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November 16th, 2011

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Brooklyn History Photo of the Week: Pierrepont Place Before the BQE

John Jay Pierrepont Home, 1879, v1986.66.70; John Jay Pierrepont photograph collection, ARC.197; Brooklyn Historical Society.

 

The next time you drive on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway (BQE) through Brooklyn Heights, imagine what it looked like before there was a BQE. This photograph was taken by John Jay Pierrepont, son of Henry Evelyn and Anna Maria Pierrepont. John and his brother (Henry Evelyn II) lived in Brooklyn Heights and took over Pierrepont Stores, the family’s shipping storage business along the Brooklyn waterfront. In 1879 when this photograph was taken, it would have been very convenient for the brothers to descend the stairs from the backyard of 1 Pierrepont Place, where John resided, toward the offices of the Pierrepont Stores.

Many of the properties along Pierrepont Place enjoyed this aesthetically pleasing and direct route to the water until the BQE was built at the proposal of Robert Moses. After a grueling, public debate, the twentieth-century residents of Brooklyn Heights were able to strike a compromise that eliminated the backyards on Pierrepont Place and installed the Brooklyn Heights Promenade to accommodate the BQE running below instead of criss-crossing the historic neighborhood.

Incidentally, John Jay was also an amateur photographer who chronicled the progress being made on the Brooklyn Bridge and many other waterfront scenes.  He was the treasurer for the Long Island Historical Society (now the Brooklyn Historical Society) and a member of the Committee on Brooklyn History.

Otto C. Dreschmeyer’s Brooklyn, 1965-1968

 

Coney Island Beach

Coney Island Beach, ca. 1968, v1988.12.41; Otto Dreschmeyer Brooklyn Slides Collection, V1988.012; Brooklyn Historical Society.

Through his camera lens, Otto C. Dreschmeyer (1896-1983) documented the iconic neighborhood of Coney Island, and other Brooklyn scenes during the late 1960s. An amateur photographer, (likely using a Hasselblad camera), Otto Dreschmeyer’s style captured moments of everyday reality within Brooklyn’s public spaces. The Otto Dreschmeyer Brooklyn Slides (v1988.12) include the unveiling day at the JFK Memorial monument and the 1965 Memorial Day parade in Prospect Park, Coney Island of the late 1960s (with images of fireworks, sunset views of the shoreline, and night shots), and a few images of boats and boat rides in Sheepshead Bay.

Cat in Ridgewood Garden

Cat in Ridgewood Garden, ca. 1968, v1988.12.134; Otto Dreschmeyer Brooklyn Slides Collection; Brooklyn Historical Society.

The most intimate images are at his Rockwood residence, of a calico cat in a swath of garden sunshine. Dreschmeyer himself never appears in the images and remains somewhat enigmatic in terms of his life, profession, and motives for photographing these 157 slides while in his seventies.

Otto Dreschmeyer was never married, and based on US census records, likely lived his entire life in the family home with his widowed sister, Ella Piens. Their parents were German immigrants, and their Ridgewood family home was considered part of Bushwick, Brooklyn until 1977. After The 1977 Blackout and looting in Bushwick, Ridgewood became a Queens neighborhood in an effort to disassociate the neighborhood from Bushwick’s resulting reputation. At the age of 40, Dreschmeyer was responsible for a tragic car accident in 1936 that was reported in The New York Times. He also submitted a WWII draft card in 1942 but was not drafted for service. While digitizing and cataloging this collection of slides, I began to spin my own tales about this enigmatic, amateur photographer: What work did he do in his life? Was he retired? Was he a recluse?

Memorial Day, Prospect Park, 1965

Memorial Day, Prospect Park, 1965, v1988.12.4; Otto Dreschmeyer Brooklyn Slides Collection, V1988.012; Brooklyn Historical Society.

The local scenes he photographed are set within the years of social upheaval following President John F. Kennedy’s assassination, the Civil Rights Movement, and the beginning of the US military involvement in Vietnam.

Parachute Jump and Coney Island Boardwalk

Parachute Jump and Coney Island Boardwalk, ca. 1968, v1988.12.80; Otto Dreschmeyer Brooklyn Slides Collection, V1988.012; Brooklyn Historical Society.

As to Dreschmeyer’s main subject matter of Coney Island, BHS provides additional resources to contextualize these images in their time. Charles Denson’s Coney Island: Lost and Found, is part memoir, part historical research, and is a first hand account of the neighborhood in the late 1960s when Dreschmeyer was photographing there. The closing of Steeplechase Amusement Park in 1965 was a symbolic moment that illustrated the fall into economic decline by both the amusement parks and the neighborhood. From Denson’s perspective, “Only through war metaphors could what was happening to my neighborhood in 1965 be described…The city was taking their homes…By the time the war ended ten years later, nearly 40 city blocks of homes and businesses had been destroyed” (pg. 105). Under urban renewal plans, middle class family homes were demolished by the city while high-rise, low income public housing buildings were being constructed. Coney Island of the 1960s and 1970s became known for its crime and poverty, partially due to the city’s neglect. On Memorial Day weekend in 1966 The New York Times reported that 4,000 youths took over the boardwalk and threw bottles at people, causing the parks to close early. Then in April of 1968, another New York Times article reports on several thousands of rioters that stormed and looted the boardwalk and subways.

Women on Boardwalk Bench, Coney Island

Women on Boardwalk Bench, Coney Island, ca. 1968, v1988.12.126; Otto Dreschmeyer Brooklyn Slides Collection, V1988.012; Brooklyn Historical Society.

However, the tensions felt in Coney Island during these years were not deterrents to Dreschmeyer. Whether intentional or accidental, Dreschmeyer took quieter, everyday images of this neighborhood in transition that captures the Coney Island sightseers, new construction sites, the old rides and attractions, the boardwalk strollers, and the evening sunsets.

Novelties, Coney Island

Novelties, Coney Island, ca. 1968, v1988.12.151; Otto Dreschmeyer Brooklyn Slides Collection, V1988.012; Brooklyn Historical Society.