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April, 2010

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Horsecars and trolleys and plank roads, oh my

One of my favorite things about being an archivist at BHS is all the different people I get to meet in the library. Researchers and their work are fascinating, and with each new person I work with, I get to learn something new. When I first started working as an archivist, I was amused to make the connection that libraries and archives have regulars– folks that come in often enough that you know their names (and sometimes their stories and their quirks)– just like the bars and coffee shops and restaurants I’d worked at in the past. At BHS we have some great regulars, either because they live in the neighborhood and love working in our amazingly beautiful library, they are researchers for hire who return often with new research for new clients, or because their research requires them to delve deeply in to the collections here at BHS.

One of our favorite regulars falls in to this last category: Darryl Heller is an American History PhD candidate at University of Chicago, whose work around 19th Century Brooklyn has brought him back to our archives on repeated trips. This week brings him back to Brooklyn again for more research and a presentation at Proteus Gowanus. Proteus Gowanus is a gallery, press, and reading room, and each year they chose a theme around which they build projects, exhibits, and events. This years theme is Transport, “an exploration through art, artifacts, books and events of How We Get There in the never-ending journey toward our destinations.” As a part of this exploration, they asked Darryl to talk about the history of early transportation in Brooklyn. For those of you unfamiliar with pre-HopStop public transport in Brooklyn, it was made up of a complicated and confusing assemblage of competing routes, technologies, companies, visions, and legislation. Following is a preview from Darryl of some of what he will be talking about:

Brooklyn is known for many things, among which is as the home to famous Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbets Field. The Dodgers, of course, was a shortened name for the Brooklyn Trolley Dodgers, a moniker that came to represent the baseball team after 1911. This title was appropriate given that Brooklyn had one of the most extensive street railway systems in the nation. Crossing the streets of the borough was, to some extent, a hair-raising if not life threatening endeavor. However, the trolley era, and its ubiquitous overhead wires, was preceded by the horsecar railway, a lower tech, but critical mode of transportation that occupied the streets of the city for almost half a century.

darrylblogphoto

This early form of urban transportation was constructed by laying smooth rails along city streets and using horses or mules as the motive power. Between 1853 and 1898 over twenty different companies provided transportation around the city of Brooklyn with lines radiating like the spokes of a wheel from downtown to all parts of Kings County. At its height, some companies stabled more than 3000 horses to pull cars and move residents between home, work, and pleasure destinations such as Coney Island. Lines stretched from Fulton Street to East New York, Atlantic Avenue to Jamaica, Main Street to Williamsburgh, and Hamilton Ferry to New Utrecht and Gravesend.

One of the reasons that the horse was so important is that steam locomotives were banned from operating within city limits because of their noise, smoke, ashes, and sparks. Although the Long Island Railroad was provisionally allowed to run steam trains along Atlantic Avenue, most other steam roads operated in the rural towns and villages beyond the city line. Some companies used both forms of power, that is, travelers would board a horsecar at an East River ferry and ride it to the border of the city. They would then disembark and transfer to a steam train in order to continue on to Bath Beach, Coney Island, or other shore locations.

By the late 1880′s electricity was developed to the extent that it provided a viable solution to the horse. Out of this was born the horseless trolley, with its power station that replaced the stable. For many, this was a welcome advance and by the turn of the century the role of the horse was fading from memory. Nevertheless, its contribution to the development of the modern city is unquestioned.

Join Darryl Heller, Proteus Gowanus, and quite likely a few BHS staff, this Friday at 7PM at Proteus Gowanus, 543 Union Street, Brooklyn, New York 11215.

Stories from Puerto Rico

Writing in 1975, Angelo Falcón, founder of the National Institute for Latino Policy and currently a professor at Columbia University, said:

The more than century-old presence of a politically active Puerto Rican community in New York City has been curiously obscured, afflicted by what Russell Jacoby calls ‘social amnesia’ and with serious consequences.  (Puerto Rican Politics in Urban America, 1984)

35 years later, last Friday, BHS celebrated the newly accessible Puerto Rican Oral History, 1973-1975.  This oral history project, initiated in 1973 by John D. Vasquez, then Director of Puerto Rican Studies at New York City Community College, was the first oral history project undertaken by BHS.  As coordinator of the BHS Oral History Program, I am proud that BHS answered the call coming from Falcón, Vasquez and others at that time to document the important contributions and experiences of the Puerto Rican community in Brooklyn.

The oral history interviews in this collection are newly accessible even though they were conducted between 1973-1975 because until now, only transcripts were available – you couldn’t listen to the actual interviews which were recorded on cassette tape.  BHS is a leader among archives who give researchers access to the actual audio/video of interviews rather than just transcripts.  BHS gives primacy to the audio document because as Alessandro Portelli says, “The tone and volume range and the rhythm of popular speech carry implicit meaning and social connotations which are not reproducible in writing.” (The Death of Luigi Trastulli and Other Stories, 1991).  This is one of the ways BHS furthers our mission to make the vibrant history of Brooklyn tangible, relevant, and meaningful today.

Everyone is welcome to come to BHS to listen to the voices collected in this oral history, which is also made accessible at Centro.  Centro gives online access to some of their collections including this excellent bilingual educational resource: The Electronic Schoolhouse/La Escuela Electrónica.

Listen to Amna Ahmad, BHS Oral History Intern and Columbia student, discuss her experience digitizing this collection from cassette tape and the stories she heard listening to ALL 75 HOURS of interviews!

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Amna Ahmad & Pedro Juan Hernandez

Amna Ahmad & Pedro Juan Hernandez

Pedro Juan Hernández, Senior Archivist at Centro de Estudios Puertorriqueños/Center for Puerto Rican Studies at Hunter College, CUNY; Chela Scott Weber, Archivist & Director of the Othmer Library at BHS;  and I also spoke on Friday about the importance of this collection.  Among those joining the discussion were El Diario’s Erica González; folklorist Elena Martinez, creator of the Steamship Migration tour of New York on the City of Memory; and Stephanie Alvarez, mother of Cassie Alvarez, BHS Visitor Services Assistant who we were surprised to discover is a descendant of Luis Felipe Weber, an important leader of the Puerto Rican community in the 1920s who is often discussed by narrators in this collection.

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Stephanie Alvarez and her daughter Cassie Alvarez

Here are some samples from the Puerto Rican Oral History collection.  These interviews were recorded between 1973-1975:

Listen to Celia Vicé (b 1920), civic leader, former Commissioner of NYC Commission on Human Rights, and at the time of the interview president of Puerto Rican Heritage publications:

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Listen to Honorina Weber Irizarry (b ca. 1905) talk about how being bilingual helped her in the workplace and the generosity of her brother Luis Felipe Weber:

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Listen to Luis Hernandez (b ca. 1923), then NYC Commissioner on Human Rights talk about leaders in the Puerto Rican community in Brooklyn:

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Listen to Sister Carmelita (b. 1907) talk about the Spanish-speaking community in Brooklyn and changes in religious practice:

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To hear more, including interviews in Spanish, please visit BHS and listen in the Library.

To read more, here’s a Select Bibliography about Puerto Rican community in New York City.



The Things They Carried

BHS and Queensborough Community College hosted a reading and discussion last Saturday of Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried, a collection of short stories about a platoon of American soldiers in the Vietnam War.  This event was part of The Big Read, an initiative of the National Endowment for the Arts designed to encourage reading and cultural conversation.

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Joseph Giannini, Joan Furey, and Anthony Wallace, three veterans featured in BHS’s exhibit In Our Own Words: Portraits of Brooklyn Vietnam Veterans, read from their own writings and generously shared stories about their experiences in Vietnam, coming home, coping with post-traumatic stress, and what they continue to carry emotionally.

Listen to excerpts from the event:

Michele Cuomo and Anida Pobric from Queensborough Community College read from O’Brien’s story “Good Form”

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Joan Furey talks about her experiences as a nurse in the Post-OP/ICU at the 71st Evacuation Hospital in Pleiku, Vietnam 1969 – 1970, what it was like to work in a regular hospital in the U.S. after that experience, and she reads from her book Visions of War, Dreams of Peace, an anthology of poetry and prose by women who served in Vietnam co-edited with Linda VanDevanter.

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Joseph Giannini commanded a rifle platoon that was part of the Special Landing Force in Vietnam, he talks about loosing half his platoon, how surfing helped him begin to heal, parallels between his experiences and what men and women currently serving in Iraq and Afghanistan are going through, and he reads an excerpt from a short story he wrote called “Interval”.

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Anthony Wallace entered the military in 1969, he talks about why he chose to enter Noncommissioned Officers school, and describes the 90+ pounds of equipment and supplies he carried in his rucksack, as well as the memories and emotions he carries with him after surviving an attack that left 25 US wounded and seven dead.

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Anthony, Joseph, and Joan talk about their experiences Coming Home from war:

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More comments and questions about women in the military:

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Hancock Street in Bedford-Stuyvesant

There are certainly some architectural gems in Bedford-Stuyvesant.  A researcher in the library today researching her block for the purpose of landmarking it and The Brownstoner making 247 Hancock Street the Building of the Day drew me into another section of our Photography Collection.  In the early 70s, BHS president James Hurley, with others, photographed this beautiful block of Hancock Street.

Hancock Street between Marcy & Thompkins taken by William Cox, 1972.  Brooklyn Historical Society Hargrave Collection of Bedford-Stuyvesant Photographs, v1974.5.2.

Hancock Street between Marcy & Thompkins taken by William Cox, 1972. Brooklyn Historical Society Hargrave Collection of Bedford-Stuyvesant Photographs, v1974.5.2.

Hancock Street between Marcy & Thompkins taken by William Cox, 1972.  Brooklyn Historical Society Hargrave Collection of Bedford-Stuyvesant Photographs, v1974.5.4.

Hancock Street between Marcy & Thompkins taken by William Cox, 1972. Brooklyn Historical Society Hargrave Collection of Bedford-Stuyvesant Photographs, v1974.5.4.

Hancock Street between Marcy & Thompkins taken by William Cox, 1972.  Brooklyn Historical Society Hargrave Collection of Bedford-Stuyvesant Photographs, v1974.5.9.

Hancock Street between Marcy & Thompkins taken by William Cox, 1972. Brooklyn Historical Society Hargrave Collection of Bedford-Stuyvesant Photographs, v1974.5.9.

Kelly Mansion 249 Hancock Street between Marcy & Thompkins built by Montrose Morris taken by William Cox, 1972.  Brooklyn Historical Society Hargrave Collection of Bedford-Stuyvesant Photographs, v1974.5.9.

Kelly Mansion at 249 Hancock Street between Marcy & Thompkins built by Montrose Morris taken by William Cox, 1972. Brooklyn Historical Society Hargrave Collection of Bedford-Stuyvesant Photographs, v1974.5.9.

239 Hancock Street between Marcy & Tompkins taken by James Hurley, 1972. Brooklyn Historical Society Hargrave Collection of Bedford-Stuyvesant Photographs, v1974.5.16.

239 Hancock Street between Marcy & Tompkins taken by James Hurley, 1972. Brooklyn Historical Society Hargrave Collection of Bedford-Stuyvesant Photographs, v1974.5.16.