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 | NY400 | FNY THE BOOK/ERRATA | CONDENSED POP
![]() |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Much of Greenpoint has rightly been named a NYC Landmarks historic district, as its side streets contain vintage architecture from the mid-1800s of a quality not being produced today in even the most lavish of new homes. Several of the neighborhood's side streets, in particular India, Kent, Milton, and Noble have more than their fair share of beautiful multifamily dwellings (the two terms were not anathemic in the 1800s). In FNY I have already walked Milton and now it's time to give Noble its due. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||




The 1863 Union Baptist Church is described as a late example of Romanesque Revival, first used by famed ecclesiastical architect Richard Upjohn in the mid-1840s. Landmarks:
The style gained widespread popularity during the 1850s with the congregations of the dissenting Protestant sects (i.e. Congregationalists, Unitarians, Universalists, Methodists, Baptists, etc.) because, unlike the forms of the Gothic Revival, Romanesque detailing had no special doctrinal symbolism. The simplicity and austerity of the style held a strong appeal for these Protestant congregations. Most Early Romanesque Revival style churches are brick buildings which gain their architectural character through the sophisticated use of the material in the creation of arches, corbels and other details.
Its name recalls some Greenpoint street trivia. In 1869 there was a split in the congregation, with the new branch erecting a building on Manhattan Avenue -- then known as Union Avenue. The pastor of this new church was Rev. David Charles Hughes, whose son, Charles Evans Hughes (1862-1948), became NY State Governor and a Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court. In 1900 the two congregations reunited at the older Noble St. church, which then became known as the Union Baptist Church.


The ground floor was converted to commercial use about the turn of the twentieth century. Two entrances with double wooden doors and transoms are flanked by three projecting display windows.
On the corner is an older example of a NYC fire alarm with a simple pull handle.


















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 | NY400 | FNY THE BOOK/ERRATA | CONDENSED POP
erpietri@earthlink.net
Page completed August 6, 2009
©2009