Downtown Jamaica

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Downtown Jamaica King Manor Museum 150-03 Jamaica Ave. La Casina 90-33 160th St. The finest 19th century manor house The Firehouse HiSTORiC remaining in New York City, King Built in 1934, the former 89-56 162nd St. FUTURE Manor was the home of Rufus King — La Casina is a rare Queens Valencia Theatre The Jamaica Firehouse, completed a signer of the U.S. Constitution, U.S. example of the streamlined 165-11 Jamaica Ave. in 1925, is a fine example of Senator, and outspoken opponent of Moderne Style. Its ziggurat Classical Revival architecture. Its Designed by John Eberson and constructed slavery. Today, it is a museum dedicated façade and projecting neon JAmAiCA Grace three bays once accommodated in 1929, the Valencia was one of the several JAmAiCA to Rufus King. In Federalist tradition, sign once called attention one hook and ladder and three atmospheric “Wonder Theatres” built across decoration is modest and proportions Episcopal Church to its use as a night club and engine companies. The Firehouse the country. The interior, with its star-lit Jamaica is a growing Downtown with a are solid. A pedimented window on the 155-15 Jamaica Ave. restaurant. Restored in closed in the 1960’s when more ceiling, pools, niches, and exotic decoration, We hope that you will take a walk second floor and a handsome columned 1993, it is today the home unique blend of historic buildings that both Built in 1862, Grace Episcopal Title Guarantee modern replacement facilities creates the impression of a stunning Spanish portico give the Manor’s entrance of the Jamaica Business preserve its rich past and provide the through Jamaica’s history and Church is an outstanding were built. In 1990, this unique plaza. The Theatre is now the Tabernacle an elegant character. Resource Center. 90-04 161st St. example of English Gothic historic structure was renovated of Prayer. context for new development and growth. discover our architectural treasures. Completed in 1928, the Title Revival architecture. Although for commercial re-use. This rendering shows the former Queens Jamaica is a community that is comparatively small in size, it Guarantee Building is characteristic is strikingly bold in appearance. of many small Art Deco office Family Court building, with its ornate Italian proud of its past, and excited about The broached spire, making the buildings constructed in New Renaissance-style façade, being integrated York City during the Jazz Age. It its future — a vibrant downtown transition from its square into a new mixed-use project currently buttressed base to an octagon, at once gives the impression of characterized by the energy, has great nobility and dignity. soaring vertically at the top, and at under development by the Dermot Company diversity, and entrepreneurship of The Church contains several the base, strength and durability. that will feature new housing and high- Rene Paul Chambellan, one of WPA murals painted during the quality retail space. Restoring such historic its residents, workers, businesses, Great Depression. The open Art Deco’s greatest sculptors landmarks to productive use creates new and leaders. church-yard forms a pleasant whose work includes the Daily contrast to the commercial News Building and Radio City focal points of community and civic Music Hall, designed the exterior character of Jamaica Avenue. activity, and significantly adds to the ornamental reliefs. 1 2 3 4 5 6 renewed sense of energy and quality of life that is driving sustainable growth and revitalization in Downtown Jamaica. 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 HILLSIDE AV E HILLSIDE AV E F 88th AV E 88th AV E E MERRICK BL 89th AV 165th ST 164th ST 163r 89th AV E 162nd ST 16 1st d ST ST 90th AV Prospect Cemetery SUTPHIN SUTPHIN E VD 148th 148th 90th AV E 160th ST 150th ST PA Long Island Rail Road 153r Beaver Rd./159th St. 4 Former Sidewalk Clock Russell Design NYC Jamaica Station King Park RSONS BL d ST Established in 1668, Prospect Union Hall St. Archer Avenue and Sutphin Boulevard ST Register Building Former Kurtz Store 6 Cemetery is the oldest cemetery 161-04 Jamaica Ave. Greater Jamaica Development Corporation is a community- BL 3 5 First Reformed Church Originally erected in 1900 and 162-24 Jamaica Ave. The LIRR Jamaica Station was constructed in in Queens County and served Former Jamaica building organization that plans, promotes, coordinates VD ST 146th 146th E as the burial ground for many 153-16 Jamaica Ave. Built in 1898, the Register served located at 161-11 Jamaica 1913, and currently serves as the general offices 1 VD Savings Bank JAMAICA 2 JAMAICA AV Avenue, this is a fine example This former furniture store is a and advances responsible development to revitalize Jamaica UNION HALL ST prominent families living in for 76 years as the County Registry of the Long Island Rail Road. The station is five AV E JAMAICA Built in 1859, the church was 161-02 Jamaica Ave. fine example of Art Deco Style. and strengthen the region. AV E 9 7 GUY R BREWER BL of a virtually extinct street stories tall and has a rectangular form. It is faced 10 Jamaica. The Chapel was designed and constructed by for title deeds in Queens. Its The material and forms give the Built in 1898, this landmarked amenity, and was designated with stone on its lower two floors, painted white, 11 recently renovated and dedicated Jamaica master carpenter Sidney Neo-Italian Renaissance façade building a smooth, streamlined 8 structure is the finest Beaux Arts a New York City landmark in Marshalling the resources of the public, private, and not-for- with red brick above. Each façade features large ARCHER AV E to Illinois Jacquet, a world- J. Young, with assistance from makes a unique contribution to appearance. They suggest a 13 building in Queens. The sensual 1981. It is double-faced with a profit sectors, the Corporation’s work expands economic bays of windows with metal enframements and ARCHER AV E famous jazz musician. It will be master mason Anders Peterson. the Jamaica Avenue streetscape. futuristic vision of the twentieth E J Z E J Z E decoration and delicate iron work cast-iron paneled base, fluted opportunity and improves quality of life for the ethnically and panels, some featuring a central diamond pattern. re-used for community events, It is among the finest examples of The imposing rusticated masonry century: a positive view of the ARCHER AV are a pleasant contrast to the stern column post, and splendid economically diverse residents of Jamaica and for the region, The stunning AirTrain Terminal, completed in meetings, and educational Early Romanesque Revival Style. work on the ground level contrasts technology, speed, light, and but elegant Register Building acroteria motif crowning the which benefits from rational, well-planned, and sustainable 2003, is next door. purposes in conjunction with The City recently completed a strongly with the smooth surfaces, space which was prevalent in 160th ST metropolitan growth. VD next door. The façade is united clock face. It was restored and 159th restrained moldings, and large E York College. Restoration work $22 million restoration of the the 1930’s. 94th AV 150th ST moved to its present location 12 to the Cemetery is expected to now landmarked building, which by two architectural devices — arched windows on the second VER RD 158th ST York begin in 2009. symmetrical pilasters rising two level. Now a New York City on Union Hall Street in 1989. ST will be operated by the Jamaica Greater Jamaica Development Corporation BEA College floors, supporting a defined Center for Arts and Learning as a landmark, it is today home to 90-04 161st Street New York City Designated Landmark cornice and pediment, and two premier performing arts center the Jamaica Center for Arts and Jamaica, New York 11432 = SUBWAY ornamental balconies focusing National Register of Historic Places and multipurpose venue. Learning. 718-291-0282 AV E attention on the entrance. Landmark Quality LIBERTY www.gjdc.org 0509 In the years following the Civil War, Jamaica Romanesque Revival A Brief History grew rapidly. The 1875 population of 780 jumped Circa 1860-1890. Building forms ViSiT to 3,922 five years later. By 1898, the year Architectural are usually massive, with an emphasis on the depth and HistoriC of Jamaica Queens was incorporated into New York City, expanse of solid surfaces. 6,500 people lived in Jamaica. By 1910, that Styles Rounded open arches are used JAmAiCA number topped 58,000. Business and residential to dramatize entrances or important interior spaces. development accelerated in the 20th century, with Ornamentation is derived from JAmAica Jamaica, Queens is a dynamic urban the 1918 extension of the elevated transit lines Byzantine, Coptic and Celtic center and regional transportation (with a nickel fare!), which enabled people who Here is a quick guide to architectural architecture. Mythological WALKiNG tour AND GUiDE hub characterized by the energy and worked in Manhattan to live in Jamaica. The figures and symbols are styles that you can find in historic sometimes incorporated into entrepreneurship of its people – a Long Island Rail Road Station was completed in amaica Avenue was an ancient trail for Native Downtown Jamaica. the decoration. downtown on the way up. Jamaica has American tribes from as far away as the Ohio 1913. By the 1940’s, Jamaica’s commercial district numerous government and institutional JRiver and the Great Lakes, coming to trade included fine department stores, the first modern Examples: First Reformed Church, Jamaica, NY Jefferson market Courthouse, manhattan, NY anchors serving the New York City skins and furs for wampum. In 1655, early settlers supermarket, and a Spanish Baroque movie palace region.
Recommended publications
  • Strategic Policy Statement 2014 Melinda Katz
    THE OFFICE OF THE QUEENS BOROUGH PRESIDENT Strategic Policy Statement 2014 Melinda Katz Queens Borough President The Borough of Queens is home to more than 2.3 million residents, representing more than 120 countries and speaking more than 135 languages1. The seamless knit that ties these distinct cultures and transforms them into shared communities is what defines the character of Queens. The Borough’s diverse population continues to steadily grow. Foreign-born residents now represent 48% of the Borough’s population2. Traditional immigrant gateways like Sunnyside, Woodside, Jackson Heights, Elmhurst, Corona, and Flushing are now communities with the highest foreign-born population in the entire city3. Immigrant and Intercultural Services The immigrant population remains largely underserved. This is primarily due to linguistic and cultural barriers. Residents with limited English proficiency now represent 28% of the Borough4, indicating a need for a wide range of social service support and language access to City services. All services should be available in multiple languages, and outreach should be improved so that culturally sensitive programming can be made available. The Borough President is actively working with the Queens General Assembly, a working group organized by the Office of the Queens Borough President, to address many of these issues. Cultural Queens is amidst a cultural transformation. The Borough is home to some of the most iconic buildings and structures in the world, including the globally recognized Unisphere and New York State Pavilion. Areas like Astoria and Long Island City are establishing themselves as major cultural hubs. In early 2014, the New York City Council designated the area surrounding Kaufman Astoria Studios as the city’s first arts district through a City Council Proclamation The areas unique mix of adaptively reused residential, commercial, and manufacturing buildings serve as a catalyst for growth in culture and the arts.
    [Show full text]
  • Project Context
    PIN X735.82 Van Wyck Expressway Capacity and Access Improvements to JFK Airport Project DDR/DEIS CHAPTER 2 Project Context PIN X735.82 Van Wyck Expressway Capacity and Access Improvements to JFK Airport Project DDR/DEIS Project Context 2.1 PROJECT HISTORY As part of a post-World War II $200-million development program, and in anticipation of an increased population size, the City of New York sought to expand its highway and parkway system to allow for greater movement throughout the five boroughs. The six-lane Van Wyck Expressway (VWE) was envisioned to help carry passengers quickly from the newly constructed Idlewild Airport (present-day John F. Kennedy International Airport [JFK Airport]) to Midtown Manhattan. In 1945, the City of New York developed a plan to expand the then-existing Van Wyck Boulevard into an expressway. The City of New York acquired the necessary land in 1946 and construction began in 1948, lasting until 1953. The Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) bridges for Jamaica Station, which were originally constructed in 1910, were reconstructed in 1950 to accommodate the widened roadway. The designation of the VWE as an interstate highway started with the northern sections of the roadway between the Whitestone Expressway and Kew Gardens Interchange (KGI) in the 1960s. By 1970, the entire expressway was a fully designated interstate: I-678 (the VWE). In 1998, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey (PANYNJ) began work on AirTrain JFK, an elevated automated guideway transit system linking downtown Jamaica to JFK Airport. AirTrain JFK utilizes the middle of the VWE roadway to create an unimpeded link, connecting two major transportation hubs in Queens.
    [Show full text]
  • Early Voting Poll Site List
    Line 112-CI-21 JUNE PRIMARY ELECTION – 2021 (SUBJECT TO CHANGE) POLL SITE LIST KINGS COUNTY 41st Assembly District 42nd Assembly District 43rd Assembly District 44th Assembly District 45th Assembly District 46th Assembly District 47th Assembly District 48th Assembly District 49th Assembly District 50th Assembly District ED SITE NAME SITE ADDRESS ED SITE NAME SITE ADDRESS ED SITE NAME SITE ADDRESS ED SITE NAME SITE ADDRESS ED SITE NAME SITE ADDRESS ED SITE NAME SITE ADDRESS ED SITE NAME SITE ADDRESS ED SITE NAME SITE ADDRESS ED SITE NAME SITE ADDRESS ED SITE ADDRESS SITE NAME 001 PS 197 .................................................1599 EAST 22 STREET 001 PS/IS 437 .............................................713 CATON AVENUE 001 PS 320/PS 375 ................................... 46 MCKEEVER PLACE 001 PS 131 ................................4305 FT HAMILTON PARKWAY 001 ST. BRENDAN SENIOR APARTMENTS L.P. ...... 1215 AVE O 001 PS 188 ............................................ 3314 NEPTUNE AVENUE 001 PS 229 ...............................................1400 BENSON AVENUE 001 PS 105 ....................................................1031 59TH STREET 001 PS 896 ..................................................... 736 48TH STREET 001 PS 157 ...................................................850 KENT AVENUE 002 PS 197 .................................................1599 EAST 22 STREET 002 PS 249 ........................................18 MARLBOROUGH ROAD 002 PS 320/PS 375 ................................... 46 MCKEEVER PLACE 002 PS 164
    [Show full text]
  • Too Cool—Families Catch the Cool!
    2010 SPRING Cool Culture® provides 50,000 underserved families with free, unlimited sponsored by JAQUELINE KENNEDY access to ONASSIS 90 cultural institutionsRESEVOIR - so that parents can provide their children withCENTRAL PARK 80 Hanson Place, Suite 604, Brooklyn, NY 11217 www.coolculture.org educational experiences that will help them succeed in school and life. CENTRAL PARK HARLEM MEER Malky, Simcha, Stanley and Avi Mayerfeld. Fi e tzpa t trick t . Vaness e a Griffi v th and Ys Y abe l Fitzpat FIFTH AVENUE d rick. n a o FIFTH AVENUE i g r e S , a n i t n e g r A Isabella, Sophia and Ethel Zaldaña 108TH ST 107TH ST 106TH ST 103RD ST 105TH ST 102ND ST 104TH ST 101ST ST 100TH ST 99TH ST 98TH ST 97TH ST 96TH ST 95TH ST 94TH ST 93RD ST 92ND ST 91ST ST 90TH ST 89TH ST 88TH ST 87TH ST 86TH ST 85TH ST 84TH ST 83RD ST 82ND ST 81ST ST Felicia and Omaria Williams F e l ic ia a nd he t C C O o o m o a h ri W o To ol— illiams atc l! Families C The Cool Culture community couldn't choose just one. “I really liked came together to Catch the Cool on making stuff and meeting my friend and June 8th at the Museum Mile getting a poster by (artist) Michael Albert,” she said. The siblings – along with Festival! Thousands painted, drew, their sister Ysabel (one), mom Yvette and aunt danced and partied on Fifth Avenue from Vanessa Griffith– participated in art activities 105th Street to 82nd Street, dropping in that included crafting monkey ears at The museums along the way.
    [Show full text]
  • To Enlarge the Map
    THE EPISCOPAL DIOCESE OF VIRGINIA Northern 522 Piedmont North Fairfax Winchester Church of the Holy Cross, Dunn Loring (1) 15 Epiphany Episcopal, Oak Hill (2) Church of the Christ Church, Holy Comforter, Vienna (3) Arlington Shenandoah Valley 81 Good Shepherd, Lucketts St. Anne’s, Reston (4) Westminster-Canterbury La Iglesia de Cristo Rey (1) Bluemont St. Peter’s, St. Dunstan’s, McLean (5) 8 La Iglesia de San Jose (2) Grace Church, Purcellville St. James’, St. Francis, Great Falls (6) Leesburg St. Andrew’s (3) Christ Church, Winchester Berryville St. Francis Korean, McLean (7) St. George’s (4) 7 St. John’s, McLean (8) 6 3 St. John’s (5) St. Paul’s Church-on-the-Hill, St. Mary’s, St. Gabriel’s, St. Thomas, McLean (9) St. Mary’s (6) Winchester Berryville St. Timothy’s, Herndon (10) 7 Leesburg 66 St. Michael’s (7) Cunningham St. David’s, 2/4 St. Peter’s (8) Chapel Parish, Ashburn Trinity (9) Millwood Trinity, Upperville St. Matthew’s, Sterling Meade Memorial, White Post 6 Emmanuel, Middleburg 50 1/5 66 Church of Our Redeemer, 7 9 Leeds, Aldie 8 Alexandria Markham 9 Southern 340 Emmanuel, Delaplane 10 4 5/7 Christ Church (1) 1 7 395 Church of St. Clement (2) Calvary Church, Front Royal 3 11 Shenandoah Grace, The Plains 2 Church of the Resurrection (3) St. Andrew’s, 8 3 2 5 Marshall 11 Emmanuel (4) Valley St. Paul’s, Haymarket 4 2/9 Grace (5) Cathedral Shrine of the 6 10 66 1 Immanuel Church-on-the-Hill (6) Transfiguration, Orkney Springs 12 7 1 4 10 4 2/4 3 Meade Memorial (7) Culpeper 29 7 St.
    [Show full text]
  • Y\5$ in History
    THE GARGOYLES OF SAN FRANCISCO: MEDIEVALIST ARCHITECTURE IN NORTHERN CALIFORNIA 1900-1940 A thesis submitted to the faculty of San Francisco State University A5 In partial fulfillment of The Requirements for The Degree Mi ST Master of Arts . Y\5$ In History by James Harvey Mitchell, Jr. San Francisco, California May, 2016 Copyright by James Harvey Mitchell, Jr. 2016 CERTIFICATION OF APPROVAL I certify that I have read The Gargoyles of San Francisco: Medievalist Architecture in Northern California 1900-1940 by James Harvey Mitchell, Jr., and that in my opinion this work meets the criteria for approving a thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master of Arts in History at San Francisco State University. <2 . d. rbel Rodriguez, lessor of History Philip Dreyfus Professor of History THE GARGOYLES OF SAN FRANCISCO: MEDIEVALIST ARCHITECTURE IN NORTHERN CALIFORNIA 1900-1940 James Harvey Mitchell, Jr. San Francisco, California 2016 After the fire and earthquake of 1906, the reconstruction of San Francisco initiated a profusion of neo-Gothic churches, public buildings and residential architecture. This thesis examines the development from the novel perspective of medievalism—the study of the Middle Ages as an imaginative construct in western society after their actual demise. It offers a selection of the best known neo-Gothic artifacts in the city, describes the technological innovations which distinguish them from the medievalist architecture of the nineteenth century, and shows the motivation for their creation. The significance of the California Arts and Crafts movement is explained, and profiles are offered of the two leading medievalist architects of the period, Bernard Maybeck and Julia Morgan.
    [Show full text]
  • 817 Broadway Building
    DESIGNATION REPORT 817 Broadway Building Landmarks Preservation Designation Report Designation List 512 Commission 817 Broadway Building LP-2614 June 11, 2019 DESIGNATION REPORT 817 Broadway Building LOCATION Borough of Manhattan 817 Broadway (aka 817-819 Broadway, 48-54 East 12th Street) LANDMARK TYPE Individual SIGNIFICANCE 817 Broadway is a 14-story store-and-loft building designed by the prominent American architect George B. Post. Constructed in 1895- 98, this well-preserved Renaissance Revival- style structure represents the type of high-rise development that occurred on Broadway, south of Union Square, in the last decade of the 19th century. Landmarks Preservation Designation Report Designation List 512 Commission 817 Broadway Building LP-2614 June 11, 2019 817 Broadway, 1905 Irving Underhill, Museum of the City of New York LANDMARKS PRESERVATION COMMISSION COMMISSIONERS Lisa Kersavage, Executive Director Sarah Carroll, Chair Mark Silberman, General Counsel Frederick Bland, Vice Chair Kate Lemos McHale, Director of Research Diana Chapin Cory Herrala, Director of Preservation Wellington Chen Michael Devonshire REPORT BY Michael Goldblum Matthew A. Postal, Research Department John Gustafsson Anne Holford-Smith Jeanne Lutfy EDITED BY Adi Shamir-Baron Kate Lemos McHale PHOTOGRAPHS Sarah Moses Landmarks Preservation Designation Report Designation List 512 Commission 817 Broadway Building LP-2614 June 11, 2019 3 of 21 817 Broadway Building Deborah Glick, as well as from the Municipal Art Manhattan Society of New York and the Metropolitan
    [Show full text]
  • Region 11: Queens
    t e Road 77th e t r t S et 270th Street wl He 271st Street Langdale Street 269th Street 270th Street 78thAvenue 268th Street 77th Avenue 77th 267th Street 266th Street 76th Avenue 76th 265th Street 79thAvenue 265th Street 264th Street 85thAvenue 263rd Street e 262nd Street u n e v A 261st Street n o t 80thAvenue s Hewlett Street i l 73rd Avenue l 25B i 74th Avenue 74th EF W 60th Road 60th 260th Street t s a 60th Avenue 60th E e d u a 75th Avenue 75th n o 259th Street e 262 R nd Street Av d n h 2 t 7 260th Street 267th Street 7 Langston Avenue 258th Street 5 d 260th Street r a v e 87thAvenue l 266th Street 81stAvenue u 257th Street o t B e 83rdAvenue e e u tr c e S a a u 82ndAvenue s l th n s 5 256th Street e P 5 a v 260th Street 2 e A N 261st Street h u h t t 255th Street n 9 0 e 6 6 2 v 87th Road 58th Avenue A 254th Street h 25 t 4 2 5 th Stre 55th Street 84th Drive Little Neck Parkway et 73rd Road 7 d a Little Neck Parkway e t o 254th Street Bates Road e u R Little Neck Parkway e n e t r e u e t s v n e S r Leith Place d 254th Street 254th Street t e A d 82ndRoad e S 82nd Drive v n e 252nd Street 253rd Street ood e 2 d Glenw u 85th Road A 5 n L n 2 e v h A 252nd Street 2 t l t e t a d r B 253rd Street 6 a 7 e o 252nd Street 8 253rd Street u R 251st Street n d h e i t a e e L u v o n A e e R v le Lan 252nd Street t va h A Brow s 251st Street t e 250th Street 1 7 Elkmont Avenue Elkmont e u 7 5 k n o e r e b 251st Place v e u 60th Avenue n A n m 250th Street e a n P e L y ve c Jericho Turnpike e a a a l e e u l A w m P n u l a k l e h
    [Show full text]
  • Walking in Jamaica: Exploring the Boundaries and Bridges of Rhetorical Agency
    Walking in Jamaica: Exploring the Boundaries and Bridges of Rhetorical Agency Brent Lucia, Communities are in constant flux, shifting within University of Connecticut a network of people, things and spaces; yet it is not uncommon to see a universal narrative emerge within the local commonplace of our towns and cities. These narratives are often too simplistic, avoiding the dynamic array of rhetorical flows that are circling through the social, material and historical realities within a communities’ actual network. During my time working in Jamaica Queens, New York, I witnessed the strong dissonance between the common narrative told in Jamaica’s local news outlets and the experience I had in its actual spaces. My manuscript explores this dichotomy by describing a recent walk I had through Jamaica’s streets, traversing its unique landscape while reflecting on my own subjectivity in the process. In doing so, I argue that rhetorical agents have the ability to support or subvert these universal narratives. However, one must also consider how our spatial encounters reinscribe the fluid and often precarious positionalities we find ourselves in as we move through different spaces over time. As you walk through the streets of Jamaica, every house seems either a store or a tavern. There are two newspapers, one by Mr. Brenton, 81 Reflections | Volume 19.2, Fall/Winter 2019 - 2020 otherwise “Dr. Franklin,” a good soul; and the Long Island Farmer. Jamaica has a large, old established Academy for Boys, “Union Hall,” and also an Academy for Girls…The infinitude of Jamaica stores and public houses allows an inference which is the truth, viz: that farmers, travelers, marketmen, and other passengers on the turnpike through the village give it all its trade and retail business.
    [Show full text]
  • The Rewilding of New York's North Country: Beavers, Moose, Canines and the Adirondacks
    University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers Graduate School 2008 The Rewilding of New York's North Country: Beavers, Moose, Canines and the Adirondacks Peter Aagaard The University of Montana Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Aagaard, Peter, "The Rewilding of New York's North Country: Beavers, Moose, Canines and the Adirondacks" (2008). Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers. 1064. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/1064 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE REWILDING OF NEW YORK‟S NORTH COUNTRY: BEAVERS, MOOSE, CANINES AND THE ADIRONDACKS By Peter Miles Aagaard Bachelor of Arts, State University of New York College at Geneseo, Geneseo, NY, 2005 Thesis presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History The University of Montana Missoula, MT Spring 2008 Approved by: Dr. David A. Strobel, Dean Graduate School Dr. Dan Flores, Chair Department of History Dr. Jeffrey Wiltse Department of History Dr. Paul R. Krausman Department of Ecosystem and Conservation Sciences ii Aagaard, Peter, M.A., May 2008 History The Rewilding of New York‟s North Country: Beavers, Moose, Canines, and the Adirondacks Chairperson: Dan Flores This project examines the restoration histories of beavers (Castor canadensis), moose (Alces alces americana), and wild canines (Canis spp.) within the Adirondack Highlands of northern New York.
    [Show full text]
  • American Committee on Africa 198 Broadway NYC 10038 (212) 962-1210 Major Lenders to South Africa
    MAJOR LENDERS TO SOUTH AFRICA AND LIST OF ALTERNATIVE BANKS NOT LENDING TO SOUTH AFRICA (New York City) (01994 American Committee on Africa 198 Broadway NYC 10038 (212) 962-1210 Major Lenders to South Africa -Below are listed the four major banks in the New York City area that participate in loans to South Africa. -We strongly urge student and all other groups to take funds out of these banks and to redeposit them in banks that do not engage in lending to South Africa. -On the following pagesis a list of alternative banks that do not lend to South Africa. Most of them have branches near CUNY campuses which will facilitate transferring accounts into these non-lenders. CITICORP (Citibank is its major subsidiary) CITICORP is the world's largest lender to South Africa, having participated in over $2 billion in loans to that country. This total includes recent loans of $250 million to the South African Government and $100 million to AECI, South Africa's largest explosives company. While being a willing lender to South Africa, CITICORP is notorious for its refusal to lend to third world communities in the United States--the practice known as redlining. CHEMICAL BANK CHEMICAL BANK has participated in $310.4 million worth of loans to South Africa. Most recently CHEMICAL BANK managed a loan of $60 million to Minorco, the principal overseas subsidiary of Anglo-American Corporat 4 on, South Africa's largest corporation. Through Minorco's expansion, Anglo-American has become the largest foreign investor in the United States--significantly strengthening U.S.-South African economic relations through its control of such companies as Salomon Brothers (the biggest U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Museum Association of NY Announces Museum Partners for Building Capacity, Creating Sustainability, Growing Accessibility the Mu
    November 24, 2020 Troy, NY FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Megan Eves Marketing & Communications Associate (518) 273-3400 [email protected] Museum Association of NY Announces Museum Partners for Building Capacity, Creating Sustainability, Growing Accessibility The Museum Association of New York (MANY) is thrilled to announce that 98 museums from across New York State have been selected to participate in “Building Capacity, Creating Sustainability, Growing Accessibility”, an IMLS CARES Act grant project designed to help museums impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic share their collections and reach audiences who cannot physically visit their museums. 200 staff will be trained to use new hardware and software to develop programs that will engage their communities and reach new audiences. “We are honored to be awarded IMLS CARES act funding and excited to be able to make an impact on the work of our colleagues and their museums across New York State,” said Erika Sanger, MANY Executive Director. “We are living in an age of transition, experience a radical shift in our ways of learning and communicating. The group selected captures the diversity of our shared history in NY and our nation. The stories embodied in the museums’ collections and the storytelling talents of their interpretive staff are the heart of the project.” In this two-year project, museums will identify a program to virtually deliver to their audiences, focusing on developing programs from stories found in their collections that reveal cultural and racial diversity in their communities. “We are delighted to have been chosen for this project and cannot wait to get started,” said Brenna McCormick-Thompson, Whaling Museum & Education Center of Cold Spring Harbor Curator of Education.
    [Show full text]