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| I don't get into Clinton Hill often enough. I am intimidated by it -- imagine a neighborhood, along with neighboring Fort Greene and to some degree, Bedford-Stuyvesant, which flank Clinton Hill on the west and east -- dominated by block after block of homes dating from the post-Civil War period to the robber baron era of circa 1900. Each house bigger and better than the house next to it, acres and acres of this, and none of which I can afford or ever will unless I get a visit from Little Bit of Luck. I went to high school on the Clinton Hill-Bed Stuy border when the neighborhoods were on a different planet --Planet Terror -- in the Super Seventies. Back in 2007 I was stumbling around the corner of Gates Avenue and Cambridge Place in eastern Clinton Hill -- clearly in territory quite a bit north of my humble station -- when I squeezed off some shots of homes built by people who would have likely employed me to ostle their horses or clean their stables when they were alive. I also more recently found out the story behind an old awning sign that has been given a brand new lease on life in the age of irony that we currently inhabit. |
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This freestanding, shingled, vernacular French Second Empire style house was probably built c.1860 for Jeremiah Peterson. The house is two stories high with a mansard roof and has a bay which extends out almost to the lot line.The wooden-enframed entranceway set above two steps has a glass-paned door, of later date, sidelights, and a plain wooden surround. The first-and second-story windows have simple wooden lintels, surrounds', and sills. The mansard roof has slate siding and is pierced by three pedimented dormer windows that rest on a wooden cornice with rectangular blocks above two decorative bands. Original iron gate posts and the areaway fence remain. The house probably once had a front porch.
RIGHT: A few doors down at # 86 is a distinctive green and white, shingled and porched house that must be cool on even the warmest days. The Italian villa-style house likely dates to the late 1860s. From 1880-1892 it was the home of Russell Engs, who built several other homes in the Clinton Hill historic district.

87-93 Cambridge Place was a row constructed by William Montgomery around 1863. They are distinctive for their bay windows; only one, #89, contains its original wooden bay. These particular bays are said to be unique in New York City. From 1866-1872 #87 was home to James Whiting, the son of a Supreme Court Justice.





HOME | ADS | ALLEYS | CEMETERIES | COBBLESTONES | FORGOTTENSLICES | LAMPS | NEIGHBORHOODS | SIGNS | STREET NECROLOGY | STREET SCENES | SUBWAYS & TRAINS | TROLLEYS | YOU'D NEVER BELIEVE YOU'RE IN NYC | LINKS | FORGOTTENTOURS | SEARCH | FORGOTTENSTUFF | QUEENS CRAP | FRANK JUMP'S FADING ADS | OUT OF TOWN | BOWERY BOYS | ALL CITY NY | LOST CITY | VANISHING NY | LONG ISLAND ODDITIES | GOTHAM LOST AND FOUND | NY400 | FNY THE BOOK/ERRATA | CONDENSED POP
Page completed August 25, 2009
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