Tag Archives | heights history

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Heights History: 215 Montague Street

The structure that once stood at 215 Montague Street is gone, replaced by a commercial building anchored by Commerce Bank, but the address has earned its place in history. As the “Front Office” of the Brooklyn Dodgers it was where club President/GM Branch Rickey broke Major League Baseball’s color barrier on August 28, 1945 by […]

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Heights History: Brooklyn Heights Railroad

On July 20, 1891 the cable cars connecting Brooklyn City Hall (now Borough Hall) and the Wall Street Ferry started running on Montague Street. The line was designed by Robert Gillham who was known for his work on the Kansas City Cable Railway. It ran until 1924, twelve years after the Wall Street Ferry stopped […]

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Heights History: Brooklyn Heights Historic District

In the late 1940s and early 1950s, Brooklyn Heights residents persuaded “Power Broker” Robert Moses to re-route his plans to ram the BQE through the heart of the neighborhood and to halt bulldozing Willowtown in the name of progress. The woman who led the resistance against Moses on his Willowtown proposal was Mrs. Darwin James, […]

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Heights History: Vintage Henry and Cranberry Photo

With the imminent opening of the Blue Pig Party Place at 50 Henry Street, we found this vintage photo of the spot to be quite interesting. Anyone have background on the store that was once there or an idea of the year this photo was taken? Photo via Flickr user vinceconnare

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Heights History: Nabe vs Robert Moses

To some Robert Moses was the most brilliant urban planner who ever lived. Others will argue that Moses’ cold and wreckless vision stymied beauty and fostered the urban blight of the mid-twentieth century. Among his accomplishments, Moses built the Belt Parkway and replaced Brooklyn’s shorefront towns with horrific high-rise apartments worthy of the Eastern Bloc. […]

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Heights History – 21 Clark Street

Your friends ask you what that castle building is on Clark Street and if you’re a smarty pants you know that it was once known as the Leverich Towers Hotel.  It’s now a residence hall for Jehovah’s Witnesses but in its heyday it played host to the Brooklyn Dodgers (they stayed there during homestands), housed […]

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Heights History: 48 Hicks Street

The storefront at 48 Hicks Street is now vacant but it was once a used antiquarian bookstore owned by one of New York City’s legendary booksellers.  Jack Biblo, who along with partner Jack Tannen owned and operated Biblo and Tannen’s one of Manhattan’s largest bookstores, spent his final years running a much smaller bookstore — […]

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