DIRTY WORDS 
 New book uncovers Brooklyn’s garbage-filled island 
 COURIER L 48     IFE, NOV. 22-28, 2019 
  THE BIG  
 CHEESE Down and dirty: A new book examines the history of a garbage-filled island that once  
 By Bill Roundy Now everyone can get a seat at the Table! 
 Beloved pizza joint Table 87 has more than  
 doubled the size of its original Atlantic Avenue  
 location.  The  mini-chain,  which  also  has  spots  in  
 Gowanus and in Industry City, has taken over the office  
 space next door, giving it room for another coal oven, 70  
 new seats, and a 23-tap bar serving beer and wine. 
  The expansion was sorely needed, said the pizzeria’s  
 owner, because the space had become intolerably busy,  
 with customers facing waits of up to 90 minutes for a pie. 
 “People would wait, but for me, it was nauseating to  
 make people wait that long,” said Thomas Cucco, a Bay  
 Ridge native who now lives in Midwood. 
 With the new space and a new oven, he says, the  
 wait for a pizza is never more than 30 minutes, and the  
 restaurant can accommodate a lot more people at one  
 time. Its original dining room could only hold about 20  
 people, said Cucco — and it filled up quick.  
 “We were known as a boutique place — if you got a  
 seat, you were lucky,” he said. 
 The new space can hold  up to 90 people, and the extra  
 dining area can also be reserved for special occasions and  
 for kids’ birthday parties, said Cucco, something that was  
 difficult to accommodate before. 
  The pizzeria’s new bar, which serves mostly  Brooklynmade  
 brews, caters to those looking to stop in for a quick  
 beer and a slice, noted Robert Cucco, operations manager  
 for the chain  and Thomas’s son.   
 Table 87, named for its location at 87 Atlantic Avenue,  
 opened in 2012, when that stretch of the avenue was fairly  
 desolate, noted  Thomas Cucco. But the completion of  
 Brooklyn Bridge Park, just a few blocks away, led to an  
 increase in foot traffic, and with new residential buildings  
 set to open soon on the Park’s Pier Six and in several other  
 locations nearby, he expects business to keep increasing.  
 “I love the expansion of the neighborhood,” said  the  
  elder Cucco. “When we opened, I knew that Brooklyn  
 Bridge Park was coming, and when the Park came, the  
 people came.” 
 Visit the newly expanded Table 87 87 Atlantic Ave.  
 between Hicks and Henry streets in Brooklyn Heights,  
 (718) 797–9300, www.table87.com. Open Sun–The, 11:30  
 am–10 pm; Fri–Sat, 11:30 am–11 pm.  
 By Bill Roundy Have an ice time! 
 Prospect  Park  opened  its  
 ice skating rink this week,  
 letting Brooklynites strap on their  
 skates  for  the  first  glide  of  the  
 season. The frozen water rink at the  
 LeFrak  Center  at  Lakeside  officially  
 opened at 10 am on Nov. 20, and will  
 remain open every day — including  
 Thanksgiving and Christmas — until  
 Spring melts it away, said one Park  
 spokeswoman. 
 “Prospect Park Alliance is excited  
 to welcome the public for another  
 winter season on the ice at Lakeside,”  
 said Deborah Kirschner. 
 The  LeFrak  Center  features  two  
 ice rinks — one covered, and one  
 fully out-of-doors, but for now, only  
 the covered circle of ice is open.  
 The outdoor rink is expected to open  
 in early December, but the weather  
 makes an exact date difficult to pin  
 down, said a Park rep.  
 Along  with  skate  stars  gliding  
 along the ice, the winter season will  
 also feature several sports on the  
 Prospect  Park  ice  rinks,  including  
 curling,  hockey  and  broomball.  
 Classes and leagues for the sports  
 will begin in December, and the rinks  
 should  remain  open  until  mid-April,  
 depending on the weather. 
 For those who feel a little unsteady  
 on their blades, “booster” classes are  
 available this Saturday and Sunday at  
 10:30 am. The class costs $40 for one,  
 or $70 for two. 
 Prospect Park’s full “Skate School”  
 will begin in December, and this year  
 the classes will offer some real expert  
 instruction: Leading the team  will be  
 Melissa Gregory and Denis Petukhov,  
 skaters who represented the United  
 States  in  the  2006  Winter  Olympics  
 in Torino, Italy.  
 “We  are  delighted  to  have  
 Olympians  Melissa  Gregory  and  
 Denis  Petukhov  co-directing  the  
 Skate School, and bring their talents  
 in  developing  innovative  sports  
 programming and youth development  
 to Lakeside,” said Kirschner. 
 Go skating at LeFrak Center at  
 Lakeside  (171  E.  Drive  in  Prospect  
 Park, enter on Ocean Avenue between  
 Parkside Avenue and Lincoln Road,  
 www.prospectpark.org). Open   Fri,  10  
 am–8 pm; Sat, noon–9 pm; Sun, noon– 
 5 pm. Weekday hours vary. Admission  
 $7.50 weekdays, $11 Sat, Sun, Friday  
 nights, and holidays. Skate rental $8. 
 HBy Rose Adams istory  has  never  been  so  
 trashy! 
 A new book dives into the  
 Brooklyn’s filthy past, unearthing the  
 story of those who handled — and  
 lived among — New York City’s  
 garbage. The author of “Brooklyn’s  
 Barren Island: A Forgotten History,”  
 said that the immigrant and African- 
 American workers who lived on the  
 trash-filled island in the late 19th and  
 early 20th centuries were overlooked  
 even while thousands of them toiled  
 in service to the city.  
 “People kind of ignored them —  
 they were seen as part of the garbage,”  
 said  Miriam  Sicherman,  who  will  
 read from her book at a Williamsburg  
 bookstore on Nov. 24.  
 The  historian  and  elementary  
 school  teacher  first  learned  about  
 Barren  Island  from  a  book  about  
 garbage disposal, and dug through  
 old newspaper articles, city records,  
 and oral histories to bring the island’s  
 history to life.  
 Barren Island once floated off of  
 Marine Park, in the area still known  
 today as Dead Horse Bay. Black  
 workers began traveling to the island  
 in the 1850s to process trash, and  
 soon, their families moved with them.  
 Irish, German, and Eastern European  
 sanitation workers followed, and by  
 1910, about 18,000 residents lived  
 across the locale, census data reports. 
 Life in Barren Island was not easy  
 — most of the inhabitants worked  
 in  garbage  and  fishing  factories,  
 where  they  processed  dead  horses,  
 household trash, and fish products,  
 the  book  describes.  Government  
 agencies turned up their noses at the  
 inhabitants,  and  with  no  running  
 water or city fire department, blazes  
 would  frequently  devastate  the  
 community.  
 There  were  some  upsides  to  
 living off the grid, noted Sicherman.  
 Locals took advantage of the lack of  
 government  oversight  to  sell  booze  
 without  regard  for  liquor  laws,  
 and  they  owned  semi-feral  hogs  
 decades  after  the  city  had  banned  
 the  animals,  which  served  both  
 garbage-disposals  and  a  source  of  
 bacon — at  least,  until  government  
 officials  gunned  down  most  of  the  
 porcine  beasts  in  1909.   And  the  
 island  immigrants  had  more  space  
 than  those  crowded  into  tenements  
 in the Lower East Side. 
 “On the bright side, they had a lot  
 of freedom,” Sicherman argued.  
 That  freedom  lasted  until  the  
 1930s, when the water around the  
 island was filled in, connecting the  
 area  to  the  mainland  and  creating  
 Floyd Bennet Field. In 1936, city  
 planner Robert Moses kicked out the  
 last remaining residents to build the  
 Marine Parkway Bridge, and Barren  
 Island was soon forgotten. 
 “Brooklyn’s Barren Island” launch  
 party at Spoonbill and Sugartown 218  
 Bedford Ave. between N.  Fourth and  
 N. Fifth streets in Williamsburg, (718)  
 387 –7322,  www.spoonbillbooks.com.  
 Nov. 24 at 5 pm. Free. 
  Table 87 expands  
 on Atlantic Avenue 
 housed a vibrant community.  Miriam Sicherman 
 Blade runners: The ice skating rinks at  
 Lefrak Center in Prospect Park will be open  
 all winter.   Photo by Stefano Giovannini 
 Robert and Thomas Cucco stand in the new dining room of Table  
 87 on Atlantic Avenue.   Photo by Bill Roundy 
 Skate o’clock! 
 
				
/www.table87.com
		/www.prospectpark.org
		/www.spoonbillbooks.com
		/www.table87.com
		/www.prospectpark.org)
		/www.spoonbillbooks.com