Jefferson near Nostrand in 1899
LETS PRESERVE AND PROTECT OUR WONDERFUL NEIGHBORHOODS. BEDFORD, STUYVESANT HEIGHTS & TOMPKINS PARK
Monday, May 26, 2014
Thursday, June 13, 2013
Walking Tour with Morgan Munsey
Jefferson Ave Homes Designed by architect G. A. Schellenger in 1884
Writer Anne Hellman of http://design-brooklyn.tumblr.com/ and photographer Michel Arnaud tour us around Brooklyn's recent townhouse renovations, restaurant and bar build-outs, garden designs, and public structures, as well as visits to studios of designers making high-end furniture, lighting, and textiles.
I was honored to give the lovely Anne Hellman White, the wonderful Jane Creech and the super talented Michel Arnaud a tour of Bedford Stuyvesant for an up coming book. Here is a sneak preview of whats to come
If you would like to join me and awesome Suzanne Spellen (aka Montrose Morris) on a tour this summer please go to MAS NY. We are leading a tour this weekend of the proposed Bedford Historic District and Stuyvesant Heights.
Labels:
Gilbert Schellenger,
Jefferson Avenue,
Tours
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
748 Hancock Street home to the first African American female principal in the NYC public schools
"Sarah Smith Tompkins Garnet was the first African American female principal in the New York public schools. The eldest of eleven children, she was born Minsarah Smith in Brooklyn on July 31, 1831 to Sylvanus and Annie (Springstead) Smith. Her parents, both of mixed African-American and Native American stock, were landholders and successful farmers. Since there were no schools available for African-American children in the immediate vicinity, Sarah received her early education from her paternal grandmother, Sylvia Hobbs, who maintained a school in the attic of her home on Hempstead Plains. At the age of fourteen Sarah began teaching in an African free school, a caste school established by the Manumission Society in Williamsburgh (later part of Brooklyn), N.Y. At the same time she studied at various normal schools in and around New York City. Her first teaching assignment in the public school system was the principalship of a grammar school in New York City which was subsequently designated as P.S. (Public School) 80. She served continuously as principal of this school from the date of her appointment, April 30, 1863, to the date of her retirement, Sept. 10, 1900. The last years of her life she devoted to the seamstress shop which she had begun in 1883, along with her teaching, on Hancock Street in Brooklyn.
Mrs. Garnet had the distinction of being the first African-American woman to attain the rank of principal in the New York City public school system, and she was considered a most efficient administrator. The public presentations and closing exercises of her school--among them the "Literary Salads" made up of quotations from standard authors--always drew large crowds. Some measure of the quality of her work may be found in her students, who included Harry H. Williamson, podiatrist and author; Walter F. Craig, violinist; and Florence T. Ray, Fannie Murray, and S. Elizabeth Frazier, who became successful teachers and leaders in the public schools. On a lesser scale, she touched the lives of many through the night school program which she initiated, emphasizing, in addition to literary education, sewing, homemaking, and vocational training. Mrs. Garnet was both resourceful and persistent. Though frail of body, she had an "unconscious grace and dignity," a serenity and tact, that won the regard of both her pupils and her supervisors.
Combined with a successful career in teaching and administration were marriage and family life. At an early age she was wed to the Rev. James Thompson, an Episcopal Minister who became the rector of the St. Matthew Free Church of Brooklyn. Mrs. Thompson became an active member of his church and remained an Episcopalian throughout her life. Thompson died in the late 1860's, leaving her with two children, both of whom died young. About 1879, she became the second wife of the Rev. Henry Highland Garnet, a noted educator, Presbyterian clergyman, and abolitionist. His death in 1882 left her again a widow.
Inspired, perhaps, by Garnet's active role in public affairs, and aided by her prominence as the widow of so renowned a leader, Mrs. Garnet in her later years took part in several organizations devoted to the uplift of the African-American people. She was the founder and leading spirit of the Equal Suffrage Club, a small organization of black women in Brooklyn which met in her shop or in her home to advance the cause of political rights for women; although of limited influence, the group remained in existence from the late 1880's until her death. She early joined the National Association of Colored Women, serving in modest capacities for several years. She was active in efforts to remove discrimination against African-American teachers in New York and on one occasion, it is said, joined Bishop W. B. Derrick in testifying before the state legislature at Albany. In 1911 she went to London, England, as a delegate to the first Universal Races Congress. On her return, although then eighty years of age, she actively distributed to her club suffrage literature she had acquired in England. She died that fall at her Brooklyn home of arteriosclerosis and was buried in Greenwood Cemetery in Brooklyn. A younger sister of Mrs. Garnet, Susan Maria (Smith) McKinney Steward (1845-1918), graduated from the New York Medical School for Women and Children and pursued a successful career as a physician in Brooklyn and later at Wilberforce University in Ohio."
Mrs. Garnet had the distinction of being the first African-American woman to attain the rank of principal in the New York City public school system, and she was considered a most efficient administrator. The public presentations and closing exercises of her school--among them the "Literary Salads" made up of quotations from standard authors--always drew large crowds. Some measure of the quality of her work may be found in her students, who included Harry H. Williamson, podiatrist and author; Walter F. Craig, violinist; and Florence T. Ray, Fannie Murray, and S. Elizabeth Frazier, who became successful teachers and leaders in the public schools. On a lesser scale, she touched the lives of many through the night school program which she initiated, emphasizing, in addition to literary education, sewing, homemaking, and vocational training. Mrs. Garnet was both resourceful and persistent. Though frail of body, she had an "unconscious grace and dignity," a serenity and tact, that won the regard of both her pupils and her supervisors.
748 Hancock Street Photo by Felicia Jamieson
Combined with a successful career in teaching and administration were marriage and family life. At an early age she was wed to the Rev. James Thompson, an Episcopal Minister who became the rector of the St. Matthew Free Church of Brooklyn. Mrs. Thompson became an active member of his church and remained an Episcopalian throughout her life. Thompson died in the late 1860's, leaving her with two children, both of whom died young. About 1879, she became the second wife of the Rev. Henry Highland Garnet, a noted educator, Presbyterian clergyman, and abolitionist. His death in 1882 left her again a widow.
Inspired, perhaps, by Garnet's active role in public affairs, and aided by her prominence as the widow of so renowned a leader, Mrs. Garnet in her later years took part in several organizations devoted to the uplift of the African-American people. She was the founder and leading spirit of the Equal Suffrage Club, a small organization of black women in Brooklyn which met in her shop or in her home to advance the cause of political rights for women; although of limited influence, the group remained in existence from the late 1880's until her death. She early joined the National Association of Colored Women, serving in modest capacities for several years. She was active in efforts to remove discrimination against African-American teachers in New York and on one occasion, it is said, joined Bishop W. B. Derrick in testifying before the state legislature at Albany. In 1911 she went to London, England, as a delegate to the first Universal Races Congress. On her return, although then eighty years of age, she actively distributed to her club suffrage literature she had acquired in England. She died that fall at her Brooklyn home of arteriosclerosis and was buried in Greenwood Cemetery in Brooklyn. A younger sister of Mrs. Garnet, Susan Maria (Smith) McKinney Steward (1845-1918), graduated from the New York Medical School for Women and Children and pursued a successful career as a physician in Brooklyn and later at Wilberforce University in Ohio."
1900 census of Hancock Street
Labels:
Hancock Street
Monday, January 21, 2013
The Largest building in Bedford Stuyvesant
The second 13th Regiment
Armory, i.e., the Sumner Avenue Armory, was built in 1891 to replace the 1874 Flatbush Avenue Armory. The new armory, designed by Rudolphe Lawrence
Daus, is
a massive, early medieval inspired, fortress-like
edifice dominated by a
two-story, stone-trimmed sally
port and two symmetrical,
originally six-story round towers
with crenelated parapets. The armory
is currently a city-owned homeless shelter. The second largest Amory in New
York City and maybe the country but this building sit unprotected. We have lost one tower of this great building already. I hope that we do not lose more.
Orginial Amory Located at Altantic Center
Amory Today
Located in the proposed Stuyvesant North Historic District the Thirteenth Regiment Armory
covers almost the entire bloc k on Sumner Avenue (Marcus Garvey), between
Putnam and Jefferson Avenues. The cost
of its construction was about $650,000.
The architecture of the structure is of the old Norman style with modern
improvements of the time. R. L. Daus the architect, thinking that the Thirteenth
Regiment would prefer a building, suggestive of the Thirteenth Century, and believing that, apart from sentiment, the Norman barons
of that period knew what was serviceable in military architecture with that
idea. The building was regarded by experts
as the very expression of simplicity, strength and dignity.
Architect Rodolphe Lawrence Daus was born on August
10, 1854 in Mexico, where his parents ( Lepold and Emma Ruben-Daus a German and French couple) were residing temporarily. Owing to
business relations of his father, who was a wholesale merchant. When he was
only a few months old he was brought to New York, where he grew up. At the age of 20 he came to Europe for his
studies, entering the world famous Paris School of Fine Arts or École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts . Among his classmates he was the first to
graduate from the second to the first in class, a distinction that entities him
to a special prize. In assertion he
gained medals in construction and mathematics, and his first “project.” Or design
in the class gained him the highest award obtainable. Another distinction he gained was the “Achilles
le Clair” prize
Before returning to the United States he was married in
Paris to Madamoiselle Louise Perrin. He
lived at his first home at 1419 Pacific in Crown Heights North. During the latter part of his live he lived
in the winter in the St. Hubert Hotel and the summers were spent at Sea Gate. Daus had two daughters, Henriette and Emma
and one son William Thallen Daus, who followed his father’s footsteps being a
student of architecture at the Beaux Arts.
In 1899 Daus was appointed a member and secretary of the New
York Building Code Commission, and, being the only architect in that body. Daus was, moreover president of the Brooklyn
American Institute of Architects, as well as an active member of the Brooklyn
Institute of Arts and Sciences and the Beaux Arts Society. Among the clubs of which he was a member may
be mentioned the Brooklyn Club, the Rembrandt Club, the Atlantic Yacht Club,
the Riding and Driving Club and the
Riding Club.
Daus was a painter of oil and water color in which he
achieved success. Daus died on September 30, 1916 at his Paris home located at
36 Avenue de la Bourdonnais.
Other Daus Buildings in Bedford Stuyvesant:
- 74 Halsey Street 1886 (unprotected but calendared)
- 615-613 Throop Ave 1890 (landmarked in 1971 Stuyvesant Heights)
- Lincoln Club in Clinton Hil, Brooklyn
- NY County National Bank, 8th and 14th St, Manhattan
- 266 West End Avenue, Manhattan
- 47 Montgomery Pl., Brooklyn
- Greenpoint Library, Brooklyn
- 135 Plymouth St Dumbo, Brooklyn
Street address: | 357 Sumner Avenue (now Marcus Garvey Boulevard, between Putnam and Jefferson avenues) |
City: | Brooklyn |
County: | Kings |
Year constructed: | 1892 - 1894 |
Architect: | Rudolphe Lawrance Daus |
Size : | Regiment |
Square footage: | 232,606 NSF |
Acreage: | 2.62 Acres |
Status: | Closed in 1971 / Used for homeless men's shelter |
Units Stationed:
|
Years:
|
13th Regiment | 1894 - 1899 |
13th Heavy Artillery | 1900 - 1905 |
13th Coastal Artillery | 1906 - 1907 |
13th Artillery District Co. 1-12 | 1908 - 1913 |
13th Coast Defense Command (Co. 1-12) | 1914 - 1921 |
13th Coast Defense Command (Co. 357 - 368) | 1922 - 1922 |
245th Artillery (Batteries A-M) | 1923 - 1923 |
245th Coast Artillery Regiment | 1924 - ???? |
Transportation Battalion | 1961 - ???? |
Tuesday, December 25, 2012
Lost Bedford Corners Rem Lefferts House
Rem Lefferts once lived in the lovely home that was torn down over 100 years ago. This house was built in 1838 and stood as a major landmark in Bedford (Bedford Corners) for over 70 years. I wish this place was still standing but today we have a rather unappealing architecture on the north side of Fulton at Arlington Pl. Lets not lose anymore of our buildings lets landmark Bedford. Please come out to the public hearing on the 15th of Januaury.
Saturday, December 8, 2012
Lost Bedford Stuyvesant Old Three Mile House.
Three Mile House on Fulton Street 1909
Wednesday, December 5, 2012
Lost Bedford Stuyvesant Throop Avenue Presbyterian Church
Throop Avenue Presbyterian Church 1906
Throop Avenue Presbyterian Church was first reported to the General Assembly of the
Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. (Old School) in 1853. In 1945, it received another
congregation through a merger, and became known as the Throop Memorial Rosedale
Presbyterian Church, Rosedale, NY. In 1962, the name was changed to Throop Memorial Church
Rosedale, located in Queens, New York. This is still an active congregation.
Throop Avenue Presbyterian Church Sunday School 1906
1889 Fowler and Hough rendering
Rev Lewis Ray Foote D.D.
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