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Laurelton
Laurelton
Laurelton
Ebook172 pages41 minutes

Laurelton

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When the 13 colonies declared their independence from the British, the area of Queens that eventually became Laurelton consisted of woodlands, ponds, and farms. This rural community gained some recognition when an attempt to build an upscale housing development for wealthy New Yorkers failed, but left in its place an elegant, new Long Island Railroad Station named "Laurelton." In 1929, the stock market crash and Depression led New Yorkers to the discovery that home ownership was a thrifty alternative to renting. As Laurelton was a beautiful and safe area, real estate boomed. The neighborhood experienced a momentous ethnic change in the 1970s, and within 20 years 80 percent of Laurelton's population was Afircan American and Caribbean middle-class professionals. Laurelton is in the eighth-wealthiest council district in New York City, and its reputation for beauty and community involvement continues.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateSep 18, 2012
ISBN9781439624111
Laurelton
Author

Roberta Kossoff

Roberta Kossoff has worked in the field of neighborhood preservation and local history for several years. She is a special education teacher and a resident of Bayside, Queens. Annette Henkin Landau, who grew up in Laurelton, is a short-story writer, former teacher of college English, and a recently retired librarian.

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    Laurelton - Roberta Kossoff

    throughout.

    INTRODUCTION

    Laurelton is a place in time

    And a state of mind,

    A love and warmth

    That will always be,

    And can never be again.

    —Charles Stein Sr., 1998

    By 1900, parts of Queens were becoming bedroom communities for other parts of New York City. The Long Island Rail Road electrified its line, opened tunnels under the East River, put an end to ferry service, and positioned Queens within commuting distance. The Queensboro Bridge did the rest.

    In 1906, a former New York state senator, William H. Reynolds, advertised the sale of lots on which only expensive one-family houses could be built. Laurelton was advertised as the Garden Suburb in New York City, 25 miles from Manhattan and highly restricted, a code term meaning no Jewish people. Only a few lots were sold and a few houses constructed. The senator soon abandoned Laurelton.

    Laurelton languished underdeveloped for most of the prosperous 1920s, but in the summer of 1928, an advertisement appeared that another group of 204 Spanish type houses has been started on the old Laurelton golf course, bringing the total . . . to more than 900 homes.

    The stock market crashed famously in October 1929, but it did not seem to deter the builders. Eighty new homes were opened for inspection on 226th Street, bringing the total to 2,000. The developers announced plans for 500 more. Soon, they announced that $1.3 million worth of dwellings had been sold, bringing the four-year level to $35 million. There is never a shortage of potential home owners, the developer said.

    The families who decided during the Depression that home owning was a good investment were not the people Senator Reynolds had been seeking. They were mainly first generation working people of Irish, Italian, German, or Jewish descent. They were people frugal enough to have saved money for a down payment on a modest house, and after the election of Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1933, they could turn to the Homeowners Loan Corporation for help.

    Potential home owners did not fail to notice that Laurelton was no longer restricted. The builders paid no attention to the ethnicity of names and asked no questions about religion. Neither did the buyers. They moved across the street, around the corner, or next door to each other without knowing the identity of their neighbors. They did not do much socializing, nor did they encourage their children to play together. They joined a church, a synagogue, or neither without comment from the neighbors. They waved to each other over their fences and kept the peace.

    On Merrick Road, across from where the Twin Ponds Bakery building still stands, was the traditional white farmhouse of the Schmitt family. It had neither central heating nor running water. The Schmitts grew a wide variety of vegetables that they sold to stores on Merrick Road and carried by truck to the Wallabout Market in Brooklyn.

    The Schmitt farmhouse was built by Albert Schmitt, whose family emigrated from Germany in 1849. He and Margarethe Kappelmaier were married in Saint Boniface Church in Fosters Meadow (later called Rosedale) on February 12, 1889. Three days later, he signed a contract to purchase a 28-acre farm for $3,400. The Schmitt family farmed this land until Albert’s death in 1947.

    At the age of 77, Albert was interviewed by a local newspaper. He said he had lived there when Merrick was a plank one-way toll road to Jamaica, when those eastbound were forced to wait at muddy sidings for western traffic. During the mornings, He led his cows all the way to . . . East New York and passed nothing but farms.

    Next to the farm was the training academy of Capt. Ernest Engerer, who in addition to training police dogs also had a circus act. He claimed to have won his wild animals in a poker game and to have lost part of his left arm to a lion. He was a dashing figure, unconventional and theatrical, who sometimes took his show on the road and enlisted the help of his two children, Ernie and Barbara, for his act.

    Captain Engerer’s life and career came to a spectacularly tragic end in an amusement park in North Carolina in 1962. He was

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