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28 times • MARCH 3, 2016 for breaking news visit www.qns.com OLD TIMER To tell the story of John R. Pitkin and his grand idea for a brand-new city is to tell the story of the origins of several communities in Brooklyn and Queens. It begins back in 1835 when Mr. Pitkin of Connecticut visited New Lots and had the grand idea of founding a great new city, stretching from Brooklyn all the way to Jamaica. The son of a shoemaker, John Pitkin left home at the age of 12 to seek his fortune. A hard-working young man, Pitkin worked on different farms for several years, his earnings starting at $5 per month and soon reaching $11. Having put aside his money for school, Pitkin soon had an education If you have any memories and photos that you’d like to share about “Our Neighborhood: The Way it Was,” write to The Old Timer, c/o Ridgewood Times, 62-70 Fresh Pond Rd., Ridgewood, NY 11385, or send an email to editorial@ridgewoodtimes.com. All mailed pictures will be carefully returned upon request. and began a dry goods business. Within a few years, Pitkin’s business was earning $100,000 a year and he had the capital to enact his dream of a new city. One by one, Pitkin began purchasing the land from the old Dutch settlers – the Lotts, Van Siclens, Wyckoffs, and the Snedickers among them. Pitkin’s idea for this new city was to attract people from all over, those that were tired of farm life, but not enamored with the idea of living in a city like Manhattan. Laying out the village, with streets and thoroughfares, and separate areas for factories and parks and recreation, Pitkin’s idea attracted a lot of attention. And as it was located just to the east of Manhattan, he named his new city East New York. On the eastern end of his proposed city was an area that he called Woodville. Over the years there has been much speculation regarding the origins of the name with some suggesting it was named for the abundant woods and other suggesting it was named in honor of one Captain Wood who, according to old news accounts, may have once lived on the land. Just as the new city was beginning to develop, Pitkin’s plans crumbled during the Panic of 1837. Banks were shuttered, factories went out of business, and thousands of people lost their jobs. Pitkin himself took a massive hit as he had purchased more land than he could pay for and the mortgages on many of his properties were foreclosed. Over the next 10-12 years Pitkin regrouped, still retaining much of the land that was Woodville while his dream city of East New York developed as a smaller model of what he had envisioned, but he profited little from it. Woodville, on the other hand, turned out to be a good investment. The railroad from Brooklyn to Jamaica ran through Woodville (along Atlantic Avenue) as did the main road from Flushing to the Rockaways. This road, originally known as “The Road to the Landing” or Connecticut Avenue soon became Flushing Avenue (and eventually Woodhaven Boulevard). And the Jamaica Plank Road was yet another road from Brooklyn to Jamaica going directly through Woodville (and would eventually become known as Jamaica Avenue). These three well-traveled roads through Woodville brought businesses and workmen and the population began to grow. Between the roads in and out of Woodville, and the traffic generated by the popular Union Course racetrack, hotels and restaurants began to open up and flourish. Woodville grew so much so that in 1853 the village applied to the U.S. government to establish a post office. However, the petition was rejected because there was already a Woodville, in Jefferson County in upstate New York, and the law stated that there could not be two post offices with the same name in the same state. And so, being determined to have their own post office, the citizens of Woodville contemplated a change of name. One popular suggestion was Edgewood, due to the fact that the village’s borders were thick with heavy timber. Ultimately, however, Pitkin’s suggestion of Woodhaven was selected as the new name of the now nearly 20-year-old village. In those days, the original village of Woodhaven stretched much further south than it does today. Maps of this era show that most of the village of Woodhaven was south of Atlantic Avenue. The land between Atlantic and Jamaica Avenues was slow to develop, but houses eventually began to crop up all over the place. The land between Jamaica Avenue and Park Lane South was the last of Woodhaven’s farm lands to fall victim to the population boom. Real estate developers began to create sections within Woodhaven – Wyckoff Park, Simpson Park, Columbia Park, Napier Park, Eldert Park, Belmont Park and Chester Park among them. All of those names have been lost to history, but two sectional names in Woodhaven did manage to survive for a time. One section, Brooklyn Manor, was east of Woodhaven Boulevard and North of Jamaica Avenue. It shared a name with the Long Island Rail Road’s Rockaway Beach branch station at Jamaica Avenue on the border with Richmond Hill. The station was demolished in 1962 but the Brooklyn Manor name still pops up on maps from time to time and the name is still visible in a few businesses, most notably the nearcentury old Manor Delicatessen on Jamaica Avenue between 94th and 95th streets. The other section was a small 4- to 6- square-block area known as Ozone Park, allegedly called such because of its healthy ocean breezes. Built surr o u n d i n g the Ozone Park station of the same Rockaway B e a c h branch, the name not only survived, but the area grew and developed its own identity. Regarded as a section of Woodhaven for many years, in the mid to late 1920s newspaper accounts began referring to the area as Ozone Park and the borders began to take shape and match what we are accustomed to today. There is a tremendous amount of Woodhaven history in the neighborhood known today as Ozone Park and it is that area that the Woodhaven Cultural & Historical Society will be exploring on a free walking tour on Sunday, April 3, starting at noon. If you are interested in attending please email the WCHS at woodhavenhistory@ gmail.com. PRESENTED BY THE WOODHAVEN CULTURAL AND HISTORICAL SOCIETY Woodhaven’s roots begin with Pitkin


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