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July, 2009

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Breukelen State of Mind

The Brooklyn Paper’s going Dutch this week? The newspaper’s title banner has been changed to the Dutch spelling of the word (or at least a version of the Dutch spelling) and is replete with an animated windmill. Jasper Danckaerts would be thrilled – though perhaps not as much with reporter Shannon Gies’ “good riddance” send off of Danckaerts and the Labadists.

As for the Breukelen/Breuckelen spelling of the Dutch-settled land – this is something that BHS debated about during the preparation of the Pages of the Past exhibit. After all, BHS has a t-shirt that uses the spelling with the ‘c’, and yet Danckaerts’ very diary from 1679, around which the exhibit is centered, drops the ‘c’ consistently in his descriptions of the new land. After consulting with the scholars who were assisting us with the exhibit we learned that both spellings were used in the middle-Dutch writing of the day. We decided to be consistent with Danckaert’s usage of the word and retain his spelling. So keep that tidbit in mind when you’re around town at other events celebrating 400 years of Dutch influence in New York.

Park Lit TONIGHT Coney Island ALWAYS

Two of BHS’s Interpreting Brooklyn artists, novelist Elizabeth Gaffney and Coney Island playwright Michael Schwartz, will be reading tonight in Fort Greene Park with L.J. Davis, a fellow contributor to the magazine A Public Space.

Another friend of BHS and Coney Island, Charles Denson, founder of the Coney Island History Project, is hosting an online conversation at The New York Times City Room Blog this week.

If you haven’t been following the debates about revitalizing Coney Island, the City Council is about to vote on a rezoning plan and the Municipal Art Society has suggested improvements to the proposed plan.  The New York Times and local community organizations have endorsed MAS’s improved plan which doubles the size of the amusement area and removes hotels from the south side of Surf Avenue which would block the view of the ocean.

“Coney Island is a great business school… you have to be very dumb not to learn how to sell.  And I wasn’t!”

That’s a quote from an interview with Lillian Santangello, founder of the World of Wax Musee, Coney Island’s first and only wax museum conducted by BHS in 1987.  Check out BHS’s podcast to hear more from this interview.

Ms. Santangello was almost 80 years old at the time of the interview and she has wonderful things to say about her wax figures and the visitors to her museum on the corner of Stillwell and Surf Avenue – both the celebrities like Charlie Chaplin and the “riff raff”.   Ms. Santangello grew up in Coney Island and started working at at early age helping her adopted father at his fruit and peanut stand.  The wax figures in her museum included Nat King Cole, Roberto Clemente, and a figure in an electric chair which now haunts BHS’s warehouse…