Probably no other Brooklyn neighborhood has as many ghosts as Coney Island, from Luna Park to Steeplechase to George Tilyou to the Elephant Hotel. For over sixty years, Surf Avenue’s trolley poles that carried electric wires on trundling trolley cars remained in place as if frozen in time. Nathan’s is still where it’s always been, at Surf and Stillwell, joined in 2019 by a new incarnation of Feltman’s — which invented the mild sausage on a roll treat in the first place. Despite being vastly shrunken over time, in the summertime Coney Island is Brooklyn’s playground in the warm months, welcoming thousands of visitors to the rides, the beach, the surf, the hot dogs.
For the Coney Island of the late 20th Century, the one still of recent memory, there’s no better chronicle than Charles Denson’s Coney Island Lost and Found. The longtime Coney resident discusses what it was like to live in the gradually devolving Coney Island before it was somewhat revived in the late 1990s and early 2000s by the arrival of things such as the Coney Island Museum and Mermaid Parade.
There’s another Coney, of course, one home to residents year round, many low-income, some middle-income, to over a dozen high rise housing projects constructed in the mid-20th Century: the Brightwater Houses; Luna Park Houses; Warbasse Houses; and Trump Village, constructed by Fred Trump, father of “The Donald.” Before any of thee housing projects were built, Coney north of the elevated train serving the D, F, N and Q trains was home to a cluster of small streets that had modest one or two family residences, and even some larger apartment buildings, that were wiped clean by the hand of Corbusian towers in the park developments.
Here’s a Geographia Maps overview of the Coney Island area in 1938. I’m concentrating on the area east of West 8th ad west of Ocean Parkway, north of Surf Avenue. Right off the bat you can notice a couple of things. At that time Sheepshead Bay Road ran east of West 6th Street, continuing on to Ocean Parkway (Trump Village occupies that stretch now). Neptune Avenue wasn’t continuous — it ran to West 6th, then you needed to travel north and then head east on it again. When Trump Village was built, Neptune avenue was straightened.
West 1st through 3rd Streets continued south to Seabreeze Avenue. Only pieces of those streets are there today, mainly to serve traffic going to PS 100, still there on West 3rd. The thick yellow line at the top is the new Circumferential Parkway, rendered rather crudely here. It opened in 1940 and its name was quickly shortened to Shore Parkway, also known as the Belt Parkway.
Needless to say the E. Belcher Hyde street and property maps produced in the early 20th Century are much more comprehensive, listing every street, house, house number, trolley track, elevated train, you name it. If you’re a true map maven I urge you to check the zoomable plates in Historic Map Works, where they are available for purchase without watermarks.
The section shown here is between West 1st and 5th Streets north of Sea Breeze Avenue. All these streets have been replaced by Trump Village, with the exception of the el right of way, PS 100 (the large orange box in the center) and West 5th, which continues as a major north-south street.
Roberge Place was a short one-block street running between West 3rd and West 5th (West 4th did not extend this far south). It was lined with modest one and two story houses like this one. The NYC Mnicipal Archives tax photos from 1940 is a true time machine here, transporting you to a completely vanished past, Every building on every lost street was captured by the camera.
I’ve noted that Sheepshead Bay Road used to extend east of West 6th. At the top of the map you can see its intersection with West 5th Street. Just south of SBR was a large trolley car yard. South of Surf Avenue was the familiar amusement area.
522 Sheepshead Bay Road at West 5th Street. Not all dwellings had a refrigerator in 1940 and ice purchases were still important.
The upper right area of the map is interesting. There was a small interconnecting grid of paths called Nass Walk, sands Walk, and Stern Walk. Along these paths you would be able to find small attached houses, but also the only large apartment houses that were torn down to make way for Trump Village.
Nass Walk, looking south toward Stern Walk. You can see the demolished Lincoln and Sands Apartment buildings here.
A small two story building on Sands Walk.
Attached pair of houses with a gambrel roof on Stern Walk.
Thompson Place was a short dead end issuing west from West 5th Street south of the Nass-Sands-Stern grid. The short Place dead ended at the trolley yard. This was #19 Thompson Place, the last building on the street. The sign in the foreground marked the block and lot number.
Kister Court ran east from West 8th Street north of Surf Avenue.
When I was a kid age 11, I bicycled all the way down to Coney Island from Bay Ridge, my first relatively long ride. I wound up under the el at West 6th and a street then under demolition, Triton Avenue. It ran from Shell Road east under the el and then was assumed by Neptune Avenue. The name fit right in with Coney nomenclature, as Triton was the conch blowing merman son of Neptune. The avenue lasted longer than it may otherwise have because a trolley line ran on it.
In the map above, only a rerouted Neptune Avenue remains, as does West 6th which runs under the el carrying the F train. The Warbasse Houses and Trump Village now occupy everything else, wiping out Triton Avenue, Rodman and Holmes Streets (which ran north from Triton) and Cortland street (between Sheepshed Bay Road and Neptune Avenue).
A trolley station stop and attached houses on Triton Avenue.
A single family dwelling on Cortland Street.
Attached house and radial wave streetlamp on Holmes Street.
A pair of walkup apartment buildings on Rodman Street.
Today, these streets; their dwellings; the people who lived there — are distant memories and by the next generation will cease to even be memories. The Coney of 2020 has little resemblance of that of 1940.
Check out the ForgottenBook, take a look at the gift shop, and as always, “comment…as you see fit.”
1/15/20