he said. “The Mona Lisa is a treasure and it’s not hidden away.”
David Oats of Forest Hills, who has worked for years to get the Remonstrance back in Flushing for good, said a document sitting in a vault does no one any good. “They say if you go to Albany, you can see the Remonstrance on a digital photo, but that is not enough. The Declaration of Independence is on view to the public and so should this.”
Bob Bullock, president of the Archives Partnership Trust, defended the state’s position. “The document belongs to all the people in New York state, not just to those in Flushing. And we have never turned down a request to bring it to Flushing.”
This is the fourth time it’s been returned to Flushing on a temporary basis.
Penelope Bowne Parryman, representing the descendants, noted that the signers were “remarkable for being unremarkable.” She called the Remonstrance the first formal resistence in the new world and likened it to the Declaration of Independence.
“Like the signers of the Declaration of Independence, these men all took great risks and suffered hardships, but they are largely forgotten.”
Her 10 times great-grandfather was John Bowne, who was banished by Gov. Peter Stuyvesant for allowing Quakers to meet at his home. Bowne pleaded his case with the Dutch West India Company and won. He returned with a letter instructing Stuyvesant to grant religious freedom for all.
At a luncheon the next day for descendants, sponsored by the Flushing Marketing Task Force and the Flushing Business Improvement District, many guests said they were in awe over what their ancestors had accomplished.
James Thorne travelled to Flushing with his daughter, Corrie, from their home in Walla Walla, Wash. “We are actually descended from six of the signers but our main relative was William Thorne,” he said. “It’s nice to be connected to such influential history.”
Thorne added that he was very proud of his heritage. “I am overwhelmed with what they did. They stood up to the toughest thing.”
Lewis Thorne of Eugene, Oreg., is James Thorne’s cousin. Reflecting on the signers, he noted that they were reacting to what they thought was right. “Their ideas were strong and organized. It’s amazing how closely James Thorne’s beliefs paralled mine.”
Ralph Hart and his sister, Bonnie, travelled from Virginia. They are related to Edward Hart, who wrote the Remonstrance. Ralph Hart noted that his ancestor was jailed for three weeks for his “sedition” and forced to apologize for it. “After he got out of jail, he moved his family to Westchester. Hartsdale is named after them.”










