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Continued From Part 1


Glenn Curtiss (1878-1930) was an early aeronautical pioneer in the period immediately following the Wright Brothers' famed breakthrough at Kitty Hawk, NC. He flew the June Bug to nearly a mile high on July 4, 1908 and the following year participated in the first sanctioned airplane race, the Grande Semaine d'Aviation, at Rheims, France and emerged the victor. During the pre-World War I period he continued to innovate heavier-than-air seaplanes that could take off and land on water, beginning a lengthy association with the U.S. Navy. The Curtiss-Wright Corporation, a descendant of the Curtiss Aeroplane and Motor Company, continues as a major player in the aerospace field.
WAYFARING MAP: DITMARS BOULEVARD

LaGuardia Airport was constructed in 1929 as Glenn Curtiss Field, and later, North Beach Airport, replacing a former North Beach amusement area called the Gala Amusement Park, opened in 1889 by piano master William Steinway and beer baron George Ehret; it fell flat when Prohibition was enacted in 1920. The North Beach area and park were served by the Brooklyn City Railroad, which operated a trolley line along Old Bowery Bay Road, once one of the only thoroughfares in eastern Jackson Heights and East Elmhurst. The line survived into the 1930s and served the airport for a time.
North Beach Airport was expanded for full commercial traffic in 1937 after Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia took a commercial flight to NYC only to land at Newark Airport. Indignant, he demanded to be taken to NYC on board the aircraft, which took off once again and landed at Floyd Bennett Field on Jamaica Bay, the only airfield with runways long enough to accommodate a commercial flight in those days. The new airport needed to be built on landfill supported on a metal frame that still interferes a little with the compasses on board planes that are taking off; pilots have to compensate for it. North Beach Airport was expanded from 550 acres to over 800 and was opened October 15, 1939 as The NY Municipal Airport. At the time, Time Magazine called it "the most pretentious land and seaplane base in the world." (In 1939, pretentious was a compliment.) The country's five major airlines in 1939, Pan American Airways, American, United, Eastern Air Lines and Transcontinental & Western Air (TWA) were original tenants.
There have been only 4 plane crashes on takeoff or landing from LaGuardia over the years. On January 15, 2009, US Airways Flight 1549 to Charlotte, NC suffered total engine failure after being struck by a flock of geese at 3000 feet. Captain Chesley Sullenberger and crew safely managed a water landing in the Hudson River with no casualties and only minor injuries.
Above: runway seen from 86th Street and Ditmars Boulevard












Ditmars Avenue/Boulevard, in an area map from about 1915-1920. As we can see, the region is built over the now filled-in Jackson Mill Pond. In the 1800s, there was indeed a mill here, known as Kip's and then Jackson's Mill, used to grind wheat and corn for area residents until 1870. The mill may have been renamed to honor John Jackson, who built an east-west toll road through what was known in the 1800s as Trains Meadow. That road, of course, is the present Northern Boulevard.




Mike has no idea what youtube is, and why should he?



Hotel Row
Ditmars Boulevard's Hotel Row runs from 100th Street southeast to almost 25th Avenue; there are several hostelries here, one bigger than the other, from the older, pedestrian LaGuardia Airport Hotel to the big red Crowne Plaza...






InterContinental Hotels has operated Crowne Plaza Hotels since 1983. The one on Ditmars Boulevard appears to have drowned in a huge bucket of red paint, though I like the hundreds (thousands?) of windows.
East Elmhurst
Ditmars Boulevard runs along the northeast boundary of East Elmhurst, which some say encompasses everything north of Northern Boulevard and east of the Brooklyn Queens Expressway; I think a good chunk of that is Jackson Heights and I restrict EE to everything east of Junction Boulevard/94th Street and north of Northern. The name makes little sense to me because even at its broadest limit, it's east of Astoria and at best, north-northeast of Elmhurst with Jackson Heights in between.
The part of East Elmhurst that Ditmars Blvd. passes through developed relatively early on, in 1905, even before the opening of the Queensborough Bridge. During its relatively lengthy history East Elmhurst became home to a number of famed musicians (joining Addisleigh Park in south Jamaica in this regard) including Ella Fitzgerald and Harry Belafonte (and nearby Corona boasted the longtime homes of Louis Armstong and Dizzy Gillespie). Malcolm X was also a resident, but his stint in East Elmhurst is marred by an ugly incident in which his family's house on 97th Street was firebombed February 14, 1965, just one week before he was fatally shot in Harlem. 97th Street is marked by a street sign bearing his name.
Along Ditmars Boulevard, there's a group of homes overlooking Flushing Bay that date from the very early 20th Century with eclectic architectural design -- I have yet to see them mentioned in any proposed Landmarks Preservation Commission report, and so they're always subject to the predations of overdevelopers who, as we'll see, have already made some incursions.













This Doric-columned building at 31st Avenue has two porches on two floors, the better to view the bay from the west side of Ditmars Boulevard.




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Photographed July 12, 2009; page completed July 26.
©FNY 2009