To advocate for landmark status for architecturally & culturally significant sites in Rego Park, Forest Hills, & nearby Queens communities, & document local history.
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
A Healthy and Productive New Year Like It's 1911!
As we make the transition into 2011, let's reflect upon our traditions, enriched with art and personality through direct humanly touch, prior to the digital age, when most people can design something by clicks of the mouse in Adobe Photoshop (not to discredit current times entirely). Let's take a journey to 1911, as the above postcard creatively exhibits the year in lace. A number of hand-colored and sometimes embossed postcards with poetic greetings, penmanship, and ornate illustrations were sent to family and friends, and were indeed sold in Queens in your corner convenience shop or in soda fountain drugstores such as the former Sutton Hall Pharmacy on Ascan Ave in Forest Hills. Queens became part of the City of NY on January 1, 1898, and on Dec 24, 1901, "post card" was authorized by the act of congress, and was allowed to be printed on the back of the undivided postcards of the era (previously known as private mailing cards). Postcards were a novelty each year, and the medium was relatively new within itself.
We wish everyone a year filled with health, happiness, and great productivity personally. May historic preservation be productive for Forest Hills, Rego Park, and our neighbors who are advocating for landmarking and the general preservation and creative reuse of the built cornerstones of our neighborhoods, which create the very essence of an appealing and diverse city. Let's be neighborly, and progressively defend our neighborhoods from greedy developers by expanding our coalition of volunteers and supporters. Let's not forget where we came from as a nation, in order to have a greater understanding of the principles we are built upon, to pave the way for a culturally and architecturally richer future.
Friday, December 24, 2010
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Historic Business: Forest Hills & Rego Park Edition!
A less common matchcover known as a supersized matchcover. |
Even the matches have an illustration! Here we see the Forest Hills Inn & Station Square in the Forest Hills Gardens. |
Unveiling our Historic Businesses of Forest Hills & Rego Park Collection on Flickr, featuring ads from vintage publications, matchcovers, and photos of vintage signs and painted ads:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/8095451@N08/collections/72157625503288147/
Much of historic preservation revolves around researching and archiving historic buildings and homes that grant your neighborhood character and a "sense of place" as a whole, as well as advocating for Individual Landmark (facade), Interior Landmark, &/or Historic District designation, so harmonious buildings and neighborhoods can live on, and accommodate and inspire future community residents and businesses.
What we sometimes take for granted is another worthy part of historic preservation when surveying a neighborhood through photos and research, which is a question you must ask yourself...
"What businesses were in my neighborhood decades earlier, which is now where my Duane Reade, Starbucks, & Verizon is? How did this impact the demographics, economic conditions of the neighborhood from then until now, and how did it impact storefront architecture and frame of mind of the streetscape for local and transient patrons?
There is no question that greater attention was paid to the design of our shops years back, rather than the mass produced cookie-cutter glass, stucco, aluminum and dropped ceiling era of today's businesses. Kudos to the few detail-oriented businesses owners that think "outside of the box" by paying attention to the overall historic character of the neighborhood, through the precise design of their storefronts and interiors. This bears a sense of permanence, and that the business was always there, so perhaps it will be here to stay.
On many instances, landmark-worthy apartment houses and commercial buildings co-exist with commercial spaces on their first story or in close proximity, and the relationship between the above characteristics is the very essence of what composes a more appealing and profitable neighborhood in the name of preservation, with historically-appropriate development and adaptively-reused establishments. Every neighborhood has an economic backbone, so let's take a look back at some businesses in Forest Hills depicted in ads published in the 1935 Gardens Varieties by The Gardens Players of Forest Hills, LI. Then decide whether we changed for the better or for worse in regard to detail and character (which is very evident in the ads & matchcovers)......
The Holland House on Austin St remains one of Forest Hills' most exclusive addresses! |
The West Side Tennis Club & Forest Hills Tennis Stadium had a number of shops & restaurants named after it. Afterall, Forest Hills: Tennis as Tennis: Forest Hills. |
Want more? All ads in the Gardens Players flickr photoset can be accessed by visiting:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/8095451@N08/sets/72157625503194037/
Enjoy the photoset for neighborhood matchcovers, which were once a great source of advertising and art:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/8095451@N08/sets/72157623162019991/
The Lost Battalion Hall in Rego Park was once an establishment that issued war bonds in the 1940s. Note the humorous cartoon-inspired illustrations on many matchcovers around that time period. |
Saturday, December 18, 2010
NY1 News Publicizes First Presbyterian Church of Newtown Restoration Fundraiser
The First Presbyterian Church of Newtown has a congregational history dating to 1652 & a brownstone edifice from 1895, but gained a new chapter of faith when it was featured on NY1 News. On December 16th, Rocco Vertuccio interviewed Church Historian Marjorie Melikian and Rego-Forest Preservation Council Chairman Michael Perlman, on their initiative to raise funding for the church's much-needed restoration. The NY1 segment, "First Presbyterian Church of Newtown Reaches Out To The Community" first aired on Dec 17th & will also be televised today and on Dec 19th:
http://www.ny1.com/content/130808/first-presbyterian-church-of-newtown-reaches-out-to-community
Some measures to boost funding for a restoration include holding periodic concerts with a free will offering, and nominating the site for status on the State & National Register of Historic Places, but the site's future and historic beauty relies on the public. Any donation would be much appreciated.
To help restore this site which has roots to 17th century Newtown, donations to can be sent by check to:
Dec 10 Posting: Christmas Concert Fundraiser For Restoration, Photos, & The Church's Significance
http://www.ny1.com/content/130808/first-presbyterian-church-of-newtown-reaches-out-to-community
Some measures to boost funding for a restoration include holding periodic concerts with a free will offering, and nominating the site for status on the State & National Register of Historic Places, but the site's future and historic beauty relies on the public. Any donation would be much appreciated.
To help restore this site which has roots to 17th century Newtown, donations to can be sent by check to:
First Presbyterian Church of Newtown Building Fund
54-05 Seabury St, Elmhurst, NY 11373.
("Building Fund" must be noted on the check.)
Dec 10 Posting: Christmas Concert Fundraiser For Restoration, Photos, & The Church's Significance