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Old Posted Aug 22, 2014, 8:08 PM
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Smile NEW YORK | Verrazano-Narrows Bridge | 692 FT | ≈ FLOORS | 1964

The History of Bay Ridge, Fort Hamilton, and the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge




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For most residents of the New York metropolitan area, the Bay Ridge section of the Borough of Brooklyn, New York, is remembered as part of the New York City marathon route. Moviegoers remember the locale as the setting for the 1977 feature film Saturday Night Fever. For motorists, the community is used to reach the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge, by way of either the Gowanus Expressway or the Belt Parkway. Concealed from view on the silver screen or through an automobile window is the rich history and natural beauty of Long Island’s westerly tip. Bay Ridge, and the adjacent community and military enterprise of Fort Hamilton, border picturesque New York Bay and share a collective history that dates back to early Dutch colonization. The following is a half-millennium account that highlights early European exploration and the area’s brief tenure as a playground for the wealthy. It also features a historiography of Bay Ridge’s most distinct structure, the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge.

Early Settlement to the American Revolution

Bay Ridge and Fort Hamilton stand at the western edge of Long Island, along New York Bay and the Narrows. The latter waterway is a strait that separates Long Island from Staten Island.[1] At one point, Bay Ridge extended as far north as Thirty-Ninth Street into present-day Sunset Park. However, the construction of Interstate 278/Gowanus Expressway and the approaches to the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge physically divided the community, created Sunset Park, and defined the eastern border. Currently, Bay Ridge is circumscribed by the Gowanus Expressway and the Belt Parkway to form a clearly defined neighborhood. On the east side of the Gowanus Expressway, along the Narrows, lies Fort Hamilton military post.[2] The first European vessel to sail through the Narrows was the Dauphine, a three-masted carrack, under the command of Florentine explorer Giovanni da Verrazzano. On the mild spring morning of April 17, 1524, sailing for King Francis I of France, Verrazzano slipped through the Narrows into Upper New York Bay. In a journal, he described that after dropping anchor, he ventured to shore in a smaller vessel. There he was greeted with joy by a native people. It is assumed that he landed on what is now Staten Island. Verrazzano called the upper bay a “very beautiful lake” and named it Bay of Saint Marguerite, after the King’s sister. He called the territory the Land Angouleme, because the King was once the Count of Angouleme.[3]

European settlement of present-day Bay Ridge and Fort Hamilton waited over a hundred years following Verrazzano’s journey. The area known as Fort Hamilton was first settled by Jacques Barkeloo in 1620.[4] By the 1630s, the Dutch colonies of New Amsterdam and Breukelen were established on Manhattan and Long Island. On August 3, 1639, Anthony Jansen Van Sales, one of New Amsterdam’s first African-American settlers, received a land patent from the Dutch West India Company under Governor-General Kieft for two hundred acres “on the bay of the North [Hudson] River,” near the current New Utrecht-Gravesend border. While Van Sales applied for the land grant in 1643, it was retroactive to 1639. A condition was that Van Sales improve the land and pay a small rent. A May 27, 1643 patent confirms a house was built. By 1660, Van Sales sold his land and returned to New Amsterdam. Following the Van Sales patent, additional lands lying between Gowanus and Coney Island were purchased by Governor Kieft on account of the West India Company from Chief Penhawitz of the Lenape Indians. The land was partly in present-day Gravesend and partly in New Utrecht.
The Varrazano Turns 50 Years Old in November
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Last edited by THE BIG APPLE; Aug 25, 2014 at 1:06 AM.
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Old Posted Aug 24, 2014, 11:09 PM
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I think you meant to say it turns 50 in November.
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Old Posted Sep 6, 2014, 6:45 AM
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The following is a half-millennium account that highlights early European exploration and the area’s brief tenure as a playground for the wealthy.
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Old Posted Sep 9, 2014, 4:35 PM
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The cleanest looking suspension bridge in North America. Not the best, or the most iconic, but certainly one of the better ones.
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Old Posted Sep 10, 2014, 2:29 PM
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The following is a half-millennium account that highlights early European exploration and the area’s brief tenure as a playground for the wealthy.
What?
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Old Posted Sep 10, 2014, 3:53 PM
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I can't believe the city built a bridge speficially for NJ residents. What the....
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Old Posted Sep 10, 2014, 6:12 PM
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NJ residents? Staten Island is part of NYC, silly!
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Old Posted Sep 12, 2014, 1:40 PM
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NJ residents? Staten Island is part of NYC, silly!
Poor Staten Island. The forgotten borough.
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Old Posted Mar 21, 2015, 6:23 PM
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Old Posted Mar 21, 2015, 6:26 PM
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The History of the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge, 50 Years After Its Construction



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long ago as 1910, when a steady parade of steamships bearing immigrants passed through the Narrows—the mile-wide channel at the entrance to New York Harbor—engineers envisioned a great bridge as a gateway to the New World. When it finally opened, 50 years ago this month, the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge—honoring the 16th-century Florentine explorer Giovanni da Verrazzano, though not to the extent of spelling his name correctly—boasted the longest suspended span in the world: 4,260 feet, or four-fifths of a mile. Even after the great era of steamships had passed, the bridge held sway, dictating the design of the Cunard liner Queen Mary 2, once the world’s largest passenger ship, which first sailed in 2003, so that at high tide its funnel would pass beneath the roadway with 13 feet to spare.

Connecting Brooklyn with Staten Island, it is still the longest suspension bridge in the Americas, 11th in the world. The crowning achievement of the structural engineer Othmar Ammann and of New York’s imperious master planner Robert Moses, it was built for $320 million (about $2.5 billion in today’s currency), more or less on budget, a standard of frugality that present-day New York can only dream of. Ten thousand men worked to build the bridge, from “punks” lugging heavy bolts to foremen dubbed “pushers” to John Murphy, the superintendent, whose temper and sun-and-wind-hardened face led his charges to call him Hard Nose behind his back. Three men died. The bridge’s construction was vividly chronicled by Gay Talese, then a cub re=orter for the New York Times, whose book, The Bridge, is now being reissued in an expanded edition by Bloomsbury. It tells of Mohawk Indian ironworkers who made a specialty of walking the high steel and of James J. Braddock, once a world heavyweight boxing champion (Joe Louis took his title), by then a welding machine operator. “The anonymous hard-hatted men who put the bridge together, who took risks and sometimes fell to their deaths in the sky, over the sea—they did it in such a way that it would last,” Talese recalls in an interview

When it was finished, a ride across cost drivers 50 cents, or the equivalent of less than $4. But we should be so lucky: Today the cash toll is $15. Old-timers still mourn the sundered neighborhoods of Brooklyn, where hundreds of homes were destroyed to make way for the approach, and the sleepy, almost rural character of Staten Island when it was linked to the rest of New York City only by ferryboat.

To Talese, the Verrazano is about more than transportation. “A bridge, in its ultimate form, is a work of art,” he says, and one can see his point. Sunlight glints off the pair of monumental steel towers, 70 stories tall, carrying the curvature of the earth into the sky, where their tops are exactly 15⁄8 inches farther apart than at their base. At night, lights pick out the graceful curve of the four great cables, each three feet in diameter, spun from enough steel wire to reach more than halfway to the moon. The bridge thrums with the traffic of a million and a half vehicles weekly, its passengers “suspended,” as the poet Stephen Dunn wrote, in 2012, “out over the Narrows by a logic linked / to faith.”
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Old Posted Mar 21, 2015, 6:27 PM
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Old Posted Mar 21, 2015, 6:28 PM
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Old Posted Mar 21, 2015, 6:29 PM
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Old Posted Mar 21, 2015, 6:41 PM
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I must say that while walking on the promenade next to Belt and Shore Parkways and while walking under this bridge, and seeing huge trucks and tractors going above your head, just then SIZE CONSTANCY kicks in. This huge bridge is a huge bridge, and the particles that make up the steel that make up this bridge and the contaminants moving on and about are all magnanimously huge. Just then while standing under this bridge and seeing people taking landscape photos of themselves with the bridge in the background, does one realize that having been built half a century ago, those who stepped foot under this bridge felt the same way I do: we are witnessing a moment that's once in a lifetime. This bridge is unlike the Manhattan, Brooklyn, or 59th Street Bridges where they are overshadowed by surrounding skyscrapers, this bridge eclipses the tiny homes of Brooklyn and Staten Island. That is its beauty. That is a moment in one's life.

That is the story of this bridge.
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Old Posted Mar 21, 2015, 6:43 PM
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It's a very ugly bridge, New York could have done way better, It virtually doesn't exist to everyone outside of the city.
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Old Posted Mar 21, 2015, 7:12 PM
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[opinion] It virtually doesn't exist to everyone outside of the city.
Maybe that's because it's a bridge meant for the city and the only thing beyond the bridge is the Lower Bay and Atlantic Ocean.


NYC - 1962 - building Verrazano Bridge by petespix75, on Flickr


NYC - 1963 - building Verrazano Bridge by petespix75, on Flickr
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Old Posted Mar 21, 2015, 8:52 PM
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It's a very ugly bridge, New York could have done way better, It virtually doesn't exist to everyone outside of the city.
It is actually a very nice, clean design. Very well done for the time it was built. It it Mackinaw or the Golden Gate? No, but not everything can be the best in its category.
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