Category Archives: Exploring Manhattan

Day Three Hundred and Twenty Six Halloween begins Boo! October 1st-31st, 2024

School has started, the leaves have started to change colors and it is getting dark at a depressing 7:00pm. Fall has started. With that, the farms go from peaches and tomatoes to pumpkins and apples. By Labor Day, the Halloween merchandise starts to hit the shelves and even more depressing, Christmas trees and ornaments with Santa’s singing have entered the stores. I am still hitting the beach and I have to look at reindeer?

As I was passing Rosie’s Farm on my way into Mullica Hill as I was driving to Wildwood for the Firemen’s Convention, I came across this festive sign for Halloween. We were worried about Halloween in the middle of September? Still it intrigued me and I thought this would be fun. I booked a room at the Salem River Inn for two weeks later and off I went yet again to South Jersey exploring all the back roads.

When I got off at Exit Two off the Jersey Turnpike, I was greeted with all these signs with this festive little ghost all over them. I would understand later that this was a big fundraiser for the Harrison Township Historical Society, a very nice little museum on the edge of Downtown Mullica Hill, NJ that I had blogged about in the past. So with the room and tour all booked, off I went exploring the area again until I could check into my hotel.

Since I had just toured the area two weeks earlier, I got most of my stock pictures in and had a list of places I wanted to visit again before they closed for the season. On that list was Hudock’s Ice Cream to see if I could get that heavenly peach ice cream again before they closed for the season, then visit a small museum in Bridgeton (which ended up being closed), the Cohanzick Zoo in the Bridgeton public parks and the Bridgeton Presbyterian Church cemetery for more pictures of sections of the historic cemetery that I missed. So I took all the local back roads through farm country to get to Bridgeton. The adventures took through farm country and all the great farms and farm stands that come with it. It is so much fun when I get lost.

The Mullica Hill Ghost Walk in Mullica Hill, NJ started the Halloween season

I was coming back from the Firemen’s Convention and was staying in Salem River when visiting museums for my blog and I saw the sign for the Mullica Hill Ghost Walk and back to South Jersey I went. I had to take my mind off the first month of school, so I took the weekend to get away.

As I made my way down to Bridgeton to start a series of visits to historical sites on my bucket list for my blog I took a local detour down local roads and came across Moods Farm with a very festive looking pumpkin looking at me and smiling. I had plenty of time for a detour and visit the farm. What a treat!

The farm was really active that morning with people going on hay rises through the fields, walking through the corn maze and enjoying apple cider and cider doughnuts. That last one I was planning on doing.

The very festive female pumpkin greets you at the gate

Moods Farm Market at was very busy that morning and was even busier when I left

The entrance to the market at 901 Bridgeton Pike, where they were selling tickets to hay rides and the maze

https://www.moodsfarmmarket.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46655-d8754661-Reviews-Mood_s_Farm_Market-Mullica_Hill_New_Jersey.html

The farm created such a relaxing and enjoyable environment when welcoming you. I felt like I was taking a step back to the 1970’s when there was time to stop and take a breather and enjoy a sunny afternoon. I really like the farm stand with the multiple fruits and vegetables and homemade jams.

The fruits and vegetables from the farm

There were lots of things to choose from at the stand

I was in search of a good cider doughnut. I was bummed that they were selling them by the pack. That was until I stopped and talked with the girl at the counter and she said I could buy them individually. They were just coming out of the fryer and they were warm. There is nothing like a fresh cider doughnut with fresh apple cider.

The doughnuts were just out of the fryer and were so delicious

The Apple Cider was made from Honey Crisp apples

I took my cider doughnut and my apple cider and sat at the picnic tables over looking the farm. With all the rushing around in my life, it was to just stop and enjoy a sunny morning.

I was watching the rides through the fields

While I was at the picnic tables, I read the trivia questions in the large pumpkin while watching the tractors drive by.

The Pumpkin Trivia board

The questions and answers were really cute. I thought it was an interesting game.

The questions

The answer

It was just nice to watch people on the rides and having a good time. It is nice to see all this on a sunny early afternoon.

Looking over the farm in the early afternoon

Watching people have fun on the hay rides

The wooden pens of animals for kids to play with at all ages

After this relaxing detour at the farm, I continued my trip down the back roads to Bridgeton, passing other farms and fields of corn.

Then I passed Elmer, a small farming town just south of Mullica Hill. I had not heard from their historical society and when I saw the sign and time I took a chance to see if they were open and pulled down the country lane. I am glad I did.

The country road leading to Elmer, NJ

In Southern New Jersey you are reminded that we are still a rural state

When I visited Elmer, NJ, they were having their ‘Harvest Fest’ that afternoon when I finally got to see their historical society, which was open as they were sponsoring the event. Normally they are only open the second Sunday of the month and that is it.

The Tractor display at the Harvest Fest

The crowds at the Harvest Fest

The amazing crafts at the festival

The amazing crafters at the festival

While I walked around Downtown Elmer, I found that their historical society was open too. I finally got to tour that elusive museum too.

The Elmer Historical Museum at 117 Broad Street

https://www.facebook.com/greaterelmerareahistoricalsociety/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46415-d28644121-Reviews-Greater_Elmer_Area_Historical_Society-Elmer_New_Jersey.html

The sign for the museum

The main gallery

The main gallery of the museum

After I left Elmer, I made my way down to Bridgeton to the downtown to visit some of the historical sites in this former Colonial city. For such a depressed City, Bridgeton has a lot to offer and see. I am so surprised that the artists have not taken over this city as well. I am starting to see traces of it as there are now two art galleries in the downtown amongst the Mexican businesses and a few of the Victorian homes outside the downtown have been really fixed up.

The first museum that was located in the main library, the Woodruff Museum of Indian Artifacts was closed and no one could take me downstairs no matter how much I asked. I could not understand how a main library could run on just two people.

So I left there and decided to take pictures at the Presbyterian Church cemetery. There were a lot of pictures that I did not get the last time I visited and there were certain parts of the cemetery I wanted to revisit. Before I did that, I noticed a woman and her daughter had set up a taco stand just in front of the church across the street from the library.

The smells were amazing and I wanted to see what they were serving. She was cooking homemade soft tacos. tamales and quesadillas. I was starved and they looked so good. So I ended up getting two of them and she served them with a homemade hot sauce. They were out of the world.

What was nice is that they set up a table just outside their stall and I was able to enjoy lunch outside in the beautiful weather

The fresh Tacos being cooked across the street from the Bridgeton Library. The woman and her daughter were such good cooks

After lunch, I headed back up into downtown Bridgeton and visited the Century Bakery at 525 North Pearl Street. I had read an article online that this was one of the best bakeries in the State of New Jersey. It did live up to its reputation. The doughnuts were excellent.

Century Bakery at 525 North Pearl Street

https://www.centurybakery.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46324-d4983179-Reviews-Century_Bakery-Bridgeton_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

I could not believe the selection of different flavors of doughnuts and cakes and it was hard to choose between them.

The selection of doughnuts to chose from

I wanted something different so I got a Vanilla Cream filled glazed doughnut. Talk about excellent. It was light and sweet and topped with a thick layer of glazed.

The Glazed Vanilla Cream Filled doughnut

Yum!

After lunch, I spent the rest of the afternoon before I checked into my hotel at the Bridgeton Presbyterian Church in the cemetery taking pictures of the historic graveyard. It really is something out of a Hollywood horror film. The cemetery at Bridgeton Presbyterian Church contains some of the founding families of the region and many veterans of both the revolutionary and Civil Wars.

I headed to the church and toured the cemetery. On a sunny Fall afternoon with the leaves changes colors, the graveyard had a certain glow to it like the spirits knew I was there. I still think this graveyard has positive spirits at rest because I never feel creeped out by it. It seems like the spirits always appreciate visiting them and respecting their place here.

The entrance of the cemetery

https://www.nj.gov/dca/njht/funded/sitedetails/old_broad_street_presbyterian_church.shtml

https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1969053/old-broad-street-presbyterian-church-cemetery

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Broad_Street_Presbyterian_Church_and_Cemetery

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46324-d24140698-Reviews-Old_Broad_Street_Presbyterian_Church_Cemetery-Bridgeton_New_Jersey.html

My review on VistingaMuseum.com:

The graveyard from the outside

The graveyard by the church

The historic family plots

The church always looms in the distance

The graveyard has a creepy look about it even during the day

I toured the graveyard and looked over some of the more unusual tombstones. I liked the part of the graveyard that was older and closer to the church. The names of many of the original families of the area and a lot of Revolutionary War members were buried here so it’s not only historical but part of the fabric of the City of Bridgeton.

After I toured the graveyard I headed to another part of Bridgeton and headed to the Cohanzick Zoo in the Bridgeton Park.

The entrance to the Cohanzick Zoo in the early afternoon

https://cohanzick-zoo.org/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46324-d1425883-Reviews-Cohanzick_Zoo-Bridgeton_New_Jersey.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

I got to the zoo in the early afternoon and was able to walk around the zoo and tour the whole thing in an hour. This regional zoo had a lot of smaller animals that had been rescued or abused. The sad part was that the cages and pens were not that big so some of the animals looked bored.

The entrance of the Zoo

The sign that explains the zoo

The Raccoon House was my first stop

I searched for the raccoon and found him sleeping at the top of his house

The little guy looked so pooped

The zoo is one of the smaller more localized ones that I have visited so you can see the whole zoo in about an hour. Then you can walk leisurely around the paths and revisit the exhibitions again. Some of the animals like the peacock family, just wonder around the park and do their thing.

This gorilla sculpture that greets you in the back part of the zoo

Following the walkway to the back pens where a lot of the small animal and bird displays were located

The next exhibition that I visited was the Sand Hill Crane and I read that the poor little guy had been injured. He seemed a bit more optimistic when I passed the cage. I think that the animals just want some attention.

The Sand Hill Crane display

The Crane was watching all of us as we passed his cage

The next small animal that I visited was the Fennec fox and the two that I saw were fast asleep on this warm afternoon. They must have had a busy morning.

The Fennec fox cage

The foxes that I saw that day were fast asleep

While I was walking around the back part of the zoo, there was a peacock family walking around the cages. The father peacock had two small birds with him and they just meandered amongst the cages.

The male Peacock walking around the zoo with his children. They were allowed to walk around on their own without being locked up. They looked like they were having an adventure as a family.

The Ring Tailed Lemur display

I visited the Ring- Tailed Lemur pens and these little monkeys looked like they were plotting an escape. They stayed in a bunch the whole time I watched them and they just stared.

The lemurs just stared back at me as I watched them

The back part of the museum was beautiful in the early fall

The tiger sculpture along the path at first freaked me out that he had gotten out and just looked at us. He looked real.

The Totem Pole Garden

The river running through the gardens in the Fall 2024

The leopard looked bored in his cage. He justly walked aimless around their cages. They are not being given enough space to move around.

The serval cage

The Serval also looked bored. It just walked in circles around the cage. I was not sure if he was bored or just confused.

The zoo was such a nice place to relax and just collect my thoughts. The beginning of the semester had been rough for me and we were going into Midterms in a couple of weeks. Just walking through the zoo relaxed me. Between the gardens and the sounds of the animals it was nice to clear my head for an hour.

The Salem River Inn at 91 Country Club Road

https://salemriverinn.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Hotel_Review-g46799-d12378333-Reviews-Salem_River_Inn-Salem_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

I headed over to the Salem River Inn in Salem, NJ and dropped my things off in my room before the tour. I just relaxed for a bit before I made the trip back to Mullica Hill to start the tour. The town was packed with people already starting their tours.

Downtown Mullica Hill the night of the walk

The downtown was dotted with scarecrows

The foliage was just starting to change but like Octobers in the past five years it has been warmer and greener further into the month.

The tee shirts of the event being sold at the start of the tour

Our tour guide at the start of the tour

The scarecrows on the tour

We walked many stops in the downtown that was steeped in history even before the Revolutionary War.

The Hanging Barn where a worker hung himself

The history of the 12th Infantry some buried in the town

The Haunted St. Stephen’s Church downtown

The inside of the church where angels were seen

The graveyard talk in the back of the church

The Haunted House where multiple ghosts have been seen

Another haunted house

The Mullica family home is haunted

Another haunted house in town

After the tour was over, I toured the Mullica Hill Historical Society after the tour to see the new ‘Taverns and Temperance’ exhibition on the local watering holes of the 18th and 19th centuries of which only two exist.

The Last Call exhibition at the Harrison Township Historical Society Museum at 62 Main Street

https://www.harrisonhistorical.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46655-d25105321-Reviews-Harrison_Township_Historical_Society-Mullica_Hill_New_Jersey.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

The history of taverns and their purpose

The interesting artifacts from the exhibit

The ‘Last Call’ exhibition was a look on how taverns were such an important part of socialization at a time when there were no movies, internet, phones and newspapers were limited. Still there was a strong resistance to people drinking which still reflects to our Puritan past.

There was nothing wrong with having a drink but there was a sense of taking it too far. Still this attitude is reflected today. It is still interesting though how one or two of these taverns have carried over into the Twenty First century. They are still welcoming guests today and that proves the socialization of these establishments and how important they are in our lives.

After the tour was over and I had a nice visit with the museum, it was almost 9:00pm and I wanted to eat something. Two small tacos and two doughnuts are hardly a proper lunch for someone. By 9:00pm though, the whole town had rolled up its sleeves. Even the restaurant where the tour started was closing at 9:00pm. I was shocked as there were people inside still ordering. The host said the kitchen was closing and if I knew what I wanted I could sit down.

That was not much of an offer especially at their prices and I made my way down to Naples, the pizzeria and Italian restaurant where I had parked. They were open until a normal 11:00pm on a Friday night (I still do not understand restaurants that close at 9:00pm on a Friday or Saturday night. This part of the COVID scare is over and things are pretty much back to normal).

I went to the host stand and they seated me quickly. Tours were still going on and as I ate my dinner, the place really filled up when I finished because there was no place left to eat in town. (Not a good business decision). I really enjoyed Naples. Not only was it a lively environment with the games going on and a very active bar scene but the food was really good as well and very reasonable.

Naples Pizzeria 1 South Main Street in Mullica Hill

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g46655-d421347-r973870279-Naples_Pizza-Mullica_Hill_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

The inside of Naples the night of the walk

The pizza was amazing

The pizza was so good that night

After the walk was over, I went back to the hotel and sunk into bed. I was exhausted from all the driving. The Salem River Inn is so quiet and relaxing the I slept so soundly that night.

My favorite room in the hotel, The Meadow Room with views of the old golf course and the lawns in the front of the hotel.

I had a bit of a rough night’s sleep, I figure to all the traveling and running around due to work. When I got up, I got to watch the sun rise over the field. That is worth getting up for in the morning.

The start of the sunrise

Continues

Continues

Continues

Continues as the Sun peeks out

Continues

Continues

The sunrise finished. This is why you have to book this room

I had a kind day ahead of me with a lot of running around visiting museums for my blog and exploring the areas of South Jersey that I had not yet covered. That meant running from Salem to Millville to Penns Grove to Pennsville to visit all three historical societies before everything closed at 4:00pm. It does not seem like much but it was a lot of ground to cover.

I started off with a good breakfast on the deck overlooking Delaware Bay that Yvonne prepared for me. It was an egg omelet with tomatoes with fruit, breads and hot tea. The perfect breakfast to start the day. The weather was spectacular and perfect for eating outside.

The views from the deck at breakfast the first week of October

The perfect breakfast outside on the terrace

The perfect omelet

Matched with the perfect view

I had to check out early as the Inn was preparing for a big wedding and I had a lot of ground to cover before I headed home. Don’t ask me how I did it but I got the job done.

I said my goodbyes to the owners but not before taking some more spectacular pictures of the grounds and the beach area. It was so beautiful in the morning.

The beach just outside the hotel

Looking the other direction down the shore line facing the Delaware Bay

After I packed up, I said my goodbyes to the owners and headed to my first stop, the Millville Historical Society in Millville, NJ the first of my three stop journey.

It took just under an hour to arrive in Millville which was past Bridgeton where I had been the other day. I was lucky there was no traffic on the road and I got to the museum fifteen minutes before it opened. It gave me time to take all my exterior pictures of the museum. It is a nice little museum with a great bunch of volunteers.

The Millville Historical Society at 200 East Main Street

http://millhistsoc.org/

https://www.facebook.com/Millvillehs/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46627-d27044122-Reviews-Millville_Historical_Society-Millville_New_Jersey.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

The Baracha-Dunn House right next door to the Historical Society is open for touring.

History of the museum:

(from the museum’s website)

The Millville Historical Society has been preserving Millville, New Jersey’s past for over nine decades.  Incorporated in 1927, the organization’s headquarters and archives depositary is located in the historic 1857 Millville Bank at 200 E. Main St., Millville.

The main gallery of the Millville Historical Society

The Society has been entrusted with the care of three of Millville’s most historic structures: the 1857 Bank building at 200 E. Main Street, the 1798 Baracha Dunn House, and the 1814 Mansion House.  Admission to all buildings is free.  Donations are gratefully accepted.

The main gallery of the Millville Historical Society from the front door

I recently visited the Millville Historical Society and got to tour the museum and the historical home next door. The main part of the museum is built inside a historic bank that the Society took over in the 1970’s. All the displays are showcased around the museum.

The original picture of the Millville National Bank during the turn of the last century

One of the first displays you will see is the original drawing of the bank. This beautiful historic building sits on the very edge of the downtown as you enter Millville. On the top of the display was a model of a sand separator that was in the creation of glass which the area was known for in the previous century.

The historic map of Downtown Millville, NJ

Another display has a model one of the major ferries that once ran in Millville.

The model of the Millville

After I toured the displays along the perimeter of the museum, I had a tour of the Baracha-Dunn House next door which was part of the historical society’s complex. These historic buildings were built in the late 1700’s and the addition in the early 1800’s. The tour takes you through both the main house and the later addition both upstairs and downstairs.

The Barack’s-Dunn house was open for a tour

The entrance the house from the street

The main room of the original house with the hearth in the main room for cooking and for heat in the house

The hearth is the center of the house

The Living Room of the main home

The Living Room of the home

The Living Room

The other side of the house which was the later addition to the home offered more rooms.

The Living Room from the main door

I left Millville after about an hour and a half and had to race across the southern part of the State of New Jersey down both Routes 45 and 47 to get to Penns Grove to visit the Penns Grove Historical Society which was on the other side of the Garden State Parkway. They closed at 3:00pm and that offered its challenges. Thank God I had already visited the Presbyterian Church cemetery and the Cohanzick Zoo the day before. Since I also updated the exhibition at the Historical Society at Mullica Hill and the town pictures of Millville, Salem, Mullica Hill and Penns Grove, pretty much my blogs were completed to the seasons. That took a lot of driving and a lot of racing around. Still I was extremely impressed the the Historical Society of Penns Grove, Carney’s Point and Oldmans.

While the Society is in a very depressed downtown area which pretty much does not exist anymore (all the stores surrounding the building are all boarded up), inside the museum was presented the exhibition “What We Wore Then”, an impressive look at the town’s former Downtown area up until the 1970’s when the Delaware Memorial Bridge, the Malls and highways changed the way the town shopped. All the strip malls along the highway drew people away from the stores downtown.

The Penns Grove Historical Society at 48 West Main Street

https://www.facebook.com/p/Historical-Society-of-Penns-GroveCarneys-Point-Oldmans-100064438279569/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46723-d27075535-Reviews-Historical_Society_Penns_Grove-Penns_Grove_New_Jersey.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

This was when the museum was decorated for Christmas in 2023

The Penns Grove Historical Society sign that welcomes you to the museum

The mission of the Society is to collect, study and conserve such historical materials as they relate to the towns and their inhabitants, especially of the early settlement. It shall preserve relics and property of the past, both real and personal as may be given, bequeathed, purchased, loaned or otherwise acquired by the Society. It shall be the Society’s responsibility to use the collection for the education, enjoyment and benefit of the general public.

After almost two years of trying to visit this small historical society, the trips aligned and J was able to visit the Penns Grove Historical Society and delightful and very engaging exhibitions. What was sad was that people missed this wonderful well thought out museum when visiting the area. The museum has so much charm and such interesting exhibitions to walk through.

Entering the museum and the sign for the main exhibition ‘The Clothes we Wore’

There were three exhibitions showing when I came to visit. One was “On the Waterfront” on the Penns Grove waterfront. This describes the shipping and fishing industry that the town had before the building of the factories and the Delaware Memorial Bridge. Each display case has different aspects of the industries.

The seafarer and shipping artifacts

This exhibit shows how much the Delaware Bay has changed over the last 100 years.

The pictures and description of the native coastline around the Delaware River

Pictures of the Fishing Industry that was once part of the fabric of the town

The next was the exhibition, “The Clothes We Wore” was an extensive look at the retail community of Downtown Penns Grove, NJ before the coming of the malls and changes of traffic patterns into town. It is also a look at the changes in the way we dress not just to go out but how we dress every day.

When you walk the exhibition you can see the array of stores from shoe stores to hats that people used to don until the mid 1960’s and the coming of ‘Flower Power’. Each store had its specialty and catered to a specific client. It is interesting how each stores had it own display of wares and its use in our wardrobes. It also shows a very vibrant downtown that is now part of its past.

Each store had its own display along with the advertising in a time when shopping was leisurely and we took time out to try things on. Pride in appearance was a big part of who we are as people.

Dresses and suits were once part of our everyday wardrobe

The Millinery shop where hats and gloves were part of the wardrobe

Shoes shined for work every day were part of the uniform

Accessories built the character of our wardrobe

More hats that showed the personality of the wearer

The different advertising for the various merchants that made up the downtown

A glimpse of the downtown in its heyday

The infant and children’s clothing was a bit more formal even at public school

We pampered babies even back then. Their wardrobes were always special

Poland’s Department Store downtown was the place to shops before malls took over

The last exhibition was entitled “It’s Elementary” on the town’s school system. The displays in the back of the museum discuss the modes of transportation before cars and highways became part of the fabric. The progression of the schools in Penns Grove were on display as well with class pictures, school trips, awards and pictures of the schools themselves before regionalization and building of new schools.

The history of the Penns Grove School system in the exhibition “It’s Elementary”

The history of early schools in Penns Grove

The corner stone of the Penns Grove School

A classic trip to Washington DC and Mount Vernon were part of the school traditions even in the 1920’s

After I finished touring the Penns Grove Historical Society, I made a mad dash across the highway followed by the Pennsville Historical Society President, who just happened to be visiting that afternoon, to tour the house before they started to put the Christmas decorations up. This was pretty much the last weekend before all the houses closed to start the holiday season. Most of the houses needed to be decorated before Thanksgiving and it took time.

Church Landing Farm-Pennsville Historical Society

http://www.pvhistory.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46726-d24140695-Reviews-Church_Landing_Farmhouse-Pennsville_New_Jersey.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

I got to the Church Landing Farm in plenty of to tour the house and the grounds. What an interesting museum that is full of surprises. When they unlock the auxiliary buildings to show you the displays, they are a real wonder of fascinating artifacts each with its own theme.

The sign welcoming you to the Church Landing Farm-Pennsville Historical Society

The house was built by Daniel Garrison between 1840-1845 and was the home for five generations of the Garrison family up to 1973 when the last living relative, Anna Locuson died and did not leave an heir. In 1991, Atlantic City Electric worked with the Pennsville Township Historical Society to open this as a museum.

I started with a quick tour of the outer buildings which I had seen three years prior but did not have a camera to take the proper pictures. Since there is not much online, I was on major picture taking mission and started with the amusement shed of the old Riverview Amusement Park display.

The display of the original park

The Amusement Park display

The Amusement Park display

The Amusement Park display

Then I moved onto the Military and Farming buildings

The town history building

Then I moved onto the High School and Military displays and then I took a quick tour of the house before they closed at 4:00pm. Talk about visiting under the wire.

The Town and High School History building

The High School display

After the tour of the outer buildings, the president of the historical society took me on a quick tour inside so I could take pictures in the house before it was decorated for Christmas. It really is a beautiful old home with the most amazing views of Delaware Bay. No wonder it was in the family for so many years. We first toured the downstairs starting with the Living Room.

The Living Room during the late Fall

The Parlor during the rest of the year

Then we took a quick tour of the bedrooms before they were decorated again for Christmas.

Bedroom One

The Bedroom during the regular months

Bedroom Two

The Bedroom during the regular months

The new dollhouse that was donated

The bathroom during the year

I just had enough time to visit the rest of the house and then head off to lunch before my trip home. The house is so nicely decorated both in the regular months and for the Christmas holidays that it is fun to visit all times of the year. I just finished the tour when the museum closed for the day (Visit my blog site VisitingaMuseum.com for details on all of these historical museums and sites).

I stopped for a late lunch/early dinner at my favorite Chinese restaurant in the Pennsville area, Orient Restaurant at 414 South Broadway, a small restaurant in a tiny strip mall that you would never notice. It may have a very non-descriptive front but the reviews online do not do the restaurant justice as the two times I have eaten here the food and service are excellent. I never quite understood why the restaurant is not busier.

Orient Chinese Restaurant at 414 South Broadway in Pennsville, NJ

https://www.facebook.com/p/The-Orient-Chinese-Restaurant-100083171296875/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46726-d421184-Reviews-Orient_Chinese_Restaurant-Pennsville_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

Orient Chinese Restaurant is one of those old fashioned Cantonese places that still offers the fried noodles and sauces in the beginning and still serves hot tea, ice water and Fortune Cookies at the end of the meal. Don’t be fooled though, this is no Chow Mein palace. Everything I have tried here is delicious, the prices are fair and the portion sizes are just right for a full meal.

The Wonton Soup is excellent

I kept it traditional by ordering a combination platter with Wonton Soup and Sweet and Sour Pork with Pork Fried Rice.

The Sweet and Sour Pork with Pork Fried Rice and an Egg Roll

The egg rolls here are delicious!

I have always been impressed by the meals at the restaurant and it was a nice way to end a very productive weekend. I got to visit, update and revisit so many cultural sites for my blogs plus I got to see Mullica Hill’s Haunted past. It was also such nice weather and I love waking up and looking at the views of the Delaware Bay at the Salem River Inn. Dinner was the cap off to a very busy Halloween season.

With four class though, I told myself that I am toning the whole Halloween season back a notch to limit the amount of events on the weekends. It got to be too much last year with work at the college and classes at NYU that I nearly lost my mind. So I promised myself that I would try not to revisit events of the past and pace myself each weekend of October. This year we did luck out and every weekend in October was beautiful with surprisingly warm weather. It would be 80 degrees on Halloween Night for the parade but for now, I enjoyed the long weekends and relished my time off when I had it. Until the next weekend.

The second weekend of October was my birthday and this time around I was planning things I had wanted to do and visit on my blogs and eat at some of the restaurants on my bucket list. Two of my major projects were done so on Friday I got all dressed up and started my birthday morning volunteering at Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen.

I got in a little late but was able to catch up with everyone filling take away bags for the guests to go with their meals, then preparing 100 sandwiches for the weekend to take to sites where the homeless were sleeping so that they had a meal over the weekend and then we had to prepare for Sunday Supper that Sunday so all the place settings had to be prepared and bagged up for the dinner, which I had been to a couple of times over the Summer when I had more time. I always like to give back on my birthday and this was the perfect way to start my birthday day.

It was such a beautiful afternoon to walk around the City. This area of Chelsea has changed a lot in the last twenty years

I decided to take it easy this birthday and not do too much running around. I still had to get a haircut and get some other errands done. One of the meals that I planned today was having Afternoon Tea at the Lowell Hotel up on East 61st Street. I had passed the hotel years ago and when I was doing research on the hotel, they had mentioned the excellent Tea Service they had in the afternoon. Since I have been to the Plaza, Pierre and Waldorf (which is still closed for renovation) many times in the past, I had put it on my bucket list to try. At $150.00 for tea, and tiny cakes and sandwiches it was always hard to justify the price for ‘just going’, Since it was my birthday, I decided to splurge today and spend some of my hard earned money on something special. It was well worth it. What a nice afternoon.

The first thing to check out is the Lowell Hotel at 28 East 63rd Street at Madison Avenue. This elegant little hotel is one of the ‘Leading Hotel’s of the World’ and whose architecture is elegant and inviting. The potted plants and well appointed doorman really give it that European looking touch.

Lowell Hotel at 28 East 63rd Street

https://www.lhw.com/hotel/The-Lowell-New-York-NY

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g60763-d12247765-r976399515-Majorelle-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

On my birthday in 2024, I finally broke down and went for Afternoon Tea in Majorelle, one of their signature restaurants. I went to try the new “Lilly of the Valley” Tea designed by Dior. It was pricey but this was a once in lifetime experience (unless someone takes me here again). The whole experience was amazing from the time I walked in to the time I left. It was first class all the way.

The floral arrangements along were magnificent. I could not believe the attention to detail the whole hotel paid to every corner of the hotel. Even in the bathrooms nothing was out of place.

The floral arrangements in the lobby were polished and elegant

Majorelle is a quiet corner of the hotel’s restaurants with an elegant and polished look to it. The restaurant was not busy that afternoon with only three other tables having diners. People were well dressed and subdued and the room was polished elegance.

Majorelle set for Afternoon Tea patrons

Nothing was out of place in Majorelle

The table set for one and ready to celebrate my birthday

Ordering from a menu fit for a King! I did not look at any prices this afternoon (it was my present to myself)

The start of the Afternoon Tea service

The Sweets and Sandwiches of the Lilly of the Valley Tea

The Curried Chicken, Lobster Salad and Cucumber Sandwiches

The pastries were so beautiful that I did not want to eat them. They looked as good as tasted!

I toasted my father on the Anniversary of his passing and to my birthday for a happy and safe year. This French Rose Champagne was excellent and a generous pour. Happy Birthday to me!

I had to justify spending the extra $35.00 on a glass of Champagne, I admitted to the waiter that it was my birthday and I should spend it in a special way. They came out later with two freshly made Madeline’s with a candle on the plate for my birthday. I will not tell you how much they sell Madeline’s for here but this was a generous gift that the waiters gave me. I told them I did not say it for something free (this is hardly an Olive Garden) but they could see it was a special gift to myself.

The Madeline’s presented to me with a candle on my birthday

Then came out the freshly baked scones which were still warm from the oven. Everything was made from scratch and made for me for this Tea. Even the Madeline’s were still warm from the oven.

These scones just came out of the oven for me and they were served with freshly made jelly

The additional sweets: freshly made iced cookies, Madeline’s, the Pink Dior Cake and a Chocolate Puffed Cake were presented to me after Tea was served

The Pink Dior Cake that served as a Birthday cake

The Pink Dior Cake was the perfect Birthday cake

Me on my birthday at the Lowell Hotel tea. This was the perfect birthday present to myself. I did make a wish that afternoon but I will not tell it

After I filled myself with sweets and good things to eat, I needed to walk this all off. Even then the sugar was starting to affect me and I needed a stretch or I would have spend out in the hotel’s lobby. I walked outside in the warm weather and walked down East 63rd Street and enjoyed the sunny day. That was some birthday!

After Tea was over, I took a trip to the Central Park Zoo to walk off some of the desserts and then I started to get phone calls from friends and family on my birthday, which was really nice of everyone. It was so beautiful and warm that I sat in the gardens near the Seal Tanks and talked with everyone for over an hour before my haircut appointment.

The Central Park Zoo if right off Fifth Avenue

https://centralparkzoo.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d267703-Reviews-Central_Park_Zoo-New_York_City_New_York.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

The Central Park Zoo gardens

Me visiting my pals, the Seals

He gave me a long stare on my birthday

By the time the Zoo had closed, I had finished most of the my phone calls with my family and friends ( I was on the phone for over two hours), I went to get my haircut at York Barber at 981 Lexington Avenue. My barber of thirty years finally retired at 92 and I had to find a new barbershop. I had passed this place many times on my walks on the Upper East Side and finally decided to try it. I have had my last four haircuts here and I have been very happy.

York Barbershop at 981 Lexington Avenue has been around since 1926 and the interior looks like it

https://www.yorkbarbershop.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d27798906-Reviews-York_Barber_Shop-New_York_City_New_York.html

My review on LittleShoponMainStreet@Wordpress.com:

https://littleshoponmainstreet.wordpress.com/category/barber-shops-in-manhattan/

The barbers here are really nice and the haircuts are only $42.00 which I think is very fair for the quality of the cut and the fact that I look so nice when leave. They have also all been around for a long time so their clientele is pretty much established. This is also where a lot of celebrities get their haircuts but I never see anyone I know.

The inside of York Barbershop with the all well known people who get their haircuts here

After my haircut, it was off to the Metropolitan Museum of Art for a quick tour of the new exhibitions and just to walk around. I love just getting lost in the Met when I want to just get lost in myself. This was the perfect place to spend my birthday.

I love walking around this area looking at the luxury stores and walking around the Pierre and Plaza hotels, especially around the holidays. Unfortunately because of recent occurrences, the security at the hotels becomes a point of harassment where you can’t even walk around to look at the displays in public areas anymore.

Pierre Hotel.jpg

Pierre Hotel at 2 East 61st Street of Fifth Avenue

https://www.thepierreny.com/

https://www.tajhotels.com/en-in/taj/the-pierre-new-york/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Pierre

For my Birthday dinner in October 2024, I enjoyed my birthday dinner at the hotel’s signature restaurant, Perrine. The food and service were wonderful. The only problem was that the restaurant was so quiet during the Jewish holidays I felt alone sitting in the back of the restaurant (I had asked for a large table so that I could grade papers).

Perrine Restaurant inside the Pierre Hotel at 2 East 61st Street

https://www.perrinenyc.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d10172460-Reviews-Perrine-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

The dinner was the perfect way to end my day walking around the Upper East Side. I had been eyeing that Perrine Burger for so long and on a cool night it was the perfect comfort foods.

The inside of Perrine on my birthday

My table at Perrine

I did not even need a menu I had memorized it and I was having the Perrine Burger. It was one of the best burgers I have eaten in a long time. It was made of Prime Beef and Short ribs and you could taste the difference in the meat. It was gamey and rich

My birthday dinner

Nothing like a juicy burger and fries on your birthday

The Perrine Burger is indeed special

Yum!

For dessert instead of any cakes or traditional sweets (I had all of that at Tea in the afternoon), I order the Apple Galette topped with sweet apples and cinnamon. Another perfect comfort food on a cool October night.

My birthday dessert, the Apple Galette

Don’t miss the Apple Galette at Perrine is amazing!

I just relaxed on this birthday evening, spending my day visiting the things I had missed before and just relaxed and enjoyed them.

Me on the night of my birthday at Perrine (with my hair cut). It really was a special evening and a special day. It really cheered me up especially that wonderful dessert!

After my birthday dinner, I walked around Midtown and just enjoyed the views. It is so beautiful in this section of the City. Still before I left I had to take a quick tour of the Pierre Hotel. I forgot how elegant this hotel is to visit. I had worked at the hotel during Spring Break in 1984 and remembered it being one the best hotel’s in the world at that time. I still have that love of this hotel.

Exploring the Rotunda at the Pierre

Even the bathrooms are amazing

After I left the hotel, I just walked around Fifth Avenue and enjoyed the views. Fifth Avenue and East 59th Street is what people think the State of New York is when you say the words “New York” to anyone outside the City.

Midtown Manhattan by the Plaza Hotel at night

The amazing views of Fifth Avenue at night

I really enjoyed the day with wonderful food, excellent activities and giving back on my big day. I know the meals will set me back a bit but both hotels are well worth it. The quality of the food and service you just don’t see a lot of anymore. Happy Birthday to me!

I got back to work over the weekend and graded papers and worked on new projects for my students. With four classes the semester, these students keep me awfully busy. So I spent Saturday and Sunday in front of the computer.

On Sunday morning, we had the October meeting for the Bergen County Firemen’s Home Association. We are starting to get ready for the annual breakfast and the holiday party so there was a lot to discuss.

The NJ Jersey Firemen’s Home decorated for the Fall holidays

The home did a nice job making the grounds cheerful for both the residents and their families

The stage was set for a wonderful afternoon of entertainment

My blog on the event at the NJ State Firemen’s Home:

https://wordpress.com/post/tbcfha.wordpress.com/982

Singer Kelly Carpenter entertained the guests that afternoon

It was a productive meeting and we got a lot accomplished. We started the plans for the annual Christmas Party at the home and the breakfast meeting at the Wyckoff Fire Department. After the meeting was over, I drove around Downtown Boonton taking pictures of the foliage. It was going to be a long week at work and every weekend had something going on due to Halloween.

The next week after an extremely tiring week of classes and testing, I was finally able to sneak back up to Narrowsburg, NY (the upstate Brooklyn) for the weekend. I have been trying to do this for five years and I was finally heading back to the town.

Two days later, I was off again to try another restaurant, The Heron, in Narrowsburg, NY. I must be dedicated because only me could travel to two out of the ways spots just to try a restaurant. I had missed eating here in 2017 when I was passing through on my way to Bovina Center, NY (See Day Seventy-Seven on ‘MywalkinManhattan.com’):

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/5116

To see the whole trip to Narrowsburg, I followed the same trip I made five years ago. This was a picture taking trip and it was just as enjoyable as it was the first time. Here is the link to the full trip both times:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/10049

I had gotten to Narrowsburg at 5:00pm that night and had to be in Bovina Center by 8:00pm so I just had about a half an hour to walk through the downtown and pass the restaurant. I vowed I would be back and it took three years to do it. Funny how life gets in the way when you are living it?

The goal is Downtown Narrowsburg, NY

My trip to Narrowsburg, NY was also a last minute trip that had been on my bucket list for the summer break from school. After such a wonderful day in Cape May, I wanted to take another drive to revisit the area in more detail plus there were a few museums that I wanted to visit that were also on the bucket list. So after work, I traveled up Route 23 into Sussex County and traveled up the highway to my first stop, The Franklin Mineral Museum (which I had passed years ago). It was a nice little museum on the site of the old Franklin Mine.

Before I got to the museum, I had to stop at the McDonald’s in Franklin, NJ, which has been my go to place for lunch before the long trip up to Narrowsburg. It is right around the corner from the Franklin Mineral Museum at 260 Route 23 in Franklin, NJ.

The limited edition Chicken Big Mac which is on the menu as a special

https://www.mcdonalds.com/us/en-us/location/nj/franklin/260-nj-23/4332.html

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46449-d4440486-Reviews-McDonald_s-Franklin_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

It was one big sandwich. This is a meal in itself

I had to try the new Chicken Big Mac that they were featuring as a special on the menu. It was two tempura chicken patties with the same sandwich set up as the beef counterpart with another type of secret sauce. I have to admit with a small Coke, it was more than enough to tide me over before dinner at 7:00pm. I did not need to order anything else. After lunch, I headed over to the Franklin Mineral Museum.

The entrance to the Franklin Museum 32 Evans Street in Franklin, NJ

Home Page

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46449-d2172670-Reviews-Franklin_Mineral_Museum-Franklin_New_Jersey.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

The Franklin Museum 32 Evans Street in Franklin, NJ (See my reviews on TripAdvisor and VisitingaMuseum.com) is dedicated to preserving the history of the mining industry, the types of minerals that were found on the property plus interesting displays on fossils from New Jersey and Native American artifacts.

The Franklin Mineral Museum on a sunny afternoon

Before you start to tour the museum, they give you an option to tour the quarry on your own and look for specimens of rocks. I looked over the quarry to find smaller pieces to take home and they had a black light to look over what you found. I found several pieces of calcite that glows orange under the light.

The Mineral Room before the lights go out

When touring the museum, leave yourself plenty of time to tour each of the galleries with two standing out, the Illuminated Rock Room and the simulated mine shafts, which take you into a copy of what a mine shaft and working in the mine would be like.

The Illumination Room is interesting once they shut the lights and close the door

The gallery illuminated

The other rooms are dedicated to minerals and rocks that are found all over the world. The only problem with the museum is that it is a little dated. Most of the signs are typed and the displays could have had more videos to explain what things were and how they were mined. Still the museum is an interesting stop along the highway.

The Franklin Museum Mineral Room

The Native American and Pre-Columbian Gallery

The Fossil Room

After my trip to the Franklin Museum, I continued the drive up Route 23 to downtown Sussex, the County seat. I have never been to such a depressed downtown before since visiting Asbury Park in 2002 (this shore town looks nothing like that today). In 2024, this is the same with Downtown Sussex with a very big theater and arts district. Now the sidewalks are being ripped up and bricked up. The buildings are getting a new life with new stores, restaurants and I can see galleries.

Downtown Sussex, NJ

https://shopdowntown.org/pages/shop-downtown-Sussex-New%20Jersey

The beauty of Downtown Sussex, NJ

The changes going on now will change Downtown Sussex in 2024

Driving through it looks very nice from a distance but when I parked the car and walked around, almost all the storefronts were empty. All these beautiful historical buildings were just sitting around rotting. The historic hotel on the edge of downtown that looked over the rest of the city was falling apart. There was a theater that had been turned into an arts center but the rest of the downtown had not caught up yet. The artists have not found this place yet. Even the Chase branch closed recently so it is telling you about business. I got in my car and continued driving.

When I stopped in Downtown Sussex in 2024 for the first time in almost five years and all the predictions I thought that would happen to this downtown are coming true. The artists and the creative types have discovered the area. The beautiful Victorian homes that surround the downtown are being renovated, the sidewalks are being bricked up and the ‘new windows’ on old buildings are showing repurpose. It , like Asbury Park, are finding a new beginning.

The views as you start the drive into the mountains on Route 97

The views of the Delaware River in 2024

The trip up Route 23 continues into the mountains and to the highest point of New Jersey, High Point Mountain in High Point Park. Here you will see a lush forest and a great park to go hiking in. Maybe for the next time. I exited through the town of Port Jervis, NY before making the turn onto Route 19 which lead me into the mountains.

The Route 97 plaque

Route 19 past Port Jervis, NY hugs the Delaware River

Route 19 right now is one of the most beautiful drives into the mountains. The foliage was still green on my way up but in a few months the leaves will start to change colors and the views will be even more spectacular. Just driving slowly up the road the Delaware River Valley shows off its true beauty. My advice when you travel up to Narrowsburg, NY is to take your time and if there is a driver that wants to pass you, stop at one of the stops along the way and take the time to admire the view.

Route 19 views of the Delaware River

The view on its way to Narrowsburg, NY

I have to admit though that the drive can be a little scary being so close to the cliffs. I had not been this nervous about driving to close to an edge since my trip to Hana in Maui, Hawaii so please take your time, drive alert and drive during the day. During the late summer, just seeing the river glisten beside me and driving through the small towns on the way up the highway was picturesque and romantic.

The views from the top of Route 97

I got up to Narrowsburg in the late afternoon and the everything in the town was closing down for the night. I arrived at the Narrowsburg Inn by 3:00pm and needed to take time to relax. I met the owners who were preparing for a wedding that Saturday so I did not want to take up much of their time. What surprised me was when they told me that this was their last weekend in business and that Sunday would be their last day running the Inn. Also I was to be their only guest that evening and that they were leaving by 6:00pm for the evening.

All I could think about was the Overlook Hotel in the movie “The Shining” and the rumors that I read online that the Narrowsburg Inn was haunted. The owners assured me that there were no ghosts at the hotel, and I would be fine. They showed me to my room toward the back of the hotel with a view of the park and the river in the distance.

For $100, I thought it was very nice (See my review on TripAdvisor). It had a nice large bedroom with a small sitting area and bathroom with another small sitting area. The whole Inn had been renovated and made to look rustic to match the environment of the town.

The views of the Delaware River from the bridge in Narrowsburg

The Narrowsburg Inn at 182 Bridge Street

https://narrowsburginnnarrowsburg2.mybistro.online/

I had time to unpack and then explore the town while my hosts returned to their work. Downtown Narrowsburg is right around the corner from the Inn and is a nice walk down the road (The Narrowsburg Inn has since been renovated since I stayed there in 2019 and I have no pictures of it).

In 2024, the Narrowsburg Inn was full and I stayed at the new Darby Hotel just across the bridge in Pennsylvania.

The Darby Hotel at 9 Manor Road in Beach Lake, PA

https://www.facebook.com/StayatDarby/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Hotel_Review-g60983-d23684502-Reviews-The_Darby-Beach_Lake_Pocono_Mountains_Region_Pennsylvania.html?m=19905

The Darby Hotel is a new hotel to the area and is a five minute walk across the bridge from Downtown Narrowsburg. This little hotel which was once a nursing home has been transformed to a hipster hotel with game rooms, wonderful jazz music in the lobby and at breakfast and the most comfortable beds. They had a fire pit at night and a wonderful continental breakfast in the morning. I slept soundly that evening and enjoyed walking the grounds in the morning.

The Common area of the Darby Hotel

The firepit on the grounds at night

My bedroom and the dreamy bed

The Continental Breakfast in the morning which is part of the package

The grounds of the hotel

Narrowsburg had once been a sleepy little logging and fishing town that had become depressed with the economy of Upstate New York until the artists and restaurateurs discovered the town again and made it the ‘Brooklyn’ of the Catskills. The downtown is filled with innovative ‘farm to table’ restaurants, some very expensive galleries and shops (these do not cater to the locals) and some excellent views of the Delaware River.

I think Narrowsburg is going through its second transition as some of the more expensive stores have closed up and some newer ones look like they have been planned.

Downtown Narrowsburg, NY in the Fall of 2024

The small four block downtown is filled with clothing and food stores, small gift shops and galleries and some interesting restaurants. Most of the stores were closed by 5:00pm and would not be opening until 11:00am the next day so there was not much to do but window shop. I walked the whole downtown and passed the grain factory at the end of the block and wondered how long it would be operating with this wave of change. It was nice to see the old and new next to one another and how the town is remaking itself.

Downtown Narrowsburg, NY post office

Downtown Narrowsburg with the Heron Restaurant in the background

https://welcometonarrowsburg.com/explore

I had time to walk ahttps://welcometonarrowsburg.com/exploreround the river and the bridge that lead to Pennsylvania and don’t miss out on this breathtaking view. It is really something to look down the river and see woods and rock formations as well as see the view of the “Big Eddy”, the bend in the Delaware River in the middle of the downtown. The river bends to create a type of lake that naturally flows. At one time, this is where the logging industry used to move the logs downstream but now its used for fishing, boating and photography.

The Bridge over the Delaware River

The views of Delaware River in the Fall 2024

After the walk downtown and saw how busy The Heron Restaurant was that evening, I decided to walk a little further to work up my appetite and walked around the other blocks and look at the old homes and small farms that surrounded the downtown. Right down the road there was even a small historic cemetery and Fort Delaware were right down the road from the Inn.

The views of the ‘Big Eddy’ of the Delaware River from the Downtown Narrowsburg

Dinner at The Heron Restaurant was beyond my expectations (See review on TripAdvisor). The whole experience was excellent. From the warm greeting that I got at the host desk, to the view from my deck table (if the weather is nice it is highly recommended that you get a table on deck facing the river) which is amazing, to the friendly and welcoming service. It was one of the best meals I had eaten in a long time. What was nice was the restaurant was decorated for the Halloween holidays and it was pretty spectacular.

The artsy entrance to The Heron Restaurant at 40 Main Street

The sign that welcomes you to the restaurant

http://theheronrestaurant.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g48227-d3348484-Reviews-The_Heron-Narrowsburg_Tusten_Sullivan_Catskills_Catskill_Region_New_York.html?m=19905

The Heron Restaurant during October 2024

The inside of the restaurant during October of 2024 with Halloween decor

Choosing to sit on the outdoor terrace at sunset

The outdoor dining that overlooks the Delaware River

Enjoying a Bellini before dinner and toasting my father on the Tenth Anniversary of his passing

My toast to my father with much love!

What is nice about The Heron is that the prices are very fair for the portions you receive and everything I had was consistently delicious. I started off with a side salad of fresh greens with a homemade vinaigrette dressing, which was a small side dish that could have passed for an appetizer. It was more than enough. It was a combination of mixed greens, red onions, carrots and radish which was crunchy and delicious.

The Mixed Green Salad to start the meal

The salad was crisp and tossed with a light dressing

For my entree, I ordered the Fried Chicken with mashed potatoes with mushroom gravy with a side of mac & cheese that was made with three cheese, caramelized onions and baked bread crumbs . Trust me when I say that the sides of salad and mac & cheese are more than enough. The appetizer portions were much larger and would be too much with a full entree.

My Fried Chicken and Mashed Potato dinner (there were no sides of Mac & Cheese on the menu on this visit)

The Fried Chicken was excellent. When you have a free range organic chicken you can tell the difference in flavor with that and a frozen chicken from KFC. The chicken was moist, succulent and flavorful. The outside had been coated with a crunchy breading that was perfectly fried and crisp. The mashed potatoes were loaded with butter and the mushroom gravy had a rich flavor to it. The mac & cheese must have contained three cheeses and was sharp, gooey delight. The entree was delicious.

I highly recommend the Fried Chicken the Heron Restaurant

For dessert in 2019, I skipped the rich, heavier desserts (even though I really wanted one) and opted for the homemade grapefruit sorbet which was light and tart and the perfect ending to spectacular meal. In 2024, that dessert was no longer available and I wanted some comfort food to end the meal. I had the Lemon Ricotta Cake with a pot of Tea for my dessert. Talk about heavenly. The dense cake was served with a side of fresh whipped cream.

My dessert, the Lemon Ricotta Cake with Hot Tea on a cool October night

The dessert was perfect on a cool October night

The view was the deck was just as breathtaking! As I waited for dinner to arrive, the view changed from a sunny evening that gave way to a beautiful sunset over the “Big Eddy” and the mountains to a starry night where you could almost touch the constellations. I could see the ‘Big Dipper’ perfectly from my table. It was the perfect compliment to the wonderful food and excellent service.

The people dining on the patio The Heron Restaurant looking over the “Big Eddy”

I was the last one left on the terrace which had such beautiful views of the stars

After dinner was over, I walked around the quiet downtown and walked over to the small deck that is next to the stores down the road and looked at the stars. Up in the mountains you don’t have all the light pollution of the City and you can really see all the stars and admire the constellations. The walk was the end of a perfect evening.

The Skeleton inside the restaurant greeting you and watching you leave

The Mummy Lady outside the restaurant

When I got back to the Inn, it was quiet. There was one light on at the other side of the building over the kitchen. I guess one of the cooks stays there. Outside that, when I walked in I saw the empty kitchen and dining room. I walked up the creaky stairs to see the other empty rooms and arrived back in my own warmly lite room and got ready for bed.

Downtown Narrowsburg at night with a full moon by the bridge

If there is a ghost in this Inn, I did hear them. I sunk immediately into the soft, firm, comfortable bed and went fast asleep. When I mean its quiet up here it is silent. I did not hear a peep and slept soundly the whole night. Since the owners were not coming back until noon the next day, I could sleep in and had one of the best night’s sleep since the trip to Cape May. All that driving wore me out.

The owners had recommended Gerard’s Cafe at 119 Kirks Road the next morning for breakfast (See review on TripAdvisor). It had been an old gas station that had been turned into a restaurant (I think they still pumped gas there). It was a pleasant little cafe where all the local farmers ate and caught up on their gossip.

Gerard’s Cafe is now called “Proper to Go” and is a gourmet grocery store

I had a sausage, egg and cheese breakfast sandwich with a side of hashbrowns ($10.95) and a blueberry Danish that had been brought in from a local bakery ($2.00) and everything was simple and delicious. The hashbrowns could have been warmer but overall it was a nice meal. It was fun watching the staff interact with the local guys and some of them went in the back to kid with the staff and give the cooks a hard time. It is a very nice place to eat if you want to go where the locals eat.

The Sausage Egg and Cheese sandwich was excellent (the restaurant is no longer open)

Since none of the downtown stores open until 11:00am, I stopped at Fort Delaware down the road. Fort Delaware is a local historical site (See review on TripAdvisor and VisitingaMuseum.com) that is a recreation of an old fort that used to be on the Pennsylvania side of river.

The Historic sign

The fort was created in the 1950’s as a local tourist attraction by an area resident historian who later sold it the area Parks system. The fort was open for touring on my first visit and I got to see the grounds. In 2024, it was closed as they were preparing for a Haunted Halloween event.

Fort Delaware at 6615 NY-97 in Narrowsburg, NY

https://sullivanny.us/Departments/ParksRecreation/FortDelaware

https://www.facebook.com/fortdelawareny/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g48227-d3386995-Reviews-Fort_Delaware_Museum-Narrowsburg_Tusten_Sullivan_Catskills_Catskill_Region_New_Yor.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

The site has three homes that recreate life in the fort as well as a working blacksmith shop and areas for spinning cloth and cooking. There are actors walking around demonstrating their crafts and talking to the visitors. It is a nice place to take the family if they are interested in history. If you visit the fort, remember to take time to walk all around the upper decks of the fort to look inside.

The next day after a relaxing breakfast and a quick run through Downtown Narrowsburg, I headed home. I had to drive down the shore to visit both Point Pleasant and Seaside Heights to check out their Boardwalks to see how the towns were celebrating Halloween. So there was a lot of driving I had to do this entire weekend before I resumed classes on Monday. I dragged my class work with me on the trip and managed to grade all my papers over dinners both in Narrowsburg and Seaside Heights.

The Aquarium was packed with people going to the special programming. The lines were so long that I did not bother. I had been there over the summer and had a lot of fun inside. The aquarium is very interactive and I loved the feedings that I saw in the summer.

The seal feedings were a lot of fun. The seals they have at this aquarium were both disabled and needed to be in a controlled environment. One had a flipper amputated and had a tough time swimming and the other was blind. They both seemed so grateful that people were helping them and were both very aware of human contact.

The harbor seal was a little charmer

She was always looking around, watching everything we were doing

The little harbor seal could not have been friendlier to the crowd and more engaging. She just showed the crowd what she could do and proceeded to swim around, eat and enjoy herself. She was so used to being around humans she acted like one herself.

The blind seal was just as friendly

The larger seal seemed so at home and comfortable around humans she seemed so relaxed during the feeding. You can tell she was well taken care of by the handlers.

She was also very playful

After the feeding was over and most people left, I stayed to say goodbye to the little harbor seal and she gave me such an innocent look. I just wiggled my mustache at her as she stared back at me.

How can you resist that look?

I walked through the upstairs open pools before I headed downstairs and watched the turtles watching us. Both the Spotted Turtles and the Diamondback turtles just popped in and out and stared at us.

The Northern Diamondback Terrapin

The Northern Diamondback turtle was funny. He just bobbed his head around and looked at all of us looking at him. It is so interesting to watch wildlife observe us and form an opinion. It would be an eye opener if they could talk and form an observation on us watching them.

The Diamondback turtles staring at us

The Spotted Turtle

The Spotted Turtle kept looking at us as well

Both turtles must be so used to humans looking at them, I swear that they are forming their own observation of us. If they were born and raised in captivity, they must be used to us as well.

The one thing I can say about the aquarium from what I observed is that the mammals and aquatic like are very well taken care of and the tanks are very clean. The employees here really take good care of the marine life and of the aquarium itself. I found the staff engaging and knowledgeable on their assigned displays. They interacted with the public very engaged and that’s what made this trip here so enjoyable.

When I came back in October for the Halloween holidays, the aquarium was mobbed with people trying to get in for the Halloween special events inside. I did not even bother getting in line but just walked the Boardwalk to see the decorations. “Boo at the Boardwalk” was a big deal and people came out in droves.

Halloween in 2024 in Point Pleasant with “Boo at the Boardwalk”

https://jenkinsons.com/event/boo-at-the-boardwalk-3

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46745-d273151-Reviews-Jenkinson_s_Boardwalk-Point_Pleasant_Beach_New_Jersey.html

My TripAdvisor review of the Aquarium:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46745-d8388429-Reviews-Jenkinson_s_Aquarium-Point_Pleasant_Beach_New_Jersey.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

“Boo at the Boardwalk” Halloween 2024

“Boo at the Boardwalk”

“Boo at the Boardwalk”

“Boo at the Boardwalk”

Trust me, Halloween is a big deal at the Jenkinson Boardwalk. There were all sorts of activities. Considering that it was almost 72 degrees that day, the Boardwalk was mobbed with people that Sunday afternoon. Everyone was sweating on the Boardwalk and a lot of people were wearing shorts. So much for the Fall!

Classes got even tougher for me as we going into Midterms and all my students were getting their Team projects so there was a lot going on between Mondays and Thursdays. Then on the long weekends I kept running from one section of New Jersey to the Hudson River Valley and then trips down the shore. I really stretched myself trying to cram as much as I could get done before the day was over.

I could not wait for weekends in October. Classes were rough and having over a hundred and thirty students can be taxing but I still managed to get the job done. As I was getting my second round of research papers graded, on the third weekend of October I traveled back up to the Hudson River Valley for a Holiday Tea at the Mills Mansion Staatsburgh. It was the first Halloween Tea since the one I attended in 2019 and the program was very similar to the one we had then.

I have been a Friend of the Mills Mansion now for about four years finding that I was going to a lot of their events it just made it easier to join and get priority on their special events which are enjoyable. The ‘Halloween Tea’ was one of them the opened the holiday season.

The slide show as we were about to begin the lecture at the Staatsburg Mansion

https://parks.ny.gov/historic-sites/staatsburgh/details.aspx

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g48676-d107418-Reviews-Staatsburgh_State_Historic_Site_Mills_Mansion-Staatsburg_New_York.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

The table set for the Halloween Tea

The guests arriving for the Halloween Afternoon Tea

The friendly witches getting ready to greet guests

This event was a tea and lecture of how the Victorians recreated Halloween from a dark more countryside evening wrapped in mystery to an engaging urban event with costumes, specialty foods and traditional events like apple bobbing that guests then made their own. Local Historian Carol Kohan discussed how the event went from a dark rural event to fun and engaging holiday.

The celebration was spooky and fun

From the old traditions to new ones

The Victorian’s made everything elaborate and overdone and the Halloween celebrations were ‘taken up a notch’ with elaborate costumes, parties, bonfires and desserts and candies that were to be served. There were special invitations and cards that were to sent and rules of etiquette.

The Ghosts and Ghouls of the holidays

Following the Civil War and at a time when disease was not understood the way it is now, there was an interest in spiritualism and seances were in vague as people want to reach out to their loved ones. So having a medium at a party was part of the activity. The Victorians knew how to transform a holiday.

The Menu for the afternoon

Our tables numbers on the table

During the discussion, we enjoyed an afternoon tea of the specialty Staatsburg Tea blend, a variety of finger sandwiches, pumpkin and cranberry scones and many types of pastries including mini pumpkin cheesecakes, tiny devil’s food cupcakes and assorted sweet cookies. The caterer always does a nice job with the food and service here.

The food at these function are excellent and plentiful. These were the current and raison scones

The Assorted delicious Tea Sandwiches

Sweets and cakes Afternoon tea here is wonderful

The estate in the Fall of 2024

The estate during the Fall of 2024

After the tea was over, I took a tour of the mansion. After my afternoon at Staatsburgh, I went mansion hopping and took pictures of the foliage at Wilderstein by Rhinebeck and then at the Vanderbilt Mansion in Hyde Park. I worked my way back down Route Nine to my last event of the evening, the ‘Ghost Tour’ at the Knox Headquarters site. It was a very unique event.

My first stop was Wilderstein just as the house was closing for the afternoon. The last of the guests were relaxing on the patio overlooking the Hudson River as the docents started to close up the house. The views of the Hudson River from the house are spectacular.

The Wilderstein Estate 330 Morton Road in Rhinebeck, NY in the height of the foliage

https://www.facebook.com/p/Wilderstein-Historic-Site-100057653822538/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g48486-d263984-Reviews-Wilderstein_Historic_Site-Rhinebeck_New_York.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://visitingamuseum.com/tag/wilderstein-mansion/

The most amazing views of the Hudson River in the Fall of 2024

The colorful fall foliage of the Hudson River at Wilderstein

The beauty of the Wilderstein estate

After I visited Wilderstein, I went to the Vanderbilt Estate in Hyde Park, where the last of the tours for the day were completely sold out and the parking lot was really busy. People were touring the grounds and looking over the Hudson River. These old estates had some of the most prime space along the river.

The Vanderbilt mansion facing the Hudson River around the time of the setting of the sun

https://www.nps.gov/vama/index.htm

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanderbilt_Mansion_National_Historic_Site

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60801-d105845-Reviews-Vanderbilt_Mansion_National_Historic_Site-Hyde_Park_New_York.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

The views of the Hudson River from the Vanderbilt Mansion

The last home of Fredrick Vanderbilt

I could tell why Fredrick Vanderbilt loved this house so much

After I toured the grounds of both of these wonderful mansions, it was the trip down both Route 9’s past all the other historical sites that were closing for the afternoon. The whole Hudson Valley was busy that afternoon.

I attended the Halloween events at the Knox Headquarters when in the spirit of the 18th Century Gothic Literature, an author took us on a tour of treason and tides turning during New Windsor Cantonment and inside the Knox Headquarters. The ghosts of the past tried to find a traitor in the midst of the war.

Meeting the ghosts of the author and her characters on the site of the Knox family estate

The Knox House at 289 Old Forge Road is lit for the Halloween holidays had a eerie look to it that night

https://parks.ny.gov/historic-sites/5/details.aspx

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knox%27s_Headquarters_State_Historic_Site

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g48760-d1174661-Reviews-Knox_s_Headquarters_State_Historic_Site-Vails_Gate_New_York.html

My review on VistingaMuseum.com:

The Ghosts trying to find a traitor in the ranks

The Ghosts of the past trying to find a traitor during the war

Leaving the Continental Army camp after the performance was over that evening

We walked the estate and followed the storyline with the actors. There were people on both sides of the war who thought they were right. It was an interesting Halloween event. Then it was the quick trip home to relax.

The week before Halloween, the Hasbrouck Heights Men’s Association head it’s Forth Annual Halloween House & Merchant Decorating Contest, which was a huge success. The contest took place as I was giving my students their midterms and as I prepared for the Halloween Parade. It was the week from Hell as it was a series of late nights and taking my computer and all my paperwork with me. I never worked so hard. Last year, throw in Grad School and three massive projects and three research papers and you know why last year my Halloween blog was filled of nights of exhaustion. At here I did not have the three classes at NYU but this time I had the additional class with another thirty students so it was just hard.

It was a banner year in ‘Haunted Hasbrouck Heights’ as a record number of Hasbrouck Heights residents decorated their homes for what has now become the start of the Holiday season. ‘In our town of Halloween’ we searched for the best ghosts and ghouls and things that go bump in the night to find the best house and merchant that best represents the spirit of the Halloween holidays. This is my forth year as the Chairman of the Hasbrouck Heights Halloween House Decorating Contest and I have never seen so much creativity in our town.

The Hasbrouck Heights Men’s Association Halloween House & Merchant Decorating Contest:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/55559

We found that our winners were two members of the community that had been winners in previous contests, who really stepped up their game and created displays that dazzled the judges unanimously, Heights Floral Shoppe for a third straight year and the Fiduccia family of 85 Woodside Avenue for a second year since winning two years ago. The judges were blown away by their creativity and ingenuity in creating such fantastic displays.

Our Merchant Division is starting to grow with more of our Downtown merchants decorating their windows for the Halloween season. We wish more would get involved but the clear winner is now a three time winner with not just the most amazing windows but interior as well.

The Heights Flower Shoppe dazzles during day and night

‘I love Halloween,” owner Ray Vorisek said. “We like to use our creativity in the windows. I am always adding on and looking for new things for the display. We have been so busy lately that we were not able to finish adding some of the newer pieces for the store.”

The witches, goblins and ghosts in the display at Heights Flower Shoppe

The windows were decorated with flying witches and beasts smiling on their journeys while a howling wicked witch of the west stood guard in the front of the store. The interior was a wonderland of Halloween decorations and candies perfect for any Halloween event and party.

The inside is decorated for a Halloween get together

The candy selection for you little goblins

The store both inside and out was decorated to the hilt with items for sale and the displays.

Three time winner Ray Vorisek with HHMA Halloween Chairman Justin Watrel

Winner and owner of Heights Flower Shoppe Ray Vorisek in front of his store.

Our runner up the year was Healing 4 the Soul, the gift shop and café that is one of the newer additions to our business district. The business is owned by residents Renee and Dawn Pikowski. The windows were simple and creative and elegant.

The enchanting windows of witches and pumpkins

The spiritual windows up close

“We love to decorate our windows,” said co-owner Nicole Pikowski “ we strive to be creative. You will always see different displays at each holiday.” The store was decorated with beautiful witches wishing everyone a Happy Halloween.

The inside of the Cafe for Healing 4 the Soul

The enchanting gifts at Healing 4 the Soul

There are a lot of lotions and potions and sweet treats to eat inside that are all handmade in house. The Halloween fragrances abound the store. More of our merchants got very creative this year and we are hoping to see more next year.

Chairman Justin Watrel presenting the Runner Up Merchant award to Co-Owner Renee Pikowski

HHMA Halloween Merchant Decorating Winner Renee Pikowski

In the House Decorating Division it was a difficult decision for judges who drove around many days both day and night to see the houses. Of all the wonderful houses we visited all over Hasbrouck Heights, one home was on the top of every list of each judge and that was 85 Woodside Avenue.

The Fiduccia family had been our winners in the Second Annual contest and stepped up their game by adding all sorts of new elements to the yard to be the winners again in 2024. The vote was unanimous amongst all five judges.

85 Woodside Avenue at night

These are some videos on the winning home’s video display that won the contest. These were amazing and so spooky:

Video of the display of the Archway in the yard:

Video of the window display on the second floor of the house:

Video on the yard and video displays:

Ghosts and ghouls lined the yard performing all sorts of interesting acts

Skeletons lined the yard awaiting the crowds of Trick or Treaters visiting on Halloween Night

The Fiduccia family in their family ‘skeleton’ costumes

The Fiduccia family with their second year win!

The display during the day was just as impressive as it is at night

Matt Fiduccia said that he really wanted to add new things to the display. “We found a lot of new items that became available and added them to the display. I created the arch for the ‘Ghostbuster-like video’. We added the projectors to the windows on the second level of the house as well. There are a lot of new decorations on the market now for Halloween.”

The house not only had sculptures and mannequins of all types but creatures, skeletons and ghouls that lines the yard. In the archway in the front yard was a running video of apparitions from movies like ‘Ghostbusters’ and ‘Poltergeist’. In the upstairs windows of the home were running videos of desperate souls and violent blows. Each part of the house had its own storyline. It was a well-deserved win.

The Fiduccia family together with their second win for the Halloween House Decorating Contest

The Judges Marc Mancuso, Chairman Justin Watrel and Vinnie DeCicco from the Hasbrouck Heights Men’s Association with winner Matt Fiduccia

With so many wonderful houses to choose from, the judges narrowed it down to three homes as the runners up. There were so many that we liked but each judge was asked to narrow it down to three and it was pretty much unanimous amongst the five of us. Just like the winner, the judges had a short list of the runners up and three homes captured our imagination.

The first two were previous runners up who upped their game and had extraordinary displays of creativity. One was at 36 Hamilton Avenue, the home of Alex, Laura and Scarlet Pena. The other was at 115 Ottawa Avenue the home of Dennis Hall. The displays were both intriguing and imaginative both during the day and night. Like the winners, everyone stepped up the decorations with lights and sound effects and added that special touch to their homes that made it stand out.

Our third was a house on the Hasbrouck Heights border in Lodi that captured the imagination of each judge at 236 Paterson Avenue. The house had a bevy of creatures displayed both in and out of the house. All the judges kept passing it at night so impressed by it we did not realize that it was on the border of Hasbrouck Heights in Lodi, NJ.

“My grandfather used to decorate his house and people used to travel to visit it, so I wanted to keep that tradition going,” said Runner up Jay Logan. “We keep dreaming up new ideas for the display and we keep adding to it.”

Jay and Ann Logan of Lodi were one of the three Runners up for the contest

“We didn’t even know that there was a contest going on,” said Anne Logan. “We live right on the border of Hasbrouck Heights and Lodi, so we feel like we are part of both communities.” The Logan’s turned their display on and lit up and roared. The Logan’s are active members of both communities and were surprised and very excited about their win.

236 Paterson Avenue at night

The ghost and ghouls in front of 236 Paterson Avenue

236 Paterson Avenue during the day

Chairman Justin Watrel awarding the Logan’s their award.

At 26 Hamilton Avenue, Alex and Lauren Pena and their daughter, Scarlett added at lot to their and their display had more horrors in each section of the yard and house. “We have a lot of fun decorating on Halloween and everyone is impressed by the front yard display,” Lauren explained.

26 Hamilton Avenue was Runner Up last year as well

36 Hamilton winners Lauren and Scarlet Pena in front of their home with Chairman Justin Watrel

The Skeleton surgery in front of 26 Hamilton Avenue

36 Hamilton during the day

The mother and daughter Runner Up winners Lauren and Scarlet Pena

The last house on the Runner Up list was 115 Ottawa Avenue which had an honorable mention last year in the contest and has been noted on the list since the first year of the contest. Owner Dennis Hall accepted the Runner Up award with much excitement. “I love decorating the house for Halloween. The kids really seem to love it when they come here Trick or Treating. We are a very popular house. I added the sound effects and have several new pieces that I did not have time to put out for next year. You will have to come back next Halloween.”

115 Ottawa Avenue

115 Ottawa Avenue by the doorway

Runner Up and previous Honorable mention winner Dennis Hall Second next to his ghoulish display that was lit for the night of the presentation

115 Ottawa Avenue drinking the day

We want to thank all the members of the Hasbrouck Heights community for their wonderful displays and with a little extra decoration here and sound effect there can make a big difference in the judging.

Before I headed into the city for an overnight stay the night of the parade, I went to the Halloween events at the Harlem Meer in the northern section of Central Park. For years I had wanted to see the Pumpkin Flotilla. This is when hundreds of lit carved pumpkins are paddled around the Harlem Meer at sunset. I have never seen this section of the park so crowded. Being 77 degrees that night, families crowded the park creating crafts and children in costume were having a ball playing with each other and enjoying the activities. It was when it turned dark, the eerie and exciting events of the water activities started.

The Harlem Meer in late October 2024 before sunset

Every year the park has all sorts of activities for families like pumpkin painting, costumes contests and refreshments. The conclusion of the sent they have the pumpkin parade.

The Harlem Meer and the Dana Center right before sunset and the activities begin

I had never seen the Harlem Meer so crowded before especially with lots of little kids. Families were enjoying the Halloween activities of pumpkin carving and painting, games and little treats that the kids got (I never saw anything as it was gone quickly). The festivities were just ending as I raced from class to get into the City before the Pumpkin Flotilla started at dusk. It was still light outside so I got to enjoy the exhibition inside the Dana Discovery Center, “The Gates”, on the history of the various gates people use to enter Central Park.

The Gates Exhibition at the Dana Exploratory Center

https://www.centralparknyc.org/locations/charles-a-dana-discovery-center

https://www.centralpark.com/things-to-do/attractions/harlem-meer/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d4563063-Reviews-Charles_A_Dana_Discovery_Center-New_York_City_New_York.html

The Gates Exhibition

The Gates Exhibition

The start of the Pumpkin Flotilla

Then the fun began when the sun went down and the Halloween music started to play on the load speaker. Then two people canoeing started to paddle around the Harlem Meer Pond with lit Jack O’Lanterns following them. They started at dusk but when the sun finally went down, the real magic began.

Sunset at the Meer

Sunset at the Meer

Sunset on the Meer

The pumpkins of the Pumpkin Flotilla

Paddling around the Meer

Video:

For the next hour, one gentleman started paddling around the Meer then followed by another and they circled the pond for about an hour. Everyone was jockeying for space as we all tried to take the perfect pictures.

The paddling around the Meer

The Pumpkin Flotilla at darkness

Video of the paddling:

Harlem Meer at night:

I stayed in the park taking pictures as the guys finished paddling around. The park had a almost spooky and mysterious look to it at sunset. I just wanted to get out of Central Park when it got dark. Too many bad memories of things happening. I headed over to the East Side

I stopped at the Bamboo House for a quick dinner before I left for home. The one nice aspect of this small take out place is that is has a nice place to sit down and eat. It isn’t the fanciest place but is a nice place to sit down and have a relaxing meal.

The inside of the dining area of Bamboo House is very nice for a takeout establishment.

https://www.seamless.com/menu/bamboo-house-1509-lexington-ave-new-york/1295116

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d25542970-Reviews-Bamboo_house_Chinese_Restaurant-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

https://diningonashoestringinnyc.wordpress.com/tag/reasonable-chinese-restaurants-in-new-york-city/

I stopped by the restaurant for a late night dinner and had the General Tso’s Chicken with Pork Fried Rice and a pint of Hot and Sour Soup. It was perfect on a cool October night.

My dinner that night

The Hot & Sour Soup was perfect. The spiciness of the soup really opened me up. It had such a rich flavor to it. The General Tso’s Chicken had a nice tangy and spicy flavor to it to complimented by the Pork Fried Rice.

The Spicy Hot& Sour Soup

The General Tso’s Chicken was delicious

This small gem by the Lexington Houses is very good and I look forward to dining here in the future. They have a very nice selection of meals for a reasonable price. It was a wonderful dinner and a great way to end the evening. To work off dinner, I walked from East 98th Street back to Port Authority down Park and Madison Avenues, stopping on the side streets to look at the Halloween decorations. I took so many pictures of displays because I knew the second the Halloween Parade was over, everyone would take down their decorations by Saturday and the Christmas decorations would start to go up.

For some reason East 95th Street off Fifth Avenue especially between Park and Lexington Avenue, were decorated to hilt. The East 90’s were heavily decorated for Halloween as if there was a competition between the neighbors of these areas. Then when I got into the more commercial 80’s, it seemed to stop. More and more this year I saw more people decorate for the holidays.

Here are some of my favorites from my walk down through the Upper East Side:

There scary tales of the Upper East side

East 95th Street looked like it was in competition for the best decorations

Halloween at 1165 East 98th Street

East 95th Street decorations

East 95th Street

East 95th Street

East 95th Street

East 95th Street

East 95th Street

East 95th Street

East 95th Street

East 95th Street

East 95th Street

East 95th Street

East 92nd Street

East 92nd Street

East 92nd Street

East 92nd Street

East 91st Street

East 79th Street

East 79th Street

This was pretty twisted on East 79th Street

East 79th Street

East 78th Street

East 78th Street

East 78th Street

People on the Upper East Side really decided to decorated and they did. People were really creative and had a lot of fun this year. I saw this in my own community that people are embracing the fun part of Halloween. I think people really wanted to outdo each other.

The next day, I had class in the morning at the college and I could tell that the students were getting antsy that they wanted to get out and enjoy Halloween. I can tell a lot of my students had plans that day and wanted class to end. As soon as class was over, I was on the bus to the City. I found out earlier in the week that Mark, who I had been working with for years at the Performance Gate as a Marshall, was not going to be there and now I was in charge with another Marshall J.J. to run the gate. I had to admit I was nervous.

I really had nothing to worry about as I was well trained and there was a lot of help plus J.J. was a great guy and we got along really well. Our entire Team worked together and the evening went by without a hitch. I had never seen four and a half zoom by so fast.

The Cat Puppets practicing at the parade

The Cat puppets rehearsing at the beginning of the Halloween Parade

A Cat Float in the 2024 Halloween Parade

The Dragon Float at the end of the Halloween Parade

Last float in the Halloween Parade

Me Protecting the Gate at the Halloween Parade with my friend the Dragon

J.J. and I working together at the Halloween Parade

By 8:30pm, the last of the stragglers had come into the parade route. Anyone who arrived late were out of luck anyway as the the floats were long gone. Most of the parade goers were downtown anyway. When we closed the gate, J.J. and the other volunteers left and I stayed to watch what was left of the floats heading up town. By the time I got to the staging area, only two floats were left and the rest were people in costume marching up Sixth Avenue. The parade was winding down by 9:00pm and I walked up Sixth Avenue and followed the parade uptown. Even the Village was heavily decorated for Halloween.

Decorations on East 11th Street

Halloween on East 11th Street

Decorations on East 13th Street in the Village

The crowds were huge and still going strong when I left Da Umberto’s later that evening. One of the police officers said they were on duty until 11:00pm and I thought he was kidding. That really was when the crowds thinned out.

After the parade a group of us went to Da Umberto’s at 107 West 17th Street for dinner as we had in the past

https://daumbertonyc.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d423279-Reviews-Da_Umberto-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

I stayed and had dinner with some of the other volunteers at the parade at Da Umberto’s, an Italian restaurant at the end of the parade route. As I watched the remainder of the parade goers finish their march uptown and the volunteers packing up the puppets and floats, I stopped in for dinner and just relaxed. It was nice to talk to the other people who helped in the parade and exchange notes.

Dinner Buffet at Da Umberto’s

Dinner Buffet at Da Umberto’s of Roasted Potatoes and Brussel Spouts, Penne Vodka and Veal Risotto. The food is as good as it looks!

The food and the service at Da Umberto’s is excellent and we all had a nice time after the parade was over to relax and catch up with each other. The parade was the main topic and its success. It was such a beautiful night and the temperature was still a balmy 65 degrees when I left the restaurant. I had never seen such a warm Halloween but the economic impact of people eating outside, bars jammed with party goers and every restaurant below 23rd Street including the pizzerias and fast food restaurants jammed packed were helping the local economy. Owners may have been tired but looked extremely happy. It ended up being a very nice Halloween for everyone.

As I resumed classes and handed back Midterm exams, (I spent the night at the Residence Inn Downtown and locked myself in the room until 4:00pm the next day grading) there was once last event I attended before it closed for the season. It was the The Pumpkin Blaze up in Croton on the Hudson at the Van Courtland Manor.

I was able to get tickets the Friday night of the last weekend. It was a cool night when I drove up and since it was after Halloween as one of the volunteers at the site said to me, “We see a significant drop in people after Halloween”, the place was empty. There may have been about fifty people when I walked through which was perfect for picture taking. No one was in my way this time and I had plenty of time to walk through and admire the displays.

By the last weekend though, the amount of pumpkins was less and I could see they carved just enough to fill it in for the last weekend. Still I loved the creativity of everyone who contributed to the Blaze.

Arriving to the Pumpkin Blaze on the last weekend of the event. It was quiet on Friday night but was the best for picture taking and viewing all the wonderful displays

Van Cortlandt Manor Pumpkin Blaze in Croton on the Hudson:

https://pumpkinblaze.org/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g47560-d23971908-Reviews-The_Great_Jack_O_lantern_Blaze-Croton_on_Hudson_New_York.html

I have been to the Blaze over the last ten years and each year displays do change but it is nice to see new things be created. These are some of my favorite displays of the Blaze. I hope you enjoy them.

The Entrance display

The entrance to the Pumpkin Blaze

The entrance path to the Blaze displays and all the Halloween Delights!

The entrance to the Pumpkin Parade

The Carved Pumpkins at the entrance

The Carved Pumpkins at the entrance

The Carved Pumpkins at the entrance of the Blaze

The Carved Pumpkins at the entrance of the Blaze

One of my favorite carved pumpkins

I loved this pumpkin

The main display has not changed much but it is still spectacular. It is an amazing site.

The Tappan Boo Bridge travelling to the ghostly display

The Jellyfish display by the Tappan Boo Bridge

The Headless Horseman display

Video on the Display:

The Pumpkin Merry Go Round

Video on the Merry Go Round:

The Albany Post Road

The Pumpkin Windmill

The Video on this:

The Cafe that they opened for refreshments

The Pumpkin Tunnel

Video on the Pumpkin Tunnel:

The Dinosaur displays

The Pumpkin Serpent

The special effects with the serpent

The Statue of Liberty near the main house

The Van Cortlandt Family home decorated for Halloween

The decorations during the musical performance

The field of pumpkins along the way

The end of the Blaze

The Gift Shop on the last week of the Blaze. The Blaze would close that Sunday.

It really was a wonderful Halloween season. I may have cut back because of work but the things I had volunteered to do and events I participated in made it all worth it. It really was a great start to the holiday season.

Boo!

Places to Visit:

Old Town Hall Museum/Harrison Township Historical Society Inc.

P.O. Box

Mullica Hill, NJ. 08062

(856) 478-4949

https://www.harrisonhistorical.com/

https://m.facebook.com/Harrison-Township-Historical-Society-310499278053/

Open: Sunday 1:00pm-4:00pm/Monday-Friday Closed/Saturday 1:00pm-4:00pm

Admission: Free but a donation would be appreciated.

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g46655-d25105321-r866773005-Harrison_Township_Historical_Society-Mullica_Hill_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/8879

Old Broad Street Presbyterian Church & Cemetery

54 West Avenue

South Bridgeton, NJ 08302

Check website

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Broad_Street_Presbyterian_Church_and_Cemetery

http://cumberlandnjart.org/cumberland-historic-sites/broad-st-presbyterian-church/

Open: From Dawn to Dusk every day

Admission: Free

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g46324-d24140698-r844174571-Old_Broad_Street_Presbyterian_Church_Cemetery-Bridgeton_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/7751

Cohanzick Zoo

Mayor Aitken Drive

Bridgeton, NJ 08302

(856) 453-1658

Open: Sunday-Saturday 9:00am-5:00pm

Admission: Free but donations are accepted

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46324-d1425883-Reviews-Cohanzick_Zoo-Bridgeton_New_Jersey.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/23956

Historical Society of Penns Grove, Carney’s Point and Oldmans

48 West Main Street

Pennsgrove, NJ 08069

(856) 299-1556

https://www.facebook.com/Historical-Society-of-Penns-GroveCarneys-Point-Oldmans-116286428399994/

Open: Sunday 1:00pm-3:00pm (Seasonal)/Monday-Saturday Closed

Admission: Free but donations are suggested and recommended to help operate the museum

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g46723-d27075535-r973452214-Historical_Society_Penns_Grove-Penns_Grove_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/8940

Church Landing Farm at Pennsville Township Historical Society

86 Church Landing Road

Pennsville, NJ 08070

(856) 678-4453

http://www.pvhistory.com/museum.htm

https://www.facebook.com/pages/category/History-Museum/Pennsville-Township-Historical-Society-291880372272/

Open: Sunday 1:00pm-4:00pm/ Monday-Saturday Closed/Museum is open from April-December/The Auxiliary buildings are closed when the museum is closed. The community is welcome on Sundays when the museum is open and for community events. Please check the museum website on this.

Admission: Donation suggested/check website

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g46726-d24140695-r844169560-Church_Landing_Farmhouse-Pennsville_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/7734

The Greater Elmer Area Historical Society

117 Broad Street

Elmer, NJ 08318

(609) 670-0407

https://www.facebook.com/greaterelmerareahistoricalsociety/

http://www.elmerboroughnj.com/GreaterElmerAreaHistoricalSociety.html

Open: Sunday-Friday Closed/Saturday 10:00am-2:00pm (Second Saturday of the Month)

Admission: Free but donations are accepted and encouraged to help fund the museum.

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46415-d28644121-Reviews-Greater_Elmer_Area_Historical_Society-Elmer_New_Jersey.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/8876

Millville Historical Society

200 East Main Street

Millville, NJ 08322

(856) 293-1078

http://millhistsoc.org/

https://www.facebook.com/Millvillehs/

Open: Sunday 1:00pm-4:00pm/Monday-Tuesday Closed/Wednesday 1:00pm-4:00pm/Thursday-Saturday Closed

Admission: Free but donations are accepted and recommended to help operate the museum

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com.au/Attraction_Review-g46627-d27044122-Reviews-Millville_Historical_Society-Millville_New_Jersey.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/23661

Millville Army Air Field Museum

1 Leddon Street

Millville Airport

Millville, NJ 08832

(856) 327-2347

Open: Sunday 10:00am-4:00pm/Monday By Appointment Only/Tuesday-Saturday 10:00am-4:00pm

Admission: Donation Suggested Adults $10.00/Children 5.00

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g46627-d2647289-r971146426-Millville_Army_Airfield_Museum-Millville_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/22892

Swedesboro-Woolwich Historical Society Museum

Swedesboro City Hall

1500 Kings Highway/ Second Floor

Swedesboro, NJ 08085

(856) 467-0202

https://www.historicswedesboro.com/boards-commissions-departments/swedesboro-woolwich-historical-society/

Open: Sunday: third Sunday of the month 1:00pm-4:00pm Monday- Saturday By Appointment only-please call ahead

Admission: Free but donations are accepted

My review on TripAdvisor:

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/22903

Van Cortlandt Manor

5 Riverside Avenue

Croton-on-the-Hudson, NY  10502

(914) 366-6900

Open: See website for seasonal hours

My review on TripAdvisor (Manor and Pumpkin Blaze):

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g47560-d116391-Reviews-Van_Cortlandt_Manor-Croton_on_Hudson_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/3677

Rosie’s Farm Market

317 Swedesboro Road

Mullica Hill, NJ 08062

(856) 223-9252

https://www.rosiesfarmmarket.com/

https://www.facebook.com/rosiesfarmmarket/

Open: Sunday-Saturday 8:00am-6:00pm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46655-d5217872-Reviews-Rosie_s_Farm_Market-Mullica_Hill_New_Jersey.html

Mood’s Farm Market

901 Bridgeton Pike

Mullica Hill, NJ 08062

(856) 478-2500

https://www.moodsfarmmarket.com/

Open: Sunday Closed/Monday-Saturday 8:00am-6:00pm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46655-d8754661-Reviews-Mood_s_Farm_Market-Mullica_Hill_New_Jersey.html

Fort Delaware

6615 Route 97

Narrowsburg, NY  12764

http://sullivanny.us/Departments/ParksRecreation/FortDelaware

Open: The last weekend in June until Labor Day; Friday-Monday 10:00am-5:00pm (check seasons)

Fee: Adults $7.00/Seniors $5.00/Seniors (62 or older) $4.00

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g48227-d3386995-Reviews-Fort_Delaware_Museum-Narrowsburg_Catskill_Region_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/3299

The Franklin Mineral Museum

32 Evans Street

Franklin, NJ 07416

(973) 827-3481

Home Page

Fee: Combination Museum & Rock Collecting: Adults $15.00/Children 3-16 $10.00/Seniors (65+) & Veterans $12.00 Other packages for just the museum and rock collecting are available. Please check the website.

Open: Sunday 11:00-5:00pm/Monday-Friday 10:00am-4:00pm/Saturday 11:00am-5:00pm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46449-d2172670-Reviews-Franklin_Mineral_Museum-Franklin_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/3287

The Sterling Hill Mine Museum

30 Plant Road

Ogdensburg, NJ  07439

(973) 209-7212

https://www.sterlinghillminingmuseum.org/

Fee: Adults $13.00/Seniors (over 65) $12.00/Children 4-12 $10.00

Open: Sunday-Saturday 9:30am-3:30pm Tours depend on time of the season (2:00pm)

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46702-d584517-Reviews-Sterling_Hill_Mining_Museum-Ogdensburg_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/3293

The Vanderbilt Mansion & Estate

National Historic Site

4097 Albany Post Road

Hyde Park, NY  12538

(845) 229-7770

http://www.nps.gov/vama

https://www.nationalparks.org/explore-parks/vanderbilt-mansion-national-historic-site

TripAdvisor Review:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60801-d105845-Reviews-Vanderbilt_Mansion_National_Historic_Site-Hyde_Park_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on VistingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/2200

Staatsburgh State Historic Site(The Mills Mansion)

75 Mills Mansion Drive

Staatsburgh, NY  12580

http://www.facebook.com/staatsburghSHS

Open: Thursday-Sunday: 11:00am-5:00pm

TripAdvisor Review:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g48676-d107418-Reviews-Staatsburgh_State_Historic_Site_Mills_Mansion-Staatsburg_New_York.html?m=19905

Hours: Open Thursday-Sunday: 11:00am-5:00pm (the last tour is at 4:00pm)/Open Monday Holidays from April 19th to October 28th. The mansion then closes to prepare for the holiday season. Closed on Thanksgiving and Easter. There are special programs from January to April so please see the website.

Admission: $8.00 for adults/$6.00 for groups and Seniors/Children under 12 are free. Special events have separate fees and can run from $8.00 to $10.00 and above.

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/2137

Wilderstein Historic Site

330 Morton Road

Rhinebeck, New York 12572

(845) 876-4818

http://www.wilderstein.org

Home

Open: Thursday-Sunday 1:00pm-4:00pm/Closed Monday-Wednesday

Fee: $10.00 donation at the Holidays/$16.00 Adults/$10.00 Seniors & Students/Children Under 12 free

Visit Wilderstein-With its exquisite Queen Anne mansion and Calvert Vaux designed landscape, this historic estate is widely regarded as the Hudson Valley’s most important example of Victorian architecture.

TripAdvisor Review:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g48486-d263984-Reviews-Wilderstein_Historic_Site-Rhinebeck_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/1642

Jenkinson’s Aquarium

300 Ocean Avenue North

Point Pleasant Beach, NJ 08742

(732) 899-1212

https://www.facebook.com/jenksaquarium/

Admission: Adults $18.00/Seniors $13.00/Children 3-11 $12.00/Children under 2 Free

Open: Sunday-Saturday Check website due to Seasonality

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46745-d8388429-Reviews-Jenkinson_s_Aquarium-Point_Pleasant_Beach_New_Jersey.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/19644

Central Park Zoo

Fifth Avenue and East 64th Street

New York, NY 10021

(212) 439-6500

https://centralparkzoo.com/

Open: Sunday-Saturday 10:00am-4:30pm

Fee: Adults $12.00/Seniors (65+) $10.00/Children (3-12)$8.00/Total Experience Adults $16.00/Seniors (65+) $15.00/Children (3-12) $12.00

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d267703-Reviews-Central_Park_Zoo-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/5105

Charles A. Dana Discovery Center

Central Park North

New York, NY 10029

(332) 240-3256

https://www.centralparknyc.org/locations/charles-a-dana-discovery-center

Open: Sunday 10:00am-5:00pm/Monday Closed/Tuesday-Saturday 10:00am-5:00pm

Admission: Free donations accepted/Become a member of the Central Park Conservatory

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d4563063-Reviews-Charles_A_Dana_Discovery_Center-New_York_City_New_York.html

Places to Eat:

Majorelle-The Lowell Hotel

28 East 63rd Street

New York, NY 10065

(212) 935-2888

https://www.lowellhotel.com/restaurants-and-bar/majorelle/57-1/

Open: Sunday Closed/Monday-Saturday Lunch 12:00pm-4:30pm/Dinner 5:00pm-10:30pm

My review on TripAdvisor”

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d12247765-Reviews-Majorelle-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

Perrine-The Pierre Hotel

2 East 61st Street

New York, NY 10065

(212) 940-8195

https://www.perrinenyc.com/

Open: Sunday 7:00am-4:00pm/Monday 7:00am-3:00pm/Tuesday-Saturday 7:00pm-11:00pm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d10172460-Reviews-Perrine-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

Hudock’s Frozen Custard Stand

544 Salem Quinton Road

Salem, NJ 08079

(856) 935-5224

https://www.facebook.com/Hudocks-Custard-Stand-155824314452996/

Open: Sunday-Saturday 10:00am-10:00pm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g46799-d5555493-r843947185-Hudock_s_Frozen_Custard_Stand-Salem_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/diningonashoestringinnyc.wordpress.com/3072

Four Season’s Doughnuts

275 North Broadway

Pennsville, NJ 08070

(856) 678-3800

https://www.facebook.com/fourseasonsdonuts/

Open: Sunday-6:00am-6:00pm/Monday-Friday 5:15am-6:30pm/Saturday 6:00am-6:00pm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46726-d3903174-Reviews-Four_Seasons_Donuts-Pennsville_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

The Orient Chinese Restaurant

414 South Broadway

Pennsville, NJ 08070

(856) 678-4021

https://www.facebook.com/p/The-Orient-Chinese-Restaurant-100083171296875/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46726-d421184-Reviews-Orient_Chinese_Restaurant-Pennsville_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

Bamboo House Chinese Restaurant

1509 Lexington Avenue

New York, NY 10029

(917) 938-9783

https://www.seamless.com/menu/bamboo-house-1509-lexington-ave-new-york/1295116

Open: Sunday-Saturday 11:00am-10:30pm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d25542970-Reviews-Bamboo_house_Chinese_Restaurant-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/diningonashoestringinnyc.wordpress.com/5414

McDonalds

260 Route 23 North

Franklin, NJ 07416

(973) 827-2557

https://www.mcdonalds.com/us/en-us/location/nj/franklin/rt-23/4332.html?cid=rf:yxt:ron::clicks

Open: Sunday-Saturday 5:30am-11:00pm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46449-d4440486-Reviews-McDonald_s-Franklin_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

The Heron Restaurant

40 Main Street

Narrowsburg, NY 12764

(845) 252-3333

http://theheronrestaurant.com/

Open: Sunday 10:00am-4:00pm/Closed Monday-Wednesday/Thursday-Saturday 11:00am-3:00pm-5:30pm-9:00pm (Thursdays) and 5:30pm-10:00pm (Fridays and Saturdays)

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g48227-d3348484-Reviews-The_Heron-Narrowsburg_Catskill_Region_New_York.html?m=19905

Franklin Chicken & Ribs (Now Olluco Bistro in 2024)

535 Route 23 South

Franklin, NJ  07416

(973) 209-0222

https://www.facebook.com/pages/category/Barbecue-Restaurant/Franklin-Chicken-Ribs-AKA-The-Rib-Crib-412588115948234/

Open: Sunday-Saturday 6:00am-8:00pm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46449-d17704967-Reviews-Franklin_Chicken_Ribs-Franklin_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

Holland American Bakery

246 Route 23 South

Sussex, NJ  07461

(973)-875-5258

https://www.hollandamericanbakery.com/

Open: Tuesday-Saturday 6:00am-6:00pm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46857-d2074129-Reviews-Holland_American_Bakery-Sussex_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

Green Valley Farms

997 Route 23 North

Sussex, NJ 07461

(973) 875-5213

https://www.facebook.com/GreenValleyFarmsNJ/

Open: Sunday-Saturday The farm is seasonal so please check the website and Facebook for more information

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46857-d10814678-Reviews-Green_Valley_Farms-Sussex_New_Jersey.html

Da Umberto

107 West 17th Street

New York, NY 10011

(212) 989-0303

https://daumbertonyc.com/

Open: Sunday Closed/Monday-Thursday 12:00pm-11:00pm/Friday 12:00pm-11:30pm/Saturday 5:30pm-11:30pm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d423279-Reviews-Da_Umberto-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

Dong Happy Garden

440 South Riverside Avenue #440

Croton on the Hudson, NY 10520

(914) 271-7888

https://www.menupix.com/westchester/restaurants/3212099/Dong-Happy-Garden-Menu-Croton-On-Hudson-NY

Open: Sunday 12:00pm-10:00pm/Monday-Thursday 11:00am-10:30pm/Friday-Saturday 11:00am-11:00pm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g47560-d4616434-Reviews-Dong_Happy_Garden-Croton_on_Hudson_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/diningonashoestringinnyc.wordpress.com/6233

Places to Stay:

The Salem River Inn (formerly the Inn at the Salem Country Club)

91 Salem Country Club Road

Salem, NJ 08079

(609) 402-8190

https://salemcountryclubnj.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Hotel_Review-g46799-d12378333-Reviews-The_Inn_at_Salem_Country_Club-Salem_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

The Darby Hotel

9 Manor Drive

Beach Lake, PA 18405

(844) 730-5504

https://www.facebook.com/StayatDarby/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Hotel_Review-g60983-d23684502-Reviews-The_Darby-Beach_Lake_Pocono_Mountains_Region_Pennsylvania.html?m=19905

Silver Moon Bakery 2740 Broadway & 105th Street New York, NY 10025 (Closed March 2025)

The Silver Moon Bakery at 2740 Broadway at 105th Street

The delicious selectin of baked products at the Silver Moon Bakery

The Crumuffin at Silver Moon Bakery filled with Nutella Chocolate and Vanilla Cream

In March 2025, the bakery closed:

Day Three Hundred and Twenty-One Walking the Avenues of Gramercy Park Irving Place, Lexington, Third and Second Avenues August 27th, 2024

It has been one busy summer. In between walking the neighborhoods of Manhattan, I have been revisiting neighborhoods, attending events that I had in the past like the Coney Island Sand Castle Building contest and the Dutchess and Ulster County Fairs. I wanted to spend more time at them and I needed new pictures at all of these events (see my full blog, MywalkinManhattan.com for all these interesting blogs). That and I have been exploring the Jersey Shore towns like Point Pleasant and Seaside Park and Heights to really see what is beyond their Boardwalks. It has been a productive summer since graduation running back and forth between the Hudson River Valley and the Jersey Shore.

As I get ready for the school year to begin in a week and a half, I have more places to see and experience. Still in between all this I want to volunteer time at the Soup Kitchen and planning trips outside the City too experience more of New Jersey. Each day of the Month of August is like planning “D Day”.

Gramercy Park is such an interesting neighborhood. From the vibrant commercial areas to the historical parks, Gramercy Park has a lot of hidden treasures tucked here and there throughout the neighborhood. It seems though, along the neighborhoods Avenues, I would have been expected to see more classic architecture and beautiful stonework, I experienced experienced a more commercial environment with modern buildings. Still tucked here and there along the Avenues were many gems of the past and some beautiful little parks.

The Gramercy Park Historic District plaque

I started my walk along the Avenues of the neighborhood with a walk up the Irving Place Street and walked around the park to Lexington Avenue on the other side of the park. Irving Place and Lexington Avenue are separated by Gramercy Park’s north and South borders.

Gramercy Park in full bloom in the Summer of 2024

The section of the neighborhood is shared with the Union Square neighborhood as the lines are blurred from street to street between Gramercy Park, Union Square and the Flatiron District. This neighborhood has distinct architecture, beautiful parks including Gramercy Park, part of the old Rose Hill Farm estate and Stuyvesant Square, part of the former estate of Dutch Governor Peter Stuyvesant.

I started my walk on the southern part of Gramercy Park along the historical Irving Place with its historic homes and restaurants. I passed 4 Irving Place which the first couple of floors were under scaffolding. I admired the clocktower on the top of the building, the beautiful embellishments and just the elegance of the building. The building is home to Consolidated Edison (ConEd).

The was designed by architect Henry Janeway Hardenbergh and architectural firm of Warren and Wetmore in the Neo-Classical design. The first phase of the building was started in 1911 and both phases were finished by 1929. The original section of the building is in the picture with the wings of the building to both sides (Wiki).

I passed 4 Irving Place, the Con Ed Building, just as twilight hit the building and you could see the beauty in its shadows.

Its clock told the time of the early evening.

The next morning when I walked past it again, you could see the true beauty of its design.

I also noticed that the roof top held a more intricate design than I noticed the night before. Look up at its intricate details to admire its beauty. This is part of the originally designed building.

Once I turned onto Irving Place, the old core of its industrial past gave way to the bohemian village it would become and stay in the future. This was once ‘THE’ neighborhood to live in and has stayed that way since even through the rough times of Union Square.

The most impressive object you will see in the neighborhood is this bust of Washington Irving that sits outside the Washing Irving Campus on Irving Place.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washington_Irving_Campus

This bust of Washington Irving was created by artist Friedrich Beer

Artist Friedrich Beer

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Beer

https://www.artprice.com/artist/112959/friedrich-beer

Artist Friedrich Beer was a German born artist known for his works on busts of famous individuals.

The neighborhood goes from commercial to more residential as you get further up Irving Place and closer to Gramercy Park. The borders of Union Square overlap with Gramercy Park and the Flatiron District between East 18th and East 20th streets so I revisited buildings that J had seen before. If people went in a Time Machine to Manhattan from 100 years ago they would still see the same buildings but with totally different uses.

The Washington Irving house at 122 East 17th Street and Irving Place (Washington Irving never lived here)

https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/the-irving-house-new-york-new-york

The “Irving House” was built by Peter Voorhis between 1843 and 1844, along with the adjacent two houses at 45 and 47 Irving Place. The original tenants of 49 Irving Place (at that time referred to as 122 East 17th Street) were Charles Jackson Martin, an insurance executive, and his wife, who would reside there from 1844 until 1852. Henry and Ann E. Coggill would live in it in 1853, and in 1854 it would become the home of banker Thomas Phelps and his wife Elizabeth, who would remain until 1863 (Atlasobsucra.com).

The front of the house facing Irving Place

The first mention in print of Irving having lived in the house came in the Sunday Magazine Supplement of the New York Times on April 4, 1897. The article is a human interest story about Elsie de Wolfe and the means and methods she used to decorate “Irving’s house.” In 1905, de Wolfe would become known as the first professional interior decorator and it appears this article is an early attempt at publicity for her. As for the information about Irving, the article takes enormous liberties (actually, it flat-out makes things up), claiming that Irving had conceived of the house himself and was very particular about the architecture and design (Atlasobsucra.com).

The entrance to the house at 122 East 17th street

The plaque on the house dedicated to the writer created by artist Alexander Finta

In 1930, a restaurant called the Washington Irving Tea Room was operating in the basement of the building and in 1934 a plaque sculpted by Rodin-student Alexander Finta was put up on the north facade that would cement the story in the public consciousness. Today, the surrounding area remains covered in references to Irving, from the large art installations in the nearby W Hotel to the Headless Horseman pub on 15th Street(Atlasobsucra.com).

Artist Alexander Finta

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Finta

https://www.askart.com/artist/Alexander_Finta/108330/Alexander_Finta.aspx

Artist Alexander Finta was a Hungarian born artist who moved to the United States in 1923. He had studied mechanical engineering in his own country and had studied with Auguste Rodin. His is known for his elaborate busts. He spent the remainder of his career at 20th Century Fox Studios (Wiki)

All along the Irving Place corridor, the street is lined with interesting and historical buildings many of them turned into restaurants or inns. There are many historic plaques in this neighborhood and some creative architecture. The first building that caught my eye was 53 Irving Place, which is the home of Pierre Loti Wine Bar.

Review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d2136974-Reviews-Pierre_Loti_Wine_Bar-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

The home of Pierre Lotte Mediterranean Restaurant at 53-55 Irving Place was the home of O Henry

When I looked at the side of the building near the entrance, I was this historic plaque that said that this was the home of author William Sidney Porter (O. Henry). The author lived here from 1903-1907 and wrote the “Gift of the Magi” while living here and eating at Pete’s Tavern across the street (Wiki).

The historic plaque for author O Henry at 53-55 Irving Place

Author William Henry Porter

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O._Henry

Down the road at is Pete’s Tavern, one of the most famous and the oldest literary restaurants in the City. The restaurant was founded in 1864 as the Portman Hotel and then in 1899 when changed to Healy’s Cafe when it was run by John and Tom Healy. Then in 1899, it was bought by Peter D’ Belles and renamed Pete’s Tavern. The restaurant was a ‘Speakeasy’ during prohibition and the dining rooms have not changed much over the last over hundred years (Pete’s Tavern website).

Pete’s Tavern was busy on the night of my first part of the walk.

Pete’s Tavern at 129 East 18th Street

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pete%27s_Tavern

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d527869-Reviews-Pete_s_Tavern-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

The entrance of Pete’s Tavern

The entrance to Pete’s Tavern on Irving Place

The painting outside of Pete’s Tavern of the Speakeasy years

Pete’s Tavern was busy both nights that I passed it. I had not eaten there in over a decade when I had a holiday dinner there with friends by I remember the food and service being excellent. The restaurant is really special during the Christmas holiday season from what I can remember.

My friends Barbara, Lillian and I after dinner at Pete’s Tavern in the early 2000’s

Another restaurant I went to before my friend, Barbara, moved to Florida was a Friend of the a Farmer at 77 Irving Place, a farm to table concept before it became very popular. I remember the food being wonderful but the place being a bit noisy. She lived on the fringe of Gramercy Park and had passed this restaurant many times and had wanted to try it that evening.

Another great restaurant is Friend of a Farmer at 77 Irving Place

https://www.friendofafarmer.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d496790-Reviews-Friend_of_a_Farmer-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

Across the street, I passed this apartment building at 76 Irving Place. I loved the outside embellishments on the building and the friendly looks you get from the statuary. The building was built in 1897 by architect Lyndon P. Smith (Corcoran Group).

You have to look up to admire the details of 76 Irving Place

https://www.corcoran.com/listing/for-sale/76-irving-place-manhattan-ny-10003/23012133/regionId/1

https://streeteasy.com/building/76-irving-place-new_york

The entrance to 76 Irving Place with its tiny angels

This woman guards the front of Irving Place like guard

This woman greets you at 76 Irving Place

The classic architecture of the block especially as you get closer to Gramercy Park changes from smaller apartment buildings to brownstones lining the parks southern border. Gramercy Park offers some of the most interesting architecture. This ivy covered building that impressed me so much as the sun was going down is at 80 Irving Place.

This building at East 19th street and Irving Place is typical for the buildings that once lined this neighborhood

80 Irving Place is currently under renovation

https://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2014/04/the-1854-house-at-no-80-irving-place.html

https://www.trulia.com/home/80-irving-pl-new-york-ny-10003-31506439

The house was built as a single family mansion between 1853 and 1854 and had been the home of the prominent Wood family and then to actress Agnes Ethel Tracy. Since 1987, it has been a single family home again. What I thought was interesting was that the house was used in the movie “Working Girl” as Sigourney  Weavers character’s home (DaytoninManhattan.com).

Look up at the beautiful details of 81 Irving Place

81 Irving Place in all its glory

https://www.elliman.com/newyorkcity/buildings-communities/detail/527-c-725-2766/81-irving-pl-gramercy-park-new-york-ny

https://streeteasy.com/building/81-irving-place-new_york

https://www.apartments.com/81-irving-pl-new-york-ny-unit-8a/5q6z3mp/

81 Irving Place is one of the most beautiful apartment complexes in the city that I have come across. The embellishments along the building are some of most detailed and elegant I have seen. This prewar Co-Op was built in 1929.

The details along the windows

The embellishments of the building

The dragons and demons that adorn the windows

The embellishments of the building

The unusual creatures at the doorways

The embellishments of the building

The creatures guarding the windows

The embellishments of the building

The rooftop gardens are protected by these griffins

The building has a whimsical almost storybook imagine of creatures protecting their home.

Where I want my future home to be when I retire to the City and can afford it is 19 Gramercy Park South. I have always loved this building since I fell in love with the neighborhood over thirty years ago. I always wanted a home with a key to Gramercy Park. The building has that classic turn of the last century look about it and it has always been my dream to live here when I retire. I need to hurry and win the lottery.

My dream home would be at 19 Gramercy Park South with a key to the park

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/19_Gramercy_Park_South

I had thought this was a apartment building but it is actually a single family mansion with 37 rooms. It was built in 1845 and when the mansion was extended by Stamford White in 1887 was the home of socially prominent Stuyvesant-Fish family. It is currently back to being a single family mansion (Wiki).

I did the walk around the Park and continued along Lexington Avenue from East 20th to East 23rd Street. There is more magnificent architecture along the way. Small details that will surprise you and things that will stare you along the walk.

I walked along Lexington Avenue where the campus of Baruch College, which is part of the CUNY system, starts. One of its stand out buildings is The Lawrence and Eris Field Building, also known as the 23rd Street Building by the college. This building opened in 1929 and the ornamented Italian Renaissance revival style façade on 23rd Street  is constructed of limestone and brick and engraved with “The College of the City Of New York.” (CUNY Website)

17 Lexington Avenue-The Lawrence and Eris Field Building, also known as the 23rd Street Building on the Baruch College Campus.

https://17lexupdate.baruch.cuny.edu/history/

The beautiful details of the building

The Baruch College campus is located on the border of Gramercy Park and Kips Bay showcasing the unique architecture of the campus. Many of the buildings on this side of campus are going through a renovation so watch the scaffolding.

The coat of arms on the side of the building

The middle coat of arms on the side of the building

Coat of arms on the side of the building

The building on the Baruch Campus that I admired was the was the Baruch College Administration Center whose entrance is at 135 East 22nd Street. I loved the Art Deco details on the building. These seemed to represent all aspects of business.

The side of the Baruch College with its Art Deco details

Details on the CUNY building-The Baruch College Administration Center Building in its glory

The front of the Baruch College Administration Center at 135 East 22nd Street

https://plexuss.com/u/cuny-bernard-m-baruch-college/history

The elaborate details on the building give it its Art Deco appearance. The Art Deco Administrative Center at 135 East 22nd Street was built in 1937–1939 as the Domestic Relations Court Building, and was connected to the Children’s Court next door (Baruch College Website).

Across the street from CUNY campus, the Sage House at Four Lexington Avenue. Sage House was built in 1913 for the Russell Sage Foundation, a social welfare nonprofit that was an early advocate of social work and urban planning (Streeteasy.com).

The historic Sage House at Four Lexington Avenue

https://www.corcoran.com/building/gramercy-park/3917

https://streeteasy.com/building/the-sage-house

The building is a pre-war office building designed by Grosvenor Atterbury in the Italian Renaissance palazzo style. It has a rusticated red sandstone façade, vaulted ceilings, and carved decorative shields (Wiki). The building was converted to Coop apartments in 1986. The building next to it was the Hotel Gramercy Park which is currently closed and under renovation. Even though the hotel is closed, you can still peek through the scaffolding and see its elegance.

I myself have some wonderful memories of this hotel. I had stayed at the hotel back in 1993 while working at Macy’s Herald Square, when it was a European style old hotel with the large rooms with a view of the park. It had the most amazing bathtubs to sink into the night before I left to assist in the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. Years later, when Danny Meyers opened the Italian restaurant, Maialino, in the lobby in the early 2000’s, I remember taking my father there for Father’s Day and having the most delicious Roast Pork with potatoes that were cooked in the roast’s juices. It was a fantastic meal and the most perfect Father’s Day. Funny how I still remember that meal almost twenty years later.

The Hotel Gramercy Park at Two Lexington Avenue

The Hotel Gramercy Park was designed by architect Robert T. Lyons and was built by brothers Bing & Bing in 1924 and the hotel opened in 1925. The extension of the hotel along East 21st Street was designed by architects from Thompson & Churchill and built between 1929-1930. The hotel is designed in the Renaissance Revival style (Wiki). Across the street from the hotel is the historic One Lexington Avenue.

One Lexington Avenue facing Gramercy Park

https://streeteasy.com/building/1-lexington-avenue-new_york/9-d

https://www.corcoran.com/building/gramercy/3916

Built in 1910 by noted architect Herbert Lucas. This twelve-story intimate cooperative features extraordinary design details including a stately limestone and brick façade, timeless-elegant marble lobby and wood-paneled elevator still attended full-time by the elevator operator (Streeteasy.com).

The Cyrus West Field plaque on One Lexington Avenue where his home once stood

Cyrus West Field

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyrus_W._Field

https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/cable-cyrus-field-1819-1892/

One Lexington Avenue was once the home of Cyrus West Field, who was considered the ‘Father of the American Cable” and helped lay the first trans Atlantic cable in 1858. When it broke, it was laid again in 1866 (American Experience).

The original house on the same corner in 1866 (NY Public Library)

Looking back up Lexington Avenue in the Summer of 2024, you can see how this neighborhood just keeps changing and still getting better. The old buildings are finding new uses and this part of the neighborhood is still very exclusive.

Looking up Lexington Avenue from Gramercy Park

The views uptown are so beautiful and will look even better when all the scaffolding comes down on all of these buildings. Still this part of the neighborhood is very impressive.

I walked down East 23rd Street to Third Avenue and it is not as impressive. This part of the neighborhood is more commercial the further you go from the park and most of the architecture here and on Second and First Avenue is mostly businesses housed in new buildings. Here and there though, tucked in the corners there is still a glimpse of the neighborhood’s past. You just have to look up to appreciate it.

Walking down Third Avenue from East 23rd Street

It may be all new construction but it is still impressive. Just a different feel and character. Third Avenue is more of a commercial district of larger stores and small restaurants.

Interesting street art on a Third Avenue mailbox. At least someone has some optimism

Tucked in between the modern architecture and some older brick buildings was this elaborate white building that stood out amongst its more plain neighbors and was one of the few older buildings left on Third Avenue.

The beauty of 190 Third Avenue known as Scheffel Hall

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scheffel_Hall

Scheffel Hall was designed by architects Henry Adams Weber and Hubert Drosser and was built between 1894 to 1895. This part of Gramercy Park was known as ‘Kleindeutschland’, ‘Little Germany”, when it had a large German immigrant population. The building served as a beer hall and restaurant at that time and was modeled after an early 17th Century building in Heidelberg Castle, the “Friedrichsbau” (Wiki). The building stands out for its beauty and elegant details that make this building special. There is nothing like it in the neighborhood and it a testament to its German past.

I finished my walk down Third Avenue and turned the corner at Second Avenue. As I walked down Second Avenue past Church of the Epiphany at 375 Second Avenue, I came across the historical plaque for the marker of the original “Rose Hill Farm” that was once part of this neighborhood and whose borders now make up the ‘Rose Hill’ neighborhood in Midtown Manhattan. All that remains of the farm today is the current Gramercy Park, which is a corner of the old farm.

The site of ‘Rose Hill Farm’, the home of General Horatio Gates and his second wife, Mary Valens

Rose Hill was originally a farm owned by James DeLancey and it was sold to Honorable John Watts, a member of the Colonial Assembly in 1747. The farm was 130 acres between East 30th to East 21st Street from what is now Irving Place to the East River. John Watts later married Ann DeLancey and they raised their family here. At the start of the Revolutionary War, as Loyalists they returned to England and left the estate to their son, John, who inherited it in 1789 (Wiki).

My blogs on Visiting the Rose Hill section of Manhattan:

Walking the Borders of Rose Hill:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/16580

Walking the Streets and Avenues of Rose Hill:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/16776

General Horatio Gates

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horatio_Gates

Revolutionary War General Horatio Gates and his second wife, Mary Valens, bought the farm in 1790 and built a new mansion on the corner of what is now Second and East 22nd Street. They lived here for the next twenty years with him a member of the assembly in 1800 and active in New York Society at that time. He died on the farm in 1806 and the estate was parceled out later on when the new grid pattern for Manhattan was created (Wiki/Horatio Gates website).

Rose Hill Farm

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rose_Hill,_Manhattan

The beautiful windows of the church of the Church of the Epiphany at 373 Second Avenue

https://epiphanychurch.nyc/

As I looked up from the plaque, I admired the front windows of the Church of the Epiphany at 373 Second Avenue and all the beautiful plantings in front of the church. The original church that had been built in 1870 burned down in 1963. The current church was designed by the architectural firm of Belfatto & Pavarini and was finished in 1967. The stained glass windows of the Madonna and Child were from the original church (Wiki/Church of the Epiphany website).

Walking down at East 23rd Street, it was a short walk down the Avenue where I passed 303 Second Avenue and the beautiful details of this famous piece of the neighborhood history. This is the one really standout building on the block with interesting embellishments all along the windows and doorways.

303 Second Avenue-The Rutherford Place Medical Building

https://streeteasy.com/building/rutherford-place/a

https://www.compass.com/building/the-rutherford-manhattan-ny/319539373204573973/

The Rutherford Medical Building was designed by architect Robert H. Richardson and was finished in 1902. This was a very active hospital delivering sixty percent of the infants in Manhattan at that time before a full part of the hospital. It was converted to luxury condos in recent years (Wiki/Streeteasy.com).

The historic plaques

The historic plaques

The elegant details of the The Rutherford Building

You have to look at the top of this building to really appreciate it

As you cross over from East 17th Street on both sides of Second Avenue, you are greeted by the greenery of Stuyvesant Square, what is left of the former estate of ‘Peg Leg’ Peter Stuyvesant, the Governor of the Dutch colony of New Amsterdam. The park was in full bloom and on a hot day, the shade trees are a pleasure to be under.

As I walked down Second Avenue, I passed the beauty of Stuyvesant Square Park

The sign welcoming sign to Stuyvesant Square Park

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/stuyvesant-square

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stuyvesant_Square

I walked through the park, admiring the paths of flowers and flowering trees. People were outside reading books and listening to the makeshift concert that a resident was putting on. There is a dirty little secret to Stuyvesant Square Park is on the edges of the park there is a lot of loitering by delivery guys and homeless in the corners of the park. The park could also use a little pruning and sprucing here and there.

Looking up Second Avenue from Stuyvesant Square

Stuyvesant Square in full bloom

The Stuyvesant family was the influence of this wonderful park. In 1836, Peter Gerard Stuyvesant, the great great grandson of Peter Stuyvesant and his wife, Helen Rutherfurd sold four acres of the original Stuyvesant Farm to the City for $5.00 as a public park under the stipulation that the City build a fence around it. It took an almost lawsuit from the city to finally build the fence in 1847, which is the fence that surrounds the park today (NYCParks.org).

The colorful flowers surrounding the fountains

In the middle of the park on the right side as you are walking down Second Avenue is the statue of Governor Peter Stuyvesant in all of his glory.

The statue of ‘Peg Leg’ Peter Stuyvesant, the Governor of the Dutch Colony

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/stuyvesant-square/monuments/1516

This famous public statue of Governor Peter Stuyvesant was designed by artist Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney in

Artist Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gertrude_Vanderbilt_Whitney

Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney was an American born New York artist who had studied at the Arts Student League of New York and apprenticed under several well known artists.

The Stuyvesant Square Park in the Summer of 2024

Around the corner from the park as I walked its perimeter was the beautiful testament to God in the form of St. John The Baptist Greek Orthodox Church at 143 East 17th Street

St. John The Baptist Greek Orthodox Church at 143 East 17th Street

https://www.stjohn.ny.goarch.org/

https://www.facebook.com/StJohnBaptistNYC/

Built in 1885, designed by Schwartzmann & Buchman, with a baroque facade that was altered in 1957 by Kyriacos A. Kalfas (Wiki).

The detailed windows of St. John’s Church at East 143 17th Street

As I reached East 14th Streets, I could see that the neighborhood along Second and Third Avenue did not have the same historic appearance as the side streets of the neighborhood. Here and there tucked in between modern buildings, there were a few gems,

This building was at 231 Second Avenue

https://streeteasy.com/building/231-2-avenue-new_york

https://www.elliman.com/newyorkcity/buildings-communities/detail/527-c-725-135503/231-second-ave-gramercy-park-new-york-ny

This prewar apartment building was built in 1910. You have to really look up to see the elegant details of the building and its decorative embellishments.

The beautiful entrance to the apartment building

The classic embellishments of the building

Walking through the other side of Stuyvesant Square I got better views of 303-305 Second Avenue

This city squirrel just ignored me as it chopped away at some nuts

The beauty of Stuyvesant Square in the Summer of 2024

The historic plaque at Stuyvesant Square

Lunch was a slice of Sicilian pizza at Lunetta Pizza at 245 Third Avenue. I had passed Lunetta Pizza many times while walking through the neighborhood and noticed that it was one of the few restaurants in the neighborhood that did not change their prices after COVID. They are still one of the most reasonable pizzerias in Manhattan (See my review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com).

The slice was amazing. Their red sauce is spiced perfectly and that is what makes the structure of the pizza. The Sicilian pizza here is crisp and pillowy, the way it should be.

Lunetta Pizza at 245 Third Avenue

https://www.lunettapizzaandrestaurant.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d23657421-Reviews-Lunetta_Pizza_Restaurant-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/diningonashoestringinnyc.wordpress.com/6060

The prices are extremely fair and are still pre-COVID. They do not rip you off.

The selection of pizzas is extensive

The Sicilian slices were pillowy and crisp with a deep, rich flavor because of their amazing red sauce.

I finished walking the Avenues of Gramercy Park with enough time to take the trip out to Brooklyn for the pre-West Indian Parade event at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden.

My blog on the special event at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/53496

The fountain in the Cherry Blossom Esplanade

The private members night

The Carnival like atmosphere right before the West Indian Parade

After the event was over, I headed back to Manhattan for dinner. I had been so impressed by Lunetta Pizza’s food the afternoon, that I bypassed my favorite restaurants in Brooklyn and went back to dinner there.

I had a very impressive Linguini with a Meat Sauce and I then made a better judgement call on the food and it is truly excellent. The meat sauce was so flavorful and the pasta perfectly cooked and a very generous portion size that it made the perfect dinner.

My dinner at Lunetta Pizza, the Linguini with Meat Sauce

Yum!

As I left the neighborhood that night I passed a plaque in the sidewalk from the Mayor Abe Beame Administration (now these were some bad years in the City) dedicating a tree for the beautification of the neighborhood. It just shows has the City just keeps morphing with the cycles the City goes through over the years. Manhattan just keeps changing.

The plaque from the neighborhood beatification program in the 1970’s. This plaque is near East 23rd and Third Avenue. It is also coming out of the ground.

Mayor Abe Beame

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abraham_Beame

As I passed Bryant Park that evening, twilight had come and the lights of the City were coming on. New York City may have its problems, but there still is a beauty to it.

Passing Bryant Park that evening

The next part of the walk will be visiting the Streets of Gramercy Park.

Places to Visit:

Stuyvesant Square Park

9 Rutherford Place

New York, NY 10003

(212) 639-9675

Open: Sunday-Saturday 7:00am-11:00pm

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/stuyvesant-square

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stuyvesant_Square

My TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d218637-Reviews-Stuyvesant_Square-New_York_City_New_York.html

Places to Eat:

Lunetta Pizzeria

245 Third Avenue

New York, NY 10010

(212) 432-5200

https://www.lunettapizzaandrestaurant.com/

Open: Sunday-Saturday 10:00am-4:00am

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d23657421-Reviews-Lunetta_Pizza_Restaurant-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/diningonashoestringinnyc.wordpress.com/6060

Please read my other blogs on Gramercy Park:

Day Three Hundred and Twenty Walking the Borders of Gramercy Park:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/51647

Day Three Hundred and Twenty One Walking the Avenues of Gramercy Park:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/53432

Day Three Hundred and Twenty Four Walking the Streets of Gramercy Park:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/53788

Lunetta Pizza & Restaurant 245 Third Avenue New York, NY 10010

Lunetta Pizza & Restaurant at 245 Third Avenue in Gramercy Park

The delicious selection of pizzas at Lunetta

The wonderful Linguini with Meat Sauce that I had that evening for dinner

Three Hundred and Twenty-Two ‘Little Caribbean Last Lap Night’ at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden August 27th, 2024 and August 27th, 2025

I needed a break after a week of running around. I had just reached out to my students for their preparation of the first day of class, have been volunteering at the Soup Kitchen and running from the Jersey Shore to the Hudson River Valley attending events, walking Boardwalks, attending festivals and County Fairs and visiting small museums that seem to be open only once a month. It has been a long but productive summer working.

After a long day of volunteering at the Soup Kitchen and walking the Avenues of Gramercy Park for my blog, ‘MywalkinManhattan.com’ (I am trying to finish the neighborhood before school starts), I went to our last members night at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden ‘Little Caribbean Last Lap’, a celebration of the Caribbean Community. It was such a beautiful night for the event.

The Cheery Blossom Esplanade on a beautiful August night

It was a beautiful sunny night in Brooklyn and the gardens were showing their summer finest. It was a warm night and perfect for touring the gardens. The Cherry Blossom Esplanade Fountain looked especially pretty with the water plants and red flowers surrounding it.

The fountain in the Cherry Blossom Esplande

The view of the fountain was especially beautiful with all the plants in full bloom.

The fountain always is bloom during the warmer months

I walked along the paths around the gardens, admiring the flowers and flowering shrubs giving us the last glimpse of summer. Members were relaxing on benches and the lawns all over gardens just as the music started up by the Lotus Ponds. What was impressive was the field of Bleeding Hearts that were in bloom while I was walking the path.

The field of bleeding hearts in the Brooklyn Botanic Gardens

When I got to the Lotus Pools, DJ Danglez was playing all sorts of Caribbean dance hits while people were enjoying cocktails and finger foods at the refreshment stands by the Lotus pools.

The music was starting by the Lotus Pools

The evening just getting started at the Brooklyn Botanic

It has been a long summer since graduation on May 17th. I swear my feet have not touched the ground since I crossed that stage at Radio City Music Hall (was that four months ago?) I swear I have run from one thing to another just trying to catch up with my past. I needed an evening of music and a bit of relaxation.

The DJ booth at the top of the pools

The food booths offered items like fried plantains, jerk chicken wings and the bar, Rum Punch and Lemonade with Mint and Rum. It was a long day and the perfect night for a cocktail. Talk about putting you in a relaxing mood.

The Rum Punch at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden Bar

The delicious Rum Punch at the Gardens

After a relaxing drink, I walked around and enjoyed the beauty of the gardens while listening to the music.

The beauty of the Gardens by the Lotus Pools

I sat on the hill above the Lotus Pools and watched the DJ spin the tunes. Since there was not enough seating in the pools area many members had the same idea and we just relaxed on the hill and listened to the energetic music.

The DJ spinning Caribbean dance music that evening

Families having a good time that evening

It was a nice way to spend the end of the traditional summer break as the Borough prepares for the Caribbean Parade in a few days. We just hope for good weather that day. As the evening wore on, traditional dancers and stilt walkers entertained the crowds with live musical performances and dance. That was a nice sneak peek before the parade.

We got a first glimpse of the festivities with dancers and stilt walkers

The dancers performing that night

Video on the dancing:

People started dancing along with the performers that night.

People dancing along the pools with the performers that evening

After the performances, the DJ spinned dance music and people got up to dance near the DJ stage. As it got dark, the lights came on and the last hour was a magical night. It really was an entertaining night and a great introduction of the rich Caribbean culture in Brooklyn.

Back on August 27th, 2025:

I found myself in the same position as last year. Overworked from preparing for classes next week, going away for a few days in Upstate New York to Bovina Center and Ithaca for a picture taking session and my evenings reviewing the students resumes. I needed a break from it all so it was back to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden for Caribbean Night.

Members Night on the lawn

Listening to Caribbean Reggae

I took some time to walk around the gardens while it was still light out. The gardens were still in full bloom in late August.

The Lotus Pools in the early evening

The colorful flowers lining the pools

The Sunflowers in full bloom

The flowers bursting color

I was not sure if this was an Iris or Lilly

Walking through the Magnolia Gardens in the Summer

Walking through the Shakespeare Gardens

The flowers in the garden in full bloom

There was so much color in the gardens

The garden in peak bloom

Touring the Japanese Gardens

After the quick tour of the gardens, it was time to relax on the lawn and listen to music.

Listening to the DJ spin

It is nice to just sit on the grass and listen to music and relax! This is what I love about the gardens. You can sit down and watch.

The Member’s Night at Twilight

Day Three Hundred and Twenty Exploring the Borders of Gramercy Park from Park Avenue South to First Avenue to East 23rd to 14th Streets August 2024

The beauty of Gramercy Park in the Summer of 2024

I started my exploration of Gramercy Park having walked many of its borders in other walks. It seems that the borders between the Flatiron District, Union Square, Rose Hill and NoMAD have become blurred. All these beautiful buildings with their protective lions, mythical creatures and mysterious faces watching and protecting them have a home on all of them.

The elegant brownstones that line the park

Gramercy Park is probably one of the nicest neighborhoods in Manhattan with its historic brownstones, beautiful park and excellent restaurants and shops. The neighborhood is steeped in history and it had been enjoyable to walk around the buildings and read their history.

The Union Square Market is always packed

https://www.grownyc.org/greenmarket/manhattan-union-square-m

As I walked around the Farmers Market, looking over the very over-priced fruits, vegetables and bakery products, I noticed more of the medallions that line the border of Union Square Park. The first one I admired without the sunlight distracting me was the medallion of the layout of the park from the 1800’s.

This is the original layout of the park in 1876 plaque

The collection of medallions around the park’s fringes

The Union Square collection of plaques

The collection of plaques in Union Square Park

The plaques around Union Square Park

The plaques around Union Square Park

I walked around the park and marveled at it on a very hot afternoon. Like most parks in former edgy neighborhoods, it fascinates me how a bunch of twenty year old’s and families sun themselves and socialize where thirty years earlier you would be harassed by homeless, drug dealers and methadone addicts. You still might see them on the fringes of the park but not like in the early 1980’s.

The expansive lawn of Union Square Park

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/union-square-park

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Union_Square,_Manhattan

The park now has a business partnership and I believe a Friends group as well. There are so many activities going on in the park, that I am sure people don’t notice all the chess hustlers and counterculture types on the 14th Street perimeter.

Looking at the southern part of the park facing 14th Street and the southern entrance to Broadway

From Park Avenue South/Union Square East is the extension of the street that lines the eastern end of the park. At the corner of East 15th Street and Union Square East is 101 East 15th Street the old Union Square Savings Bank building.

101 East 15th Street-The Union Square Savings Bank Building/Daryl Roth Theater

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daryl_Roth_Theatre

The side of the Union Square Savings Bank building

The bank itself was founded in 1848 and moved to this location in 1895. This building was designed by architect Henry Bacon in the neo classical design in 1905 and the building was finished in 1906. The bank closed in 1992 (Wiki).

I walked to the small triangle of Union Square Park that sits between East 15th and 14th Streets and came across a sculpture that I had never seen before on all my walks back from NYU. Maybe I just missed it when it was dark out. It was a depiction of an urban legend of the NYC sewers.

The alligator sculpture ‘N.Y.C. Legend’

The sewer cover top of the sculpture

The sign for artist Alexander Klingspor

Artist Alexander Klingspor

Artist Alexander Klingspor is Swedish born artist who works both in the United States and Sweden. He apprenticed under American artist Mark English. He is known for his paintings and sculptures (Wiki).

I then started my walk up Park Avenue South which is actually the western border of Gramercy Park. I have always been impressed by the W Hotel on the corner of 16th Street and Park Avenue South at 201 Park Avenue South.

The W Hotel at 201 Park Avenue South

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W_New_York_Union_Square

https://www.marriott.com/en-us/hotels/nycnu-w-new-york-union-square/overview/

Review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Hotel_Review-g60763-d220243-Reviews-W_New_York_Union_Square-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

This luxury hotel has an impressive history of being one of the innovators of luxury in the Marriott chain. The W Hotel concept was known for its edginess in design and the creativity in its restaurants. Things must be progressing as their customer gets older because their General Manager spoke to our Leadership class before I graduated from NYU and said they are softening the music (finally!) and changing the designs in the rooms. Maybe there will finally be a place to put your clothes.

The historic plaque on the building

This historic building was designed by the architects D’oench & Yost in the Modern French mode and built in 1911. Like most historic office buildings below 23rd Street, the are being refitted as hotels and condos as the desire for high ceilings and soaring lobbies have become desirable. This building had been designed for the Germanic Life Insurance Company Wiki).

I continued up Park Avenue South to East 20th Street to see another familiar building on the border of the neighborhood, 250 Park Avenue South. This building seems to be on the border of many Manhattan neighborhoods.

250 Park Avenue South

https://250parkave.com/

The embellishments on 250 Park Avenue South

The embellishments on 250 Park Avenue South on both sides of the building

On the street level of the building is the restaurant Barbounia

Barbounia 250 Park Avenue

https://barbounia.com/

Review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d611431-Reviews-Barbounia-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

250 Park Avenue South was designed by architects Rouse & Goldstone in 1911 in the Neo-Classical design. You have to look at the building from a distance to appreciate all the interesting embellishments on the sides and top of the building.

237 Park Avenue with it’s lion guardians

https://www.apartments.com/237-park-ave-new-york-ny/kcb010c/

The building 237 Park Avenue was plain but I thought these lions the adorned the build were pretty cool.

https://www.corcoran.com/building/flatiron/303

The building was designed by William Dilthey and built in 1898. The building’s style, scale and materials contribute to the special architectural and historic characteristics of the Ladies Mile District (Corcoran Group).

As you walk up Park Avenue South, the first building that makes an impression is 251 Park Avenue South. This elegant office building with its large display windows and clean lines shows of the store inside. The office building was built in 1910 and has large windows both on the ground level and towards the top of building.

251 Park Avenue South

https://moovitapp.com/index/en/public_transit-251_Park_Avenue_South-NYCNJ-site_22867315-121

One building that does standout from the others on Park Avenue South is the Calvery Church at 277 Park Avenue. The church was established in 1832 and moved to its current location in 1842. The current church was designed in the Gothic Revival style by James Renwick Jr., who designed St. Patrick’s Cathedral.

277 Park Avenue South-Church of the Calvery

https://www.calvarystgeorges.org/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calvary-St._George%27s_Parish

Another interesting building, I looked up and admired while walking up Park Avenue South was 281 Park Avenue South, the former Church Mission House. The building was designed by architects Robert W. Gibson and Edward J. Neville in the Medieval style and was built between 1892 and 1894. It was built for the Episcopal Church’s Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society (Wiki). It now houses the photography museum The Fotografista Museum.

281 Park Avenue South-The Fotografiska Museum (The Church Mission House)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_Missions_House

https://www.fotografiska.com/nyc/

Another impressive building, I passed before East 23rd Street is 105 East 22nd Street the former United Charities Building. This is the final building in what was once known as “Charity Row” (Wiki). The building was designed by architect R. H. Robertson and the firm of Rowe & Baker. It was built by John Stewart Kennedy in 1893 for the ‘Charity Organization Society’ (Wiki).

105 East 22nd Street-United Charities Building

The details of 105 East 22nd Street

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Charities_Building

The embellishments on the building

The embellishments on the building

I started walking down East 20th Street from Lexington Avenue. I crossed East 23rd Street which is the edge of the neighborhood shared with Gramercy Park, Rose Hill and Peter Cooper Village further down the block. This busy thoroughfare is lined with a lot stores, restaurants and many interesting buildings that leads to the East River.

I stopped for lunch at a Dim Sum restaurant named Awe Sum Dim Sum at 160 East 23rd Street and it was just excellent. I took my friend, Maricel, here for lunch when it first opened and we ate through most of the menu (see my reviews on TripAdvisor and DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com).

The Awe Sum Dim Sum at 160 East 23rd Street

https://awesumdimsum.us/

The menu items that the restaurant carries.

The restaurant has the most amazing appetizers to choose from that are all made in house and served fresh to you either at your table inside or one of the many tables outside (while the weather holds out). On my trip with Maricel, we ate our way through the Fried Dumplings, the Chicken Siu Mai, the Spring Rolls, the Baked BBQ Pork Buns, the Scallion Pancakes and the Soup Dumplings. On my trip today, I ordered the Soup Dumplings, Crispy Shrimp Rolls and the Siu Mai with pork and shrimp.

The Soup Dumplings here are the best

So are the Spring Rolls when they are fresh out of the fryer

On one of the trips I had the Pan Fried Pork Buns, Spring Rolls and Roast Pork Buns.

With the cost for each running between $4.00-$6.00, I could eat my way through the menu. The nice part is what a nice contemporary designed restaurant the place is to dine in. Everyone is kept ‘socially distanced’ so it is a nice place to eat.

The inside of Awe Sum Dim Sum

After a nice relaxing lunch, I was ready to continue down East 23rd Street. Criss crossing the street again, I noticed the beauty of 219-223 East 23rd Street. The building has all sorts of griffins and faces glaring out. When you stand across the street, you can admire the beauty of all the carvings on the building along the archways above and the faces staring at you from the tops of windows.

219-223 East 23rd Street

The window details of 221 East 23rd Street

https://www.cityrealty.com/nyc/gramercy-park/219-east-23rd-street/7437

Another building that stands out is 304-310 East 23rd Street. This former factory building was built in 1900 and now is the “The Foundry”, a converted condo complex. The amazing detail on the building stands out and you have to admire the stonework and details in the carvings along the building.

304-310 East 23rd Street is a former factory

https://www.cityrealty.com/nyc/gramercy-park/the-foundry-310-east-23rd-street/3880

The stone work is a standout on this building

Reaching the end of East 23rd Street, you will see the planned middle class complex of Peter Cooper Village, which has gone market rate and is now getting very upscale and seems to have a younger resident walking around then the usual middle aged residents who used to be on the list to get one of these very desirable apartments.

The entrance to Peter Cooper Village at First Avenue

https://www.petercoopervillage.com/

Across from Peter Cooper Village is the Asser Avery Recreational Center and Playground 392 Asser Avery Place with the famous baths and pools that have been part of the neighborhood for generations.

The Asser Levy Recreation Center and Park at 392 Asser Levy Place

When the baths opened in 1908, the facility was called the East 23rd Street Bathhouse. It was by architects Arnold W. Brunner and William Martin Aiken. Based on the ancient Roman Baths, the architecture was inspired by the “City Beautiful” movement, a turn of the century effort to create civic architecture in the United States that would rival the monuments of the great European capitals (NYCParks.org). The playground next to it opened in 1993.

The architecture by Arnold Brunner and William Martin Aiken resembled a Roman Bath

The fountain at the bathhouses.

The historic plaque.

The Baths and Park was named for Asser Levy, a Jewish trailblazer in colonial times when Mr. Levy and 23 Jews fled from Brazil in 1654 to seek refuge in New Amsterdam. He challenged Governor Peter Stuyvesant when he tried to evict the Jews from the colony. He was the first Jew to serve in the militia and own property in the colony (NYCParks.org).

Asser Levy

http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/9876-levy-asser-asser-levy-van-swellem

The border to the east of the neighborhood is combination of the East River Esplanade, FDR Drive and First Avenue. Since First Avenue and FDR Drive are surrounded by a combination of college campus and hospital space, it makes walking around the neighborhood tricky.

When you walk across East 23rd Street to FDR Drive, you have to cross over FDR Drive at East 25th Street behind the VA New York Harbor Healthcare System Hospital complex and the CUNY/Hunter College campus and then cross over the bridge to the Waterside Plaza complex.

The Waterside Plaza complex and the Greenway walkway

https://streeteasy.com/building/waterside-plaza

This series of apartment buildings faces the East River and FDR Drive that leads to the East River Greenway walkway and the Waterside Plaza walkway both surround the complex. The views are breathtaking on a sunny afternoon of the East River and Long Island City.

The East River Greenway and the view of Long Island City.

East River Greenway looking at East 23rd Street

I turned around from the river (which is technically not part of the neighborhood) and walked down First Avenue. First Avenue is an unusual border for the neighborhood in that on one side is the gated communities of Peter Cooper Village from East 23rd to East 20th Streets and Stuyvesant Town which is from East 20th to East 14th Streets and on the border of Avenue C at the very eastern border. These once middle-income housing that once catered to teachers, fire fighters and police have gone market rate in the last twenty years, and you can see the changes in the chain businesses that now line their side of First Avenue.

Peter Cooper Village lining East 23rd Street

https://www.apartments.com/townhomes/stuyvesant-town-peter-cooper-village-new-york-ny/?bb=21mx4myuvHnj_9a

Peter Cooper Village on the corner of East 14th Street and First Avenue

Stuyvesant Town-Peter Cooper Village was one of the biggest post WWII private developments created in Manhattan. It consists of 110 red brick buildings that spreads over 80 acres of land below East 23rd Street. The complex was developed by Metropolitan Life Insurance Company based on the earlier success of the Parkchester complex in the Bronx. The first buildings opened in 1947. The complex used to be catering to middle class/middle income rent controlled apartments but since 2006 has gone more market rate (Wiki).

I found that you are not allowed to walk around the complex without permission so I just walked around the borders of the complex that had open roads. Please just don’t ‘walk around the complex’ without permission or know someone in the complex. Still I was able to walk through some of the well landscaped corners of the complex. They do a nice job maintaining the complexes.

On the other side of First Avenue just below East 20th Street starts Stuyvesant Town

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stuyvesant_Town%E2%80%93Peter_Cooper_Village

The gardens in between the buildings in Stuyvesant Town in the Summer of 2024

On the other side of the street, there are small brick and brownstone buildings housing businesses that cater to the complex with a combination of chain and independent stores. I thought the whole Avenue could use a bit of a makeover. So much of the neighborhood was under scaffolding. Walking down First Avenue I noticed a lot of newer businesses on the complexes side of the street with more upscale restaurants and bars. Now that this is market rate housing and there have been renovations in the complex, a wealthier clientele has moved into the two complexes.

On the business side of First Avenue, it’s a combination of small restaurants such as pizzerias, delis and bodegas and services catering to the residents in both complexes. Here and there are some very reasonable places to eat. From 23rd Street to about 16th Street are businesses that cater not just to the housing complexes across the street but to the office buildings around the corner at East 14th Street.

The independent businesses lining First Avenue and East 21st Street

The independent businesses along First Avenue and 19th Street

Turning onto this part of 14th Street just above Alphabet City, I found I was far away from the old Ladies Shopping District and the beautiful architecture that once housed those stores. That is closer to Fifth Avenue and Broadway. On one side of East 14th Street are new buildings catering to office workers. The northern side of East 14th Street is a series of old brick and brownstone buildings that house small restaurants and bars.

The East 14th Street shopping district is made up of small businesses

Looking up Second Avenue at East 14th Street

As you enter the heart of East 14th Street as I rounded the corner, I saw a tiny fire fighter outside Engine 5 at 340 East 14th Street.

Engine 5 at 340 East 14th Street

https://www.instagram.com/explore/locations/32846714/fdny-engine-5-14-st-express/

https://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2022/07/the-1881-engine-company-5-340-east-14th.html

Engine 5 was founded as a Volunteer Fire Company in 1865. This firehouse was designed by Napoleon LeBrun & Son in 1881 and is still used today (DaytonianinManhattan.com).

Little Fire Fighter at Engine 5

Looking down East 14th Street shopping and dining district

There is a real diversity of businesses down this stretch of East 14th Street from First to Third Avenues.

Coyote Ugly Bar, famous of the film, at 233 East 14th Street

https://www.facebook.com/CoyoteUglySaloonNYC/

Review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d259689-Reviews-Coyote_Ugly-New_York_City_New_York.html

The bar was made famous by the movie of the same name back in 2000.

The trailer for the movie “Coyote Ugly”

Here I noticed a lot of newer buildings that have changed the dynamic of the neighborhood housing small businesses, city agencies and some of the buildings that have become part of the NYU campus. 14th Street is now a hodge lodge of different businesses such as restaurants and stores and a lot of fast-food places catering to the college students and the office workers.

328-330 East 14th Street

https://streeteasy.com/building/328-east-14-street-new_york

https://www.apartments.com/328-e-14th-st-new-york-ny/svj96n5/

This six story walk up apartment building was built in 1900 and is one of the last holdovers in this neighborhood. You have to look up at all the faces staring at you to appreciate it (Streeteasy.com).

The entrance to 328 East 14th Street

The faces staring at you from the entrance of 328 East 14th Street

As you get closer to Union Square Park, you see more of the classic architecture and upscale housing. In an ever-changing Manhattan, this area like every other section of island is being knocked down and rebuilt. The closer to the parks you get, the more upscale things get.

At 124 East 14th at the base the NYU campus at part Palladium Hall is Urbanspace Union Square. There is a selection of upscale restaurants catering not just to NYU students but to the business community as well. This just opened in August 2024 so I had not noticed it when I was recently attending NYU.

Urbanspace Union Square at 124 East 14th Street

https://www.urbanspacenyc.com/union-square

https://www.facebook.com/urbanspace/

I took a quick walk through the food court and looked over the over-priced menus of the restaurants. I could not believe the prices of these places and how it catered to college students but the place was packed. I also saw two young plain clothed policemen looking over the food court and that was a little unnerving but a sign of the times.

The food court in the afternoon

Some of the upscale restaurants at the Urbanspace Food Court

When I arrived back at my starting point in Union Square Park, it was nice to sit on the benches and listen to the street performers practicing their music. The park has been such a relief from the heat and a place to cool down is probably the reason why the wealthy called this home before the Civil War. There is a lot of calm in the park in this very busy crossroads to uptown.

Looking down East 14th Street from Irving Place

Arriving back at Union Square Park in the Summer 2024

Union Square Park in the late summer is quite spectacular

Union Square Park is just spectacular during the Summer and it is nice to just relax on the lawn or sit on the benches and read a book. It is nice to just calm down and relax and enjoy the day. The Gramercy Park area is unique in architecture, parks, restaurants and shops and there will be more to explore in the future.

Please read my other blogs on Gramercy Park:

Day Three Hundred and Twenty Walking the Borders of Gramercy Park:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/51647

Day Three Hundred and Twenty One Walking the Avenues of Gramercy Park:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/53432

Day Three Hundred and Twenty Four Walking the Streets of Gramercy Park:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/53788

Day Three Hundred and Eighteen Exploring the Streets of Union Square from East 19th to East 15th Street July 11th, 2024

It was another hot day in Manhattan. I worked a double shift at the Soup Kitchen so I was there until 3:00pm. The weather was a lot cooler since the rain showers but still hot. It was a lot better to walk around though.

I started my walk on Fifth Avenue and East 19th Street across from the old Arnold Constable Department store building. In comparison to the newer store across from the New York Public Library on Fifth and East 42nd Street, this store was four times the size. I had read online that not only was it the main store at the time but the warehouse, wholesale location and where some of the manufacturing took place. This building that stretches from Fifth Avenue to Broadway and was built in three stages over the late 1800’s.

The former Arnold Constable building at Fifth Avenue and East 19th Street

When I crossed Broadway, it was the ABC store, the former store that dominates between Broadway and 19th Street, the old main shopping district from the pre-Civil War era. After the Civil War, it would move to 23rd Street. This was the former W. & J. Sloane’s Furniture store.

The ABC Store, the former at Broadway and East 19th Street

https://abchome.com/?srsltid=AfmBOoqf4tgHjk9A7XL6PkjC2EezcOdKtzgtokdHaDH4uRbv-5pFkEJq

When I walked further down East 19th Street to Park Avenue South, I came across the new location for the Union Square Cafe at 101 East 19th Street a restaurant I had eaten at many times in the old location since the 1990’s.

The new Union Square Cafe at 101 East 19th Street

https://www.unionsquarecafe.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d457829-Reviews-Union_Square_Cafe-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

I stopped and took a look at the menu. It wasn’t the innovative menu that I remember from past trips to the old restaurant. They had the standard dishes that I had seen before. It looked like they were keeping it safe in post-COVID but I did note that the restaurant has gotten very expensive.

The new menu is expensive

https://www.unionsquarecafe.com/menu/dinner-menu/

The one thing I did like about the restaurant is that it had the most amazing outdoor seating. On a nice day this is the perfect restaurant to eat outside. The view of the quiet street and the historical buildings is a nice backdrop to the restaurant.

The outdoor cafe on this bright, sunny day

I had remembered the Union Square Cafe in the old location and the vibe was not the same here. It was like they wanted to cater to a hipper younger crowd instead of the older traditional crowd that they had before as customers. I continued walking down the street.

As you get closer to Irving Place, it starts to get more residential. Some of the homes are really beautiful. The residents have really done a nice job with their flower boxes and outdoor gardens in the neighborhood.

The homes closer to Irving Place on East 19th Street

I reached Irving Place and was confronted with the embellishments I had admired at 81 Irving Place. They were just so unusual and ghoulish. I think this is one of the more unique buildings in the neighborhood.

81 Irving Place in all its glory

https://www.elliman.com/newyorkcity/buildings-communities/detail/527-c-725-2766/81-irving-pl-gramercy-park-new-york-ny

https://streeteasy.com/building/81-irving-place-new_york

https://www.apartments.com/81-irving-pl-new-york-ny-unit-8a/5q6z3mp/

81 Irving Place is one of the most beautiful apartment complexes in the city that I have come across. The embellishments along the building are some of most detailed and elegant I have seen. This prewar Co-Op was built in 1929. You have to walk around the building to appreciate it and from the street level you can see all these wonderful details.

The strange creatures

Surround this building

On all sides of it

They stare at you

Welcoming you to the building

Protecting you

Staring at you

Welcoming you home

Happy to see you

Sad to see you

The faces great you with strange looks

Coat of Arms

Coat of Arms

Coat of Arms

I had not noticed all of this when I had walked the borders of the neighborhood. I just saw all these detail from a distance. When you walk along East 19th Street, you see all designs in one long shot. I thought whoever created this building had a sense of humor. When I turned around on this corner, you really can enjoy the beauty of the building.

Another building where I had not noticed the elegance before was 33 East 19th Street. You really have to stare up to see the details of the faces and animals.

33 East 19th Street

https://www.loopnet.com/Listing/33-W-19th-St-New-York-NY/4429643/

This former office building was built in 1920 and have been converted to loft apartments.

The faces greeting from the top of the building so you have to look up to look back

The strange stares you get from the building are almost a judgement call

The lions protecting the building from the top

As I walked past Broadway, I passed 889 Broadway, which I had passed many times before. Just like other buildings on this street, there are more details on the street level rather than on the main avenues.

889 Broadway-The former Gorham Manufacturing Company Building

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/889_Broadway

The beauty of 889 Broadway can be seen on all sides but you have to look at every angle of the building to appreciate it. There is all sorts of masonry and iron work around the building that gives it unique look. The building was designed by architect Edward Hale Kendall in the Queen Ann style and finished in 1884. The company moved uptown in 1905 when the retail district started to move further north (Wiki).

The unique carvings and metal work on the building

More faces watching you on the street making judgement calls

119 Fifth Avenue

https://www.propertyshark.com/mason/Property/13021/119-5-Ave-New-York-NY-10003/

https://streeteasy.com/building/119-5th-avenue-new_york

119 Fifth Avenue at the corner of East 19th Street in the Flatiron District neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City was built in 1905-06 and was designed by John H. Duncan in the neo-Renaissance style. It was built to be an annex to the Lord & Taylor department store buildings which took up most of the square block between Broadway and Fifth Avenue and East 19th and 20th Streets, being connected by bridge to two of them. After Lord & Taylor moved uptown in 1914, the building had multiple uses (Wiki).

The lion watching over you

The stonework at the top of building

This section of Fifth Avenue was meant to impress when this was the financial and retail center of Manhattan. The buildings were designed in the Neo-Classical and Beaux Arts style sowing the importance of the companies who created them, who are that point long gone. This area had been the center of business before and after the Civil War.

I then rounded the Fifth Avenue business core and walked down East 18th Street and came across one of the most beautifully designed firehouses I have ever seen in the City, Engine 14. In all my times walking around Manhattan, I don’t think I have ever walked down this street before because I never noticed this.

Engine 14 at East 18th Street was under renovation but it’s 1894 facade peeked out

https://nyfd.com/manhattan_engines/engine_14.html

https://sideways.nyc/discover/4QoKRmk3SMVH6oAvWq68ef/engine-co-14

The building is currently under renovation. Engine Co. 14 was erected in 1895 by architect Napoleon LeBrun, who designed this in the Beaux Arts design. This style is typical of the earliest New York City firehouses (Manhattan Sideways).

This was under the scaffolding

I turned the corner at East 17th Street and most of these buildings have a historic value to them and I was surprised by the collection of retailers on this block. I thought it would be a bit more upscale. I looked up at 16 East 17th Street and thought I heard the roar of a lion.

16 East 17th Street

https://www.corcoran.com/building/flatiron/303

https://www.bondnewyork.com/union-square/coop/16-east-17th-street-8-floor/1498324

The former office building was designed by William Dilthey and built in 1898. It had originally had been a button factory. It was converted to a Coop in 1979 (Corcoran.com/Bondnewyork.com).

The lion sculpture on East 18th Street

The lions protect you as you enter the building.

When I was walking back down East 17th Street I had not noticed this beautiful carving on 874 Broadway. This is on the corner of the McIntrye Building.

874 Broadway-The former McIntyre Building

https://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2010/07/1892-mcintyre-building-finials-snakes.html

https://www.cityrealty.com/nyc/flatiron-union-square/the-macintyre-874-broadway/6892

https://streeteasy.com/building/874-broadway-new_york

The McIntyre Building was the work of Ewen McIntrye, a pharmacist whose building had grown and had made him wealthy. He demolished the store he had on this spot and built this office building. The structure was designed by architect Robert Henry Robertson in a mixture of designs of the time. You can see Gothic Revival and Renaissance Revival and Victorian Eclectic in the design especially at the top of the building (DaytoninManhattan.com).

When I got to East 17th Street, I really got an excellent view of the northern part of Union Square Park. This is where you can see the real changes of the park. It is so lively and residents and business people use it as a place to unwind and relax.

The northern section of Union Square Park

Facing the northern section Union Square Park is 33 East 17th Street. I have always admired this building for its embellishments and the elegance of the design.

33 East 17th Street

33 East 17th Street-The Century Building

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Century_Building_(Union_Square,_Manhattan)

https://www.facebook.com/BNUnionSqNYC/

The now Barnes and Nobel Publishing was once known as the Century Building, due to Century Publishing Company making this their headquarters from 1881 to 1915. It is also known as the Drapery Building. The building was designed by architect William Schickel and was completed in 1881 as a real estate project by the department store company Arnold Constable & Company. Left empty through the 1970’s, it was renovated by Barnes and Nobel as their headquarters in 1995 (Wiki).

The details on the doorway of 33 East 17th Street

The doorway entrance to the store at 33 East 17th Street

This fascinating face is on the left side of the entrance to 33 East 17th Street

The look from this face shows the determination of a serious book buyer

As I passed Union Square Park, I passed the old Tammany Hall Building at 100 East 17th Street. The balance of power in New York City has changed since and it now the home of Petco Pet Products.

The side of the old Tammany Hall at 122 East 17th Street

The Tammany Hall building 100 East 17th Street is now a Petco

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/44_Union_Square

https://ir.petco.com/news-releases/news-release-details/petco-unveils-complete-pet-care-experience-new-flagship-new-york

The building was designed by the architectural firm of Thompson, Holmes & Converse and Charles B. Meyers for the Tammany Society political organization, known as Tammany Hall. It was designed in the neo-Georgian style and built in 1929. It was the organization oldest surviving headquarters building. After the loss of the organization’s political power in the early 1930’s, it was sold to the International Ladies Garment Workers Union and in present times has been used as a theater and performance space. It is now occupied by Petco (Wiki).

The symbols of Tammany Hall at the East 17th Street entrance

As I passed the commercial buildings of the neighborhood to the more residential buildings of Irving Place and passed the former carriage house at 121 East 17th Street.

The old carriage house at 121 East 17th Street-Martinys

https://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2015/10/no-121-east-17th-street.html

https://ny.eater.com/2022/4/19/23031877/martinys-japanese-cocktail-bar-opening-nyc-gramercy

Review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d26866444-Reviews-Martiny_s-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

This carriage house is a holdover from when Union Square was a fashionable neighborhood before the Civil War. After the war was over, the commercial neighborhood of Manhattan moved from Canal Street to between 14th to 23rd Street. This small carriage house survived all the decades of change to the neighborhood (DaytoninManhattan.com). I thought this a gracious building that added to the historical and Old New York look of the Gramercy Park neighborhood.

At the very edge of the neighborhood in Irving Place is the Washington Irving House that wasn’t his house.

The Washington Irving House that Washington Irving never lived in at 122 East 17th Street on the corner of East 17th Street and Irving Place

https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/the-irving-house-new-york-new-york

The “Irving House” was built by Peter Voorhis between 1843 and 1844, along with the adjacent two houses at 45 and 47 Irving Place. The original tenants of 49 Irving Place (at that time referred to as 122 East 17th Street) were Charles Jackson Martin, an insurance executive, and his wife, who would reside there from 1844 until 1852. Henry and Ann E. Coggill would live in it in 1853, and in 1854 it would become the home of banker Thomas Phelps and his wife Elizabeth, who would remain until 1863 (Atlasobsucra.com).

The first mention in print of Irving having lived in the house came in the Sunday Magazine Supplement of the New York Times on April 4, 1897. The article is a human interest story about Elsie de Wolfe and the means and methods she used to decorate “Irving’s house.” In 1905, de Wolfe would become known as the first professional interior decorator and it appears this article is an early attempt at publicity for her. As for the information about Irving, the article takes enormous liberties (actually, it flat-out makes things up), claiming that Irving had conceived of the house himself and was very particular about the architecture and design (Atlasobsucra.com).

Looking up Broadway to the old shopping district from East 17th Street

When I reached the border of the neighborhood at Irving Place, you could see the tradition of the old commercial and residential districts of the neighborhood. These have become blurred over time as restaurants, bars and boutiques have moved into former residential buildings.

On the way back to Union Square Park, I walked through the parks to admire all the flowers and gardens that were in full bloom and stopped to sit on a bench in the shade.

The view of Union Square Park at East 17th Street on the walk back to Fifth Avenue

In the northern part of the park is the impressive statue of Abraham Lincoln. The one thing that I like about New Yorkers as opposed to other cities is that they look at statuary as a debate but not so quick to knock it down like in other cities. Either that or no one really noticed it at the time of the riots. These valuable art works are meant to be debated and discussed not torn down or hidden because someone does not agree with them.

Located at the northern end of the Union Square is the prominent statue of President Lincoln. This statue stands and overlooks the lawn of the park.

Abraham Lincoln

https://www.whitehouse.gov/about-the-white-house/presidents/abraham-lincoln/

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/union-square-park/monuments/913

This impressive statue of Abraham Lincoln was designed by sculptor Henry Kirke Brown and was dedicated in 1870. In his statue of Lincoln, cast in 1868, and dedicated September 16, 1870, he combines a classically styled pose with a perceptive naturalism, uniting realistic detail with an idealistic stance (NYCParks.org).

Artist Henry Kirke Brown

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Kirke_Brown

Artist Henry Kirke Brown was an American born artist who had studied with artists in Italy for his training. He is best known for his figurative historical statues. He also designed the statue of George Washington in Union Square.

I started my walk down East 16th Street at the Levi Parsons Morton plaque at the corner of Fifth Avenue and East 16th Street.

The Levi Parsons Morton historic plaque

The plaque of the former Vice-President’s home on Fifth Avenue.

Vice-President and former New York Governor Levi Parsons Morton

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levi_P._Morton

On the building is also the B. Shackman & Company sign for a now long gone Fifth Avenue toy business.

The B. Shackman & Company sign

https://ephemeralnewyork.wordpress.com/tag/b-shackman-co/

The B. Shackman & Company sign was for the former B. Shackman & Company novelty and toy store that was located here until the 1970’s. The store once sold all sorts of novelties and gifts (Ephemeral New York.com/Consumer Grouch).

31 Union Square West

https://www.triumphproperty.com/Home/About

https://streeteasy.com/building/bank-of-the-metropolis

31 Union Square West built in 1902-03 as the Bank of the Metropolis was designed by architect Bruce Price and designated a landmark in 1988. This early skyscraper shows the influence of the American Renaissance sensibility celebrated at the Chicago World’s Fair of 1893 (Streeteasy.com).

You have to look at the very corners of the top of this building to appreciate the roar of these lions

Just like East 17th Street, East 16th Street is filled with more interesting historical buildings.

9 East 16th Street

https://streeteasy.com/building/9-east-16-street-new_york

https://www.compass.com/building/9-11-east-16th-manhattan-ny/281895198718436197/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/9%E2%80%9311_East_16th_Street

The building was designed by architect Louis Korn for Martin Johnson and built between 1895 and 1896 (Wiki).

The corniches have such a fanciful design to them

As I walked down the street I noticed not just architecturally beautiful buildings but some very talented street artists left their mark in the neighborhood. Being so close to the Museum of Sex, I thought some were quite unique.

A fried egg

I won’t ask!

Love symbols

More love symbols

I love looking down the street with its small individually owned shops and restaurants give me faith that New York City is coming back strong after COVID. It is nice to see the City so alive.

This block leads into the heart of Union Square Park and to where the Farmers Market was going strong.

The beauty of the park by East 16th Street in the middle of the afternoon

I walked down East 15th Street and relaxed in the park for a while as it got hotter out. I walked along the flower beds and paths and admired the hard work it takes to maintain this park.

How colorful the park is at East 15th Street

I walked down East 15th Street and admired one the old bank buildings that was going through a renovation.

101 East 15th Street-The Union Square Savings Bank Building/Daryl Roth Theater

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daryl_Roth_Theatre

The bank itself was founded in 1848 and moved to this location in 1895. This building was designed by architect Henry Bacon in the neo classical design in 1905 and the building was finished in 1906. The bank closed in 1992 (Wiki).

The beauty in the side of the building facing East 15th Street

I find it interesting to look at these old buildings with names of companies long gone and ask myself, ‘What happened to them?’ and ‘What happened to them?’ These buildings were designed and built for companies that were once at the pinnacle of their success. Now they are being used for hotels and retail stores proving New York’s resilience to change and to time.

The last building that impressed me the most in the neighborhood was the apartment building at 105 East 15th Street with its garish details and graceful windows.

105 East 15th street-The Swannanoa

https://streeteasy.com/building/105-east-15-street-new_york

https://www.cityrealty.com/nyc/gramercy-park/the-swannanoa-105-east-15th-street/737

The Swannanoa is a 10-story Neo-Renaissance apartment building designed by architect Gilbert Schellinger, who was a renowned and prolific designer of residential buildings back in the late 1800’s and 1900’s. Constructed in 1898, this building is easily recognized by its bay windowed facade, elegant marble lobby and hallways, which have all been beautifully restored (Streeteasy.com).

In all the walks of this neighborhood that I have made walking back from NYU in the evening from class and I walked around and through Union Square Park and I had not noticed the sculpture on the edge of the park.

New York Legend-the front of the sculpture

New York Legend-the back of the sculpture

This unique and very creative sculpture was designed by artist Alexander Klingspor

This fascinating sculpture shows the urban legend of alligators lining in New York City sewers. With all the pollution in the water around Manhattan and the rest of the City, there is No Way this would happen. I’m surprised they can still live in Florida.

Artist Alexander Klingspor

Artist Alexander Klingspor is Swedish born artist who works both in the United States and Sweden. He apprenticed under American artist Mark English. He is known for his paintings and sculptures (Wiki).

I then walked through the park for the last time that afternoon as it really started to get hot and watched the people sunning themselves, reading books or just conversing. Again it shows what time and a little effort being made can change things in Manhattan. I think the artists that dominated this area when it was going downhill would be shocked if they got out of a time machine to see how the area has changed.

Union Square Park in the late afternoon.

The Union Square Art and Farmers Market

Just remembering coming here for a hot dog with my father in 1982 and eating next to a transvestite I realized how times have changed. I think about all this when I am looking at young couples strolling around the Farmers Market with expensive baby carriages, looking at $5.00 for one cookie and $15.00 for a Cinnamon Banana Bread. I think it is no longer 1982 but 2024 post COVID and how far we have come. Union Square Park just shows how Manhattan just reinventing itself and changes with the time.

That’s New York City!

The other blogs on the Union Square neighborhood:

Day Three Hundred and Thirteen: Walking the Borders of Union Square:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/48888

Day Three Hundred and Seventeen: Walking the Avenues of Union Square:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/50233

Day Three Hundred and Eighteen: Walking the Streets of Union Square:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/50516

Day Three Hundred and Seventeen Exploring the Avenues of Union Square and Union Square Park July 18th, 2024

We had another long day at Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen. Since the holiday weekend, the Soup Kitchen does not close on the holiday, but we do on the weekend, so we had long lines on this Monday morning and afternoon. We spent our whole morning packing up bags of snacks and wipes for the meals that will be served tomorrow. We finished by 10:30am (talk about teamwork) and I was able to walk around Union Square Park and both Broadway and Park Avenue South and still make it back for lunch at 12:30pm. It was a long morning and afternoon.

The Farmer’s Market was in full swing again and the place was mobbed. Many people must have taken this week off as well because the City seemed so quiet today as well. It has been quiet since July 1st and will stay that way for another week. People were out in force walking through the market with their dogs, talking with their friends and sitting in the grass at the parking reading and relaxing.

I looked over all the statuary in the park and I found I had missed quite a few things that I had not seen because either they had been covered up with the Farmer’s Market going on or tables of things people were selling in the park. There were all sorts of medallions on the history of the park and the neighborhood and there was a statue of a mother and her child that formed the old water fountain of the park. In the corner of the park near 14th Street, there is a statue of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi. I had never noticed it before because all the landscaping and flowers had surrounded it.

The statue of Gandhi is hiding in the bushes on the southern corner of the park

Statue of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahatma_Gandhi

https://www.gandi.net/en-US/about-us

Artist Kantilal B. Patel

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/union-square-park/highlights/12380

As I walked around the Farmers Market, looking over the very over-priced fruits, vegetables and bakery products, J noticed more of the medallions that line the border of Union Square Park. The first one I admired without the sunlight distracting me was the medallion of the layout of the park from the 1800’s.

This is the original layout of the park in 1876 plaque

I walked around the park and marveled at it on a very hot afternoon. Like most parks in former edgy neighborhoods, it fascinates me how a bunch of twenty year old’s and families sun themselves and socialize where thirty years earlier you would be harassed by homeless, drug dealers and methadone addicts. You still might see them on the fringes of the part but not like in the early 1980’s.

The expansive lawn of Union Square Park

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/union-square-park

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Union_Square,_Manhattan

The park now has a business partnership and I believe a Friends group as well. There are so many activities going on in the park, that I am sure people don’t notice all the chess hustlers and counterculture types on the 14th Street perimeter.

Looking at the southern part of the park facing 14th Street and the southern entrance to Broadway

I started my walk up Park Avenue South which is actually the western border of Gramercy Park. I have always been impressed by the W Hotel on the corner of 16th Street and Park Avenue South at 201 Park Avenue South.

The W Hotel at 201 Park Avenue South

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W_New_York_Union_Square

https://www.marriott.com/en-us/hotels/nycnu-w-new-york-union-square/overview/

Review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Hotel_Review-g60763-d220243-Reviews-W_New_York_Union_Square-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

This luxury hotel has an impressive history of being one of the innovators of luxury in the Marriott chain. The W Hotel concept was known for its edginess in design and the creativity in its restaurants. Things must be progressing as their customer gets older because their General Manager spoke to our Leadership class before I graduated from NYU and said they are softening the music (finally!) and changing the designs in the rooms. Maybe there will finally be a place to put your clothes.

The historic plaque on the building

This historic building was designed by the architects D’oench & Yost in the Modern French mode and built in 1911. Like most historic office buildings below 23rd Street, the are being refitted as hotels and condos as the desire for high ceilings and soaring lobbies have become desirable. This building had been designed for the Germanic Life Insurance Company Wiki).

I continued up Park Avenue South to East 20th Street to see another familiar building on the border of the neighborhood, 250 Park Avenue South. This building seems to be on the border of many Manhattan neighborhoods.

250 Park Avenue South

The embellishments on 250 Park Avenue South

The embellishments on 250 Park Avenue South on both sides of the building

On the street level of the building is the restaurant Barbounia

Barbounia 250 Park Avenue

https://barbounia.com/

Review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d611431-Reviews-Barbounia-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

250 Park Avenue South was designed by architects Rouse & Goldstone in 1911 in the Neo-Classical design. You have to look at the building from a distance to appreciate all the interesting embellishments on the sides and top of the building.

The building 16 East 17th Street was plain but I thought these lions the adorned the build were pretty cool.

https://www.corcoran.com/building/flatiron/303

The building was designed by William Dilthey and built in 1898. The building’s style, scale and materials contribute to the special architectural and historic characteristics of the Ladies Mile District (Corcoran Group).

On the way back to Union Square Park, I passed the Tammany Hall building at 100 East 17th Street that I never noticed before because it was always under scaffolding being renovated. Now you could admire it the way the architects wanted you to originally.

The Tammany Hall building 100 East 17th Street is now a Petco

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/44_Union_Square

The building was designed by the architectural firm of Thompson, Holmes & Converse and Charles B. Meyers for the Tammany Society political organization, known as Tammany Hall. It was designed in the neo-Georgian style and built in 1929. It was the organization oldest surviving headquarters building. After the loss of the organization’s political power in the early 1930’s, it was sold to the International Ladies Garment Workers Union and in present times has been used as a theater and performance space. It is now occupied by Petco (Wiki).

The design on the top of the building is the logo for Tammany Hall

The Society of Tammany or Columbia Order sign above the entrance on East 17th Street

https://www.britannica.com/topic/Tammany-Hall

From Park Avenue South Union Square East is the extension of the street that lines the eastern end of the park. At the corner of East 15th Street and Union Square East is 101 East 15th Street the old Union Square Savings Bank building.

101 East 15th Street-The Union Square Savings Bank Building/Daryl Roth Theater

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daryl_Roth_Theatre

The side of the Union Square Savings Bank building

The bank itself was founded in 1848 and moved to this location in 1895. This building was designed by architect Henry Bacon in the neo classical design in 1905 and the building was finished in 1906. The bank closed in 1992 (Wiki).

I walked to the small triangle of Union Square Park that sits between East 15th and 14th Streets and came across a sculpture that I had never seen before on all my walks back from NYU. Maybe I just missed it when it was dark out. It was a depiction of an urban legend of the NYC sewers.

The alligator sculpture ‘N.Y.C. Legend’

The sewer cover top of the sculpture

The sign for artist Alexander Klingspor

Artist Alexander Klingspor

Artist Alexander Klingspor is Swedish born artist who works both in the United States and Sweden. He apprenticed under American artist Mark English. He is known for his paintings and sculptures (Wiki).

Across the street from the park on the way up Union Square East is tucked off in the corner of the park is the statue of General Lafayette. Why this important figure of the Revolutionary War is hidden is unfortunate.

The statue of General Marie-Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert du Motier de La Fayette, Marquis de La Fayette

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/union-square-park/monuments/884

General Marie-Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert du Motier de La Fayette, Marquis de La Fayette

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilbert_du_Motier,_Marquis_de_Lafayette

The larger-than-life-sized figure was sculpted by Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi, who also designed the Statue of Liberty (1886), another gift from the French government that figures prominently in New York Harbor. The granite pedestal designed by H.W. DeStuckle was donated by French citizens living in New York. (NYCParks.org).

Artist Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fr%C3%A9d%C3%A9ric_Auguste_Bartholdi

Frederic Auguste Bartholdi was a French born artist best known for designing the Statue of Liberty. Bartholdi attended the Lycée Louis-le-Grand in Paris where he graduated in 1852. He then went on to study architecture at the Ecole nationale superieure des Beaux-Arts (Wiki).

I walked through the northern half of the park through the now busy Farmers Market again to get to Broadway. While I walked through the crowds all I kept saying to myself is ‘doesn’t anyone work anymore?’ I could not understand the large crowds on a early Friday afternoon.

When I walk through the parks in the City, all I see is twenty and early thirty year old’s sunning themselves, talking on their cell phones or chatting with friends. In 1990, I was behind a desk at Macy ‘s busy as hell all day when I was all of their ages. Things have changed in thirty years.

The Union Square Market on a busy Friday afternoon

The northern end of the park from Broadway the day of the Union Square Farmers Green Market

https://www.grownyc.org/greenmarket/manhattan-union-square-m

I began the walk up Union Square West to Broadway. The stretch from Union Square Park from East 14th Street to East 20th Street was once a major shopping district right before the Civil War and is lined with the buildings of former department and specialty stores with their cast iron fronts and detailed embellishments. In some buildings you can still see the carvings of the old companies in the design of the front of the building.

These buildings are the ghosts of Sloan’s, Lord & Taylor, Arnold Constable, McCreery’s, FAO Schwarz, and other specialty stores whose names have either disappeared or who long moved uptown closer to Fifth Avenue. The irony of gentrification and time and the location of these beautiful buildings is that they are now filling up with new upscale independent and chain merchants filling in where past merchants have left. Old New York becomes new New York again.

The first building I noticed as I walked up Union Square West was under scaffolding. The Lincoln Building I could not see from the street or the view from the park but was able to read their historical plaque at street level. The building was designed by the architectural firm of R.H. Robertson with a combination of steel and masonry construction in the Romanesque Revival design. The building opened in 1890 (NY Landmarks Commission).

The historic plaque of the Lincoln Building which is under renovation with scaffolding in front of it. It will be interesting to see what emerges.

There were many buildings that faced Union Square Park that gives it a historical feel. The elegant look of the buildings with their neo-Classical and Beaux Arts designs gave the park the feel of the Victorian era of business. The first was 25 East 15th Street with its interesting details.

Union Square West facing the park

25 East 15th Street was built at the turn of the last century and it now fully renovated.

The beautiful details at the top of the building at 25 East 15th Street

The next building I admired was right across the street from the park as well at 31 Union Square West

31 Union Square West

31 Union Square West

https://www.triumphproperty.com/Home/About

https://streeteasy.com/building/bank-of-the-metropolis

31 Union Square West built in 1902-03 as the Bank of the Metropolis was designed by architect Bruce Price and designated a landmark in 1988. This early skyscraper shows the influence of the American Renaissance sensibility celebrated at the Chicago World’s Fair of 1893 (Streeteasy.com).

The details at the top of the building

The lions roar at the top of 31 Union Square East give the top of the building a unique style

Right next door to the old Bank of the Metropolis building is 33 Union Square East which I thought looked like a Moorish castle. This building has an illustrious past.

The Decker Building Union Square West

33 Union Square East-The Decker Building

The building was built for the Decker Brothers Piano Company and was designed by architect John H. Edelmann. It was completed in 1892 and has influence of Venetian and Islamic styles in the details of the building. From 1968 to 1973, loft space in the building was used by artist Andy Warhol for his studio, ‘The Factory’. This is where Valerie Solaris shot the artist in 1968 (Wiki).

The magnificent Moorish design on the top of the building

The Islamic influences of the building can be seen in its details at the top of the structure

Artist Andy Warhol

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andy_Warhol

I passed the park and the Farmers Market and took the walk up Broadway which I have made many times on my full walk of Broadway blog. This part of the neighborhood was once the main shopping district just before and after the Civil War and many of these buildings still stand in all their beauty. Unless you are a architectural major, many people don’t appreciate the elegance of this part of Broadway and its steep history in New York City business and trade.

Day One Hundred and Thirty-Nine: Exploring Broadway blog:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/9069

The first building I admired but I have to admit never really noticed is 867 Broadway. This is a building steeped in retail history as the home of Ditson & Company, retailers selling musical instruments and books (Daytonian in Manhattan.com).

867 Broadway is a brick building

https://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2015/11/the-ditson-co-bldg-no-827-broadway.html

https://www.propertyshark.com/mason/Property/13001/867-871-Broadway-New-York-NY-10003/

The building was designed by architect George Washington Pope and was designed in the Romanesque Revival style. The building was completed in 1882 as the top marker is carved at the top of the building. They conducted business on the ground floor of the building until 1906 when they moved to a new headquarters on East 34th Street (DaytonianinManhattan.com).

I can’t believe this building is from 1882

The next series of buildings have the Cast Iron design that was becoming fashionable after the Civil War at 873 and 881 Broadway. These show the change of direction of American businesses at that time there was a permanence to their business and these buildings were meant to last.

873 Broadway-The former Hoyt, Spragues & Company Department store

https://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2012/10/the-1868-hoyt-building-nos-873-879.html

https://marketplace.vts.com/building/873-broadway-new-york-ny

https://streeteasy.com/building/873-broadway-new_york

As Union Square gave way from being a residential district to a commercial district after the Civil War, the old homes were torn down and were being replaced by a modern shopping district. The retailer Hoyt, Spragues & Company hired architect Griffith Thomas to design this store as the new headquarters of the company on the southern corner of 18th Street and Broadway. The other half of the block was the new Arnold Constable & Company store at 881 Broadway that stretched from Fifth Avenue to Broadway. The architect designed this store as well (Wiki/DaytonianinManhattan.com).

The cast iron front of 873 Broadway and its elaborate details

Next to 873 Broadway is the Fifth Avenue extension of the Arnold Constable & Company building. The company owned this entire side of the block and was an extremely large department store for its time.

873 Broadway-The Arnold Constable Building

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Constable_%26_Company

https://www.propertyshark.com/mason/Property/13019/881-887-Broadway-New-York-NY-10003/

Arnold Constable & Company had outgrown its Canal Street headquarters (which still exists at 309-311 Canal Street) and moved to this new location in 1869. The store had two more expansions to Fifth Avenue in 1872 and 1876 to Fifth Avenue for both retail and wholesale businesses. The facade on Broadway was designed by architect Griffin Thomas who had designed the the Hoyt, Spragues & Company building to give a continuous flow to the block. Arnold Constable added the Mansard Room as the building was designed in the Second Empire Commercial style. The store moved to Fifth Avenue in 1914 right across from the NY Public Library (which is now the annex across the street) (Wiki).

The Mansard Roof of the old Arnold Constable building designed in the Second Empire Commercial style

One of the buildings on Broadway that I have always admired for its details and embellishments is 889 Broadway. You really have to walk around this building to appreciate its details and the beautiful carvings and faces that stare back at you.

889 Broadway-The former Gorham Manufacturing Company Building

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/889_Broadway

The beauty of 889 Broadway can be seen on all sides but you have to look at every angle of the building to appreciate it. There is all sorts of masonry and iron work around the building that gives it unique look. The building was designed by architect Edward Hale Kendall in the Queen Ann style and finished in 1884. The company moved uptown in 1905 when the retail district started to move further north (Wiki).

The cast iron and carved details of 889 Broadway

The carved faces of the embellishment of 889 Broadway

The last building in this former shopping district is the old Lord & Taylor building at 901 Broadway. This is one of the most elegant and most underrated building in the neighborhood. The problem with the building was the renovation of the Broadway side of the building throws off the rest of the design. The company used to use this building in its old Christmas window designs in their former Fifth Avenue store.

901 Broadway-The former Lord & Taylor building

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lord_%26_Taylor

https://architizer.com/projects/901-broadway/

https://streeteasy.com/building/former-lord-taylor-building/4

The former Lord & Taylor building is the border of the neighborhood and was the northern tip of the shopping district that expanded along 23rd Street from Broadway to Sixth Avenue. The store was designed in a Cast Iron design by architect James H. Giles. The store has one of the first steam-powered elevators in the City when it opened. This was all part of the Ladies Shopping Mile from just before the Civil War to the Gilded Age before it moved to 34th Street around 1905 (Wiki/Lord & Taylor history blog).

I made my way back down Broadway to admire the other side of the avenue and its historical set of buildings. The first was 888 Broadway, the home of ABC Carpet and the former home of W. & J. Sloan.

888 Broadway-The old W. & J. Sloan’s now ABC Carpeting

https://www.cbre.com/properties/properties-for-lease/office/details/US-SMPL-145821/888-broadway-new-york-ny-10003

https://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2011/12/w-j-sloane-buildling-880-888-broadway.html

The building that now houses ABC Carpeting was once the headquarters of W. & J. Sloan. The building was designed by architect William Wheeler Smith and was completed in 1882. The store that once held floor after floor of high end rugs, furniture and decorative products for the home moved uptown in 1912 (DaytonianinManhattan.com).

The details of 888 Broadway

The details of 888 Broadway

Next to ABC Carpet is 876 Broadway, the former D.S. Hess Building. This impressive brick building was built for David S. Hess, a decorator and furniture dealer.

876 Broadway-the former D.S. Hess Building

https://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2012/07/the-1884-d-s-hess-building-nos-876-878.html

https://streeteasy.com/building/876-broadway-new_york/3rd-floor

https://www.realtor.com/realestateandhomes-detail/876-Broadway-Fl-4_New-York_NY_10003_M32603-94846

The brick building was designed by architect Henry Fernbech in the Renaissance style and was completed in 1884. The details are in the panels by the doors and display window. D.S. Hess moved out of the building in 1984 to a new location on Fifth Avenue and a series of retailers have rented the space since (DaytoninManhattan.com).

a

874 Broadway-The former McIntyre Building

https://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2010/07/1892-mcintyre-building-finials-snakes.html

https://www.cityrealty.com/nyc/flatiron-union-square/the-macintyre-874-broadway/6892

https://streeteasy.com/building/874-broadway-new_york

The McIntyre Building was the work of Ewen McIntrye, a pharmacist whose building had grown and had made him wealthy. He demolished the store he had on this spot and built this office building. The structure was designed by architect Robert Henry Robertson in a mixture of designs of the time. You can see Gothic Revival and Renaissance Revival and Victorian Eclectic in the design especially at the top of the building (DaytoninManhattan.com).

Broadway from another angle

874 Broadway from the front angles showing the commercial section of the building on East 17th Street

The elegant roof and details of 874 Broadway

I finished walking the neighborhood in just three hours and was able to enjoy walking around Union Square Park and just relaxing with some cold water on one of the benches. This is when I really discovered all the statuary and attributes to the park that I missed all these years. I had always been so busy passing by the park on my way to something that I never really noticed it before.

The Farmers Market was in full swing in northern section of Union Square Park when I returned and as I walked through the northern end of Union Square Park, I passed the Abraham Lincoln statue. It still surprises me that all these presidential statues survived the riots in 2020. Unlike other cities, New Yorkers did not knock down their statues.

The statue of Abraham Lincoln in Union Square Park

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/union-square-park/monuments/913

Located at the northern end of the Union Square is the prominent statue of President Lincoln. This statue stands and overlooks the lawn of the park.

Abraham Lincoln

https://www.whitehouse.gov/about-the-white-house/presidents/abraham-lincoln/

This impressive statue of Abraham Lincoln was designed by sculptor Henry Kirke Brown and was dedicated in 1870. In his statue of Lincoln, cast in 1868, and dedicated September 16, 1870, he combines a classically styled pose with a perceptive naturalism, uniting realistic detail with an idealistic stance (NYCParks.org).

Artist Henry Kirke Brown

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Kirke_Brown

Artist Henry Kirke Brown was an American born artist who had studied with artists in Italy for his training. He is best known for his figurative historical statues. He also designed the statue of George Washington in Union Square.

From there I strolled to the edges of the park admiring the landscaping and the work that the Union Square Partnership along with volunteers do to keep the park looking pristine. Like Bryant Park on West 42nd Street, these parks had a dark past made lighter by modern times and a new found enjoyment found in New York City parks.

I then just relaxed and admired the beauty of Union Square Park. I got to watch the sunbathers and dog walkers in the park.

Union Square Park in the late afternoon

As I explored the borders of the park, I came across a statue of a mother and child. I never noticed that this was an old water fountain for the park. It is always blocked off by vendors during either the Farmers or Arts Markets. With nothing in front of it, I could finally see it in its full form.

The Union Square Drinking Fountain

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/union-square-park/monuments/797

Consisting of a bronze statuary group atop a granite stepped pedestal, it was crafted by German sculptor Karl Adolph Donndorf and donated by philanthropist Daniel Willis James to promote public health as well as the virtue of charity (NYCParks.org).

Artist Karl Adolph Donndorf

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adolf_von_Donndorf

Artist Karl Adolph Donndorf was a German born artist know for his large realistic sculptures. He had served as an artist apprentice to further his education on sculpture (Wiki).

I look at where Union Square started then progressed to and then what it turned into in the late 1960’s, 70’s and 80’s and what it is today coming back to where it was before and it gives me faith in how a City keeps morphing. It has its ups and downs over time but then keeps progressing. It improves and neighborhoods find new purpose.

How I have seen this neighborhood change from the 1980’s to today is a gap as large as the Atlantic Ocean. The twenty year old’s today can not imagine what I saw in this park when I was twenty. It is night and day. This shows the resilience of Manhattan and of New York City and how with each year it reinvents itself. I can only imagine the neighborhood in 2030 and what we will see then.

It will be fun to find out.

The other blogs on the Union Square neighborhood:

Day Three Hundred and Thirteen: Walking the Borders of Union Square:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/48888

Day Three Hundred and Seventeen: Walking the Avenues of Union Square:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/50233

Day Three Hundred and Eighteen: Walking the Streets of Union Square:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/50516

Day Three Hundred and Fifteen Walking the New York Fancy Food Show June23rd-June 25th, 2024

One of the highlights of my industry and my favorite amongst the big shows geared towards the hospitality field is the New York Fancy Food Show held at the Javits Center every June.

The Specialty Food Association sponsors the show every year at the Javits Center

https://www.specialtyfood.com/

The Fancy Food Show is aisle after aisle of the latest products that will be stocking our grocery stores, specialty shops and gift stores. From the latest cheeses and pates to snack foods, flavorful drinks and waters to the latest heat and eat prepared foods to almost anything else to stock your pantry with, they are being showcased at this show. It takes me the full three days to get through the show just to walk down the aisles and see what new products there are to sample. That is not enough time plus you get over-whelmed with all the foods to taste and flavors to experience.

My first day I concentrated on the first floor of the show. The first several aisles were dedicated to vendor after vendor of cheeses. I have learned over the years to pace myself when I start the show, or you go into system overload. You have to take your time in the first three aisles of the show or else you will not be able to enjoy all the other samples you need to experience to form an opinion.

I was funny that I felt this way because when I said this to a cheese merchant, she repeated that comment back to me. She said, “You know, I keep asking everyone to try our cheese, but they keep saying they have to pace themselves. Why do they keep saying that?” I reminded her that we have aisles and aisles of food to see and a lot of first timers start to fill themselves up on the first three aisles and then can’t handle the rest of the show. She did not seem pleased with that answer and went back to work.

I continued to take my time walking the Food Show. Traveling aisle after aisle of cheeses, crackers, cookies and olive oils. The snack foods selection was extensive this year. I guess the pandemic got people creating food items that they liked, and they want to make a cottage business out of it. The problem is that there are only so many different ways to make caramel popcorn or chocolate chip cookies.

The biggest problem with food items at the show is when vendors are trying to be too specific who they want their customers to be or catering to a niche customer who is gluten intolerant or looking for all natural foods. I have had to keep a straight face when I had to sample all natural sodas with no sugar or cookies without eggs, wheat, sugar and are dairy free that tasted like saw dust. I know what the vendor is trying to achieve but when an item has no flavor no one will want to buy it. Some products can achieve this but somewhere in the recipe they will have to put a few ingredients back.

I found a lot of successful items at the show that did not agree with judges when it came time to give awards out. Some of their choices just had no flavor, taste or appeal to a lot of customers. I judged products by a couple of standards, how different was it in product, how it tasted and was the flavoring different from other items on the market and creativity in packaging. Some of the snack foods and sodas that won awards boggled me because they had no flavor and no enticing packaging.

I found that some of the best products in the French and Korean Food Pavilions. The Asian countries really had the pulse of appealing to a younger customer or an older customer who liked things from their childhood. The French always know packaging. They are famous for it. The color schemes and the pictures just appeal to a sophisticated customer. It is also the taste of their foods. The flavors are direct and intense. Their snacks had more unusual flavors and better cooking methods. There just seemed like they wanted to bring gourmet foods to the snack masses of the United States. I was impressed by a handful of items that I highly recommend to those who want to indulge in a treat.

The following were the best products I sampled on the first day of the 2024 Fancy Food Show and I want to share them with other foodies and culinarians. These products stood out the most for their taste and packaging:

In the French Pavilion, the first brand I highly recommend is the potato chip brand Simply Gourmand brand Brets, whose crispy flavorful snacks were the best potato chips at the show. in the Snack Food category, I thought they were the best I tasted. With their unique flavors, the best being the Camembert Cheese and the Miel Moutarde, the honey Dijon mustard flavors and colorful packaging, were outstanding. I had to beg the vendor for two bags to take home to sample. The crispy fried French potatoes were perfectly flavored and salted and they filled the bag with chips and not air like American companies.

The Brets brand of potato chips by Simply Gourmand

https://www.simplygourmand.com/brets/

The samples I took home were excellent. I loved the crunch and the perfect seasonings.

The other item from the French Pavilion were the cookie brands by Gozoki Deceures, both the Maison Jacquemart and the Noots. These buttery delights were a treat when I tried the different varieties.

The cookies from Maison Jacquemart were excellent

I sampled the various flavors of cookies from Maison Jacquemart and the cookies look as good as they taste. I was able to try their Les Petits Lunettes, a small type of Linder tart cookie filled with strawberry jelly and chocolate cream and their mini Almond cakes, that tasted like a Madeline. You could taste the sweet butter in the cookie dough and the fresh jelly in the cookie. The crunchiness of the cookie with the sweetness of the filling was a delectable combination.

It was the same with their tartlets as well. There was a thick layer of chocolate, strawberry and apricot jelly on the top of their cookies with a buttery cookie base that showed me that they did not skimp anywhere when producing their product.

Gozoki Douceurs products were my pick for best baked products at the show

https://www.linkedin.com/company/gozoki/

The samples they gave me of the Strawberry Jelly and the Chocolate filled tarts were delicious

In the Canadian Pavilion, around lunch time on my first day of the show, I sampled the Chicken Nuggets by Al Safa Foods and these were impressive especially the spicy ones. They were juicy on the outside and crisp on the inside and the spicy flavor had a nice kick to it.

The Al Safa Chicken nuggets were one of the best chicken products I tasted at the show

What I like about Al Safa Chicken products is the quality and taste of the chicken. The product cooked up nicely and the taste would appeal to children and adults alike.

in the Italian Pavilion, there were many honey products being sampled at the show but the best flavored honey was from Casa Folino were stood out for flavor and packaging.

The Casa Folino flavored honey is a different alternative to jellies when topping toast or biscuits

The Casa Folino line of honeys had a zippy set of flavors and were unique to the show. Other vendors offered different flavored honeys due to the bees or the region they were produced but this company added the flavorings to the high quality honey making a unique accompaniment to biscuits an

The Asian Pavilion offered so many amazing products and these are the best of the best when I walked this part of the show:

I was very impressed with food items from both Korea and Thailand with a few vendors from Taiwan as well. What I liked about the Asian food products is the unique flavors and bright packaging of their products. They made their food products appealing to the eye and engaging to the senses and the packaging was fun. Once they reeled you in with the engaging packaging, the flavors were very intense with different tastes like Rose, Melon and Mango for sweets and peppers and cheeses for their savory products.

HBAF Snack Products

https://en.hbaf.com/

These Cheeseburger popcorn snack from HBAF were very impressive. The seasonings really did taste like a cheeseburger and you could taste the beef and tomato flavorings in the popcorn. Their other snacks had unusual flavors as well. I think these innovative snacks will work well in the American market. They also sampled a Cookie & Cream Malt balls and Honey Butter Almonds that were also delicious. All their products had a delicious taste and engaging packaging. The perfect stocking stuffer at the holidays.

Yummy LOL has the most interesting packaging

Yummy LOL candies had some of the most creative packaging in the candy category. The vibrant colors and the way that the company combines the use of candy as a toy makes this packaging all the more fun. The product was candy and a toy all in one package.

The quality of the candy is very good. The flavors of the candy have a high level of sweetness and I notice sometimes that the Asian made candies have a more intense flavor than their American counterparts. I think it is the use of different fruit flavors being used and the way these taste.

Sappe Products

https://www.sappe.com/en/

In the Thailand Pavilion, the Sappe products had the top beverage of the show. I have not tasted such refreshing sodas in a long time with such unique flavors. The use of unusual fruits and things like rose petal gave the sodas a bite and a flavor that I had never had before. I loved the Aloe Vera sodas, the Mogu Mogu beverages but the standout of their products was these floral Keaf sodas that were so refreshing and had such a bite to them that they were the perfect accompaniment with any spicy dish.

Keaf Sodas have an amazing and zesty taste to them

The Keaf sodas Relaxing Mood, Day Dreamer and Romantic Date Night flavors when well chilled have refreshing flavor due to all natural ingredients and just the way the tastes combine together. These sodas will not be on the market until next year but should be a huge hit in the specialty soda category. Their sodas were the best at the food show.

Of the American made products that I was most impressed with I have talked about in previous blogs on the food show such as Wein-Chuan Chinese Dim Sum products which are such high quality and taste homemade like they are made in the restaurant. Another was Goodie Girl cookies with their packaging and cookie flavors almost mimic Girl Scout cookies. I have found the high quality and consistency and packaging to be excellent.

Goodie Girl Cookies

Goodie Girl Cookies I have mentioned in past blogs as being a high quality brand of cookies and crackers. These delightful treats remind me of a version of Girl Scout cookies and even the Rep told me everyone gets confused by them. Even the packaging and flavors of the cookies are very similar to the latest versions of the scouts cookies.

The best part about Goodie Girl cookies is that you do not have to wait until once a year to buy them. Their Birthday Cake cookies have a creamy sweetness to them and the Fudge Stripped are a crisp sweet cookie and both can satisfy any sweet tooth.

I spent a lot of time visiting the Wei-Chuan booth at the show during meal times to sample all their products and I highly recommend the whole assortment.

The Wei-Chuan products of Dumplings and Spring rolls

https://www.weichuanusa.com/en/frozen-foods.html

Wei-Chuan is another American based company that makes high quality Chinese-American Dim Sum products. They were sampling two types of dumplings, the Chicken and the Pork along with their delightful crisp Spring rolls. I have always been impressed by the quality and taste of their appetizers. They are a product that are restaurant quality and you would have thought they were made in front of you.

A new standout product that I thought was fun and had a lot of promise was Sweetapolita, a specialty sprinkle set for kid’s parties.

Sweetapolita packaging of their specialty sprinkles for children’s birthday parties I think would be a huge hit with adults as well.

https://sweetapolita.com/

When I talked with the founder of the company, she said that when she used to have parties for her kids and said the best part of the party is when the kids had their own toppings. She said she created the product because she found that kids loved sprinkles and the creativity of decorating their own cakes. She found no product that fulfilled the need the way she wanted it so she imagined her own line and that was how she created her brand.

After the first day of the show, I had covered the whole first floor which is like walking four football fields of food. The SFA sponsored on the first night of the show the ‘Five Boro Block Party’ for all the attendees of the show. I was so stuffed from all the sampling that I had been doing at the show that I had no appetite whatsoever. There was a series of food trucks offering complimentary to all the vendors and attendees’ things like tacos, quesadillas, hot dogs and ice cream. Of all the times that something like this was free.

The Five Boro Block Party at the end of the first night of the show

They gave the attendees who wanted to have something to eat a generous sample of the different ethnic foods. Even though everything looked and smelled delicious, all I could manage after a day of sampling foods was a soft serve ice cream cone with a cherry dipped topping.

The variety of food trucks made for a nice light meal

This gave attendees a chance to socialize after the first long day of the show. They had a great DJ at the food truck festival and an actress walking around as the Statue of Liberty on stilts doing photo ops with all the guests. I thought that was fun evening and stayed for bit before I dragged myself back to Port Authority.

The Statue of Liberty who walked around the show greeting guests

I was so tired and stuffed with food that leaving early was no problem for me. So many of my friends imply that it must be so much fun to sample free food all day. It is a lot of work not to be tempted to try everything and to walk what is about four football fields of different types of food can really throw off your body. Too much of too many different things. I had to walk around the City for a bit before I went home that first day of the show.

I love walking around the City during the early evening

The second day of the food show I was raring to go and started the show on the bottom level of the Jarvis Center, where parts of the show was broken down by category and by country and state not just by product, so it gave me a chance to spend some more time in the country pavilions.

The dumplings or Momo’s were a Nepali dumping that were spicer than than their Chinese counterparts

https://www.facebook.com/mothersmagicworld/

The Momo’s had a spicer flavor to them due to the chilies in the dough and meats

The selection of Momos had a fiery flavor to them and reflected the colder climate where these types of dumplings originated. They are a different twist to typical Asian food. They used different spices and were hotter than most dumplings I tried at the show.

In the Chinese pavilion, one of the most popular vendors was ACC Foods LLC. The women who worked there were making everything fresh and right in front of us.

ACC Foods out of China had some of the best quality Dim Sum at the show

https://www.facebook.com/p/ACC-Foods-LLC-100054619171853/

They had employees making fresh pork dumplings and soup dumplings as we watched and then cooking them fresh as we waited for them to come out of steamers and frying pans.

All the samples for ACC Foods were prepared right in front of us

Everything at this booth was made from scratch and then cooked and served under the heat lamps. Trust me, nothing lasted that long where food sat at this booth. The quality, consistency and taste were all excellent.

In the Taiwan Pavilion, Pocas Foods had some of the most amazing food products from the show

Pocas Foods had a fantastic display of items at the show in both the beverage and the candy categories. I was blown away by the quality of their beverages and flavors of their candies. I have not tasted products that have such a vivid taste and in such unique flavors like melon, pineapple and mango.

https://www.pocas.com/

The Tik Tok beverages to me were some of the best in show at the Food Show. Not only were each of the flavors I tried delicious, but each had small pieces of gelatin inside the bottles to add another sweet treat to each beverage. These were made in Vietnam.

Their freeze-dried candy was so intensely sweet and crunchy. Such a delicious and unusual candy and with each bite it seems to get sweeter. I loved crunching on these and they are addictive.

Another excellent spread that I had tasted was by Trai foods. This brand of sauces were fiery and flavorful.

The delicious and punchy sauces by Tari Foods.

https://tarisauce.us/

Their sauces had amazing taste. They gave me a sample of the Amarillo Pepper to take home and delicious hot sauce added a nice kick to chicken and hot dogs.

There were several small batch snack makers I met in the Innovation and New Products Pavilion on my last day of the show. The popcorn from Little Lad’s was delicious and had flavors that I did not see in the more commercial brands.

Little Lads is a high quality product

The representative from Little Lad’s was so impressed by my comments of his product that he sent me home with a big bag of his Sea Salt & Olive Oil Popcorn which was a delight. I loved the subtle flavor of the popcorn and their was a nice saltiness to it.

Another unique and delicious snack were the Caulipuffs snacks. These puffed snacks were made with dried cauliflower flour and then air puffed into a type of ‘doodle’ snack.

Caulipuffs are snacks made from cauliflower

https://caulipuffs.com/

Caulipuffs were a big surprise to me at the Food Show and one of the most delicious snacks. Not only were they lighter than most of the snack foods I sampled but they were flavored so nicely. Both the honey barbecue and the white cheddar had a rich flavor and the had a nice crunch in every bite.

The Jaju Pierogi had delicious fillings and great flavor

https://www.jajupierogi.com/

I had tried a variety of pierogi at the show, but the brand Jaju stood out the most. These small batch dumplings had a variety of fillings, and the Sweet Potato with the Caramelized Onions had a sweet and savory flavor in every bite. They were also the perfect size for a side dish or a snack and cooked up well.

There were many frozen and fresh pizzas that I sampled at the Food Show but PiOOa Pizza stood out not just for the quality and taste but for the ethical stance they took in the company.

PiOOa Pizza

PiOOa pizza frozen pizzas stood out not just for their delicious flavor and consistency in the crust but the owner is deaf, and the company gives opportunities for those who are deaf employment in the company. The staff here works together to create these wonderful frozen pizzas.

One of the friendliest vendors I met were the Mother/Daughter team at Miss Hannah’s Gourmet Popcorn.

The mother/ daughter team behind Miss Hannah’s Gourmet Popcorn

https://www.misshannahspopcorn.com/

One of the surprising popcorn snacks I sampled was in the New Products Pavilion were the deliciously sweet Miss Hannah’s Tutti Frutti and Caramel Popcorn. Made in small batches by hand it is right now only available online. This decadent popcorn tastes like each individual popped kernel was coated individually with a touch of sweetness in every bite. It’s delicious taste and simple but fun packaging will make a wonderful gift or host present.

UpTop Candies are truly out of this world

The candy from UpTop Treats was very unique both in packaging, taste and in the logo. I thought this was a great product for children especially ones who were interested in the Space Age. The candies were freezes dried fruits that were sweet and crunchy and were the perfect snack for kids. Even this big kid (me), was impressed by the flavor and quality as well as the portion size of the product.

I loved the logo and the little space creature they created for the candy. I told the vendor that these would wonderful to sell in the Natural History and Children’s Museums. This is their get selling point. She had not even thought of that angle for the product. I also liked the little stuffed animal the had and said it was another good selling point.

O Sole Mio Prepared entrees

https://www.osolemio.ca/product-category/frozen-prepared-meals/individual-portion/

On my last day of the show, the vendors were trying to get rid of their samples because no one wants to travel home with boxes of samples. The vendor from O Sole Mio was explaining his product to me that it was a refrigerated, fully prepared meal that just needed to be unwrapped, mixed in the enclosed container and then microwaved and served. He offered me two samples and I foolishly took only one. It was delicious and easy to prepare.

The packaging and the dinner I prepared at home

The product was delicious and so easy to to put together. Each part of the entree, the sauce, grilled chicken and the pasta were fully prepared and in their own individual bags. I just put them into the microwaveable container, mixed it up and cooked it for four minutes and dinner was done.

The quality of the entree was excellent and it had a nice creamy rich flavor

I thought the product was a nice alternative to these expensive food kits and if you are in a rush or tired after a long day at work, this is a very nice alternative to eating out.

The best for last was a vendor that I have featured a few times before in my blogs on the Food Show. Featured in the Korean Pavilion, Melona frozen desserts. These were excellent and some of the best frozen ice pops and novelties of the show. These fruit purée ice pops are the best at the Food Show but hard to find at the supermarkets.

Melona Frozen Products

https://enjoymelona.com/

They have about a dozen different flavors of ice pops and not your typical flavors. Melona frozen foods have some of the most original and creative flavors like honeydew melon, mango, watermelon, banana and green tea. Their ice cream products, some in the shape of fish which has symbolism in Korea, were filled with vanilla ice cream and fruit syrup wrapped in a sweet rice flower dough. Not just beautiful to look at but delicious in taste.

Melona’s version of an ice cream sandwich filled with Vanilla ice cream and sweet strawberry syrup

The selection of frozen treats by Melona products put other ice cream companies to shame with their unique flavors, beautiful packaging and delicious taste. I had to keep coming back to their booth just to try all the flavors all three days of the show. They could not have been more generous with their samples and their representatives encouraged you to try more.

The New York Fancy Food show had many other quality products to sample and purchase for stores but these were the products that really stood out to me in taste, flavor, packaging and originality in the product itself. If I owned a grocery store, these are the products that I would stock and recommend to customers. In the three days I attended the show, these were my set of winners. They were wonderful in every way.

I will be looking for them in grocery stores soon. I look forward again to the Fancy Food Show in 2025.

Day Three Hundred and Thirteen Walking the borders of Union Square from Fifth Avenue to Irving Place from 14th to 20th Streets June 16th and 17th, 2024

I finally got into Union Square and at a nice time of the year. The park was packed with people sunning themselves, reading and enjoying the sunshine. The Farmers Market was in full swing and offered so many wonderful things for sale.

What a beautiful day to start the walk in Union Square Park

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/union-square-park

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d136291-Reviews-Union_Square-New_York_City_New_York.html

I was able to tour the neighborhood twice in the two day period over Father’s Day Weekend once at twilight just as the sun was setting and the lights were coming on at the cafes and restaurants and then the next morning after breakfast on a clear and sunny day. The buildings took on two different personalities at different times of the day.

The first part of the walk was revisiting lower Fifth Avenue from West 20th to West 14th Streets. Again which I had just covered for my blogs on the Lower Flatiron District. Just after the Civil War to WWI, the was the Midtown Manhattan of that era with the banking and shopping districts where you still see these traces in the beauty of the buildings. From Beaux-Arts to Neo-Classical, these former headquarters buildings were meant to impress. I started my tour passing the same Fifth Avenue buildings that share the border with the Lower Flatiron District.

I passed 156 Fifth Avenue as I walked this part of the neighborhood again and admired it for its detailed stonework carving and unusual styled roof. The Presbyterian Building was built in 1893 and was designed by architect James B. Baker and was designed in the French Gothic style. It was to be used by the Presbyterian Church as their base for domestic and foreign missions and used as office space. The Panic of 1893 changed that, and they had to lease the space out (Daytonian in Manhattan).

156 Fifth Avenue

https://www.loopnet.com/Listing/156-Fifth-Ave-New-York-NY/14050649/

http://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2011/02/presbyterian-building-156-fifth-avenue.html

I then took the long walk down Fifth Avenue and all the architectural treasures it contains. This was once the core of the old ‘Midtown Manhattan’ after the Civil War and the City started its march uptown.

148 Fifth Avenue

https://streeteasy.com/building/148-5-avenue-new_york

https://www.loopnet.com/property/148-5th-ave-new-york-ny-10011/36061-08210041/

This unique office building was built in 1900 as a office building. This building is currently under renovation.

The details on 148 Fifth Avenue

The details of 148 Fifth Avenue

The next interesting building on the walk down Fifth Avenue was 119 Fifth Avenue which had just finished being renovated.

119 Fifth Avenue

https://www.propertyshark.com/mason/Property/13021/119-5-Ave-New-York-NY-10003/

https://streeteasy.com/building/119-5th-avenue-new_york

119 Fifth Avenue at the corner of East 19th Street in the Flatiron District neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City was built in 1905-06 and was designed by John H. Duncan in the neo-Renaissance style. It was built to be an annex to the Lord & Taylor department store buildings which took up most of the square block between Broadway and Fifth Avenue and East 19th and 20th Streets, being connected by bridge to two of them. After Lord & Taylor moved uptown in 1914, the building had multiple uses (Wiki).

The details of 119 Fifth Avenue

The details of 119 Fifth Avenue

One of the most impressive buildings in the neighborhood is the old Arnold Constable Store building that stretches from its Broadway entrance down the entire block on 18th Street to its Fifth Avenue entrance.

115 Fifth Avenue-Arnold Constable Department Store

https://buildingsofnewengland.com/tag/115-fifth-ave-nyc/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Constable_%26_Company

https://www.realtyhop.com/building/115-5th-avenue-new-york-ny-10003

This seven-story department store building was designed by architect Griffith Thomas in 1868 for the prominent dry-goods company of Arnold Constable & Company. ‘The Palace of Trade’ as it became known as, is located stretches between Broadway and Fifth Avenue. The stunning Second Empire building is faced in marble, brick, and cast-iron, features stacked arch orders and a prominent, two-story, pavilioned mansard roof.  Arnold Constable & Co. was founded by Aaron Arnold, who opened a small dry goods store in the city in 1825 (Buildings of New England).

As the business prospered he moved into larger quarters numerous times. In 1842, James Constable, an employee, married Arnold’s daughter Henrietta and was subsequently made a partner. From this, the company was renamed Arnold Constable & Co. In its heyday, Arnold Constable & Co. was the largest dealer to the elite in New York City, supplying the latest fashions to a clientele that included the leading families in the city (Buildings of New England). 

103 Fifth Avenue

https://streeteasy.com/building/103-5-avenue-new_york

https://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2011/07/1896-beaux-arts-pierrepont-building-103.html

The building had an interesting history. The building was designed by architect Louis Korn and was designed in the Beaux-Arts design. It was completed in 1896 and it was named after Edwards Pierrepont, whose mansion had stood on the site before the construction of the building. When it opened the building was popular small publishing and mercantile companies (Dayonianinmanhattan.com).

The 103 Fifth Avenue details

103 Fifth Avenue embellishments

In between the buildings there was plaque to Levi Parsons Morton, the former Governor of New York State and the Vice-President of the United States under President Benjamin Harrison. This is where his home was located.

The plaque of the former Vice-President’s home on Fifth Avenue.

Vice-President and former New York Governor Levi Parsons Morton

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levi_P._Morton

On the building is also the B. Shackman & Company sign for a now long gone Fifth Avenue toy business.

The B. Shackman & Company sign

https://ephemeralnewyork.wordpress.com/tag/b-shackman-co/

The B. Shackman & Company sign was for the former B. Shackman & Company novelty and toy store that was located here until the 1970’s. The store once sold all sorts of novelties and gifts (Ephemeral New York.com/Consumer Grouch).

91 Fifth Avenue

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/91-93_Fifth_Avenue#:~:text=91%2D93%20Fifth%20Avenue%20is,built%20between%201895%20and%201896.

https://www.propertyshark.com/mason/Property/12971/91-5-Ave-New-York-NY-10003/

This beautiful office building was designed by architect Louis Korn for businessmen Henry and Samuel Korn in 1896. The office building currently houses small companies (Wiki).

The details of women looking down at us on the street at 91 Fifth Avenue

The lion details on 91 Fifth Avenue.

The last building on this part of Fifth Avenue was under an extensive renovation and I was not able to get the pictures that I wanted but still you could see the details in the building around the renovations.

Looking up Fifth Avenue from 16th Street

The Kensington Building was designed by architect Samuel Sass in the Beaux-Arts design and completed in 1906. Some of the first tenants of the building was the Milton Bradley company. The building was converted into a residential building in 1996 and were designed by architect Joseph Pell Lombardi (Landmark Branding LLC).

73 Fifth Avenue

https://www.cityrealty.com/nyc/flatiron-union-square/the-kensington-73-fifth-avenue/4044

The details on 73 Fifth Avenue

This part of Fifth Avenue has kept its character all these years and now that these buildings are back in vogue because of their history and design detail, they are being refitted for modern times. These were once the headquarters of companies that are now long gone but are housing the new future companies leading us into the 21st Century.

Looking up Fifth Avenue from 15th Street and the core of the Lower Flatiron District.

West 14th Street is a Hodge podge of building types and in various conditions. COVID really hit 14th Street businesses hard and between the pandemic, urban renewal of the neighborhood and changing tastes of building types, there is only a few buildings left from the era when this was a major shopping street at the turn of the last century. This was before everything moved up to the 23rd Street and Sixth Avenue area.

Much of the block between Fifth and Sixth Avenue is in the process of being knocked down, renovated or both. Still there are some architectural gems still left on the street.

On the corner of Fifth Avenue and West 14th Street is 80 Fifth Avenue.

80 Fifth Avenue from the corner view

https://www.loopnet.com/Listing/80-Fifth-Ave-New-York-NY/4632221/

80 Fifth Avenue is an elaborately-detailed Renaissance Revival style office building that was constructed by the architecture firm of Buchman and Fox. This building was constructed in 1908 to be used as manufacturing and office space (Kates, Ariel. Off the Grid).

Seeing better detail work on the building from the West 14th Street view.

This beautiful building’s lower and upper levels feature decorative floral and geometric ornamentation, elaborate cornices, and angled bay windows on the third floor. Ornamented pilasters are found at either side of these windows, with slightly more austere middle floors and in its arched windows and elaborate ornamentation at the top story (Kates, Ariel. Off the Grid).

The beautiful detail work on 80 Fifth Avenue.

The building’s history has a long past of companies that have worked in these offices but the most prominent had been the creation of the gay organization, The National Gay Task Force. Among the Task Force’s accomplishments during the time it was located at 80 Fifth Avenue included getting the American Psychiatric Association to end its classification of homosexuality as a mental illness; getting the federal government to end its ban on employing gay or lesbian people in any federal agencies (Kates, Ariel. Off the Grid).

When I turned to the corner and walked down East 14th Street, I know seeing developers attempt to rid Union Square of its once seedy past. As I pass the park itself, I still remember the days when this was a major drug haven, a major methadone clinic was located here and sensible people stayed far away from Union Square Park. It took Danny Meyers and the creation of Union Square Cafe in 1985 at 101 East 19th Street and then the closing of the methadone clinic to change all that. The popularity of the Farmers Market and the renovation of the park in the late 1980’s changed the complexity of the neighborhood.

The original Union Square Cafe at 21 East 16th Street

https://www.unionsquarecafe.com/about/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d457829-Reviews-Union_Square_Cafe-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

My father and I on Father’s Day at the original Union Square Cafe for lunch in early 2000’s

There were also a series of buildings around the square that were knocked down and new buildings built in their place most notably the old S. Klein on the Square building replaced by a new office building, a branch of NYU opening on the southern end of the park and the Zeckendorf Towers buildings at One Union Square changed the who complexity of Union Square into a desirable neighborhood. In the 21st Century, it is now becoming a trendy neighborhood catering to the tech industry.

Even more changes are on there way:

https://www.curbed.com/2021/01/union-square-park-partnership-plan.html

As I crossed Fifth Avenue to West 14th Street towards Union Square I remembered that this was the most southern part of the old Ladies Shopping District before the Civil War. It had been the theater district as well with the Academy of Music closer to Irving Street. After the Civil War, the shopping and theater district moved uptown towards 23rd Street, then to 34th Street and then ending at 42nd Street.

Between Fifth Avenue and Broadway along the southern border of Union Square, there is not much left of that shopping district. Many of the older buildings had been knocked down in the early 1900’s for new stores and since then much of the non-landmarked buildings were again knocked down in the early 1980’s to improve the district. S. Klein stood empty from 1975, when it closed for business to 1983 when it finally was knocked down for the Zeckendorf Towers and that changed the district forever (Wiki).

Still when I walked from Fifth Avenue to Union Square there was one building that stood out amongst all the new late 20th buildings on 14th Street and that was 22-26 East 14th Street.

This impressive building at 22-26 East 14th Street built along the former Ladies Shopping Mile was once meant to impress. This was once the home for Baumann Brothers Furniture & Rugs

https://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2015/07/the-baumann-bros-bldg-no-22-26-east.html

The building was designed by architects David and Jon Jardine for successful textile merchant James McCreery in 1881. The building was designed in the Neo-Grec and Neo-Classical design and until 1897 was the home for Baumann Brothers Furniture and Carpet store. It then passed to Woolworth’s and the broken up for other retailers. It is now home to Footlocker but you can still see the beauty in this building with its elaborate embellishments (DaytonianinManhattan.com)

You really have to stop and look at its Neo-Classical details to really appreciate this building

The intricate details of the McCreery Building

The floral details in the middle of the building

I got a chance to walk around Union Square once I finished my tours of Fifth Avenue and East 14th Street. It was a beautiful sunny day and people were outside enjoying the sun and shade in the park. The Farmers Market was going on which made it even busier. By the subway station, there were guys hustling to play chess. A typical day in Union Square Park. Thirty years ago just like Bryant Park or Madison Square Park, sensible people stayed away from these squares of green with the garbage and graffiti and drug dealing. How a City transforms itself over a period of time is confounding. From the ashes of COVID, another New York City is rising.

What impresses me the most about the park is that the crazy protestors never knocked our statues down. Inside Union Square are three very prominent and very famous statues of George Washington, Abraham Lincoln and General Lafayette.

George Washington

https://www.mountvernon.org/george-washington/

We are lucky that our statues were not knocked down like other cities in 2020. This impressive statue of General Washington sits at the entrance of Union Square.

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/union-square-park/monuments/1676

This impressive statue of George Washington was designed by sculptor Henry Kirke Brown and was dedicated in 1856. The moment Brown depicts is that of Evacuation Day, November 25, 1783, when Washington reclaimed the city from the British. With outstretched hand, he signals to the troops in a gesture of benediction (NYCParks.org).

Artist Henry Kirke Brown

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Kirke_Brown

Artist Henry Kirke Brown was an American born artist who had studied with artists in Italy for his training. He is best known for his figurative historical statues. He also designed the statue of Abraham Lincoln in Union Square.

On the southern part of Union Square is the Climate Clock atop the NYU Dorms at 60 East 14th Street. The facade of the building makes quite the statement above Union Square if you stop to look at its details.

The new climate clock and NYU dorms replaced the once seedy shopping district the was Union Square at 60 East 14th Street

https://climateclock.world/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Climate_Clock

The view of Union Square through the ages:

The Climate Clock melds art, science, technology, and grassroots organizing to get the world to #Actin Time. The project is centered on a simple tool: a clock that counts down the critical time window to reach zero emissions (our “Deadline”), while tracking our progress on key solution pathways (“Lifelines”) By showing us what we need to do by when, the Clock frames our critical mission — a rapid and just transition to a safe climate future — and puts it at the very forefront of our attention (Climateclock.world.com).

The building that single handedly changed Union Square (outside of Union Square Cafe) was the Zeckendorf Towers. This replaced the long closed S. Klein Department store that had closed in 1975 and lead to the seediness of the area. The store had been boarded up for years and led to the downfall of Union Square in the early 1980’s.

S. Klein Department Store on Union Square East was boarded up for years

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S._Klein

When the store was torn down to make way for the Zeckendorf Towers, this completely changed the area. That and the renovation of Union Square in the late 1980’s and the creation of the Union Square Farmers Market made this a desirable area once again.

The Zeckendorf Towers at One Irving Place/One Union Square East

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeckendorf_Towers

The success of the Zeckendorf Towers changed the complexity of the neighborhood for years to come replacing the S. Klein Department store. The residential building was designed by the architectural firm of Davis, Brody & Associates and was name for owner William Zeckendorf. The building was finished in 1987.

Tucked off in the corner of the park is the statue of General Lafayette. Why this important figure of the Revolutionary War is hidden is unfortunate.

The statue of General Marie-Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert du Motier de La Fayette, Marquis de La Fayette

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/union-square-park/monuments/884

General Marie-Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert du Motier de La Fayette, Marquis de La Fayette

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilbert_du_Motier,_Marquis_de_Lafayette

The larger-than-life-sized figure was sculpted by Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi, who also designed the Statue of Liberty (1886), another gift from the French government that figures prominently in New York Harbor. The granite pedestal designed by H.W. DeStuckle was donated by French citizens living in New York. (NYCParks.org).

Artist Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fr%C3%A9d%C3%A9ric_Auguste_Bartholdi

Frederic Auguste Bartholdi was a French born artist best known for designing the Statue of Liberty. Bartholdi attended the Lycée Louis-le-Grand in Paris where he graduated in 1852. He then went on to study architecture at the Ecole nationale superieure des Beaux-Arts (Wiki).

As the sun started to set on this Sunday afternoon, I passed 4 Irving Place which the first couple of floors were under scaffolding. I admired the clocktower on the top of the building, the beautiful embellishments and just the elegance of the building. The building is home to Consolidated Edison (ConEd).

The was designed by architect Henry Janeway Hardenbergh and architectural firm of Warren and Wetmore in the Neo-Classical design. The first phase of the building was started in 1911 and both phases were finished by 1929. The original section of the building is in the picture with the wings of the building to both sides (Wiki).

I passed 4 Irving Place, the Con Ed Building, just as twilight hit the building and you could see the beauty in its shadows.

Its clock told the time of the early evening.

The next morning when I walked past it again, you could see the true beauty of its design.

I also noticed that the roof top held a more intricate design than I noticed the night before. Look up at its intricate details to admire its beauty. This is part of the originally designed building.

Once I turned onto Irving Place, the old core of its industrial past gave way to the bohemian village it would become and stay in the future. This was once ‘THE’ neighborhood to live in and has stayed that way since even through the rough times of Union Square.

The most impressive object you will see in the neighborhood is this bust of Washington Irving that sits outside the Washing Irving Campus on Irving Place.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washington_Irving_Campus

This bust of Washington Irving was created by artist Friedrich Beer

Artist Friedrich Beer

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Beer

https://www.artprice.com/artist/112959/friedrich-beer

Artist Friedrich Beer was a German born artist known for his works on busts of famous individuals.

The neighborhood goes from commercial to more residential as you get further up Irving Place and closer to Gramercy Park. The borders of Union Square overlap with Gramercy Park and the Flatiron District between East 18th and East 20th streets so I revisited buildings that J had seen before. If people went in a Time Machine to Manhattan from 100 years ago they would still see the same buildings but with totally different uses.

The Washington Irving house at 122 East 17th Street and Irving Place (Washington Irving never lived here)

https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/the-irving-house-new-york-new-york

The “Irving House” was built by Peter Voorhis between 1843 and 1844, along with the adjacent two houses at 45 and 47 Irving Place. The original tenants of 49 Irving Place (at that time referred to as 122 East 17th Street) were Charles Jackson Martin, an insurance executive, and his wife, who would reside there from 1844 until 1852. Henry and Ann E. Coggill would live in it in 1853, and in 1854 it would become the home of banker Thomas Phelps and his wife Elizabeth, who would remain until 1863 (Atlasobsucra.com).

The front of the house facing Irving Place

The first mention in print of Irving having lived in the house came in the Sunday Magazine Supplement of the New York Times on April 4, 1897. The article is a human interest story about Elsie de Wolfe and the means and methods she used to decorate “Irving’s house.” In 1905, de Wolfe would become known as the first professional interior decorator and it appears this article is an early attempt at publicity for her. As for the information about Irving, the article takes enormous liberties (actually, it flat-out makes things up), claiming that Irving had conceived of the house himself and was very particular about the architecture and design (Atlasobsucra.com).

The entrance to the house at 122 East 17th street

The plaque on the house dedicated to the writer created by artist Alexander Finta

In 1930, a restaurant called the Washington Irving Tea Room was operating in the basement of the building and in 1934 a plaque sculpted by Rodin-student Alexander Finta was put up on the north facade that would cement the story in the public consciousness. Today, the surrounding area remains covered in references to Irving, from the large art installations in the nearby W Hotel to the Headless Horseman pub on 15th Street(Atlasobsucra.com).

Artist Alexander Finta

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Finta

https://www.askart.com/artist/Alexander_Finta/108330/Alexander_Finta.aspx

Artist Alexander Finta was a Hungarian born artist who moved to the United States in 1923. He had studied mechanical engineering in his own country and had studied with Auguste Rodin. His is known for his elaborate busts. He spent the remainder of his career at 20th Century Fox Studios (Wiki)

All along the Irving Place corridor, the street is lined with interesting and historical buildings many of them turned into restaurants or inns. There are many historic plaques in this neighborhood and some creative architecture. The first building that caught my eye was 53 Irving Place, which is the home of Pierre Loti Wine Bar.

Review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d2136974-Reviews-Pierre_Loti_Wine_Bar-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

The home of Pierre Lotte Mediterranean Restaurant at 53-55 Irving Place was the home of O Henry

When I looked at the side of the building near the entrance, I was this historic plaque that said that this was the home of author William Sidney Porter (O. Henry). The author lived here from 1903-1907 and wrote the “Gift of the Magi” while living here and eating at Pete’s Tavern across the street (Wiki).

The historic plaque for author O Henry at 53-55 Irving Place

Author William Henry Porter

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O._Henry

Down the road at is Pete’s Tavern, one of the most famous and the oldest literary restaurants in the City. The restaurant was founded in 1864 as the Portman Hotel and then in 1899 when changed to Healy’s Cafe when it was run by John and Tom Healy. Then in 1899, it was bought by Peter D’ Belles and renamed Pete’s Tavern. The restaurant was a ‘Speakeasy’ during prohibition and the dining rooms have not changed much over the last over hundred years (Pete’s Tavern website).

Pete’s Tavern was busy on the night of my first part of the walk.

Pete’s Tavern at 129 East 18th Street

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pete%27s_Tavern

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d527869-Reviews-Pete_s_Tavern-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

The entrance of Pete’s Tavern

The entrance to Pete’s Tavern on Irving Place

The painting outside of Pete’s Tavern of the Speakeasy years

Pete’s Tavern was busy both nights that I passed it. I had not eaten there in over a decade when I had a holiday dinner there with friends by I remember the food and service being excellent. The restaurant is really special during the Christmas holiday season from what I can remember.

My friends Barbara, Lillian and I after dinner at Pete’s Tavern in the early 2000’s

Another restaurant I went to before my friend, Barbara, moved to Florida was a Friend of the a Farmer at 77 Irving Place, a farm to table concept before it became very popular. I remember the food being wonderful but the place being a bit noisy. She lived on the fringe of Gramercy Park and had passed this restaurant many times and had wanted to try it that evening.

Another great restaurant is Friend of a Farmer at 77 Irving Place

https://www.friendofafarmer.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d496790-Reviews-Friend_of_a_Farmer-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

Across the street, I passed this apartment building at 76 Irving Place. I loved the outside embellishments on the building and the friendly looks you get from the statuary. The building was built in 1897 by architect Lyndon P. Smith (Corcoran Group).

You have to look up to admire the details of 76 Irving Place

https://www.corcoran.com/listing/for-sale/76-irving-place-manhattan-ny-10003/23012133/regionId/1

https://streeteasy.com/building/76-irving-place-new_york

The entrance to 76 Irving Place with its tiny angels

This woman guards the front of Irving Place like guard

This woman greets you at 76 Irving Place

The classic architecture of the block especially as you get closer to Gramercy Park changes from smaller apartment buildings to brownstones lining the parks southern border. Gramercy Park offers some of the most interesting architecture. This ivy covered building that impressed me so much as the sun was going down is at 80 Irving Place.

This building at East 19th street and Irving Place is typical for the buildings that once lined this neighborhood

80 Irving Place is currently under renovation

https://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2014/04/the-1854-house-at-no-80-irving-place.html

https://www.trulia.com/home/80-irving-pl-new-york-ny-10003-31506439

The house was built as a single family mansion between 1853 and 1854 and had been the home of the prominent Wood family and then to actress Agnes Ethel Tracy. Since 1987, it has been a single family home again. What I thought was interesting was that the house was used in the movie “Working Girl” as Sigourney  Weavers character’s home (DaytoninManhattan.com).

Look up at the beautiful details of 81 Irving Place

81 Irving Place in all its glory

https://www.elliman.com/newyorkcity/buildings-communities/detail/527-c-725-2766/81-irving-pl-gramercy-park-new-york-ny

https://streeteasy.com/building/81-irving-place-new_york

https://www.apartments.com/81-irving-pl-new-york-ny-unit-8a/5q6z3mp/

81 Irving Place is one of the most beautiful apartment complexes in the city that I have come across. The embellishments along the building are some of most detailed and elegant I have seen. This prewar Co-Op was built in 1929.

The details along the windows

The embellishments of the building

The dragons and demons that adorn the windows

The embellishments of the building

The unusual creatures at the doorways

The embellishments of the building

The creatures guarding the windows

The embellishments of the building

The rooftop gardens are protected by these griffins

The building has a whimsical almost storybook imagine of creatures protecting their home.

Where I want my future home to be when I retire to the City and can afford it is 19 Gramercy Park South. I have always loved this building since I fell in love with the neighborhood over thirty years ago. I always wanted a home with a key to Gramercy Park. The building has that classic turn of the last century look about it and it has always been my dream to live here when I retire. I need to hurry and win the lottery.

My dream home would be at 19 Gramercy Park South with a key to the park

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/19_Gramercy_Park_South

I had thought this was a apartment building but it is actually a single family mansion with 37 rooms. It was built in 1845 and when the mansion was extended by Stamford White in 1887 was the home of socially prominent Stuyvesant-Fish family. It is currently back to being a single family mansion (Wiki).

As I turned the corner at East 20th Street I never tire of peering into Gramercy Park and keep wishing for that key. Gramercy Park is still one of the most beautiful and fantastical parks in New York City. It has once been part of the Stuyvesant estate and got its name from Gramercy Farm that once stood here. It is the only piece of the old Rose Hill Farm still in existence (Wiki).

Gramercy Park on a glorious Spring day

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gramercy_Park

Another view of Gramercy Park

I love the beauty of this park. There is an English feel to this park that reminds me of London and some of the neighborhoods that I visited it there. I have never been inside the park but it would be fun to walk around. I found out from researching for another blog on the Rose Hill neighborhood is that Gramercy Park is the corner and last surviving parcel of the old Rose Hill Farm.

East 20th street across from the park has some of the most interesting brownstones in Manhattan. They add to the historic value of the neighborhood. When you turn the corner of Gramercy Park off Irving Place, you will see the classic architecture that surrounds the park. It is one of the most picturesque neighborhoods in Manhattan.

The beauty of East 20th Street across from Gramercy Park

Right across the street from the park sits one of the best known brownstones in the neighborhood housing the “Players Club”. This club was made famous by the movie “Manhattan Murder Mystery’” for the wine tasting scene.

The “Players Club” at 16 East 20th Street

https://theplayersnyc.org/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Players_(New_York_City)

The historic plaque on the building

The scene from “Manhattan Mystery”:

The movie “Manhattan Murder Mystery” by director Woody Allen was shot in the neighborhood

The mansion was built in 1847 and was the home of Valentine G. Hall. The building was bought by actor Edwin Booth, the older brother of John Wilkes Booth who assassinated President Lincoln. He kept a suite for himself at the top of the home and then turned the rest of the building into the “Players Club” in 1888. The club now serves as a social club with artifacts of the theater arts on display and a private restaurant (Wiki).

I loved the entrance way to 13 East 20th Street

https://streeteasy.com/building/13-east-20-street-new_york

This Co-Op building was built in 1910 and has the most elegant appearance at the entrance. This really looks like old New York.

I love the elegance of 13 East 20th Street

Another historical building on the block was 10 East 20th Street which was the home of painter Robert Henri.

East 20th Street the home to painter Robert Henri

The historic marker for painter Robert Henri

Artist Robert Henri

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Henri

https://www.nga.gov/collection/artist-info.1391.html

Artist Robert Henri was an American born artist. He studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts Philadelphia and at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. He is best known for his works in the Impressionism movement (Wiki).

As I crossed Park Avenue South, I entered the familiar neighborhood of the Flatiron District meeting the bottom of the Rose Hill neighborhood. This is when Manhattan neighborhood borders get confusing. Since the Union Square technically ends at East 18th Street but that would leave two blocks open without being in a specific neighborhood, I stretched it to East 20th Street. This again borders the Flatiron and Rose Hill/NoMAD section of the City. I figure that I will let the realtors figure this one out.

When you cross the border at Park Avenue South, I admired the same buildings I had seen several month earlier when I walked these streets and avenues just as Fall semester at NYU began.

The building at 250 Park Avenue South houses the restaurant Barbounia in the base of the building.

Barbounia 250 Park Avenue

https://barbounia.com/

Review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d611431-Reviews-Barbounia-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

250 Park Avenue South was designed by architects Rouse & Goldstone in 1911 in the Neo-Classical design.

The detail work on 250 Park Avenue South

https://www.officespace.com/ny/new-york/2231029-250-park-avenue-south

The restaurant ‘Barbounia’ at 250 Park Avenue South

The detail work above the doorway to the building

Next to this building is another beautiful historic building at 42 East 20th Street, housing another great restaurant, The Gramercy Tavern.

The Gramercy Tavern

https://www.gramercytavern.com/

Review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d424094-Reviews-Gramercy_Tavern-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

The historic NS Meyer Building that houses the Gramercy Tavern restaurant

42 East 20th Street

https://www.14to42.net/20streete042.html

42 East 20th Street was designed by the architectural firm of Neville & Bagge and was built in 1890 in the Beaux-Arts design. N.S. Meyer was a military company selling Army and Navy equipment since 1868 (14to42.net).

The beauty of the NS Meyer Inc. building

Next to that is another beautiful building the at 36 East 20th Street. This commercial building was built in 1901 with Beaux-Arts details on it.

The building at 36 East 20th Street

36 East 20th Street

https://streeteasy.com/building/36-east-20-street-new_york

https://www.loopnet.com/Listing/36-38-E-20th-St-New-York-NY/32032143/

The building is a commercial building that was built in 1901.

You can see the beauty of all the details

The details on the top of 36 East 20th Street

Right down the street at 28 East 20th Street is the Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace Historic Site Museum. It had been closed for so long after COVID I never thought it would open any time soon. It did finally open late last year and I thought this was one of the most interesting of the historical homes in the City. This one had been completely recreated by the family and then furnished with family heirlooms from the original house. That makes for an interesting museum.

Theodore Roosevelt

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodore_Roosevelt

The Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace National Historic Site at 28 East 20th Street

https://www.nps.gov/thrb/index.htm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d143273-Reviews-Theodore_Roosevelt_Birthplace_National_Historic_Site-New_York_City_New_York.html

My review on VistingaMuseum.com:

At 28 East 20th Street is the Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace Historic Site, which is an exact replication of the original home that President Theodore Roosevelt was born and raised. The house that originally stood on the site was built in 1848 and was bought by the Roosevelts in 1854. Theodore Roosevelt was born there on October 27, 1858, and lived in the house with his family until 1872, when the neighborhood began to become more commercial and the family moved uptown (Wiki).

The Roosevelt House Living Room

The original building was demolished in 1916 to make way for retail space, but upon the death of Roosevelt in 1919 the lot was purchased and the house rebuilt by the Women’s Roosevelt Memorial Association, which eventually merged with the Roosevelt Memorial Association in 1953 to form the Theodore Roosevelt Association. 

Theodore Roosevelt’s bedroom

Noted female American architect Theodate Pope Riddle was given the task of reconstructing a replica of the house, as well as designing the museum, situated next door, that serves to complete the site (Wiki).

The Parlor of the house

You have to take time when the museum is open to take the independent tour. When you walk around the house you will swear that the family had just left the room to grab something. It is well worth the trip to see how the family lived before they moved uptown.

The next building on the block that is unique is 7 East 20th Street, the old Holtz Building.

The old Holtz Building at 7 East 20th Street

The ornate, Beaux-Arts edifice was erected in 1907 as a commercial building with the Holtz Restaurant located on the lower two floors. In the early 1900’s Phillip Braender commissioned architect William C. Frohne to design a 12-story building, with the lower two floors being specifically customized and designed to house for the Holtz Restaurant. The Holtz was a high-end establishment catering to the upper echelon of the population and converted to condo lofts in 1987 (Corcoran Group.org/Streeteasy.org)

https://www.cityrealty.com/nyc/flatiron-union-square/holtz-house-7-east-20th-street/354

https://streeteasy.com/building/7-east-20-street-new_york

The detailed doorway

The embellishments by the doorway

The Holtz logo on the middle of the building

The Holtz Company sign at the top of the building

The beautiful Beaux-Art embellishment on the top of the building

The elegant details at the top of the building guard over the people who work here

Another great building on the block is the Hudson Company building at East 20th Street. This is a mixed use building that was built in 1910.

The Hudson Company building at East 20th Street

5 East 20th Street used to be a former carriage house.

https://streeteasy.com/building/5-east-20-street-new_york

Fifth Avenue and East 20th Street

After I finished the walk down East 20th Street, I walked back down Fifth Avenue to Union Square Park in the mid afternoon to see what was going on. There was a smaller version of the bigger weekend Farmers Market.

The Farmers Market in Union Square is one of the biggest and most popular Farmers Markets in the City

The Union Square Greenmarket in full swing on a sunny afternoon

https://www.grownyc.org/greenmarket/manhattan-union-square-m

After walking through all the stands and admiring the wares and the baked goods, I wanted to cool down with a walk through the park. I never really noticed all the beautiful statuary in the park before. There is a lot of interesting and famous works in the park.

The original layout of the park on a gold map

The golden plaque on the sidewalk outside Union Square Park with the original layout of the park

People relaxing in the park

New Yorkers relaxing on a warm sunny afternoon in Union Square Park

When I walked around the park, I noticed more and more artwork and statuary around the park. This flagpole is located in the middle of the park. You really have to walk around the base to appreciate the details the artist created on this.

The flagpole in the middle of the park

The Independence Flagstaff in Union Square Park

Although this flagstaff commemorates the 150th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, it is also known as the Charles F. Murphy Memorial Flagpole. The intricate bas-reliefs and plaques were completed in 1926 by sculptor Anthony De Francisci and feature a procession of allegorical figures representing democracy and tyranny, the text of the Declaration of Independence, and emblems from the original 13 colonies. The enormous flagpole, said to be one of the largest in New York State, is capped with a gilded sunburst (NYCParks.org).

Artist Anthony De Francisci

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_de_Francisci

https://americanart.si.edu/artist/anthony-de-francisci-1173

Artist Anthony De Francisci is an Italian born artist whose family were stone carvers by trade. He studied at Copper Union and the National Academy of Design when he moved to New York City. He is known for his known for his work as a sculptor and his design of American currency.

The magnificent details in the flagpole

The details are amazing on the flagstaff

The flagpole was erected to commentate the 150th Anniversary of the Declaration of Independence

Located at the northern end of the Union Square is the prominent statue of President Lincoln. This statue stands and overlooks the lawn of the park.

Abraham Lincoln

https://www.whitehouse.gov/about-the-white-house/presidents/abraham-lincoln/

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/union-square-park/monuments/913

This impressive statue of Abraham Lincoln was designed by sculptor Henry Kirke Brown and was dedicated in 1870. In his statue of Lincoln, cast in 1868, and dedicated September 16, 1870, he combines a classically styled pose with a perceptive naturalism, uniting realistic detail with an idealistic stance (NYCParks.org).

Artist Henry Kirke Brown

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Kirke_Brown

Artist Henry Kirke Brown was an American born artist who had studied with artists in Italy for his training. He is best known for his figurative historical statues. He also designed the statue of George Washington in Union Square.

There is a lot more to Union Square than just the park. There is interesting architecture. Historic statuary, wonderful restaurants and great selection of stores.

The amazing part about Union Square is the transformation of the area in the past thirty years from a park that everyone avoided to one that people could not live without. From the days of being home to one of the biggest methadone clinics in the City to be home to Union Square Cafe which transformed the park, Union Square has become the gateway to Uptown.

Finishing up the walk with some relaxation in the park

The Northern end of Union Square Park

The neighborhood has transformed itself with hip cafes, expensive lofts and a Farmers Market that is the benchmark that all others hold themselves. Just watching people sit and relax in the park reminds me of how this area had changed. You have to walk the streets to see the influences of the past and the present and how it has it has morphed to the neighborhood that it has become.

Union Square Park on that sunny warm June afternoon

As I explored the borders of the park, I came across a statue of a mother and child. I never noticed that this was an old water fountain for the park. It is always blocked off by vendors during either the Farmers or Arts Markets. With nothing in front of it, I could finally see it in its full form.

The Union Square Drinking Fountain

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/union-square-park/monuments/797

Consisting of a bronze statuary group atop a granite stepped pedestal, it was crafted by German sculptor Karl Adolph Donndorf and donated by philanthropist Daniel Willis James to promote public health as well as the virtue of charity (NYCParks.org).

Artist Karl Adolph Donndorf

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adolf_von_Donndorf

Artist Karl Adolph Donndorf was a German born artist know for his large realistic sculptures. He had served as an artist apprentice to further his education on sculpture (Wiki).

Just looking at old pictures online of Union Square in the 1970’s and 80’s shows me the power and resilience of Manhattan. It just goes to show you how a City can reinvent itself even in the worst of times and keep morphing!

The other blogs on the Union Square neighborhood:

Day Three Hundred and Thirteen: Walking the Borders of Union Square:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/48888

Day Three Hundred and Seventeen: Walking the Avenues of Union Square:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/50233

Day Three Hundred and Eighteen: Walking the Streets of Union Square:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/50516