PS 36 MYSTERY, Castle Hill–Unionport

by Kevin Walsh

Students, teachers and administrators on PS 36, on Castle Hill Avenue south of the Cross Bronx Expressway, if they even notice them, may be mystified about the carven street names on the corners of the building: “Avenue C,” “8th Street” and 9th Street.” The actual streets are named Castle Hill Avenue, Blackrock Avenue and Watson Avenue.

 

A clue can be found in this Hyde & Co. map of Unionport produced in 1900. You can find a grid layout west of Westchester Creek, with lettered avenues running north and south, and numbered avenues running east and west.

Unionport, laid out in 1851, was among the first towns in the Bronx to adopt a grid street system, and streets were named simply, by alphabet for north-south streets, by numbers east to west. Avenue A is now Zerega Avenue, Avenue B is now Havemeyer Avenue and so on. Its name seems to have something to do with the navigability of the adjoining Westchester Creek, and at one time it was hoped that a major port could be built here.

 

PS 36 was completed in 1901 and at that time, the bordering streets still carried their older names. Thus, the Blackrock Avenue side has “8th Street…”

 

… and the Watson Avenue side carries the name “9th Street.” Both sides have “Avenue C” for Castle Hill Avenue.”

Soon after this, streets in Unionport were given different names and when adjoining neighborhoods were built up they did not extend the Unionport numbering system. In 1895, all of the Bronx became part of New York County, which also included Manhattan at the time, and in time, the house numbering became based on Manhattan’s; west of the Bronx River (and in some cases, east of it) Manhattan’s street numbering system leaches into the Bronx. The Bronx became a borough of its own in 1898, and a county on its own in 1914.

Photos: Gary Fonville

8/14/15

25 comments

NY2AZ August 14, 2015 - 10:04 am

I was born & raised in the Parkchester section of the Bronx which is adjacent to this neighborhood. Parkchester was served by P.S. 106 on St. Raymond’s Avenue. Sometime in the late ’50’s P.S. 36 was closed for renovations & it’s faculty & students were reassigned to P.S. 106. Parkchester was a city within a city & we were very provincial so it caused mild culture shock (you had to be there to fully appreciate this). Somehow all survived the ordeal.

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Michael Lagana August 14, 2015 - 8:33 pm

Another good one from Gary

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Eva July 15, 2020 - 9:03 am

Great History. I went to PS 36. Started kindergarten in 1959.

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Allison Weld Spencer April 7, 2022 - 3:05 pm

I started 1st grade in 1943. In those years Parkchester had no middle school so all those kids joined us in1950. In the 3rd grade they started building the Cross Bronx Expwy. That entire year all we heard were giant jackhammers. How Mrs Glutch taught us anything is beyond me. The noise was so bad after the war the govt put up quanset buildings for the returning vets and their new families. We had friends with moms from all over Europe. Castle Hill was a true “melting pot”. Life was far more simple but happy

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ron s August 15, 2015 - 10:20 am

Very interesting

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John August 15, 2015 - 1:54 pm

Westchester Creek and Bronx River have Federally authorized channels. When I was working for the Corps of Engineers we dredged them by Federal contract periodically. With shrinking funds it now depends on how many tons of commerce move through the waterways for a dredging contract to be funded.

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Sergey Kadinsky August 17, 2015 - 9:22 pm

Very rare find, Gary. I had no idea that The Bronx had its own Alphabet City.

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Gary Fonville August 18, 2015 - 10:02 am

Sergio, Kevin wrote the text. I only took the pictures because U had known about those corner blocks for a long time.

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Tom August 18, 2015 - 3:45 pm

Interesting…so it appears this part of the Bronx went the opposite as did Queens where names changed to numbers when the current grid system replaced the old names that date from when Queens was a collection of local villages? That’s a pretty elementary school.

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Martin Abernathy December 8, 2015 - 4:24 pm

Memories…I lived in the Castle Hill Houses in the 1960s, and attended kindergarten at P.S. 36 during the 1964-65 school year.

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Cliff April 16, 2020 - 11:04 pm

What was the name of the music school on Castle Hill Avenue – Vinnie………………..?? Any help would be appreciated. Drawing a blank

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Barry February 15, 2021 - 9:20 am

I lived on Haviland ave across the hwy from PS 36 and went there as of 1951. My first girlfriend and first kiss was from Janice R.
On the second floor stairwell. I have great memories of that school and wonder if the two floor to ceiling paintings in the
auditorium and still there?

Barry S

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Ed February 19, 2021 - 11:40 am

Cliff I made a general comment posted this morning that included an answer to your Q……Vinny Roberts Music Studio. Check out Karen’s full comment. Ed

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Bob June 20, 2020 - 2:09 pm

I attended P.S. 36 from K-3, 1962-66

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Bernard Negrin April 2, 2016 - 11:34 am

As a member of the class of 1957, I would like to thank you for your research. You answered two of my questions:
a, When was PS-36 built.
b. The meaning, with documentation, of the enigmatic carvings.
Thank you again for this work.
B. Negrin

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J Brown October 18, 2017 - 10:13 am

I lived on what would have been 14th St (Newbold Ave.) and attended PS 36 for only the 7th grade while we waited for JHS 125 to be completed. It was 1951-1952, when the Cross Bx Exwy was beginning to topple houses, cutting through our little ‘towns’ of Unionport and Castlehill. We could see and hear the work being done from the school windows.

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Anonymous January 13, 2019 - 3:52 pm

My mom graduated from PS 36. She was born in 1918 . So I’m figuring she graduated from there in 1930..

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Jerry Wind July 23, 2020 - 6:07 pm

I graduated from PS 36 in 1961. Never noticed the carvings shown

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Anonymous August 23, 2020 - 4:00 pm

I went to PS36 from 1965 – 1972 Charles Elgart was the principle. I remember the carvings on the bldg yet never thought anything of it. At 60 I now look back and enjoy researching Different things about our history.

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Toby November 9, 2020 - 10:34 am

I went there starting in 1955. My kindergarten teacher was Mrs. Brady. I can still picture her. I then went to another school for 6th grade. Btw the name of the principal at PS 36 was Mr. Drescher.

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Ann garro December 18, 2020 - 12:14 pm

Went to P S.36 from 1939 to 1947. Lived on Chatterton Avenue…1 block from the school which was on Castle Hill Avenue between Blackrock and Watson Avenues.

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Keith Oliver January 22, 2021 - 11:12 am

I went to PS 36 in 1960…bused from the Bronxdale Projects. This bio brings back memories of my
kindergarten teacher Ms. Kirshner. I then transferrl to PS 47 in 1st grade; when I was teenager I would
walk from Bronxdale to Castle Hill Ave with my then
girlfriend Teresa Moore…great times seeing that old
school building.

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Karen February 19, 2021 - 6:23 am

Cliff, I took clarinet lessons during 4th and 5th Grade at Vinny Roberts Music Studio. Funny, I started going to PS 36 when in 4th grade. I had asked someone (a teacher?) why the cornerstone doesn’t match the street names. I was told the original building was from Manhattan, taken down and reconstructured in the Bronx. Thanks for the research that busts that myth.

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Ketty Gonzalez January 2, 2022 - 9:18 pm

Are there pictures of the inside p s 36 or graduating classes

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Judy November 10, 2022 - 1:33 pm

I lived on Newbold Ave. attended 36 for 7th grade…as a member of “Foti’s Chain Gang”…..anyone remember miss Foti?

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