CHURCH AVENUE, Flatbush, Part 2

by Kevin Walsh

CONTINUED FROM PART 1

When I left off…

I had just arrived at the former Kenmore Theater and Beverly Hills Bridal at East 21st Street, a mere block west of Flatbush Avenue, which with Church forms one of Brooklyn’s busiest crossroads. But we are also at the site of Brooklyn’s oldest religious congregations.

There’s been a church at the location of Flatbush and Church Avenues since 1654, the very beginnings of the village. Flatbush Dutch Reformed has had three incarnations: a wood structure built on orders from Governor General Peter Stuyvesant in 1654, a stone building in 1699, and the current one built from Manhattan schist dating to 1798. The churchyard goes back to the church’s very beginnings and contains stones inscribed in both English and Dutch. Among the many stained glass windows are a few by Louis Comfort Tiffany. The tower contains a clock and bell that are dated 1796, plus a 10-bell chime that was cast by the Meneely Foundry of Troy, N.Y., and installed in 1913. The church bell has tolled the death of every U.S. President. It also offers services in Spanish and tailors services for the local Ghanaian believers.

Surprisingly I found the Flatbush gate locked with signs indicating the cemetery was closed (“Private Property No Trespassing”) , a change from previous policies. The Church Avenue gate was open — perhaps in error — so I scurried in and out just long enough to get some photos. It would be a shame if the space was closed to the general public.

 

Erasmus Hall High School on Flatbush Avenue, seen from Church Avenue. Named for Dutch philosopher Desiderius Erasmus, the school presents two historic buildings in one location. Its white clapboard  Federal-style building, constructed in 1787, housed the private academy instituted by the Reformed Dutch Church across the street. The older building isn’t visible from the street, however, since it is surrounded by the Gothic, fortress-like Erasmus Hall High School, constructed in 1905.

The original academy was funded by several Founding Fathers, including Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr (who didn’t agree on much else). The academy became a high school in 1896: it can boast famous alumni such as pop’s Barbra Streisand and Neil Diamond, chess king Bobby Fischer, TV’s Lainie Kazan and Bernie Kopell, and opera’s Beverly Sills. The historic academy, known by students and faculty as  “the white house” can usually be glimpsed from the iron gate guarding the high school. C.B. J. Snyder’s magnificent 1905-1906 building surrounds the much older original. Erasmus Street and the former surrounding neighborhood, Erasmus, now absorbed into Flatbush, were named for Dutch scholar/philosopher Desiderius Erasmus (his parents named him Gerhard Gerhards, 1466-1536). A statue of Erasmus can be found outside the original academy building in the courtyard.

 

From a settlement in its beginnings in the 1650s, the crossroads of Flatbush Road and Church Lane, later Church Avenue, later became the Town of Flatbush which was absorbed into the City of Brooklyn in 1894 — only to see Brooklyn absorbed into NYC in 1898. Note that a lot of the side streets and little lanes you see on this map are mostly still in existence such as Johnson Place, Lloyd Street and Lott Street; Locust Street was absorbed into Bedford Avenue while Prospect Street became Veronica Place. “Erasmus Hall Academy” and Town Hall, now on Grant (Snyder) Avenue, are already in place. The Reformed Dutch Church originally owned the land in the east part of town, and the individual plots had already been allocated.

 

Flatbush’s post office building on Church Avenue is likely a 1930s Works Progress Administration building, but it looks as if it could have been built in the Dutch colonial era.

 

The Ellsworth Building, corner of Church and Bedford, has an amazing terra cotta exterior that has been marvelously restored in recent years.

At the SW corner of Church and Bedford is a ruin in limbo. This was once the Flatbush District #1 School, later PS 90, and was constructed from 1878-1894 in a design by John Culyer, also the architect of Flatbush Town Hall on Snyder Avenue — and it’s actually a designated NYC Landmark. It was a public school until 1951; 3 years later it became the Yeshiva University Boys’ High School in 1968, the Beth Rivkah private Jewish school for girls. It has been empty since the 1990s.

 

Now and then you come across a building on Church Avenue or other Flatbush streets that looks as if it was there when the neighborhood was still part of Flatbush Village.

 

Painted ad for the Lincoln Savings Bank on Church Avenue east of Woods Place and lettered in the handsome Egyptian Bold Expanded font. In late 2015, I explored the interior of a former Lincoln Savings Bank in Bay Ridge. The Lincoln Savings Bank of Brooklyn was incorporated as the German Bank of Brooklyn in 1866 and then changed to the new name in 1917, no doubt World War I influencing that decision. The bank merged with Chase Manhattan in 1993.

Though Church Avenue was named for the First Dutch Reformed Church, established in the 1650s, on Flatbush Avenue, there’s also the formidable Roman Catholic Holy Cross Church, established in 1845 and centered on Church Avenue west of Veronica Place. In the 1900s, Catholic churches all over the city built small towns in association with the parish, including grade schools, parish houses, rectories and cenacles built to house the priests and nuns associated with the church and school. The Holy Cross Parish House is a brick building with a grandentrance staircase featuring both brownstone and terra cotta trim. Latin inscriptions above the door mean “This is the house of the Lord” and “This is the gate of heaven.”

Holy Cross Church is associated with a large cemetery in East Flatbush in which the Brooklyn Dodgers’ and New York Mets’ Gil Hodges is interred as well as pre-eminent church architect Patrick Keely.

 

In 2011, the Holy Cross parish school became the St. Gregory the Great Catholic Academy.

 

The present Holy Cross church building at Veronica Place, dating to the early 20th Century, is difficult to photograph on winter afternoons, as the sun is right behind it. Originally Prospect Street, it was renamed in the 1940s for Sister Agnes Veronica, a principal of the parish school until her 1939 death.

Though she is not mentioned in the gospels, according to church tradition Veronica was the name of a woman who witnessed Christ’s torturous procession to Calvary, carrying the cross on which the Romans later nailed him. She offered Christ her veil to wipe the blood and sweat out of his eyes, and when her veil was returned to her, an imprint of Christ’s face was left on it.

At Rogers Avenue at Church there are a pair of detailed mixed-use buildings on opposite corners. The brick-faced building is just the end unit of an impressive row of buildings that are about identical running north on Rogers that are three windows across, each surmounted by a pediment, arched windows on the third floor, rectangular on the second, and stores on the ground floor.

The other is considerably older-looking and has a large pediment, a single round window, with the others featuring very large lintels. Most of the ground floor is given over to a roti restaurant; roti is unleavened flatbread served with a  variety of toppings — though it originated in India, it is popular in parts of South Africa, the Caribbean and Atlantic and Pacific Ocean island nations.

What catches the eye about the building is the street art painted on the Rogers Avenue side…

 

Dr. Yosef ben Jochannan (1918-2015), known popularly as “Dr. Ben,” was a professor in African studies, specializing in Nile Valley civilizations and their impact on Western religions; he asserted that the Jewish people, and the foundations of the Christian religion, originated in Ethiopia.

 

Another piece of the wall depicts Dr. John Henrik Clarke (1918-1998) a second professor of African studies and a prominent proponent of African nationalism. Interestingly, he changed his middle name from Henry to Henrik because of an admiration he had for Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen.

 

I recognize Marcus Garvey, Bob Marley and Malcolm X on this section, but somebody help me out in Comments about the others.

Proceeding east toward Nostrand Avenue an overhanging neon sidewalk sign for Willie’s Liquors caught my eye. One of the lost arts in New York are large (much bigger than this one) wood, plastic or neon/metal signs that overhang on sidewalks. Places I have visited like Bayonne, NJ or Philly are still replete with them, in fascinating and colorful designs. New Yoprk’s advertising signage gets blander by the year as private businesses are driven out and corporations with standard logos move in.

This fast food emporium at Church and Nostrand is a former Lincoln Savings Bank, likely the same one advertised on the wall ad a few blocks to the west. FNY Correspondent Gary Fonville has put together a few pages depicting other former and now repurposed banks.

 

Apparently the entire length of Church Avenue from Nostrand Avenue to its end at East 98th is co-named for million selling reggae master Bob Marley (1945-1981) in the heavily Caribbean-American neighborhood of East Flatbush, but oddly, only two signs appear — one here at Nostrand, and the other at East 98th.

 

The Church Avenue station serving the #2 and #5 trains on what is oddly never called the “Nostrand Avenue Line” (even though two subway lines using 7th Avenue and Lexington Avenue in Manhattan) is the third of three subway lines with a stop on the avenue, this being the IRT entry in the series. It opened August 23, 1920 along with other stops between Bergen Street and Flatbush Avenue. This was midway through the 1913 Dual Contracts that authorized both BMT and IRT subway line development for what were then two different companies, but designer Squire Vickers was in charge of subway signage for all stations during this time, and during this time they followed pretty much the same mosaic lettering template. A hallmark of the design is the use of a small triangle to separate words. Note that by this time the Period of Importance is mostly absent, though it can still be found on some signs but more as an abbreviation.

The signs themselves are a mix of blue and green here, though Vickers had some tricks up his sleeve by adding buff-colored squares at the top band. In most of the Dual Contracts stations, earth tones, green and dark blue prevail, though some stations especially on the Canarsie Line use brighter tiles.

Go big or go home — I like large-scale subway art installations. Louis Delsarte’s “Transitions,”depicting East Flatbush neighborhood scenes, has been on station walls since 2001. Delsarte, originally a Flatbusher, has works exhibited all over the USA.

Do I use Google Street View? You bet I do, and I enjoy it. At Nostrand Avenue I ended my original walk, as I frankly felt the urge for relief, and decided to hop on the #2 train back to the clean and sanitary facilities at Penn Station. However, Google helped me complete the remainder of my Church Avenue survey.

As I related in Part 1, Church Avenue is a very old conveyance going back to the Dutch colonial days as early as the 1650s. Thus, it doesn’t follow an exactly straight line and does the occasional jog north or south while its younger parallel streets were laid out in the 1800s in straight lines. Church Avenue makes one of these slight jogs at Brooklyn Avenue (which stands in for East 36th Street). Meanwhile, at the south side of the intersection you can see a very old private dwelling that may originally have served as a farmhouse.

 

In East Flatbush, Kings Highway is the main bailiwick of fantastical apartment buildings, but this Art Deco entry on East 37th and Church is formidable.

 

At Church and Schenectady Avenues (which has no doubt been baffling bad spellers for over a century) there’s another streetcar relic. Previously I had no idea this decommissioned trolley pole was still here and this one is the rare bird with a crossbar that held multiple wires.  Now I know it’s there because of the magic of Google Street View.

The #8 (later #35) trolley plied this route, and hung in there until 10/31/56 — the last surviving surface route in Brooklyn!

 

Church Avenue takes another northeast wobble at Utica Avenue (which runs south in place of East 50th Street). I had thought this terra-cotta faced building was either a movie theater or an old Child’s restaurant, but I found none of the usual ichthyic decorations like seahorses or Neptunes usually found on Child’s. I have to file it as a mystery for now.

 

However, on Utica just north of Church are the remnants of the former Rugby Theatre, now a department store.

The Rugby Theatre stood on Utica Avenue just north of Church Avenue. It opened in 1926 and was designed by architect Harrison G. Wiseman. It was equipped with a Robert Morton 2 manual 3 rank theatre organ. It also had a roof garden theatre which seated 722. Alterations were carried out in 1932 & 1933 to the plans of architect Eugene DeRosa.

Operated by the Brandt Theatres chain, it was taken over by the Golden Theater chain in the early-1970’s and operated as a dollar theater. Then it went showcase run, before being twinned in 1976 by seperating the balcony.

Eventually the neighborhood around it got rough and the theater went XXX on one screen and kung fu double feature on the other, before closing in 1986. cinematreasures

Since Church Avenue passed Rugby Road in Park Avenue South several miles ago, you may wonder why the theater carried this name. Rugby was the name of an early 20th Century development in these parts formerly known as Ford’s Corners; in the 1800s, it rated a stop on the Long Island Rail Road on what became known as the Bay Ridge Branch, which extended between the Fresh Pond Yards in Glendale, Queens and the Narrows waterfront at 65th Street with a branch going south to Manhattan Beach. All passenger services on that line ended in 1924. Rugby has been absorbed into East Flatbush and northern Canarsie.

 

This Kings County map shows Church Avenue’s easternmost extent in 1890. Note that slight dipsy-doo at Utica Avenue that was referred to. An old road that has left no trace intersected Church avenue at where Utica Avenue would eventually be built. The purple line at the right is Kings Highway. It also marks the irregular boundary of the towns of Flatbush and New Lots.

 

Kings Highway just north of Church Avenue. It’s one of Brooklyn’s oldest and longest roads, though it escaped extinction in the 1920s when Boro President Riegelmann (the Coney Island boardwalk is named for him) decided to widen and expand the route east of Ocean Parkway to a 6-lane behemoth. NYS 27 doesn’t run along Kings Highway, but the signs direct traffic to Linden Boulevard a block north, which does.

 

Church Avenue at Remsen Avenue. When Rem Jansen Vanderbeek arrived in New Netherland in 1642, he eventually set off a street naming frenzy — he had fifteen children with the surname Remsen, and most had their own descendants. Brooklyn, Queens and Staten Island all have at least one street named Remsen; the longest is Remsen Avenue, which runs in a straight line from Ralph Avenue to Seaview Avenue in Canarsie, standing in for East 90th Street. If you look at a Brooklyn map, Remsen Avenue is the westernmost street in an odd NW-SE grid orientation that defies the primary N-S-E-W grid found hereabouts and contains most of Canarsie. It causes several numbered streets to be skipped — the next numbered street Church avenue encounters after East 59th Street is East 91st!

Also, here the Department of Transportation decided, in the late 1970s or early 1980s, to install some square, brown “shoebox” lampposts — the manufacturer escapes me. This is the only occasion in which I saw one of the apices slapped on top of a regulation stoplight. There is a similar run of them on nearby Utica Avenue.

At Remsen Avenue, Church Avenue was laid out in the 1800s to make a northeast turn and in doing so, it runs smack into…

 

… Linden Boulevard, which received its name and its length at about the same time as its brother road, Kings Highway. At the time (the Roaring 20s) Brooklyn was embarking on an upgrade to its surface roads in the nascent automobile era. Thus, Linden Avenue, which begins at Flatbush Avenue, was extended east in new sections and overlaid on older streets, such as Vienna Avenue in East New York and eventually, Central Avenue in St. Albans, Queens. Linden Boulevard eventually hands Route 27 over to the Belt Parkway and was planned to run through Ozone Park, but most of its sections there, except for a couple of stubways, were never built!

When I encountered this Deco-ish building on Street View at Church and East 94th I knew it had to possess some kind of importance in the past. Sure enough, this is the remains of the former Waldorf Theater. Even ciematreasures.org knows not much beyond that the theater opened in 1934, hence the Deco design, and had closed by 1956. If any old timers remember it, the Comments floor is open.

 

At Rockaway Parkway is another stumper. Theater, restaurant, or both? If anyone remembers, let me know.

 

All roads end somewhere and Church Avenue ends here at East 98th Street between Lott and Hegeman Avenues in the Brownsville street plan. Note the Bob Marley Boulevard sign – the other one was encountered about 40 blocks to the west.

 

Nearby Brookdale Hospital, seen here at its Rockaway Parkway entrance, serves a vast area — East Flatbush, Brownsville, Canarsie and East New York. It opened in 1921 as the Brownsville and East New York Hospital and acquired its present name in 1963.

1/17/16

67 comments

Doug Douglass January 17, 2016 - 8:37 pm

From 1932 to 1963, Brookdale was Beth-El Hospital.

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Lawrence Lambert January 18, 2016 - 12:39 am

Kevin, a good resource when trying to determine the original use of a building is the NYC Department of Building’s own website at http://www.nyc.gov/buildings. There, on the left-hand side of the page you will find BIS; the Building Information System. Enter the borough, the house number and the street name and you will be able to see the documents that the DOB has on file for that building.

Try looking up the building’s C of O (Certificate of Occupancy). All buildings built beginning in the early 1900’s have a C of O which lists, in general terms, the use of the building floor-by-floor. Buildings built prior to that time may not have a C of O unless it has undergone a renovation that was major or changed its use or occupancy in some way. Look for the C of O with the oldest date. You can also look for a TCO (Temporary Certificate of Occupancy) which would predate the full C of O.

Be aware, however, that records for older buildings can be spotty, as the DOB was notorious in the past for ‘misplacing’ files (and, admittedly, some of us architects requisitioned files that were not returned). Now all filings are done electronically.

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Larry January 18, 2016 - 9:22 am

I grew up in that area.I seem to recall that old PS 90 was some sort of “special” city school but never had it explained why……it was right around the corner from Erasmus and across the street from that Flatbush PO station….Holy Cross School was highly respected in the area….

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Ed January 18, 2016 - 10:29 am

Kevin,

The building at Church and Brooklyn Avenues was the Maher farmhouse, according to my parents who grew up in the neighborhood in the ’30s. The farm was long gone by then but they remembered Mr. and Mrs. Maher sitting on their porch greeting everyone who passed by. I think the building at Church Avenue and Rockaway Parkway was a funeral home, possibly I.J. Morris, through the early ’70s.

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Kevin Walsh January 18, 2016 - 2:13 pm

Very interesting

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Larry January 19, 2016 - 9:44 am

Yes…that’s is exactly what that building was..I J Morris

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Steve Schulman July 10, 2021 - 8:22 pm

It was IJ Morris. My dads funeral was there in 1963. I lived at 469 East 98th st and attended ps 183

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Steve Schulman July 10, 2021 - 8:25 pm

Also went to Louies luncheonette. Best cherry cokes in bjlyn. Corner Church and East 98th

p ostrofsky June 21, 2017 - 3:00 pm

Yes! The building is the I J Morris funeral parlor. I lived a few blocks away from it and passed it every time I walked over to Church Avenue.

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Ellen Kohler September 12, 2020 - 8:46 am

I went to Erasmus hall in 1973-1975 .I lived in Brooklyn for 15 years of my life .I loved it there , I had the best childhood .Brooklyn always gave me joy .The Brooklyn bridge ,was my second home .My Uncle was the manager of The Hotel Margaret in BROOKLYN
HEIGHTS .We walked the promenade every night the Views were amazing ,just so peaceful …I SO miss thay ….

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Andy January 18, 2016 - 11:21 am

Go onto this link from http://www.nycsubway.org:

http://www.nycsubway.org/perl/caption.pl?/img/maps/system_1948.gif

You will see that the IRT under Nostrand Ave. was, in those days, called the “Nostrand Ave. Line.” Then it became the more pedestrian #2 and #5 lines.

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George January 18, 2016 - 5:50 pm

On the corner of Rockaway Parkway and Church sits the former home of I.J. Morris funeral parlor. Closed in lates 60’s or early 70’s. Bldg was taken over by Brookdale Hospital. Another I.J. Morris funeral home was located on Coney Island Ave (land of a thousand funeral parlors). The Waldorf Theater closed in the 50’s and the bldg was occupied by a carpet outlet store for many years. Brookdale was known as Beth-El hospital until the 60’s, when the Brookdale Corp, along with Arnold and Marie Schwartz gave big time donations. Brookdale Hospital now occupies a great many bldgs in the area (apartment houses, private homes, stores, etc. At once a highly praised and highly rated hospital, it now is one of lower rated institutions in Brooklyn.

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PADDY BOYLE February 28, 2017 - 3:30 am

You are right about I J Morris Jewish Memoria Funerall Director . A bit of history about it: They handled the Julius and Ethel Rosenberg’s funeral in 1953. I remember the procession going down Church Avenel that day.

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p ostrofsky June 21, 2017 - 3:10 pm

Before Beth-el Hospital became Brookdale it was Brooklyn Maternity. Avenue C actually runs down the lobby of Brookdale Hospital … and right off the lobby … where the restrooms are … memorial plaques with all its names are on display.

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Jon Baker January 19, 2016 - 5:28 pm

Huh. That advice about CofO was right on. Started looking into 9701 Church. It was built in 1937 as a dance hall/cabaret. By 1945, it had become a funeral parlor. So I wonder if the filled-in windows on the upper floor might originally have been glassed. In 1975, Morris Bros funerals sold it to become the Brookdale Hospital Nursing Home.

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Joe January 20, 2016 - 5:09 am

Can’t believe you didn’t mention the Granada theater near Church & Nostrand!

http://cinematreasures.org/theaters/3924

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Larry January 21, 2016 - 3:29 pm

I saw several movies there,,Great theater…

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Larry January 22, 2016 - 9:55 am

There was a Ray’s Food Shop next to The Granada for many years. Ray’s was a subsidiary of Bickford’s Cafeteria chain all over NYC.

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Richard Sica January 20, 2016 - 11:39 am

The portrait on the right in the multi-figure mural wear a crown is Haile Selassie, Emperor of Ethiopia 1930-1974. He claimed direct descent from King Solomon. Considered the returned Messiah by the Rastafari Movement in Jamaica.

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Kaleda Davis January 20, 2016 - 6:55 pm

not sure about all of the images in the painting, but definitely Stevie Wonder, Halie Selassie, Ida Wells Barnett and maybe Harriet Tubman.

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Bill Tweeddale January 20, 2016 - 9:32 pm

I think the figures along with Marcus Garvey, Bob Marley, and Malcolm X might be Haile Selassie (top right), and Sojourner Truth (bottom, 2nd from right).

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Susan Levy January 21, 2016 - 12:14 pm

1) Brookdale Hospital was known as Beth-El. Some staff members sarcastically dubbed it “Beth Hell”.
2) The Lincoln Savings Bank at Church and Nostrand was a beautiful old-style bank. When I came to Brooklyn at age 13 (1961) that’s where I had my first NY savings account. I’m sorry that it wasn’t put to a better use than fast food.

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Larry January 23, 2016 - 8:20 am

I was born at Beth-El Hospital…..We had our school savings accounts at Lincoln Savings Bank……There were 3 large magnificent banks in that general area..The Lincoln, The Fulton Savings Bank at Flatbush and Caton Aves and the Flatbush Savings Bank at Flatbush and Duryea Place, near Sears…..All huge palaces, especially to a little child…

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Marjorie May 11, 2021 - 6:21 pm

I remember going there with my mom when it was a bank. I was a child (mid-late 1970s. It was beautiful… marble floors and counters. Many years later I drove through the old neighborhood and was sad to see it had become a $.99 store!

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Howard Raab January 16, 2022 - 2:24 pm

I was also born in Beth-El Hospital and had a school savings account at the Lincoln Savings Bank. We lived on the corner of East 98th and Church.

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M. Nicholas January 21, 2016 - 7:00 pm

At the corner of Rockaway Pkway and Church Ave. was a Jewish funeral home. The infamous convicted Russian spies that were executed. The Rosenbergs funeral was held there.

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Larry January 23, 2016 - 8:15 am

I remember seeing films of of the funeral procession for the Rosenbergs….

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Shelly B January 21, 2016 - 9:08 pm

9701 Church Ave, was I J Morris Funeral Home. It later moved to Flatbush Ave, just north of Kings Highway. The Church Ave I J Morris Home was where funeral services for Ethel and Julius Rosenberg were held.

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Gary January 22, 2016 - 1:33 pm

I believe the photo of Conway’s on corner of Church & Utica was an Army-Navy Store, where we all went for Peacoats, the stiff black double breasted wool jackets we loved as kids and teenagers. Also, white sailor hats we thought we looked cool in. Across the street on Church was a large drug store, Silver Rod’s. Life was sweet then.

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Larry Goldberg January 26, 2016 - 9:49 am

Your remark at Schenectady Ave about spelling reminded me of my youth in the 50’s in Brooklyn. Whenever my aunt came up from the Washington DC area to visit us, and we took her around in our ancient Ford, she inevitably asked me “So Larry, how do you spell ‘Schenectady’?” I eventually learned it correctly and she stopped asking.

A great dissertation on Church Ave. I even remember the trolleys and their special tunnel under Ocean Parkway and wonder what future archaeologists will make of it.

Many thanks.

Larry Goldberg

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Einbinder, Favuzzi & Woonteiler, LLC January 27, 2016 - 9:53 pm

OMG…Kevin, do I have a cemetery story for YOU!

As a kid in the 60s, my Mom would sometimes take me with her to her job when there was no school, at a Dr’s office in a beautiful Victorian on Rugby between Church & Caton.

One beautiful summer afternoon, I decided I’d visit my elderly, never-married, bird loving Aunt in her Ocean Avenue studio a few blocks away. As it wasn’t a Sunday with Lawrence Welk on TV, I knew I wouldn’t be interupting anything. Atop her TV sat that $1.99 brown bakelite, ball-base, rabbit ear antenna, which she used well into the 80s. Coincidentally, she bore a passing resemblance to Art Linkletter, another one of her “heroes”.

What ensued was a comedy of errors – First, with her key breaking in her apartment door lock, then forgetting she still had 1 pink roller in her hair, & culminating with a trip to none other than the good ol’ Dutch Reformed Cemetery (which was my idea).

No sooner did we enter when one of her stockings got caught & ripped on some thorny brambles.

After a brief tour, she suggested we wrap it up already. I agreed, but not before catching sight of a long, black marble grave marker (the kind that is set lengthwise across the grave), the inscription of which read:

“HERE LYETH [male name], WHO DIED SHORTLY AND MYSTERIOUSLY AFTER VISITING THIS SPOT”.

It was dated from the 1700s, if I recall correctly.

That’s all we needed to see; without any words spoken between dear Auntie & I, we high tailed out of there ASAP. I was incredulous that sbe could run so fast.

Whether this was an 18th century practical joke, I couldn’t say. But lest you think I’M the one joking, by all means, please go there & see for yourself: It’s very close to the Church Avenue & East 21st Street corner of the cemetery.

Thanks for allowing me to share this truly unforgettable episode from my Brooklyn childhood!

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Laraine August 13, 2020 - 10:35 pm

I really enjoyed the story and comments imbue live in flirids since 1977. I used to live at 70 e.52nd street across from wknthrop Jr high school. Used to love playing handball in the schoolyard.

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Ellen Kohler September 12, 2020 - 8:58 am

I loved Brooklyn ,I went to Erasmuys Hall in 1973-1975 .We moved in 1975 .I never haad another home that ment as much , for I wasn’t their long. But I loved it with all my heart .

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GENE NORMILE January 28, 2016 - 12:22 pm

I WAS BONE IN BKLYN NY IN 1950 I WENT SCHOOL PS 181 THEN PS 246 THEN ERASMUS HALL I HUNG OUT ON LLOYD ST&CHURCH AVE I LIVED AT 2812 CHURCH AV THAY WERE THE BEST DAYS OF LIFE

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Jamal February 15, 2016 - 1:58 am

The old house just past Beford you mentioned looked like it had been there since the village days, is quite literally half the house it used to be. 2411 Church Avenue used to be. A number of years ago, in order to split up the lot apparently, they chopped the house in half as crudely as you can imagine doing such a thing. The slab sided eastern wall of the house shows how it was butchered. It was a grand old house prior to that.

I did some digging, and found several old pictures of the neighborhood from the early 1900’s, which seems to be just after the area was parceled out for residential use. The trolley line predates pretty much everything except the farmhouse at Brooklyn Avenue. There’s a shot from E. 35th street where you can see the farmhouse, the curb (seems the sidewalk was poured later on) and the trolley, and nothing but empty lots as far as the eye can see. Kind of cool/creepy to be able to see what your neighborhood looked like before it was a neighborhood at all.

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Ken Stapleton September 30, 2020 - 6:29 pm Reply
George Merlis June 14, 2017 - 12:46 pm

I used to go to the Waldorf Theater every Saturday. There was always a double feature, about eight cartoons, a Buck Rogers, Flash Gordon or Boston Blackie serial, eight coming attractions and lots of noise from the audience. I think admission in the late 1940s was a quarter. A matron in a white nurse’s uniform patrolled the aisles telling the kids to shut up — which they did until she passed their rows. I saw “African Queen” there as well as countless Randolph Scott and Joel McRae westerns.

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Shmuely September 2, 2017 - 9:58 pm

Yes, 9701 Church was I J Morris Memorial Chapel. The original chapel was established in Brownsville and they moved into this location in the late 1920’s. This was purposely built to use by funeral service professionals and had a full-sized Chapel and numerous slumber-rooms. A fully modern preparation room for embalming ( yes, back in the day most Jewish funeral homes embalmed everybody!) And a room for ritual preparation. The Morris family ran a first-class operation and at one time was the busiest funeral service in Brooklyn. Sadly, like many others in NYC, the firm was sold off to one of the large and greedy, and insensitive publicly funded, for -profit corporations. All that remains of the once proud company is the name. The Morris’ are all gone.

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Alan February 15, 2018 - 2:58 pm

Great history of I J Morris. Our family lived near there From about 1930 to the late 60’s. My father new the Morris family well. Did a lot of business with them through his Farain.

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dee November 19, 2017 - 11:45 am

If you check out this vintage footage of the Church Avenue trolley by Periscope Films, you will see a brief 5 second glimpse of the funeral home on Church and Rockaway, at 10:53: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZcL9nVShr48&t=1247s. I believe part of the building is now a dialysis center. I’m not sure; have to go out there and look around.

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Coriel November 28, 2017 - 4:01 pm

We are moving to the area soon from a. few miles away. I appreciate this rich and vibrant account of Church Ave’s past and present as seen through your keen eye. Thank you for this gift as we prepare to familiarize ourselves with a new Brooklyn neighborhood and to be a part of its emerging story.

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Rick March 24, 2018 - 4:50 pm

I grew up at 45 Martense St (quite an Art Deco palace) around the corner from the Ellsworth building in the ‘50s. There was a luncheonette on the corner where the deli is now, my father would send me there Sunday to fetch the paper. Towards Flatbush – “the ave” – was the post office the Democratic Party headquarters and the fire station. The Republican headquarters, in an old mansion,was down Church in the other direction towards Holy Cross. Saw JFK at Flatbush and Church when he was campaigning.

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Alan Reiman April 18, 2018 - 4:03 pm

In the 1940’s, 9701 Church was a catering hall. I think it was the Colonial Manor(?).

On the opposite odd numbered corner was a pharmacy. The pharmacist lived upstairs. He had a daughter, Carol, who married a dentist, Sidney Henner. He moved to Deer Park in Suffolk County.

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Sonia Fredj September 4, 2018 - 4:42 pm

Kevin and Ed, I lived on East 37th and Church and remember the house that I always suspected was a farmhouse. Any place I can find some info and photos about it??

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Neil Wilson October 9, 2018 - 9:49 pm

On the corner of Church Ave. and Flatbush was Garfields. It was a very large restaurant where we so often went for coffee and picked up girls. Now it’s a bank

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Eleanor Carlson August 19, 2019 - 8:03 pm

I OFTEN WENT TO GARFIELDS WITH A GIRLFRIEND TO LOOK OVER THE BOYS. WE WERE NOT ALLOWED TO SMOKE ON THE BLOCK OF ERASMUS HALL HS, BUT OUR TEACHERS HAD NO SAY ABOUT WHAT WE DID IN GARFIELDS SINCE IT WAS ACROSS CHURCH AVE FROM ERASMUS. I CAN’T IMAGINE FLATBUSH W/O GARFIELDS. SOME CHANGE IS HARD TO ACCEPT.

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Louis Brody January 12, 2019 - 2:22 pm

I remember the kenmore theater at church and Flatbush…don’t remember any theater at church Ave and Utica where Bobby Dept store is now…does anyone?Would love to read about it.Thanks

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bob gelfman May 3, 2019 - 12:57 pm

The buildng on the corner of Church Av and Rockaway Parkway was the I J MorrisFuneral Parlor.
I grew up at 514 Rockway Parkway diagonally across from it.

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DRey July 8, 2019 - 11:29 am

My grandmother owned a grocery store on Church Ave and New York Ave in the 1970’s. I went to Holy Cross School and P.S. 235 and lived on Linden Blvd. Lived 7 years in that area before it got very bad and we had to move to a better, safer, area in Brooklyn..

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Earl Robinson February 23, 2021 - 7:11 pm

Hey Drey..i grew up on Snyder and E34st…181school yrd + waltwhitman..
Do you remember the Irish Bar on Newyork and church on the SW corner?

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Howard August 27, 2019 - 10:19 pm

Ij Morris was the building on Church and Rockaway as ma y people had mentioned. I lived on Ave B and 98sth street. I worked at a store down the Street From IJ Morris on Church ave called Dad and Sons. Does anyone recall that store. Before that I worked at John’s Bargain Store on Church and ate at I Blbelieve Fong Fongs chinese restaurant. While in high school I Opened a record and head shop 1st called the Su shine Store and later re names The Peoples Place my partner in the store at the time was aman names Lan Rubin. Any body have any recollection and or pictures of these stores and or locations?

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Howard August 27, 2019 - 10:21 pm

Sorry for the type errors. Dam auto correct is to blame ha ha.

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Steven September 19, 2019 - 5:08 pm

I’m looking for the name of a deli that was on church ave, near a Chinese restaurant. This deli was just yards away from East 48 th St.
The years were in the ’50’s. P.S. 135 was just around the corner. Hope somebody reading this is old enough to remember. Thank you.

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Kathy J June 18, 2020 - 2:22 pm

The Roti restaurant on the corner of Church and Rogers that you pictured was once Gilmore’s Bar&Grill. Had fabulous Sunday roasts in the back area restaurant, where I went with my parents and grandparents in the 1950s and early 60s. I also remember the Saturday Matinees at the Granada Theater, the races after the main feature, with toy give-aways to winning ticket holders. Saw Godzilla there with several girlfriends. Would get a slice and a cook at the nearby pizza place, for 25 cents. That matinees were 50 cents, I think. You could have fun-filled Saturday for less than a dollar.

The other building you showed in the photo, the brick-faced one, was a funeral parlor on the bottom floor, in the 60s and early 70s, now filled with shops. I remember because my mother’s funeral was held there in 1970. Can’t remember the name of the place, though.

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Jeffrey H. Wassreman September 10, 2020 - 7:35 am

>C.B. J. Snyder’s magnificent 1905-1906 building<
Oh, so the architect of Erasmus High School had his name applied to the avenue just south of the school. I never knew that.

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stanley byck September 13, 2020 - 10:31 am

flatbush was a great neighborhood to live in.
Erasmus was a special school. graduated in 1963

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Steve Schulman July 10, 2021 - 8:42 pm

Stan, my accountant?

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Anonymous January 27, 2021 - 5:19 am

I lived on Martense St. Went to Holy Cross, shopped at Discount City on Church Ave. as a teen. After Holy Cross my parents bought a house on Schenectady Ave. Those were interesting times…..

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Anonymous January 27, 2021 - 12:19 pm

Interesting tidbit about the Art Deco apt building on E 37th and Church … If you opened the outside door, and held onto the handle while also grabbing the handle of the “inside” door .. you would get a mild electric shock … all the kids dared each other to do it

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Margaret Rorke January 27, 2021 - 12:28 pm

What a great trip down memory lane. I loved seeing the building on e37 and church. I grew up across the street from there.

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Earl Robinson February 23, 2021 - 7:14 pm

So what happened to Ridgewood st and Diamond st? Was it never laid out?
How do i found out who Robinson estate is?
I remember at the Winthrop train station there use to be a sign on the wall that said “To Robinson st”..but its actually Parkside ave..

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Saul Retig June 28, 2021 - 4:49 pm

At Rockaway Parkway is another stumper. Theater, restaurant, or both? If anyone remembers, let me know.
That was IJ Morris Funeral Home. Besides my Grandparents Yetta & Sam Sternberg, it also presided over the funerals of Julius & Ethel Rosenberg

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Steve Schulman July 10, 2021 - 8:37 pm

Does anybody remember Louies luncheonette next to in Morris. Best burger deluxe and cherry cokes in Bklyn. Went to PS 183 and lived at 469 East 98th

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Howard Raab January 16, 2022 - 2:12 pm

We lived at 469 East 98th Street from 1942 until 1959. We were in the ground floor, front apartment.

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Ernie Jackson January 9, 2022 - 4:56 am

Does anyone remember a place called The Little
Theater School on Flatbush? I used to take the train to the Erasmus Hall stop and walk over there. I took acting lessons and guitar lessons there in the very late 70s, early 80s.

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Howard Raab January 16, 2022 - 2:08 pm

Yes, that was the I.J. Morris Funeral Home. My mother’s funeral was there in ’59. More interestingly, the Rosenberg’s funeral was there in 1953. The funeral procession was four abreast and as long as the eye could see as it proceeded up East 98th Street before making the turn up Church Ave to I.J. Morris. I was 11 years old at the time as I stood on the corner selling Cool-Aid to the cops that were policing the parade. That corner building (469 East 98th St.) can be seen in the picture of that intersection. That’s also where the Church Ave Trolley Made the turn from E. 98th St.
The Waldorf Theater was where I went to see “The Thing from Another World” in 1951.
Also,

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Bruce B. July 21, 2023 - 12:44 pm

How about a mention of Jahn’s Ice Cream parlor. On Church Ave., right up from Flatbush. Also believe there was a bowling alley around that area. Grew up on Ocean Parkway, next door to the Flatbush Jewish Center’s
catering hall, with its circular driveway in front. Remember when they built the Prospect Expressway and redid Ocean Parkway. Used to play King of the Mountain on the huge piles of dirt in front of our apartment building.
Scarola’s was on the same block as the Beverly Theater, along with Ebinger’s and their famous blackout cake! Also, an appetizing store on the block as well. Adler’s Pharmacy was near the corner of Church and Ocean
Parkway. Also on that block was a bar, a “Chinese” laundry, where my father had his shirts cleaned and pressed and a candy store luncheonette on the corner of Church and E. 5th St. A&P and Waldbaum’s were across
the street from each other.Remember the wood plank floors in Waldbaum’s and the green stamps from the A&P. Bakery called NE Tell’s was there too.

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