Gowanus
Societa Di Giovanni Battista at
annual parade on President St between Third and Nevis in 1922. The building to the left is
502 President St.. 494 President is on the far right of the photo.
History
The town of Gowanus was established in 1639 by the Dutch on
a small tidal creek leading out into a small bay. In 1700, one of the first settlers,
Nicholas Vechte, built a farmhouse of brick and stone on the site which later became
Washington Park. Near this park the Battle
of Brooklyn was fought in August 1776.
Gowanus Bay as it became known, became one of the
manufacturing centers of Brooklyn including shipbuilding and gas storage. The stream was
dug by railroad owner Edwin C. Litchfield to become the Gowanus canal. It was lined with
light manufacturing operations and ringed with gritty neighborhoods. The Gowanus was
extremely foul smelling due to the heavy pollution.
Like many owners of the Gowanus factories, Mr. Litchfield lived at the crest of the hill
in Park Slope during the 1800s.
The Gowanus Canal
neighborhood is at the bottom of the hill from Park Slope. Like the Carroll Gardens
neighborhood across the canal, Gowanus was a neighborhood with a large Italian population.
Houses
The houses (and businesses) along the canal were largely
made of wood. On the block 400 block of President St., the breakdown of 49 lots is, 3 were
empty, 13 were brick buildings and 33 were wood. In contrast, in a similar poor and
industrial neighborhood near the water in Manhattan where the Blumettis lived at the same
time, all but one building on the block was brick.
Relatives of my grandfather, the Pomaricos, owned the home
at 494
President through a mortgage. Another Pomarico relative lived at 552 President, one
block uphill. Both households were used as references and sponsors for subsequent waves of
Pomaricos coming into Brooklyn from Italy.
Businesses
Businesses lining the Canal in 1910 (or one block off)
- Lumber yards/Wood Products
Ross & Synders Lumberyard located at 249 Third Avenue. One of the
owners, Sylvester Ross, lived at the top of the hill at 19 Prospect Park West.
- Kenyon & Newton Sash and Blind Mill
Across the street from Pomaricos grocery (later saloon). Owned by
William Kenyon who lived on Berkeley St.
- Coal Yards
Kelsey
& Loughlin Coal located at 242 Nevins street was one of three locations in Brooklyn.
The owner, William Kelsey lived on the 800 block of St. Marks Ave.
- Steamstone yards
- Brick yards
- Gratty Marble Works
- Ice Company
- Paint manufacturers
- Saloons/Liquor Stores
In
1905, Pietro Pomarico owned a liquor store around the corner on Third Avenue. By 1910, he
had moved it up to 4th Avenue and was supporting the extended family.
- Hildebrand Bakery
Harry,
John and Fred Hildebrand owned a large bakery around the block at 505 Carroll Street. They
all lived in the neighborhood on the 300 block of First Street next to the canal.
- Groceries
Francesco
Pomarico owned a grocery at 494 President for about ten years and by 1910 he had sold it
to 50 yr old Louis Gallo, another Italian immigrant. By 1915 at age 65, he had retired and
was living with his son Pietro.
- Paper mills
- Higgins Ink Co. on Eighth St.
Makers of India ink and still in business today.
- Brooklyn Union Gas Company
Maintained telescoping gas tanks along the canal. Large gas tanks
were located along Degraw Street between the canal and Third Avenue
Churches and Schools
- St. Agnes Roman Catholic Church
Located on Hoyt between Sackett and Degraw. It is the nearest Roman
Catholic church to the Pomaricos.
- PS # 32
Between
President and Hoyt on the other side of Gowanus in Carroll Gardens. It is the closest
public school to Pomaricos.
- PS #15
Third ave and state st. The nearest public school on
same side of canal.
Brooklyn Dodgers
In 1883, the Brooklyn
Dodgers were started as a minor league team playing out of a stadium in Gowanus
located at Third Street and Fourth Avenue in Washington Park. First used as a clubhouse,
in 1896 Nicholas Vetches house was demolished.
The team joined the American Association and were first
called the Brooklyns, then the Trolley Dodgers and finally the Dodgers.
They moved to Ebbetts Field at Bedford and Montgomery
Ave. in 1913.
Sources
Brooklyn City Directories 1900-1933
New York Census 1905, 1915, 1925
New York Census Enumeration District Map 1915
U.S. Census 1900, 1910, 1920
Snyder-Grenier, Ellen M. Brooklyn! An Illustrated
History Philadelphia:Temple University Press, 1996.
Willensky, Elliot. When Brooklyn was the World.
New York: Harmony Books,1986. |