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Port Richmond has its beginnings in the 1690s and early 1700s when Dutch and French colonists settled here. After the landowning Haughwout family laid out the town's tight street grid system in the 1830s the town became a commercial and industrial hub. The Bayonne Bridge to New Jersey, the longest steel arch bridge in the world when it was completed, has provided a beautiful backdrop here since 1931.
Today, I'm here to walk Port Richmond Avenue along its entire length from Forest Avenue to Richmond Terrace. Actually, until the late 1970s or early 1980s (I can't pin down the exact date) Port Richmond Avenue was the northern extremity of Richmond Avenue, Staten Island's main north-south route, which runs, including Port Richmond Avenue, from the Kill Van Kull, bisecting the island, all the way to Raritan Bay.

Richmond Avenue runs as an 8-lane behemoth from Forest Avenue south through the communities of Graniteville, Bulls Head, New Springville, Heartland Village, and Greenridge, feeding traffic to the Staten Island Mall (opened on the site of a former airport in 1973) and the Korean War Veterans Parkway. It's a de facto surface expressway along that length, with pedal to the metal traffic not for timid motorists. (Among its oddities: it passes the real gravesite of Ichabod Crane.) From Greenridge south, it continues as a narrower, but still busy, 4-lane road to Raritan Bay.
Richmond Avenue was laid out in the early to mid-1800s and was a narrow dirt road for much of its history, as it was a farm to market route. Along its length, it went by names such as Bridge Avenue, Old Stone Road (referring to the many granite quarries formerly in the region) and Church Road. In 1912, a year that saw many of Staten Island's streets and roads change their names, all those routes were consolidated under the Richmond Avenue moniker.












According to Staten Island historians, Covert Egbert settled on Staten Island in 1660. His descendant Jacobus and his wife, Catharina Dey Egbert, gave birth to Teunis Egbert, whose son John Egbert was born in 1751. John Egbert owned much of the area around the intersection of Richmond Road and Rockland Avenue, a neighborhood known today as Egbertville. John Egbert, a farmer and weaver, was the first in his family to have Staten Island landmarks named for him. NYC Parks




Willowbrook Road, by the way, is indeed the road and the neighborhood for which the infamous Willowbrook State School was named; the institute for mentally disabled children was exposed for its abuse and neglect by reporter Geraldo Rivera in the early 1970s. The school closed in 1987 and a branch of the College of Staten Island opened at the site six years later.



Port Richmond Avenue takes one of its many twists and turns and we can see a relatively new development, Rumpler Court. There's a bit of green out in the front, the houses look traditional instead of bland brick boxes, and even the meters are hidden off to the side. As new developments go this isn't half bad.








Directly across Port Richmond Avenue from Denino's, at Catherine Street, is Ralph's Famous Italian Ices, a legend in these parts, though I wouldn't know; stopping past on October 24th, I found it shuttered for the season. Ralph's has branched out to other locations in Williamsburg, Franklin Square, Port Washington and elsewhere. Colder weather doesn't seem to faze the Lemon Ice King of Corona. Beware: Ralph's website is currently under construction (in 2009 going on 2010, why are websites under construction?)



Though it's been aluminum-sided, the magnificence of this porched house at Port Richmond Avenue and Clinton Place is undiminished.





I have dealt with this incredible, yet unfinished mural at the corner of Post Avenue and Port Richmond Avenue before, and I enumerate the many personalities covered thereon from the 1920s through 1980s. A local real estate agent has announced that the space in front of it is available, so the mural's days of visibility are numbered, apparently. From the looks of things it was painted in the late 1980s, and I'd love to know its origins.





Port Richmond's crosswalks, signposts and lampposts were installed in 1983, the result of a $1.2 million commercial revitalization project paid for by Federal Community Development block grants and planned by the Northfield Community Local Development Corporation, a private, nonprofit organization. They're definitely of their time. Similar posts can be found on Jamaica Avenue in downtown Jamaica, and Avenue D in East Flatbush.
The Ritz

At the corner of Port Richmond Avenue and Anderson Street is the old Ritz Theatre, opened in 1924 and employed as a movie theatre, concert venue, and roller skating rink till 1985, when it was converted to a bathroom tile showroom. The Ritz, according to legend, launched the career of Jerry Lewis, who did a comedy act here in 1942 and was signed to a contract soon after.
In what's something of a lost chapter in rock history, from 1970 to 1972 the Ritz (which held 2,126 seats) -- and other 'outer-borough' venues such as the Loew's 46th Street Theatre (renamed the 46th Street Rock Palace) in Borough Park, Brooklyn, where the Grateful Dead once played a 2:30PM Wednesday afternoon show! -- featured some of the world's biggest rock bands at the height of their popularity.













One of a pair of former bank buildings on Port Richmond Avenue, this one at New Street. This is actually the younger of the two (see below)



C.H. Martin, 156 Port Richmond Avenue. The C and the M fell off recently and were replaced! Great prices, though I can't vouch for quality. Martin's doesn't have a website, and its history is therefore undocumented; but there was once a C. H. Martin, a Charles Harrison or a Carlton Henry, perhaps, who opened this place decades ago.

The Bayonne Bridge looms over Grove Avenue. The bridge was designed by master bridge builder Othmar Ammann (who also designed the George Washington and Verrazano-Narrows), and completed in 1932. Despite its height, there are concerns that it's not high enough to allow some vessels to pass and there's a proposal to replace it with a cable-stayed bridge. There is a lso a proposal to run a NYC bus route over it (the first time a NYC bus route has entered New Jersey) to connect with Hudson-Bergen Light Rail, which has a terminal in Bayonne.






A concrete trestle from the early 1940s also carries the IND A train on the Rockaway Peninsula (It was built for the LOng Island Rail Road) and gives a glimpse of what elevated train trestles would likely appear if their construction had continued further into the 20th Century. As is, most el construction came between 1888 and 1920.

The present Staten Island Reformed Church was constructed in 1844 and replaced three earlier churches on this site -- the first one was chartered as early as 1696.











The lengthy brick building on the east side of Port Richmond Avenue between Richmond Terrace and Church Street was built in 1874 for Charles Griffith, a boot and shoe dealer, and is known as the Griffith Block. Directly abutting it on Richmond Terrace until 1945 was the St. James Hotel, known to be the last home of Aaron Burr, the third Vice President and the assassin of Alexander Hamilton. Burr (1756-1836) lived on the island the last two years of his life.

Richmond Terrace, looking north past what was then Richmond Avenue. We see the Griffith Block on the right. The building with the triangular cornice in the center of he picture is still there, as is the brick building to its right. P.N. was a big name in corsetry -- those torturous devices ladies resorted to in order to look slim and trim (they torture themselves at Lucille Roberts these days) in the early 20th Century, and the initials can often be seen on ghost wall dog ads. This appears to be circa 1900.

A look from about New Street, 1920 or so. The old Palace Theatre, now razed, is in the foreground; a trolley plies its way down the avenue; in the background is Staten Island Reformed Church. The SIRT was still at grade in those days and so the elevated trestle is not to be seen.

This view shows the Griffith Block, right, which around 1900 featured a hotel sponsored by Schlitz, the beer that made Milwaukee famous. Directly in back of Griffith Block we see the St. James Hotel, where Burr died in 1836.


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Photographed October 24, 2009; page completed November 1.
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©2009 FNY