The Woodhaven Beat: A Tale of Murder in Woodhaven, Part 1
By Ed Wendell On a frigid night in February 1921, Professor Wilfred Phineas Kotkov got off the train at Boyd Avenue (88th Street) and cut
By Ed Wendell On a frigid night in February 1921, Professor Wilfred Phineas Kotkov got off the train at Boyd Avenue (88th Street) and cut
By Justin Joseph | news@queensledger.com On Thursday the New York Police Department hosted its annual Queens South Wheelchair Basketball game at Law Enforcement High School. At
By Ed Wendell Originally published in the Leader-Observer in print. If you look at the front page of this newspaper, you’ll see that it has
By Ed Wendell Over the past few weeks, the windows of GEM Discounts have been plastered with signs announcing their pending closure. The storefront sign
By Ed Wendell The Woodhaven Library on Forest Parkway will celebrate its 100th anniversary this coming weekend with a celebration on Saturday January 6th. The day
By Ed Wendell Woodhaven’s first library opened at the corner of 88th Street and Jamaica Avenue, where a Kentucky Fried Chicken sits today. It was
By Charlie Finnerty | cfinnerty@queensledger.com Workers and contractors at Amazon warehouse DBK4 at 55-15 Grand Ave in Maspeth staged a demonstration Saturday asserting their right
By Queens Ledger Staff | news@queensledger.com For former NYPD Lieutenant, John Rafferty, to protect and serve means a lot more than simply providing the community
By Iryna Shkurhan | ishkurhan@queensledger.com For the first time ever, the Salvation Army partnered with Cornell and Cornell University Cooperative Extension- New York City (CUCE-NYC)
New district lines include slivers of Glendale By Matthew Fischetti mfischetti@queensledger.com Last year, Joann Ariola comfortably sailed to victory to represent City Council District 32
By Ed Wendell On a frigid night in February 1921, Professor Wilfred Phineas Kotkov got off the train at Boyd Avenue (88th Street) and cut
By Justin Joseph | news@queensledger.com On Thursday the New York Police Department hosted its annual Queens South Wheelchair Basketball game at Law Enforcement High School. At
By Ed Wendell Originally published in the Leader-Observer in print. If you look at the front page of this newspaper, you’ll see that it has
By Ed Wendell Over the past few weeks, the windows of GEM Discounts have been plastered with signs announcing their pending closure. The storefront sign
By Ed Wendell The Woodhaven Library on Forest Parkway will celebrate its 100th anniversary this coming weekend with a celebration on Saturday January 6th. The day
By Ed Wendell Woodhaven’s first library opened at the corner of 88th Street and Jamaica Avenue, where a Kentucky Fried Chicken sits today. It was
By Charlie Finnerty | cfinnerty@queensledger.com Workers and contractors at Amazon warehouse DBK4 at 55-15 Grand Ave in Maspeth staged a demonstration Saturday asserting their right
By Queens Ledger Staff | news@queensledger.com For former NYPD Lieutenant, John Rafferty, to protect and serve means a lot more than simply providing the community
By Iryna Shkurhan | ishkurhan@queensledger.com For the first time ever, the Salvation Army partnered with Cornell and Cornell University Cooperative Extension- New York City (CUCE-NYC)
New district lines include slivers of Glendale By Matthew Fischetti mfischetti@queensledger.com Last year, Joann Ariola comfortably sailed to victory to represent City Council District 32