Pickleball Comes to Randall’s Island This 4th of July!

Brooklyn’s Homegrown Pro Pickleball Team Hosts Matches and Events at MLP New York

By Noah Zimmerman | noah@queensledger.co

Major League Pickleball and the Brooklyn Pickleball Team (BKPT) are hosting MLP New York at SPORTIME Randall’s Island over 4th of July!

From July 3 through the 6, the MLP event will showcase the best pickleball pros in the world across 30 coed team matches.

Four of these matches will feature the hometown Brooklyn Pickleball Team, one of the Premier Level MLP franchises. There will also be an amateur pickleball tournament with all welcome to join the festivities.

“Being able to bring an MLP event to New York within months of announcing Brooklyn Pickleball Team is a major step forward in our mission to be a beacon of positivity and lasting impact in our community,” said Adam Behnke, Chief Operating Officer of Brooklyn Pickleball Team. ”We are looking forward to continuing to work together with all key stakeholders to create programming surrounding the event that serves our pickleball-loving community and will shine a bright light on our city.”

For those looking to get involved, BKPT will be hosting an open practice at Randall’s Island on Thursday, June 12.

The Brooklyn Pickleball Team is also hosting a VIP contest, so be sure to follow @brooklynpickleball.team on Instagram by Sunday the 29 for a chance to win a ticket package for the event.

The 2025 MLP schedule features 14 events across 9 states. The MLP Cup will be in November.

 

NY International FC’s Nick Platt to Step Down as Coach

Founder and Head Coach Departs After Leading Lions to CSL’s Top Division

By Noah Zimmerman | noah@queensledger.com

New York International FC founder and head coach Nick Platt has announced that he is stepping down from the position. Under his leadership, the Lions were able to rise through the CSL, coming within inches of promotion to the APSL.

“Whether as a player, manager, board member, club president, social media maestro, carpool captain, equipment supplier, or shoulder to lean on, Nick embodies the spirit of NYIFC better than anyone else,” the club said in their statement last week.

“When there was nobody to fill the head coach role two years ago, Nick said yes without hesitation. In what was meant to be an interim position, Nick instead led the club to the CSL Division 2 title, promotion to Division 1, back-to-back Kilby Cup victories, and a historic APSL playoff which had us on the brink of semi-professional football.” 

To say his time at International was special is an understatement, from success on the field to his tremendous charitable work with the organization. In a CSL game this year, Platt was found wearing a pink tutu on the sidelines as he raised awareness for the club’s charity work with St. Baldrick’s Foundation to battle children’s cancer.

“The first Kilby Cup win was incredibly special. It reaffirmed my belief that the players I had were special and belonged with the very best in NYC,” Platt remarked about his most cherished moments with the club. “The first time I went to EVLovesNYC food bank and soup kitchen was special too. It has always been so important to me that we are community minded and this was a giant step forward in our goal as a club.”

Captain Aaron Forde remarked that Platt was his favorite coach to play under. “His man management is second to none and you can see how much the group respect and admire him,” he said. “He’s helped my progression as a player, I’ve played my best under him, and I can’t thank him enough for everything!”

It won’t be easy for the Lions to adjust to life without Nick on the sideline, though he’ll still suit up for the reserves. Forde is well aware of the looming challenge for their first team.

“The club will lose some great players but we’ll attract some great ones as we always do. That’s down to the culture and spirit Nick has built along with the rest of NYIFC’s management. I’m very happy that Nick is still going to be playing too, it means I won’t be the slowest on the playing squad,” the defender added with a chuckle.

 

Liberty Look to Snap Skid After 3 Losses in Last 4

New York’s lead in the East down to just 1 game

By Noah Zimmerman | noah@queensledger.com

The red-hot start to the 2025 Liberty season has come to a screeching halt, as New York entered the week with three losses in four games. Since their first loss of the year to the Fever, the Liberty’s backs have been up against the wall. Even their lone win wasn’t convincing, as New York had to overcome a 17-point deficit for win over Atlanta. The tough week continued as New York fell from 9-0 to 10-3 with losses to the Mercury and Storm. They’re down to just a one-game lead over Atlanta in the Eastern Conference.

The toughest pill to swallow was the return of Jonquel Jones to the Injured List The star center returned to action against the Dream last Tuesday after missing five games with a sprained ankle, but renewed the injury after just nine minutes in Thursday’s loss to the Mercury.

Jones has averaged 12 points and 9.6 rebounds through her 9 games. New York still hasn’t lost when Jones has recorded a double-double in a Liberty uniform, so Jonquel’s return to the lineup will be heavily anticipated. It’s estimated recovery will take 4-6 weeks, so Jones may be out through the WNBA All-Star break in July.

“You all see how valuable JJ is to us and how we want to play,” Head coach Sandy Brondello said. “Injuries are a part of the game, it’s unfortunate. JJ is going to work really hard but players are going to have to step up in her absence. you can’t replace JJ’s skill set or what she brings to us, we have to do it by committee.”

In their losses to the Fever and Mercury, the Liberty also struggled without the shooting and defense of Leonie Fiebich. The forward is currently playing with the German national team in the EuroBasket championships and has her WNBA contract suspended until the end of the tournament. She was in quarterfinal action on Wednesday night against Belgium.

Against Seattle, the Liberty were also down a third starter as Sabrina Ionescu missed the game with neck tightness. In her absence, Breanna Stewart scored 18, with Marine Johannes and Rebekah Gardner scoring 17 and 12 respectively in their first starts of the season. It wasn’t enough to overcome the Storm, who pulled away late for a 89-79 win.

A difficult road trip continues for New York, as each opponent holds a winning record. Following their Wednesday night matchup in Golden State, the Liberty traveled to Phoenix, where they’ll take on the Mercury on Friday night at 10pm. After that they’ll look to fend off the 2nd place Dream as they make a stop in Atlanta, with tipoff scheduled for 3pm on Sunday.

When they return home, New York will open a homestand spanning nearly the entire month of July. The Liberty will host the LA Sparks on Thursday, July 3 and the Storm on Sunday the 6.

 

 

Did Hell Just Freeze Over in New York City?

Politcal Whisperer

By Robert Hornak

What everyone thought was unthinkable happened last Tuesday, a 33-year old self-proclaimed socialist with a resume thinner than tissue paper won the nomination for Mayor of the City of New York. 

By all accounts, the perceived front runner, former governor Andrew Cuomo, ran a lackluster, uninspired campaign that he could have phoned in. In contrast, Mamdani ran a campaign that was vibrant and engaging, with a youthful, attractive candidate who managed to connect with many voters. He stood out, in many ways, from the rest of the pack. 

Cuomo had all the establishment support. The Democratic County organizations, the big, powerful unions, and the business and real estate communities. It seemed unthinkable that Democrats could lose this election to a back-bench Assemblyman with no real world experience. But that’s exactly what happened.

Now, everyone who thinks this could be an existential threat to the future of the city is in a state of total panic. 

The conventional wisdom – yes the same wisdom that thought Cuomo was an easy winner – says that the field must be cleared now, and rally around one candidate to take on Mamdani head to head. 

The problem with that is obvious. Why should anyone trust the pick of the conventional thinkers after they got the primary so incredibly wrong? 

Some Republicans think that their nominee, Curtis Sliwa, should be the one. But many more people seem to think that failed and disgraced incumbent mayor Eric Adams is the pick to get behind. Cuomo is also still running as an independent, just like Adams, but is seen as a loser now after his poor primary performance.

After the first round of voting, Mamdani was at 43.5% with 432,000 votes. Cuomo was a distant second at 36.4% with 361,000 votes. That’s extremely embarrassing for someone once elected to serve as governor three times. Most of the Cuomo primary support seems to be jumping to Adams, with the County organizations still undecided on how to deal with such a perilous nominee. 

It seems clear the better way to go, as Republicans often say, is through competition. Eight candidates are on the ballot for mayor. And six appear to be real, including Mamdani, Cuomo, Adams, Sliwa, and two other independent candidates, powerful lawyer Jim Walden, a democrat, and successful biotech entrepreneur Joseph Hernandez, a republican. 

Nobody is dropping out now. That’s clear, no matter how much handwringing is done by the conventional thinkers who believe they know the best way to win again. So, let’s watch this race progress over the next four months, which is plenty of time for the other five candidates to make their case to the voters. Let’s see who resonates, who connects with the voters, who can either overcome all their negative baggage or make an incredible first impression as an exciting, new face to convince the voters they are the best one to run the city. 

Then, come mid-October, we will see who’s in the best position to win and rally everyone around that one candidate to beat Mamdani.

That’s the only way to beat someone with charisma and over 430,000 votes at the start to count on. It’s no guarantee to work, but much better than having one choice shoved down our throats now that nobody can agree on. 

And, of course, we always have the ‘break glass in case of emergency’ option. This will add a new and looming dimension to the governor’s race next year. Whoever is governor, should Mamdani win, will have the power to remove him, as we learned after the Adams indictment. 

Should Mamdani do any of the things he has pledged, allow criminals to run free, impede federal authorities arresting illegal immigrants, or creating an international incident trying to arrest Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in deference to what he refers to as “internation law,” he can be removed from office. 

In what could be a competitive race for governor, a Mamdani mayoralty could be what tilts the scale for the first Republican governor since 2002.

Robert Hornak is a professional political consultant who has previously served as the Deputy Director of the Republican Assembly Leader’s NYC office and as Executive Director of the Queens Republican Party. He can be reached at rahornak@gmail.com and @roberthornak on X.

The Nuclear Power Revolution Reaches New York

Politcal Whisperer

By Robert Hornak

You know an important election is approaching when elected representatives abandon the long-standing political ideology of their party and actually take actions that many people consider long overdue. 

That very thing just happened. Gov. Kathy Hochul, despite generally strong opposition from democrats, just announced that she has directed The New York Power Authority, the utility owned by the state, to build a new nuclear reactor in upstate NY. This new facility will provide approximately half the energy that the 2.0 GW Indian Point facility provided before it was closed.

The closing of Indian Point is considered by most people to be the perfect storm of policy failure. It was ordered by the Cuomo-Hochul administration with no plan to make up for the loss of 25% of the supply being provided by Indian Point to NYC. The fallout was the loss of 1,000 good-paying jobs at the facility and economic activity at surrounding local businesses. 

Ultimately, three new natural gas fired power plants were built that replaced 1.8 GW of the energy lost. Nevertheless, energy costs in NY have been skyrocketing as demand grows. Rolling blackouts have become a constant summer concern as we just witnessed in south Queens where 300,000 homes lost power during a summer heatwave. 

Meanwhile, other states have embraced the new nuclear revolution and the new technologies that have been created in recent decades that are far superior to the tech used when most of our current nuclear facilities were built over 50 years ago. Just as we’ve witnessed with the space program, nobody is looking to use the old 1950’s tech that Indian Point was created with.

Hochul made sure to drive that point home in her announcement, proclaiming, “This is not your grandparents’ nuclear reactor. You’re not going to see this in a movie starring Jane Fonda,” in a reference to Fonda’s 1970’s movie The China Syndrome that nearly killed the nuclear power industry by fantastically fictionalizing the worst case scenario of a nuclear reactor meltdown. This was in spite of the reality that we never had a nuclear plant failure or a single death associated with nuclear energy in the U.S.

In recent years many states have realized the insanity of denying the potential of nuclear power to meet future energy needs and have overturned bans on new nuclear plants. Texas, struggling with its recent self-inflicted energy shortfall from a reliance on new, unreliable wind and solar plants, has just approved a $350 million fund to build new nuclear plants. 

Some of our largest tech companies, including Amazon and Google, who have incredible energy needs to power server farms have also begun investing in nuclear energy to power their operations.

And, of course, there were the recent Executive Orders signed by President Trump to speed up the process for the Nuclear Regulatory Agency to approve new permits and generally make building new nuclear reactors much faster. 

All this is welcome news to most New Yorkers who have been hit with massive electricity bills in recent years that are making living in NY unaffordable for many people. Crushingly high energy bills are just one more reason that there has been an exodus of people from New York to lower cost of living, low tax states like Florida.

But while welcome news, this just scratches the surface of the problem and the need. Many areas upstate are anxious to be the site for this new plant and the many good paying jobs and economic activity it will bring. Unemployment upstate has been abysmal and the exodus out of NY has hit upstate the hardest. 

This, however, should be a first step to making NY a leader in building a nuclear powered future. Communities all across upstate would be thrilled to get a reactor that would revive their local economy while providing desperately needed, reliable and affordable energy for downstate. 

This would be a win-win for everyone. Will Hochul embrace this long overdue win for New Yorkers and build on it or will this just be a one-time election season stunt? Maybe the pressure of reelection will make this more than just a gimmick. Time will tell.

Robert Hornak is a professional political consultant who has previously served as the Deputy Director of the Republican Assembly Leader’s NYC office and as Executive Director of the Queens Republican Party. He can be reached at rahornak@gmail.com and @roberthornak on X.

Queensmark Ceremony at Sanger Hall Honors the Coventry Bronze Accolade Now Installed at Rock N’ Roll History Mural

By Michael Perlman

One could sing “The Heat Is On” or any Rock N’ Roll tune that comes to mind. Afterall, it was a hot crowning moment for Queens when the Queens Historical Society’s “Queensmark” accolade was installed on May 17 at 7 PM in front of Sanger Hall at 48-20 Skillman Avenue. The façade’s mural, “Coventry: A Sunnyside Staple In Rock N’ Roll History,” now has an addition of the prestigious bronze plaque. This event featured a ceremony with the Sanger Hall staff, the legendary Sub family, and a live performance by Charlie Sub & Sound Dogs, the Coventry founder’s son’s band.

Photo by Vita Phoenix

Residents across Queens and even other boroughs are grateful that Sanger Hall, a modern-day classic bar, lounge, and restaurant that hosts musical events, is preserving the memory and spirit of the historic Coventry, the birthplace of shock rock and glam rock, which existed at 47-03 Queens Boulevard. The Coventry musical venue originated in 1972, and was originally known as the Popcorn Pub, but the building was later demolished. Within those walls, Forest Hills’-own Ramones, KISS, Blondie, New York Dolls, and Dictators, among other legendary rock musicians made history and their careers were launched. Based on tradition, the Queensmark’s installation was planned for the façade of the high-rise replacement at the Queens Boulevard site, but did not materialize after an extended period. Sanger Hall warmly agreed to be the host.

Photo by Vita Phoenix

“I admire how remarks were delivered on behalf of Sanger Hall, congratulating the Sub family and speaking how their ethos for Rock N’ Roll, originality, and local neighborhood pride aligns with that of Coventry’s,” said Ally Redmond of ATeam Partnerships, in affiliation with ATeam Communications, a public relations firm.

Recently released is a podcast series titled “Echoes of Coventry” by host Jef Canter, where a “Sizzle” reel overview can be retrieved at https://drive.google.com/file/d/16rpgB9n-w3Rjw-url8LdT5wkhY6DKGLg/view. On Spotify, four episodes have been uploaded to date: https://open.spotify.com/show/7jhoGxANd5QlkikF54SJr4. They are titled “Popcorn, Punk, and Paul Sub: The Origins of Coventry,” “Glitter, Grit, and KISS: The Scene That Sparked A Movement,” “Teenage Lust: Rocking The Coventry with Billy Joe White,” and “Perspiration, Plaques, and the Power of Place: Budd Mishkin & the Queens Historical Society on Why Venues Like Coventry Still Matter.”

It was history-in-the-making at the inaugural event at Sanger Hall on October 30, 2024, which this columnist helped coordinate with ATeam Communications and Queens Historical Society. Patrons were greeted by the unveiling of a unique pop art and rock-inspired mural, produced by well-known street artists Dylon Thomas Burns and Dylan Bauver. It features mixed media, consisting of vintage music ads, signage including Sunnyside’s Bliss Street, and legendary musicians whose careers were launched and cultivated at Coventry. Above the mural, a projector transposed historic facts and vintage images onto the façade, educating attendees and passersby. Residents and visitors can scan a QR code, opening the door to a more elaborate history lesson.

The Popcorn Pub accommodated 700 patrons and was a pivotal platform for artists to express original voices and a style at a time when New York City was undergoing significant cultural shifts. The Coventry became a sanctuary for neighborhood youths, who found solace through music. KISS notably debuted their now-iconic Kabuki makeup on site. As KISS is celebrating their 50th anniversary with a farewell tour, it is crucial to recognize where their storied career began. The two ceremonial events coupled with the mural and the newly installed Queensmark, serves as an anchor to educate generations about the transformative power of music and resilience.

Popcorn Pub circa 1972

Rehashing last October’s milestone event, pizza, hors d’oeuvres, and an open bar was available for guests, setting the mood for a memorable lineup. Jef Canter, an actor, singer, and musician at large was the evening’s host, who energized the crowd in Coventry meets Sanger Hall spirit. He asked the audience to take a look at the mural, if they have not already. He said, “It is an amazing piece of art. Some of it is paper that has been lacquered onto the wall, and some of that is paint. This beautiful collage is meant to represent the way that bands would put up their posts and bills in the old days.”

Canter referenced the transition of the Popcorn Pub to the Coventry, and pinpointed its musicians who “cut their teeth” in the business. He also explained why he is standing on stage. “I became part of the Coventry family, since there was a musical about it titled ‘Bliss Street.’ I had the marvelous opportunity of playing Paul Sub.” He introduced “the real Paul Sub” as a legend and the Coventry’s brainchild, and then continued, “I am hosting a sixth episode video podcast about the history of the Coventry titled ‘Echoes of Coventry.’” Attendees learned that it was being directed by Tal Kissos, who was among the audience members.

Canter continued, “We wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for Michael Perlman, who is a coordinator for this historic project, and he put a lot of energy into preparing for the event and was instrumental in planning the guest speakers, the mural, and this amazing venue.”

Photo by Vita Phoenix

Nick Gulotta, Chief of Staff for Councilwoman Julie Won for Sunnyside, Long Island City, Woodside, and Astoria, spoke on her behalf. He pinpointed and extended gratitude to many attendees, including members of Sunnyside Shines, the local BID. He said, “We are extremely happy to have this mural in the district. What a gift to Queens and Sunnyside! I am one of those people who rock n’ roll saved my life as a kid. I grew up around concert venues, and I’m sure many of you can relate. The idea that future generations in Sunnyside can remember exactly what happened here, just warms my heart. So many of my neighbors, artists, and folks that will see this and think about the history every single day, will be inspired and know their own potential.”

Next to take the stage was performing arts musician Phil Ballman, who embarked upon worldwide tours and serves as Queens’ Director of Cultural Affairs and Tourism on behalf of Queens Borough President Donovan Richards. Ballman is well-known for his drum set work with Grammy-nominated band Antibalas, and according to Canter, he embodies the spirit of cultural vibrancy, being honored at the event. “I’m a child of the seventies and a huge KISS and Ramones fan. It is a thrill to be here, and to be with Mr. Paul Sub whose vision created the incredible club and the legacy. Donovan Richards is a true music fan who invested over $30 million in our Queens cultural institutions.” He later extended congratulations to everyone who played a role in “a piece of Queens and NYC music history.”

Another distinguished guest speaker was Jacqueline Crossan, who serves as Communications Director for State Senator Michael Gianaris. “It’s an honor to recognize a cornerstone of Queens history. On behalf of the senator, I would like to commend everyone involved,” she said. “It really is important that we celebrate such venues, and real institutions in our community that bring us all together.”

Among the most dramatic moments unfolded when the Queens Historical Society unveiled its bronze historic Queensmark program plaque in honor of the Coventry. This distinctive accolade was presented by seven-time Queens history book author, historian, and Queens Historical Society Executive Director Jason Antos in conjunction with Rob MacKay, an author who serves as the society’s board president and Deputy Director, Community for the Queens Economic Development Corporation and is the face behind the Queens Tourism Council. Antos and MacKay also played a significant role in the event’s planning.

At first, they spoke independently. “We will present our coveted Queensmark plaque. When this originated in 1996, it was only given to buildings of great architectural merit, but recently we wanted to branch out by giving it to historic businesses, since Queens is a community of businesses,” said Antos, the son of a mom and pop business owner. “We understand how hard it is to have a dream and build a place where the community will make its routine and love for many years.” Most recent Queensmark recipients were Neir’s Tavern in Woodhaven and Friend’s Tavern in Jackson Heights. As for the Coventry, he explained, “We are proud to present it and will let everyone know about its amazing music history.”

MacKay was invited on stage and added, “We don’t give out these awards very much. A site really has to be worth something. All of the other people on our board felt that it was worthy of our Queensmark. Let’s make that mural Instagrammable!”

Austrian immigrant Paul Sub, at 94, is a Holocaust survivor who immigrated to America and later founded the Coventry and fulfilled the American dream. He came on stage with his son, Charlie Sub. Paul said, “It’s a lot of fun. Thank you for all the work that you do. Hopefully it will continue in different ways, with young people playing music and enjoying the shows.” The father and son duo held up the Queensmark in pride, after Antos turned it around and read its inscription honoring “47-03 Queens Boulevard” as the Coventry site.

Coventry Founder Paul Sub

In an interview, Charlie Sub said, “The American dream was really just a better life for our family, full of opportunities, and my dad achieved that.” He is committed toward keeping Coventry and rock n’ roll history, and his family’s legacy alive through interactive events, art, and his indie band “Charlie Sub & Sound Dogs,” which blends classic and new rock influences. “Our goal is to continue sharing the music and stories that shaped us,” he continued. He also composed the score for the “Bliss Street” musical.

Photo by Vita Phoenix

Sanger Hall was proud of the turnout and positive energy that the event brought to their venue. “It was heartwarming to see such a diverse group of people come together to celebrate Coventry’s legacy. It’s a testament to the venue’s impact across generations and cultures,” said Charlie Sub. The evening’s set included “Big Boss Man,” “Bronx is Burning,” and “Another Place.” “Each song resonates with the gritty and vibrant spirit of the Coventry era,” he explained.

Photo by Vita Phoenix

Sub felt honored by the Queensmark plaque and the mural, and is hopeful for current and future generations. “It’s moving to see our story immortalized in such a creative and permanent way. I hope the mural and plaque inspire curiosity and respect for the roots of rock music in Queens. I want younger generations to feel connected to the legacy of creativity and bold expression that defined that era.” He remembers Coventry’s electric ambiance that captured the rebellious spirit of the times. “It was outfitted with multiple stages, which allowed for a dynamic variety of performances.”

Photo by Vita Phoenix

 

Lend A Helping Hand To Restore Landmarked Remsen Cemetery

Heroism Bonding The Generations Since Forest Hills’ Colonial Times

By Michael Perlman

For May 10 at 11 AM, the Increase Carpenter Chapter Daughters of the American Revolution (ICCNSDAR) is seeking volunteers to tidy up the cemetery and help restore the later addition of four tombstones to their authentic white color. A plan is also underway to clean all signage and the commemorative plaque, as well as plant additional flowers. A presentation will help resurrect its unique history. This free event is sponsored by Juniper Park Civic Association.

Revolutionary War patriots will continue to be honored by ICCNSDAR on May 31 at 11 AM at the landmarked Bowne House in Flushing. This free public event will feature a program on the Remsen family and a reflection of the prior event, and will be followed by a museum tour. DAR members and friends are welcome to participate in a Chapter meeting at 10 AM, with lunch following the program. For additional information, the public can email darqueens@gmail.com.

Remsen Cemetery, August 2019, Photo by Michael Perlman

The mission of DAR is to promote historic preservation, education, and patriotism. “I feel proud to be a member, not just because I have an ancestor who fought in the Revolutionary War, but for the past six years, I have seen and read about all the work the DAR is doing, and it is very impressive,” said Forest Hills resident Allison Plitt, a local journalist, as well as an administrative professional employed by Robert Half. Besides conducting restoration work at Remsen Cemetery and planting, she explained, “Although the NYC Parks Department does maintain the cemetery very well, there is still some trash, sticks, and leaves that need to be picked up.”

There are 10 volunteers on board, but a larger team awaits, relying on community residents who wish to sign up. Afterall, teamwork is essential to historic preservation. “Historic preservation is not something that can be accomplished by one individual. You need to raise funds and get other people involved in the various aspects of restoration, in order to complete your project,” explained Plitt.

Remsen Cemetery, 1950, Courtesy of Historian Ron Marzlock

With the four stone memorial tombstones in mind, erected by the Veterans Administration in 1981, she consulted with Atlas Preservation, an organization that coordinates gravestone preservation training workshops with other DAR chapters. “They clean tombstones with D/2 Biological Solution, which is safe to use on many types of stones. I purchased all of our cleaning supplies through them.”

Remsen Cemetery’s original brownstone tombstones span 1790 through 1819. In 1935, the long-neglected property became a memorial park. Flanking a flagpole, two doughboys honor Forest Hills’ service in WWI. This is also where the annual Forest Hills Memorial Day Parade culminates with speeches and a wreath laying ceremony under the auspices of American Legion Continental Post 1424, in partnership with organizations such as the Forest Hills Kiwanis Club.

Wreath laying ceremony at Remsen Memorial Park featuring 2 WWI Doughboys, 2023, Photo by Michael Perlman

The Remsen family immigrated from Northern Germany in the 17th century. In Colonial times, it was popular for families to have private cemeteries close to home. The Remsen family erected a homestead on their farm adjacent to the cemetery in 1699, which stood until 1925. Jeromus Remsen (1735 – 1790) was Colonel of the Kings and Queens County Militia in the Battle of Long Island, fought in the French and Indian War of 1757, and he commanded the New York Regiment in the American Revolutionary War.

A prime aspect of New York history may actually be a short stroll away. “Remsen Cemetery was mentioned at a DAR meeting, and when I looked up its location, I could not believe it existed right here in Forest Hills. No one ever mentioned it to me,” said Plitt. “In fact, P.S. 144 is named the Col. Jeromus Remsen School, and I never heard anyone call it by that name.”

Remsen Farmhouse, North of Metropolitan Ave & East of Woodhaven Blvd, Courtesy of Michael Perlman

Plitt holds the heroism of our ancestors in her heart, as their spirits are very much alive. “DAR does a lot of work preserving cemeteries and working with veterans. As a member, you come to realize how much people really sacrificed their lives to allow American citizens to live in a truly free country. You appreciate your life so much more when you are constantly learning about people who put their lives at risk, just so you can live in a democratic nation.”

Remsen Cemetery was designated by the NYC Landmarks Preservation Commission in 1981 after a heroic initiative by residents. When a public hearing was slated for July 8, 1980, Remsen Park Coalition Chairman Michael Albetta told The Leader Observer two weeks prior, “This is a very proud moment for the Remsen Park Coalition. Our hard work has finally paid off.” He continued, “I would like to express my gratitude to Councilman Arthur Katzman for all of his unselfish efforts on our behalf. I would also like to thank Senator Martin Knorr, Assemblyman Alan G. Hevesi, and Assemblyman Anthony Seminerio for their assistance in Albany.”

Later addition of limestone memorials & doughboys, Photo by Michael Perlman

A 1925 survey revealed brownstone grave inscriptions of Jeromus, Anna, Jerome (two), Cornelius, Ann Elizabeth, Bridget, and Major Abraham Remsen. The Veterans Administration erected non-brownstone graves that memorialize Colonel Remsen, Maj. Abraham Remsen, and brothers Aurt and Garrett Remsen, who were also Revolutionary War officers. Some brownstone tombstones vanished and remain a mystery, but one must wonder if they will be replicated and reinstalled in their accurate spot someday.

The Remsen Park Coalition’s 1981 plaque states, “Within this park lies the remains of Revolutionary War Veteran Colonel Jeromus Remsen. Buried in the confines of this site were his cousins Major Abraham Remsen, Captain Luke Remsen, Lieutenant Aurt Remsen and their families. The Remsen family was amongst the first settlers of this area, originally known as White Pot.” It then reads, “This plaque also honors the hard work and determination of the Remsen Park Coalition and those individuals and organizations without whom Remsen Park would never have become reality. May this stand as a symbol of a society that cares to remember its heritage, its tradition, its values, and its lost historic sites.”

Selection of members of Increase Carpenter Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, Laurie Hanophy, Leslie Wickham, Kim Kotary placing flags at St. Michael’s Cemetery, East Elmhurst, 2025

As of 1981, the Coalition included Chairman Michael A. Albetta, President Virginia L. Macinnes, Treasurer Frank Barnett, Secretary Marc Wurzel, Felix Cuervo, Joseph E. DeVoy, longtime historian Jeff Gottlieb, and Robert P. Mangieri.

Upon encountering the plaque, Plitt commended the parties behind the cemetery’s 1981 restoration, and said, “To think that local efforts galvanized that type of community of volunteers is very impressive.” Fast-forward to 2025, Albetta extended outreach to DAR, and restoration and beautification will continue to come full circle. “They raised funds to plant 11 Japanese Cherry trees, and the Dutch government donated over 1,000 daffodils for planting,” she continued.

Plitt feels inspired by her chapter’s prior experiences. For example, in 2017, a cleanup was coordinated at Lawrence Cemetery in Astoria. Annually, flags are planted at St. Michael’s Cemetery in East Elmhurst. She explained, “Over the weekend, we planted flags on site in anticipation of Memorial Day. Each year, we also participate in Wreaths Across America, where our chapter lays wreaths at soldiers’ tombstones at Cypress Hills National Cemetery in Brooklyn. Our chapter is continuously involved in events based on member interest. If another local chapter is working on a cemetery cleanup, we will try to participate.”

Selection of members of Increase Carpenter Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, Allison Plitt, Doreen Duff, Shirley DellaVecchia, Francesca Bergenn, Leslie Wickham

 

As an event coordinator and a history buff, Plitt hopes to research the Remsen family further. So far, she and fellow DAR chapter members uncovered a Remsen Cemetery map from 1925 that pinpoints eight members buried on site. They also visited Jamaica’s Central Library and came upon two beneficial books in their archives – “Colonial Patriots” by Barbara Stuchinski and “The Remsen Family in America” by Alfred Hunt Remsen. Whether in an attic or on a dusty shelf, history is bound to resurface. “For the Remsen brothers, Luke and Aurt, we believe there are only memorials. There was no historical documentation saying they were actually buried there,” said Plitt.

Backtracking, on July 8, 1886, The Newtown Register resurrected the history of Old Newtown by publishing selections from the “Town Scrap Book,” originally drafted by the town clerk. In 1776, Colonel Jeromus Remsen was referenced as the supervisor of Newtown. An excerpt reads, “The Remsens were a powerful family in Newtown at this period. The Van Duyns were also a strong family at the same period. At the decisive moment, they took opposite sides; the Remsens under Colonel Jeromus; their competitors under the indomitable Dow Van Duyn. The spring of the passions animated the two families to obtain supremacy in a contest which they felt must be decisive and to be fought without compromise. The whole Whitepot county from Hempstead Swamp to Flushing Creek chiefly belonged to the two families; and there they dwelt in harmony until their latent spirit was excited into action by a conflict at which all the powers of Europe rested their own conflicts the better to satiate their amazement.”

Remsen Memorial Encampment, Courtesy of Michael Albetta

The publication later reads, “The career of Dow Van Duyn forms the shading in perspective to the Doric column which stands Colonel Jeromus Remsen. The homesteads in which dwelt both these men still stand on Trotting Course Lane, within hailing distance and facing each other. The hollow of the road where took place the last stormy interview between these chieftains is much the same as on that day when Dow Van Duyn had watched the retreating form of Colonel Remsen in Continental uniform marching at the head of his regiment to the Battle of Brooklyn. They never met again.”

On August 31, 1926, The Daily Star published Elmhurst resident Arthur White’s article, “Old Newtown in the American Revolution.” He was considered to be an authority on local history. An excerpt stated, “On August 27 (1776), the Battle of Long Island was fought, which terminated in the victory of the British over the patriots. The scene of the contest was in Brooklyn, where the Americans were routed at what is now the intersection of Fifth Avenue and Third Street. Both Colonel Remsen and his cousin, Major Abraham Remsen were present at the battle, and now both these patriotic men, soldiers of the Revolution, lie near together in the little family cemetery adjoining the site of the homestead on Trotting Course Lane (now Woodhaven Avenue), near Metropolitan Avenue.”

Remaining brownstone tombstones, August 2019, Photo by Michael Perlman

White pinpointed major neglect. It read, “The stone over the major’s grave has been destroyed, and the inscription on the colonel’s monument obliterated, while the graves are hidden under dense underbrush.” Today’s generations of volunteers are increasingly dedicated, and landmarking will ensure Remsen Cemetery’s placement on the map for the next few hundred years. Further discoveries and restorations await.

Mapping America’s Bravest in Forest Hills & Rego Park, Uniting Generations on Memorial Day & Year-Round

By Michael Perlman

Monuments, buildings, parks, and parade routes throughout Forest Hills keep the memory of America’s bravest alive on Memorial Day and year-round. Honoring those who dedicated their soul to safeguard our country is always timely. Come along for a leisurely stroll to explore some of these historic sites.

The Captain Gerald MacDonald Statue stands prominently in Captain Gerald MacDonald Memorial Park as a bronze sculpture bearing homage to Gerald MacDonald (1882 – 1929), a Forest Hills resident and WWI veteran. He was an officer of engineers, who erected bridges and dug trenches. The sculpture was dedicated on May 27, 1934 by Mayor Fiorello Henry La Guardia, after American Legion Post 630 allocated $1,500 at the request of WWI veteran Henry MacDonald, Gerald’s brother. The granite base inscription reads: “Capt. Gerald MacDonald; Memorial Dedicated By Forest Hills Post No. 630 The American Legion; To Those Who Served In The World War; 1934.” The statue was sculpted by Henry MacDonald’s brother-in-law, Frederic de Henwood (1864 – 1948), a world-renowned sculptor whose works appeared internationally, and was designed by architect William Henry Deacy (1889 – 1967).

Gerald MacDonald Memorial Park was officially named on April 25, 1933, and historically, the brick circle was known as Flagpole Square, where a huge flagpole once existed. On May 28, 1933, the New York Times reported, “The ceremonies included a parade through Forest Hills by American Legion posts, Boy and Girl Scouts, and civic groups. Colonel F.W. Stopford of the U.S. Army, who was the principal speaker at the ceremonies, praised Mr. MacDonald’s war service as an officer of engineers at the battle of the Meuse-Argonne.” It was announced by the Long Island Daily Press that movies of the park’s dedication would be presented at the Post on November 6, 1933.

A few years ago on eBay, this columnist acquired a rare MacDonald Memorial Games brass medal that represents Forest Hills and WWI history, and features Captain Gerald MacDonald. Into the 1940s and potentially later, the Captain Gerald MacDonald Veterans of Foreign Wars Auxiliary existed at 119-09 Sutphin Boulevard. The Veterans of Foreign Wars memorialized the captain by naming their post, The Captain Gerald MacDonald Post, No. 643 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, according to the 1934 Encyclopedia of American Biography by Winfield Scott Downs.

For over a decade, Forest Hills resident Stephen Melnick, who founded Friends of MacDonald Park, works tirelessly and recruits volunteers who also maintain and enhance the park’s landscaping and overall appeal. Undoubtedly, Captain Gerald MacDonald is watching over in pride. “It is important for the history of our community to get passed down to each generation. Respect and honor for all veterans, such as Captain MacDonald, should be instilled,” said Melnick.

The trail continues nearby with the historic Art Moderne style Midway Theatre at 108-22 Queens Boulevard, with its accordion-like façade and vertical beacon, curved corner, and oval lobby with a sweeping stairway. It was designed in 1942 by America’s foremost theater architect, Thomas Lamb, and architect S. Charles Lee. Upon making an entrance, theatergoers once took pride in a large illuminated WWII Battle of Midway map-inspired work of art. When community residents picked up a copy of The Forest Hills-Kew Gardens Post on September 18, 1942, they came across an ad stating, “The Midway Theatre has been so named and dedicated as a tribute to the gallant men of our armed forces, who achieved so brilliant a victory at Midway Island.” Patrons were ready for a single-screen theater, where they could enjoy films and attempt to escape the traumas of WWII.

On Flagpole Green, formerly Village Green in Forest Hills Gardens, stands an ornate Neo-Classical pink granite and bronze monument, which honors 102 residents and was dedicated in 1920. The WWI Soldiers & Sailors Memorial was designed by renowned American sculptor Adolph Alexander Weinman (1870 – 1952), who lived nearby at 236 Greenway South and operated a studio at 234 Greenway South. The memorial reads, “Erected by the citizens of Forest Hills in recognition of the patriotic spirit and loyal devotion of the men of this community who served in the Military Forces of The United States in The Great War.” The design represents “The Call to Overseas” above the names on the tablet including Dr. Joseph MacDonald, Gerald MacDonald, Henry MacDonald, George C. Meyer who served as president of Cord Meyer, and David and Howard Springsteen of the community’s farming family, when Forest Hills was known as Whitepot. In summer 2022, residents observed meticulous restoration work, resulting in the polishing of the bronze tablet, which developed a green patina as far back as most residents can recall.

The forested Samuel Picker Square at 69th Avenue and Burns Street features a plaque and a stone memorial bearing an inscription: “This Sitting Area is Dedicated to the Memory of Samuel Picker; Outstanding American Community Leader and Dedicated Legionnaire; 1921 – 1981; Forest Hills Post 630 The American Legion.” It also features the name of past Councilman Arthur J. Katzman, a parks advocate. A dedication ceremony was held in 1983.

Samuel Picker wore several hats, mostly throughout the 1960s and 1970s. They included Queens County American Legion Commander, Governor of District 20-K Lions International, Queens Cancer Crusade committee member, and president of the National American Legion Press Association. He served as Grand Marshal of the American Legion County Parade in Ridgewood in June 1971, which began with exercises at the War Memorial on Myrtle Avenue, and surpassed expectations with 15,000 guests.

He also served as president of the Guide Dog Foundation for the Blind. This organization offered philanthropic gift guide dogs and rehab to qualified blind applicants, where masters and guide dogs were trained at the Foundation’s center in Smithtown. Picker owned one of the earliest extant Forest Hills shops, Continental Hardware at 102-01 Metropolitan Avenue, and was also a consultant and buyer. The Forest Hills Chamber of Commerce has been going strong since 1977, and he was its founder and first president.

“Monuments and plaques are always important, since people forget at times. It is inspiring for residents to step up and do some of the great things that Samuel Picker did for our community,” said Pat Conley, 1st Vice Commander of American Legion Continental Post 1424.

Marching in the spirit of our bravest has been a unifying theme of the Forest Hills Memorial Day Parades. Forest Hills residents can trace an extensive route of historic parades. In 1922, red paper poppies were sold by a group of young ladies for 10 cents, and the proceeds benefited the veterans’ Mountain Camp. They hoped that everyone in Forest Hills would wear a poppy, which would pay tribute to wounded soldiers in the war. Abraham Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address” was read, and the Forest Hills Choral Club led “My Country Tis’ of Thee.”

In June 1923, The Forest Hills Bulletin captured how a multi-generational community bonded and paid tribute: “On Memorial Day, the Forest Hills Post of the American Legion conducted services on the Green, in which they honored Rice Bassett, Whitney Bowles, Clarence O. Collins and Lewis Serlin from Forest Hills, who rendered the supreme sacrifice during the war. Commander Thomas B. Paton, Jr. was in charge.” A parade was led by a 15-piece Naval Reserve Band.

The publication continued, “During the services, an aeroplane circled over the Green, and Comrade John von Hofe dropped a wreath, to which was attached a message from President Warren Harding. The wreath was placed on the memorial tablet and the message, calling upon the people for renewed consecration to ‘the finest sentiments of national love, devotion and loyalty’ was read. The speakers were Robert W. McCleary, Major, Coast Artillery Corps, and Hon. Robert W. Bonynge, ex-Congressman from Colorado, who both made stirring appeals for national patriotism. The Choral Club led the singing: Lead Kindly Light was sung by the post quartette, and Dr. Latshaw led in prayer.” A Memorial Day essay contest would engage the interest of neighborhood children, including those of Public School 3.

On May 31, 1938, The New York Times read, “In Forest Hills, a Memorial Day parade was headed by a detail from the Sixty-second Coast Artillery (Anti-Aircraft). The American Legion and other veteran organizations took part together with youth auxiliary units. The parade started at Austin St. and Ascan Ave. and proceeded to the Flagpole Green and thence to Jerry MacDonald Park, and to the Forest Hills Theatre, where exercises were held.”

The 2025 parade will begin on May 25 with an opening ceremony at 11 AM at American Legion Continental Post 1424 at 107-15 Metropolitan Avenue. At 12 PM, the parade will proceed west along Metropolitan Avenue and culminate at Remsen Cemetery, the site of a wreath-laying ceremony. Local and statewide community or civic organizations can march by emailing americanlegionforesthills1424@gmail.com.

The 2023 parade featured over forty organizations and Fleet Week military participants. An honorable highlight was meeting 93-year-old Co-Grand Marshal Anthony Sarro in his uniform, as he paraded alongside his portrait from the time he served in WWII.

The American Legion, incorporated by Congress in 1919, is the nation’s largest wartime veterans’ service organization. It maintains a mission to mentor youth and sponsor wholesome community programs, advocating for patriotism and honor, promoting strong national security, and continued devotion to fellow service members and veterans.

The original Forest Hills Post 630 was chartered in 1919, and would launch and publish the Post Bulletin, which was renamed the Forest Hills-Kew Gardens Post. This post named and dedicated Gerald MacDonald Memorial Park and unveiled its namesake monument. In the 1930s, meetings were held at the Seminole Club on Seminole Avenue at Harvest Street (112th Street at 70th Road) under Commander Clarence W. Williamson, who also served as the American Legion’s Queens County Americanism Chairman.

Today at American Legion Continental Post 1424, a plaque commemorates past commanders. The earliest recorded is James P. Grimes in 1946, alongside names including Stanley J. Koerner in 1953, John Civita from 1968 to 1969, and Arthur L. Dunckelman from 1984 to 1987. Former Forest Hills resident Michael Albetta served as parade coordinator from 1978 to 1990, president and founder of the Remsen Park Coalition which helped restore and landmark Remsen Cemetery, and was coordinator of the “Colonel Remsen Memorial Encampment.” Last week’s column features Forest Hills’ earliest extant site, Remsen Family Cemetery at Trotting Course Lane and Alderton Street. It was designated by the NYC Landmarks Preservation Commission in 1981, and reflects the Colonial period and the American Revolutionary War.

Sponsored by American Legion Continental Post 1424 and the Remsen Park Coalition, the May 30, 1979 parade was predicted to be the largest of its kind countrywide, with hundreds of marchers and nearly 5,000 spectators. It culminated with ceremonies in commemoration of veterans at Remsen Cemetery, including Revolutionary War Colonel Jeromus Remsen.

The 1980 Forest Hills Memorial Day Festival marked an expansion to a two-day event. On May 25, over 200 Colonial troops participated in the “Colonel Remsen Memorial Encampment,” held at Greenfield Park bordering Union Turnpike. Attendees acquired a taste of Colonial life, complete with the era’s crafts. The next day, over 2,000 marchers proceeded along Metropolitan Avenue from the turnpike, which was the parade’s former starting point.

Switching gears to Rego Park is Lost Battalion Hall at 93-29 Queens Boulevard. From 1938 to 1939, the Works Progress Administration (WPA) funded an Art Moderne building that bears homage to the 77th Division of the U.S. Army for its heroism in the WWI Battle of Argonne in France. Over half of its 550 American soldiers perished and are remembered as members of “The Lost Battalion.” Historically, the building featured a firing range and drill hall for the Queens Veterans of Foreign Wars and the American Legion. This is also where the Civilian Defense Volunteer Office welcomed enrollees for World War II. The building was placed under Parks Department jurisdiction in 1960, and serves as a community recreation center, but awaits reopening after an interior renovation.

Adorning the historic façade is a tributary limestone inscription with two bronze tablets of the Statue of Liberty. In a most unassuming place, the gymnasium, players would encounter two “Sailor, Soldier, Marine” WPA murals of the Lost Battalion in action, which were painted by Oscar Julius in 1938. Two bronze plaques are displayed in the lobby. One features Lady Liberty with an inscription that reads, “In Memory of The Lost Battalion. Built AD 1938 By Work Projects Admin. George U. Harvey, Boro. President of Queens.” Another memorial plaque features BP Harvey’s portrait as Lieutenant colonel, DSC (Distinguished Service Cross) dedicated by the citizens of Queens in 1946. For now, these artifacts are in storage.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg presented a proclamation and proclaimed August 22, 2003 as “77th Appreciation Day” in recognition of the brave men and women who served on behalf of our nation. An excerpt read: “For 86 years, the 77th Army Infantry Division has protected our city and our nation in times of crisis. On its 86th anniversary, we salute its descendant, the 77th Army Reserve Command and its courageous and skilled members who continue this illustrious unit’s legacy of valor. The unit was established on August 25, 1917 in New York State, and was called the ‘Metropolitan Division’ because a large percentage of its membership was residents of New York City.”

“Wish You Were Here…Forest Park & Rego Park Historic Buildings” Mural, Uncovering The Rich History Behind The New Mural

By Michael Perlman

Last week’s column highlighted behind-the-scenes aspects and feedback on the new Forest Hills and Rego Park architectural mural, an exquisitely detailed 24-foot by 4-foot installation at The Bagel Spot at 101-01 Queens Boulevard, where the creative vision of several award-winning architects and old-word artisans is preserved. Since 2023, this columnist/Rego-Forest Preservation Council and Four Borough Neighborhood Preservation Alliance were in collaboration with the mural’s exceptional artist, Gigi Chen, appointed by this columnist as a project coordinator and historian. The highly skillful firm, Noble Signs, installed it on June 6.

Photo by Argenis Apolinario

In an ideal city, the featured historic buildings would be landmarked, but some underwent demolition. In the spirit of the Architectural Uprising movement, lost treasures can be replicated. Now it is time to explore architecture and history of what embodies “a living museum.”

Hollywood Lanes at the Metropolitan Industrial Bank Building ~ Opened on November 8, 1952 on 67th Avenue and Queens Boulevard in Forest Hills, and built at $400,000, the popular Hollywood Lanes housed 30 lanes, and offered lunch, dinner, a cocktail lounge, and a snack bar. General Manager Mannie Rose envisioned grand tournaments. The opening ceremony’s special guest was Dick Hoover of Akron, Ohio, who was the youngest bowler to win the All-Star tournament at age 21. Hollywood Lanes accommodated professional bowlers, championships, open bowling, and birthday parties. By 1990, New York City had 44 bowling alleys, in comparison to approximately 160 in the 1960s. It remained in operation until 2002, and is now occupied by New York Sports Club.

Architect Philip Birnbaum designed this bank, retail, and recreation building in partnership with builder Alfred Kaskel. The façade features concave polished stainless-steel horizontal fins. Swedish granite columns with vertical polished stainless-steel fins convey continuity throughout this Mid-Century Modern property, which won a first prize award by the Queens Chamber of Commerce in 1952.

Midway Theatre ~ This historic Art Moderne style theater stands proudly at 108-22 Queens Boulevard, with an accordion-like façade and vertical beacon, curved corner, and oval lobby with a sweeping stairway,  and opened in 1942. It was designed by America’s foremost theater architect, Scotland native Thomas Lamb and consulting architect S. Charles Lee, and achieved a record as one of Queens’ longest continuously operating movie theaters.

Upon making an entrance, theatergoers once took pride in a large illuminated WWII Battle of Midway map-inspired work of art. When residents picked up The Forest Hills-Kew Gardens Post on September 18, 1942, they came across an ad stating, “The Midway Theatre has been so named and dedicated as a tribute to the gallant men of our armed forces, who achieved so brilliant a victory at Midway Island.” Patrons were ready for a single-screen theater, where they could enjoy films and attempt to escape WWII traumas.

Opening attractions were the U.S. Navy’s Technicolor short subject, “The Battle of Midway,” as well as “The Pied Piper” and “Just Off Broadway.” Other popular films were “Yankee Doodle Dandy,” “Casablanca,” “Pride of the Marines,” “Help!,” “West Side Story,” and “Saturday Night Fever.” Among the celebrities who made appearances were Bob Hope and Lucille Ball.The Midway screened first-run films, Walt Disney cartoons, and up-to-the-minute news, and operations shifted from RKO to Skouras to United Artists. It also transitioned from a single screen to a quad to nine screens.

 Forest Hills Stadium with an eagle sculpture, and Frank Sinatra concert and Davis Cup tickets ~ The first tennis stadium countrywide was completed on August 11, 1923 in time for the Wightman Cup. The arched colonnade, graced with eagles and West Side Tennis Club crests, was designed by West Side Tennis Club member Kenneth Murchison, a foremost public buildings architect, and in partnership with engineer Charles Landers. It was erected by the Foundation Company of New York, whose expertise was superstructures and substructures internationally. In a 1922 edition of MIT’s “The Technology Review, an ad referenced it as “America’s Tennis Stadium.”

The nearby Tudor clubhouse features an extensive tennis player “wall of fame,” including portraits of Bill Tilden, Helen Jacobs, Rod Laver, John Newcombe, Andre Agassi, Billie Jean King, and John McEnroe. A series of firsts transpired on the stadium’s hallowed grounds. In 1953, Maureen Connolly Brinker was the first woman to win a Grand Slam. This was the U.S. Open’s birthplace. Singles and National Championships and the Davis Cup also made history. Since tennis was a segregated sport, racial color barriers were broken when Althea Gibson was the first African American to win a U.S. National Tennis title in 1957, and Arthur Ashe was the first African American man to achieve the U.S. Open title in 1968.

As of 1971, the stadium began hosting annual Robert F. Kennedy Pro-Celebrity Tennis Tournaments. The 1976 event, which benefited the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial, featured influential tennis players including Stan Smith, Jimmy Connors, Guillermo Vilas and Wimbledon crown recipient Björn Borg, who were joined by the Kennedy family, Chevy Chase, Walter Cronkite, Art Buchwald, and Muhammad Ali.

Frank Sinatra, Simon & Garfunkel, Bob Dylan, Barbra Streisand, Bette Midler, Trini Lopez, The Who, Hall & Oates, The New York Pops, and Santana are a miniscule percentage of musical legends since the stadium’s adaptation as a concert venue. The Forest Hills Music Festival originated in 1960, and the Stadium underwent a rebirth in 2013, where Mumford & Sons launched a new era. The stadium was also the setting of Alfred Hitchcock’s film, “Strangers on a Train” (1951), and The Beatles’ helicopter landing on grass courts before performing, which was among the most dramatic moments in 1964.

Howard Johnson’s ~ Rego Park residents were fortunate to have “The largest roadside restaurant in the U.S.” at 95-25 Queens Boulevard, which opened in 1940, a short distance away from the World’s Fair. The three-story, $300,000 restaurant occupied a Georgian Colonial mansion-like restaurant, designed by chief architect Joseph G. Morgan of the restaurant chain, and the building earned a 1st prize Queens Chamber of Commerce award. It was owned by Howard D. Johnson, who commissioned the Fair’s esteemed seafood chef, Pierre Franey. This is also where chef Jacques Pépin worked, and was later the recipient of an Emmy Award for Lifetime Achievement.

The façade featured sculptures, ornamental cast stone, pilasters, a portico, dormers, shutters, and urns, and was topped off with a cupola. An Art Deco roadside neon sign boasted 28 ice cream flavors, a grille, a cocktail lounge, steaks, chops, and chicken. The seating capacity was 700 indoors and 300 on its terraces. The Colonial Room and Empire Room dining spaces were available for weddings. Crystal chandeliers, murals designed by famed Parisian colorist Andre Durenceau (rescued by this columnist last year), and a winding grand stairway in the rotunda were regal appointments. By the early 1970s, industry standardization and a change in taste called for fast food, causing this American icon to undergo demolition in 1974. The Rego Park restaurant is depicted in author Paul Freedman’s book, “Ten Restaurants That Changed America.”

1939 World’s Fairgrounds featuring the Trylon & Perisphere monuments rising above Constitution Mall with the George Washington and Four Freedoms sculptures ~

“The World of Tomorrow” was a dominant theme of the 1939 – 1940 World’s Fair, which attracted millions of New York residents and tourists to Flushing Meadow for a celebration of technological innovations and cultural history like no other. It spanned the period of April 30, 1939 to October 27, 1940. Over 44 million visitors attended during the summers.

A linen postcard, designed for the Exposition Souvenir Corporation by the Grinnell Litho. Co. read, “On the theory that the best commemoration is a re-dedication, the New York World’s Fair 1939 celebrates the 150th anniversary of the inauguration of George Washington as the first President of the U.S. by dedicating itself to the task of building a ‘Better World of Tomorrow.’”

The Fair’s centerpiece was the symbolic Trylon and Perisphere monuments, which were a 700-foot spire and a 200-foot in diameter sphere, respectively, designed by Wallace K. Harrison and J. Andre Fouilhoux. In March 1937, Fair President Grover Whalen said, “Entering the sphere, the visitor will emerge on the moving platform. The effect will be that of suddenly stepping out into space. Far beneath he will see cities and towns and farmland, and all the interdependent activity that links them.”

Fairgoers would exit the Perisphere across a bridge to the ground by steps inside the obelisk or by an exterior 900-foot Helicline, a sweeping ramp around the fountain, which offered a commanding view. The Trylon’s monumentality was evident structurally and atop through a beacon of light. It was estimated to be the equivalent of five to ten million candlepower, which would be evident for 30 miles at sea and approximately 200 miles by plane.

Gulf Service Station ~ Rego Park once had its own version of the Empire State Building, as in a streamlined illuminated glass block Art Deco tower of the Gulf Station on the northeast corner of Queens Boulevard and Horace Harding Boulevard. A curved façade with curved windows and stainless steel accents were among the other novelty features, since nearby service stations exhibited Tudor and Mediterranean influences. It was erected by John Meehan & Son Construction Company for Gulf Oil Company. It was deemed futuristic, coinciding with the 1939 – 1940 World’s Fair’s “World of Tomorrow” theme, and was situated en route to the Fair when Horace Harding Boulevard was briefly known as World’s Fair Boulevard. The Gulf Station earned a 1st prize award by the Queens Chamber of Commerce in the commercial construction category. The site was redeveloped in 1987 when the 17-story Queens Boulevard Tower opened at 92-29 Queens Boulevard.

Trylon Theatre ~ With the advent of the 1939 – 1940 World’s Fair, Cooper Union alumnus Joseph Unger (1896 – 1996), designed an Art Deco neighborhood theater at 98-81 Queens Boulevard in Forest Hills to reflect the Fair’s technological innovations and respond to a booming population. It was named after the Fair’s symbolic monument, the Trylon, which was alongside the Perisphere. Analogous to the Fair’s theme, “The World of Tomorrow,” the theater was “The Theater of Tomorrow.” The marquee once boasted classics such as “The Wizard of Oz,” “Gone With The Wind,” and “The Ghost Breakers” starring Bob Hope.

Unique stone façade offered striated and fan-like details, an elliptical white tile marquee, and a sleek vertical glass block projection tower. The marquee and projection tower illuminated Queens Boulevard at night, much as the Trylon and Perisphere monuments made efficient use of light in Flushing Meadows. The projection tower was Joseph Unger’s rectangular variation of the globular Perisphere. The centerpiece of the entrance pavilion’s floor was terrazzo, bearing a 3D mirror image of the Trylon monument, complementary to the Trylon on the semicircular mosaic ticket booth. The floor was accompanied by a delightfully colorful array of inlaid mosaic tiles on both sides in a classic chevron pattern. The single-screen auditorium featured a stepped ceiling with curves among sleek accents, and the proscenium featured pilasters with thematic murals depicting media and sculpture in a growing city. The standee area featured a backlit Trylon mosaic fountain.

In 1999, the theater closed. In 2006, Ohr Natan, a synagogue and community center opened, but in 2022, the congregation was forced to relocate despite opposition due to condo plans.

 Tower Diner bank building ~ Opened in 1993, Tower Diner at 98-95 Queens Boulevard in Forest Hills was a representation of a Greek-American dining classic. Owners Spiro and John Gatanas and their parents creatively adapted the Colonial Revival style Emigrant Savings Bank. Authentic features included an imposing clock tower/cupola with a weathervane and eagle, Corinthian columns, a slate pitched roof, a portico, and a cornice. Tower Diner was a must-stop for an extensive American and cultural menu, including chicken souvlaki, turkey burgers, spinach pies, cranberry chicken, and pasta primavera.

Earlier incarnations were a nightly dancing spot at Manna-Hatin Restaurant, which featured Billy Rose’s Aquabelles from the 1939 World’s Fair’s Aquacade, and Croft Chemists which housed a soda fountain. The corner Art Deco building was rebuilt for the City Savings & Loan Association circa 1963, and is believed to have been designed or inspired by Massachusetts native and award-winning architect George L. Bousquet, who once worked under Thomas Lamb, a foremost architect. Despite community resistance, Tower Diner was forced to shutter its location in late 2021, and was replaced by a condo.

 Jay Dee Bakery ~ In Mid-Century Modern style pinkish red neon, massive Art Deco letters read “Jay Dee Bakery,” a neighborhood cornerstone at 98-92 Queens Boulevard from the early 1950s through 2009. Philip Kampin and Maurice Goldstein were noted as the owners in 1952. It recalled an era where rye bread, Napoleons, and assorted cookies were freshly prepared on premise, and the staff and patrons exchanged stories. Jay Dee catered numerous social functions. The window was a neighborhood showcase filled with multi-layer cake models. The façade’s whimsical Ravenna glass mosaics in green, orange, and gold were a work of art, and Moderne curves characterized the interior ceiling and walls, where indented clouds displayed cake models. In 2009, this columnist rescued the sign among other relics.

 Forest Hills Theatre ~ The Tudor-style former theater at 107-16 Continental Avenue was designed by a foremost public buildings architect, Kenneth Murchison, and retains an ornate Tudor façade with lions, heraldic shields, fruits, knights, vines, urns, and tilework. For $300,000, the Sheer Amusement Company of Queens formally opened “the finest moving picture house on Long Island” on December 5, 1922, and it was the most complete of its kind and size countrywide. The façade would complement Forest Hills Gardens and was part of the adjacent section’s nickname, “The Village.” Its marquee boasted classics such as silent film “Through The Dark,” “Too Many Girls, “The Wizard of Oz,” “Alias Nick Beal,” “Planet of The Apes,” and “Dirty Dancing.”

The theater offered a resident orchestra and organist who played a rare four-manual Smith Unit Organ, sometimes embellished by singers and dancers for a silent film prelude. This also where the Garden Players of Forest Hills and Kew Gardens performed, and on Saturday mornings, children’s films endorsed by the Schools Motion Picture Committee were screened. The theater later featured mainstream and art films, and closed-circuit boxing broadcasts. In 1926, Helen Keller and Anne Sullivan lectured to benefit the American Foundation for the Blind’s mission. In 1971, Roger Williams, known for “Autumn Leaves,” played tunes, gave autographs, and introduced a computerized method of teaching piano and organ.

 

The Forgotten Patriotic Artists of Forest Hills Gardens The Voice Behind Patriotic Posters $ Bookplates Comes Alive

By Michael Perlman

Forest Hills Gardens, which was established in 1909, harbors an extensive history of residents who became known for their achievements on local to international levels. Back in 1914, the community began coordinating annual large-scale Fourth of July Festivals in an exquisitely decorated Station Square, often with activities at the Forest Hills Inn and Tea Garden, Olivia Park, and along Greenway Terrace and Flagpole Green, formerly Village Green.

One hundred and eleven years later, it is time to take a look at three of the community’s well-known artists with patriotic influences, whose success reached far beyond New York. They were Will Phillip Hooper and his wife Annie Betty Blakeslee Hooper of 84 Greenway South, as well as Herman Brown Rountree of 176 Slocum Crescent, but today they are long-forgotten.

Circa 1915

Circa 1915

Will Phillip Hooper (1855 – 1938) was a painter and illustrator who was born in Biddeford, Maine and pursued his studies in Boston and The Art Students League of New York. He founded the Hooper Advertising Service at 200 Fifth Avenue, and was a New York Watercolor Society member. Among the publications which featured his illustrations were Harper’s Weekly, LIFE, St. Nicholas, and The London Graphic. In 1892, “The Legend of The Lantern” featured his photogravures.

Annie Betty Blakeslee Hooper pursued her studies at San Francisco Art School, and then relocated eastward to study with Melville Dewey and Will Phillip Hooper. Her specialties ranged from bookplates to dinner plates, and was a remarkable patriotic poster artist. She exhibited bookplates at venues including the Pen and Brush Club of New York.

The spirit and voice of late artists educate current generations. In January 1916, she told The Christian Science Monitor of Boston, “Your book plate must try to express in symbols your occupation, special interests or hobbies. It may symbolize your home, your love of nature, your ideals, your activities, or your vision. It should be typical of you and you only, and the designer must blend all these symbols into a design which shall have both beauty and significance.” She continued, “After the design is made, it must be etched on copper or in cheaper form, on zinc, and printed on paper of fine quality. Collectors of book plates must look to the symbolism embodied in the composition, and also to the composition itself and to the fineness of line and delicacy of workmanship in its execution. Rare book plates are in demand, and those of famous people are greatly desired by the collectors, who are a growing class.” Orders for book plates were taken by first-class booksellers and jewelers who would retain plates to have a name inserted.

 Forest Hills Gardens was six years old when “Why We Have Chosen Forest Hills Gardens For Our Home” was published at the Village Press in 1915, after W.P. Hooper originated the idea and collaborated with Forest Hills Gardens resident Frederic Goudy, a prominent type designer, artist, and printer. At the time, Forest Hills Gardens featured 166 private homes, the Forest Hills Inn which operated as a hotel with 44 live-in staff members, and the adjacent Housekeeping Apartments (renamed The Marlboro) on the west and The Raleigh on the east. Between the apartments and houses were approximately 720 residents. Hooper selectively approached residents, and 53 entries were published alongside Goudy’s typography and decorations. Spontaneous expressions of villagers were captured and complemented by half-tone illustrations of homes.

In the publication, W.P. Hooper responded to his own question: “After looking in the vicinity of New York for six years to find a place for a home, after buying lots in two localities, I finally decided that Forest Hills Gardens was my choice, because I liked the place, the people, and the prospects. The place – because it’s beautiful; the people – because they’re interesting; the prospect – because property will increase in value.”

W.P. Hooper designed a poster in 1915 featuring a continental soldier carrying the flag and leading a child. His wife Annie designed an Independence Day 1916 “A.B. Hooper” signed poster announcing the circus coming to town. It depicts a whimsical child-like clown riding an elephant, whose upwards trunk is holding a 4th of July flag over a dog on its hind legs in anticipation. The Forest Hills Gardens Bulletin read, “It is not the animal of our books on natural history. But no finer specimen of the poster elephant has ever been seen in captivity. We are profoundly impressed with the peculiar expression conveyed by the treatment of the subject’s eye. Undoubtedly Leonardo da Vinci could have made his famous Mona Lisa smile about fourteen degrees more mysterious if he had seen this elephant first. There is something intensely human about the look in the said eye, suggesting that Mr. Hooper generously contributed that feature to the design.”

A 1917 Forest Hills Gardens Bulletin features their residence that offered a studio on the first floor and a third floor for billiards. Then in 1919, the couple relocated to 51 Summer Street.

Springfield, Missouri native Herman Brown Rountree (1878 – 1946) was a painter, newspaper artist, and magazine illustrator who designed posters for early 20th century Independence Day celebrations, where he served as the Chairman of the Poster Committee. He lived with his wife Nell Lamoine Lee, daughters Helen Cynthia and Eleanor Lee, and a Cuban servant. Forest Hills Gardens principal architect Grosvenor Atterbury designed their home at 176 Slocum Crescent with a two-story rear studio, which offered much light.

The July 12, 1919 Forest Hills Gardens Bulletin stated, “Mr. Rountree is one of this country’s most brilliant poster artists.” He is depicted on an ornate and whimsical 1927 N.M.F. caricature map of Forest Hills Gardens, Forest Hills Stadium, Austin Street, and Queens Boulevard, which features an artist in front of an easel.

Rountree’s illustrations were published for the foremost authors in leading magazines such as “Gunter’s Magazine,” “Appleton’s Booklovers Magazine,” “The Sportsman,” and Frank Buck’s “Bring ‘Em Back Alive” and the “Old Warden” series in “Field and Stream.” He illustrated for the Philadelphia Public Ledger, as well as newspapers in St. Louis, and Hartford, and one of many illustrated works was “On Many Trails.” In his obituary, he was regarded as “one of America’s best-known wildlife illustrators.” His paintings of animal life encompassed race horses, polo ponies, African hunting expeditions, and western ranch life.

Rountree’s 1916 poster, “Yes Mule – It’s The Greatest Show on Earth!!” captured the expressions of astonished children watching a clown that embraced a mule, sitting on its hind legs. The bottom further captured the Gardens’ festive and playful spirit with a lineup of a frivolous clown, a dog act with a carriage being pushed, a ballerina on a horse, boxers, acrobats, as well as a dog playing an instrument while balancing on a ball next to a woman holding a baton. The Forest Hills Gardens Bulletin drew a comparison of his poster to a mural decorative style. Referencing the mule, it stated, “Its neck is beautifully garlanded with flowers, which proves that Rountree is equally at home in the vegetable and animal kingdoms, as well as in our glorious republic. Your true artist is quite impartial in his attitude toward the various forms of government.”

His 1917 poster featured Forest Hills Gardens during WWI on Village Green (now Flagpole Green) with a 48-star American flag being raised and a backdrop of the iconic Forest Hills Inn. It depicted a planned garden community as a center for American values. This is where the community dedicated a new concrete base and bronze collar for the flagpole, in which American sailors assisted in flag-raising exercises. Also depicted are village residents, including a child who is witnessing history first-hand, alongside his mother. He displayed a sign of respect by tipping his hat.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rountree’s colorful 1919 poster features an extravagant masquerade, bright lights, and the Long Island Railroad Station of Station Square as a backdrop. In July 1919, Long Island Life referenced his poster for its unusual charm and artistic value. It read, “Each year he has donated a poster, commemorating our Fourth of July celebration. They have all been good, but this year Mr. Rountree has fairly outdone himself. This poster (the original of which is on exhibit at the Inn) is of such high quality that the committee would not resist reproducing it in color in the Bulletin. We take occasion to thank him, in the name of the residents of Forest Hills Gardens.”

He also specialized in men’s style illustration for clothing manufacturers in New York. “Mr. Rountree’s wonderfully life-like work, not only in fashion portrayal, but also as a magazine and book illustrator, has singled him out as the most brilliant of the younger school of artists. His drawings interpret superlatively well that environment of good breeding and luxurious living which many artists attempt and few – very few – achieve,” read an ad by advertising agents Sherman & Bryan at One Union Square, which secured his services. It was published in a 1907 edition of “The Clothier and Furnisher.”

Rountree’s entry in “Why We Have Chosen Forest Hills Gardens For Our Home” read, “A friend used to bore me with wonderful stories about the beauty, convenience, and general superiority of Forest Hills Gardens. So, to prove him wrong, I came out here one afternoon. Within half an hour I was explaining to him that he didn’t half appreciate the place. And now after having lived here for over two years, my wife and I feel we are in the right place on account of the convenient location, the beautiful surroundings, and above all, the good people we’ve met here.”

If readers are aware of additional posters by these notable artists, have their portraits, are aware of descendants, or would be interested in designing new local patriotic among holiday posters to continue the tradition, please email mperlman@queensledger.com

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