COLUMBUS SQUARE, Astoria

by Kevin Walsh

Above: Triborough Bridge at dusk, seen from the platform of the Astoria Blvd. station on the N/Q elevated Astoria Line. The  station, since the mid-1930s, has been positioned over the Grand Central Parkway, which connects the Triborough to eastern Long Island. At its northern end, the station affords a view of the massive concrete viaduct northbound trains use  to attain Westchester County, NY, Connecticut and points beyond via the Hell Gate Bridge.

Columbus Square (modern signage calls it Columbus Triangle) is where Astoria Boulevard, coming in from the west, becomes the Grand Central Parkway service road. West of here, Hoyt Avenue North and South is the service road. Sculpted by artist Angelo Racioppi, the statue depicting Christopher Columbus, the Italian voyager sailing for Spain, seeking an easier route to the Far East was dedicated on October 12, 1941.

The cast iron statue was built just before World War II by Italians living in Astoria, but could not be erected because the residents couldn’t afford money for the statue’s base. The statue was dedicated on October 12, 1941. In the fall of 1942 the statue was moved to a city warehouse; however, fearing scrap metal drives of WWII, the statue was moved again to the basement of the Queens Borough Hall. In 1945 the sculpture was reinstalled in its current location.

The statue was donated by the New York City WPA (Works Progress Administration) Art Project. Christopher Columbus in Queens

Above: detailing from the statue.

Also of interest at Columbus Square is the site of a teardown across Astoria Boulevard from the statue. There are a number of old painted ads arrayed on the wall. On the top, the RA exchange stood for RAvenswood (in the Bronx, RA stood for RAymond.) Here’s a complete list.

Looking closer, a huge ad for  Charles A. Fletcher’s Castoria, the mild stomach remedy used mostly by parents for kids’ tummy trouble, can be made out. Most of these ads, some of which go back to 1890 or so, have lasted for over  a century, especially in areas not directly in the sun.

And, a third ad, sufficiently disrupted so that I can’t make it out, was laid over the Castoria ad, but has peeled away, revealing the Castoria ad underneath.

9/13/11

9 comments

ron salyk September 13, 2011 - 2:21 pm

Astoria Blvd. Station was noted (prior to modernization) for the large number of names on the station signs. Specifically it had signs saying that the station was:
Astoria Ave
Hoyt Ave
25 th Ave
Columbus Square

Reply
Joseph Carlucci October 2, 2011 - 7:48 pm

In the late forties, and perhaps the early fifties, when I was a boy, Columbus Square was the scene of festive Columbus Day holiday parades featuring brass bands, local politicians, cheering and celebrating. The entire area, pre-Triborough Bridge and Grand Central Parkway, was a thriving neighborhood community, lost to the high-speed highways, a pre-cursor to the Robert Moses destruction projects in Brooklyn and The Bronx. One of the many local businesses that lost its home and livelihood from those days was a drug store operated by my uncles, the Iorio brothers.

Reply
shorty bliss October 10, 2011 - 12:59 pm

the site of “teardown across Astoria Boulevard from the statue” is what used to be “louie lumber,” or “lumber lou’s,” as i liked to call it. the graffiti that is blatantly present on the top of the white wall is by my first boyfriend, also an astoria native, from when we were 11 years old.. so that makes it 2000? y2k, bitches!

Reply
Antibiotics October 10, 2011 - 4:54 pm

there is a many blog available on that theme however best at this point…that�s why I’m commenting here

Reply
Vinnie March 31, 2012 - 3:10 pm

The sign that is painted over and the business that was torn down that was on that lot is an old lumber company called Ace Lumber.

Reply
That time Christopher Columbus annoyed Robert Moses - The Bowery Boys August 13, 2014 - 9:27 am

[…] atop the column at Columbus Circle is the most famous, perhaps the most interesting one sits in Columbus Park, in Astoria, Queens. Depicting a young, robust explorer, the statue was erected here in 1941 in […]

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That time Christopher Columbus annoyed Robert Moses - Bowery Boys History January 12, 2015 - 9:05 am

[…] atop the column at Columbus Circle is the most famous, perhaps the most interesting one sits in Columbus Park, in Astoria, Queens. Depicting a young, robust explorer, the statue was erected here in 1941 in […]

Reply
That time Christopher Columbus annoyed Robert Moses - Bowery Boys: New York City History January 13, 2015 - 10:07 pm

[…] atop the column at Columbus Circle is the most famous, perhaps the most interesting one sits in Columbus Park, in Astoria, Queens. Depicting a young, robust explorer, the statue was erected here in 1941 in […]

Reply
Eric March 24, 2015 - 12:21 am

Wow. I live there. Didn’t know my building had that much history lol

Reply

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