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Fort Greene, Brooklyn

 
Fort Greene, Brooklyn

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Fort Greene, Brooklyn



 
 
Fort Greene is a neighborhood in the New York City borough
Borough (New York City)

New York City is one of the largest cities in the world, and it is segmented into boroughs for various reasons. A borough is a unique form of government which administers the five fundamental constituent parts that make up the History of New York City ....
 of Brooklyn
Brooklyn

Brooklyn is one of the five Borough of New York City, located at the western end of Long Island. An independent city until its consolidation with New York in 1898, Brooklyn is New York City's most populous borough, with 2.5 million residents, and second largest in area....
. Fort Greene is listed on the New York State Registry and on the National Register of Historic Places
National Register of Historic Places

The National Register of Historic Places is the United States government official list of districts, sites, buildings, structures, and objects deemed worthy of preservation....
, and is a New York City-designated Historic District. It is located in north west Brooklyn, above Prospect Park
Prospect Park (Brooklyn)

Prospect Park is a 585-acre public park in the New York City borough of Brooklyn located between Park Slope, Brooklyn, Prospect-Lefferts Gardens, Brooklyn, Kensington, Brooklyn, Windsor Terrace, Brooklyn and Flatbush Avenue, Grand Army Plaza and the Brooklyn Botanic Garden....
. The neighborhood is part of Brooklyn Community Board 2
Brooklyn Community Board 2

Brooklyn Community Board 2 is a local governmental body in the New York City borough of Brooklyn that encompasses the List of Brooklyn neighborhoods of Brooklyn Heights, Brooklyn, DUMBO, Brooklyn, Vinegar Hill, Brooklyn, Fulton Mall, Boerum Hill, Brooklyn, Fort Greene, Brooklyn, New York Navy Yard, Fulton Ferry, Brooklyn, and Clinton Hill, B...
.

The neighborhood is named after an American Revolutionary War
American Revolutionary War

The American Revolutionary War , also known as the American War of Independence, began as a war between the Kingdom of Great Britain and Thirteen Colonies on the North America, and ended in a global war between several European great powers....
 era fort that was built in 1776 under the supervision of General Nathanael Greene
Nathanael Greene

Nathanael Greene was a major general of the Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War. When the war began, Greene was a militia private , the lowest rank possible; he emerged from the war with a reputation as George Washington's most gifted and dependable officer....
 of Rhode Island
Rhode Island

Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, more commonly referred to as Rhode Island , is a U.S. state in the New England region of the United States....
 (McCullough 2005).






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Encyclopedia


Fort Greene is a neighborhood in the New York City borough
Borough (New York City)

New York City is one of the largest cities in the world, and it is segmented into boroughs for various reasons. A borough is a unique form of government which administers the five fundamental constituent parts that make up the History of New York City ....
 of Brooklyn
Brooklyn

Brooklyn is one of the five Borough of New York City, located at the western end of Long Island. An independent city until its consolidation with New York in 1898, Brooklyn is New York City's most populous borough, with 2.5 million residents, and second largest in area....
. Fort Greene is listed on the New York State Registry and on the National Register of Historic Places
National Register of Historic Places

The National Register of Historic Places is the United States government official list of districts, sites, buildings, structures, and objects deemed worthy of preservation....
, and is a New York City-designated Historic District. It is located in north west Brooklyn, above Prospect Park
Prospect Park (Brooklyn)

Prospect Park is a 585-acre public park in the New York City borough of Brooklyn located between Park Slope, Brooklyn, Prospect-Lefferts Gardens, Brooklyn, Kensington, Brooklyn, Windsor Terrace, Brooklyn and Flatbush Avenue, Grand Army Plaza and the Brooklyn Botanic Garden....
. The neighborhood is part of Brooklyn Community Board 2
Brooklyn Community Board 2

Brooklyn Community Board 2 is a local governmental body in the New York City borough of Brooklyn that encompasses the List of Brooklyn neighborhoods of Brooklyn Heights, Brooklyn, DUMBO, Brooklyn, Vinegar Hill, Brooklyn, Fulton Mall, Boerum Hill, Brooklyn, Fort Greene, Brooklyn, New York Navy Yard, Fulton Ferry, Brooklyn, and Clinton Hill, B...
.

Fort Greene Park Sunset
The neighborhood is named after an American Revolutionary War
American Revolutionary War

The American Revolutionary War , also known as the American War of Independence, began as a war between the Kingdom of Great Britain and Thirteen Colonies on the North America, and ended in a global war between several European great powers....
 era fort that was built in 1776 under the supervision of General Nathanael Greene
Nathanael Greene

Nathanael Greene was a major general of the Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War. When the war began, Greene was a militia private , the lowest rank possible; he emerged from the war with a reputation as George Washington's most gifted and dependable officer....
 of Rhode Island
Rhode Island

Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, more commonly referred to as Rhode Island , is a U.S. state in the New England region of the United States....
 (McCullough 2005). General Greene aided General George Washington
George Washington

George Washington was the leader of the Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War and served as the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States of the United States of Americas ....
 during the Battle of Long Island
Battle of Long Island

}|-||-||}The Battle of Long Island, also known as the Battle of Brooklyn or the Battle of Brooklyn Heights, fought on August 27, 1776, was the first major battle in the American Revolutionary War following the United States Declaration of Independence, the largest battle of the entire conflict, and the first battle in which...
 in 1776. Fort Greene Park
Fort Greene Park

Fort Greene Park is a municipal park in Brooklyn, New York, comprising 30.2 acres .The park includes the high ground where the Continental Army built Fort Putnam during the American Revolutionary War....
, originally called Washington Park
Washington Park (disambiguation)

Washington Park may refer to:...
 and Brooklyn's first, is also derived from General Greene's name and the neighborhood. In 1864, Fort Greene park was redesigned by Frederick Law Olmsted
Frederick Law Olmsted

Frederick Law Olmsted was an United States journalist, landscape designer and father of American landscape architecture, famous for designing many well-known urban parks, including Central Park and Prospect Park in New York, New York....
 and Calvert Vaux
Calvert Vaux

Calvert Vaux , was an architect and landscape designer. He is best remembered as the co-designer , of New York's Central Park.Little is known about Vaux's childhood and upbringing....
. The park notably includes the Prison Ship Martyrs' Monument
Prison Ship Martyrs' Monument

The Prison Ship Martyrs' Monument is erected in Fort Greene Park, in the New York City borough of Brooklyn, consisting of a -wide granite staircase and a central Doric column in height....
 and crypt
Crypt

In terms of European architecture, a crypt is a stone chamber or vault beneath the floor of a church usually used as a chapel or burial vault possibly containing sarcophagus, coffins or relics....
, which honors some 11,500 patriots who died aboard British prison ships during the American War of Independence.

Fort Greene contains many superb examples of mid-19th century Italianate
Italianate architecture

The Italianate style of architecture was a distinct nineteenth-century phase in the history of Classical architecture. In the Italianate style, the models and architectural vocabulary of Renaissance architecture, which had served as inspiration for both Palladianism and Neoclassicism, were synthesized with picturesque aesthetics....
 and Eastlake architecture, most of which is well preserved. Fort Greene is known for its many graceful, tree-lined streets and elegant low-rise housing. Fort Greene is also home to the Williamsburgh Savings Bank
Williamsburgh Savings Bank

The Williamsburgh Savings Bank was an important institution in Brooklyn in the middle 19th to middle 20th centuries. A series of bank mergers bought it into the HSBC group late in the century....
, the tallest building in Brooklyn. The neighborhood is close to the Flatbus Avenue train station
Flatbush Avenue (LIRR station)

Flatbush Avenue, also called the Atlantic Terminal, is the westernmost stop on the Long Island Rail Road's Atlantic Branch at Flatbush Avenue and Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn, New York, New York....
 and has access to most major subway lines.

It is also home to several important cultural institutions including the Brooklyn Academy of Music
Brooklyn Academy of Music

Brooklyn Academy of Music is a major performing arts venue in Brooklyn, New York, a borough of New York City, known as a center for progressive and avant garde performance....
, the Brooklyn Music School, The Paul Robeson
Paul Robeson

Paul LeRoy Bustill Robeson was an American actor of film and stage, All-American and professional sportsperson, writer, multi-lingual orator, lawyer, and basso profondo concert singer who was also noted for his wide-ranging social justice activism....
 Theater, The Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts
Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts

File:WSTM Zefferus 0166.jpgThe Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts, or MoCADA, is a museum of contemporary art by black artists in the New York City borough of Brooklyn....
 (MoCADA), UrbanGlass (www.urbanglass.org), 651 Arts performing center for African-American presenters, The Irondale Center for Theater, Education, and Outreach, and Lafayette Church. Brooklyn Technical High School
Brooklyn Technical High School

Brooklyn Technical High School, commonly called Brooklyn Tech or just Tech, and also administratively as High School 430, is a New York City public high school that specializes in engineering, math and science and is the largest specialized high school for science, technology, engineering, and mathematics in the United State...
 is one of New York City's most competitive public schools. The world renowned Pratt Institute
Pratt Institute

Pratt Institute is a specialized, private college in New York City with campuses in Manhattan and Brooklyn, as well as in Utica, New York. Pratt is one of the leading art schools in the United States and offers programs in art, architecture, fashion design, illustration, interior design, digital arts, creative writing, library science, and o...
, in neighboring Clinton Hill
Clinton Hill, Brooklyn

File:ClintonHill PrattHouse byNathanHart.jpgClinton Hill is a neighborhood in the north-central portion of the borough of Brooklyn in New York City....
, is one of the leading art schools in the United States.

Fort Greene is roughly bounded by the Brooklyn Navy Yard
Brooklyn Navy Yard

The United States Navy Yard, New York - better known as the Brooklyn Navy Yard or the New York Naval Shipyard - is an American shipyard, located in Brooklyn, northeast of Battery Park on the East River in Wallabout Bay, a semicircular bend of the River across from Corlear's Hook in Manhattan....
/Nassau Street to the north, Flatbush Avenue to the west, Vanderbilt Avenue to the east and Atlantic Avenue
Atlantic Avenue (New York City)

Atlantic Avenue is an important street in the New York City borough of Brooklyn and Queens. It stretches from the Brooklyn waterfront along the East River all the way to Jamaica, Queens....
 to the south. Its main arteries are Fulton Street above St. Felix Street and DeKalb Avenue. The neighborhood is served by the New York City Subway
New York City Subway

The New York City Subway is a rapid transit system owned by the City of New York and leased to the New York City Transit Authority, a subsidiary agency of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority and also known as MTA New York City Transit....
 at Dekalb Avenue , DeKalb Avenue , Atlantic Avenue–Pacific Street ; Atlantic Avenue ; Atlantic Avenue ; Flatbush Avenue
Flatbush Avenue (LIRR station)

Flatbush Avenue, also called the Atlantic Terminal, is the westernmost stop on the Long Island Rail Road's Atlantic Branch at Flatbush Avenue and Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn, New York, New York....
 (LIRR
Long Island Rail Road

The Long Island Rail Road or LIRR is a commuter rail system serving the length of Long Island, New York that has been classified as a Class II railroad by the Surface Transportation Board....
); or the train at Lafayette Avenue
Lafayette Avenue (IND Fulton Street Line)

Lafayette Avenue is a metro station on the IND Fulton Street Line of the New York City Subway, located at Lafayette Avenue and Fulton Street in Brooklyn....
; and the train at Fulton Street
Fulton Street (IND Crosstown Line)

Fulton Street is a metro station on the IND Crosstown Line of the New York City Subway, located on Lafayette Avenue between South Portland Avenue and Fulton Street in Brooklyn....
. The neighborhood is served by the NYPD's 88th Precinct.

History


Early history


Brooklynmap1766
Approximately 800 A.D. a gradual movement of Native Americans
Native Americans in the United States

Native Americans in the United States are the Indigenous peoples of the Americas from the regions of North America now encompassed by the continental United States United States, including parts of Alaska and the island state of Hawaii....
 advanced from the Delaware
Delaware

Delaware is a U.S. state located on the East Coast of the United States in the Mid-Atlantic States region of the United States. The state takes its name from Thomas West, 3rd Baron De La Warr, a British nobleman and Virginia's first colonial governor, after whom Cape Henlopen was originally named....
 area into lower New York
New York

The State of New York is a U.S. state in the Mid-Atlantic States and Northeastern United States regions of the United States and is the nation's List of U.S....
, ultimately settling as part of the Canarsie tribe among 13 tribes of the Algonquin
Algonquin

The Algonquins are an aboriginal peoples in Canada/Indigenous people of North American speaking Algonquin language. Culturally and linguistically, they are closely related to the Ottawa and Ojibwe, with whom they form the larger Anishinaabe grouping....
 Nation. In 1637, Walloon
Walloons

Walloons are a Romance-speaking people partly from Germanic origin and Celtic origin; in any case a melting-pot speaking French language, living in Belgium principally in Wallonia, more generally the inhabitants of Wallonia....
 (now called Belgian
Demographics of Belgium

This article is about the demographics features of the population of Belgium, including population density, Ethnic group, education level, health of the populace, economic status, religious affiliations and other aspects of the population....
) Jansen de Rapelje purchased of Native American land from Dutch West India Company
Dutch West India Company

Dutch West India Company was a company of The Netherlands merchants. Among its founding fathers was Willem Usselincx . On June 3, 1621, it was granted a chartered company for a trade monopoly in the West Indies by the Republic of the Seven United Netherlands and given jurisdiction over the African slave trade, Brazil, the Caribbean, and...
 in the area of Brooklyn that became known as Wallabout Bay
Wallabout Bay

Wallabout Bay is small body of water in Upper New York Bay along the northwest shore of the New York City borough of Brooklyn, between the present Williamsburg Bridge and Manhattan Bridge, opposite Corlear's Hook on Manhattan to the west, across the East River....
 (from Waal Boght or "Bay of Walloons"). This is the area where the Brooklyn Navy Yard
Brooklyn Navy Yard

The United States Navy Yard, New York - better known as the Brooklyn Navy Yard or the New York Naval Shipyard - is an American shipyard, located in Brooklyn, northeast of Battery Park on the East River in Wallabout Bay, a semicircular bend of the River across from Corlear's Hook in Manhattan....
 now stands on the northern border of Fort Greene. An Italian
Italian people

The Italian people are a Southern European ethnic group located primarily in Italy and, by virtue of a wide-ranging Italian diaspora, throughout Western Europe, the Americas and Australia....
 immigrant named Peter Caesar Alberti started a tobacco plantation near the bay in Fort Greene in 1649, but was killed six years later by Native Americans. In 1776, under the supervision of General Nathanael Greene
Nathanael Greene

Nathanael Greene was a major general of the Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War. When the war began, Greene was a militia private , the lowest rank possible; he emerged from the war with a reputation as George Washington's most gifted and dependable officer....
 of Rhode Island
Rhode Island

Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, more commonly referred to as Rhode Island , is a U.S. state in the New England region of the United States....
 the American Revolutionary War
American Revolutionary War

The American Revolutionary War , also known as the American War of Independence, began as a war between the Kingdom of Great Britain and Thirteen Colonies on the North America, and ended in a global war between several European great powers....
 era Fort Putnam was constructed. Later renamed after Greene, the fort was a star-shaped earthwork that mounted six 18-pound cannons, and was the largest on Long Island
Long Island

Long Island is an island located in southeastern New York, United States, just east of Manhattan. Stretching northeast into the Atlantic Ocean, Long Island contains four counties, two of which are Borough s of New York City, and two of which are mainly suburban....
. After the American defeat in the Battle of Long Island
Battle of Long Island

}|-||-||}The Battle of Long Island, also known as the Battle of Brooklyn or the Battle of Brooklyn Heights, fought on August 27, 1776, was the first major battle in the American Revolutionary War following the United States Declaration of Independence, the largest battle of the entire conflict, and the first battle in which...
, George Washington
George Washington

George Washington was the leader of the Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War and served as the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States of the United States of Americas ....
 withdrew his troops from the Fort under the cover of darkness, a brilliant move that saved the outnumbered American army from total defeat by the British
Kingdom of Great Britain

The Kingdom of Great Britain, also known as the United Kingdom of Great Britain, was a country in North-West Europe, in existence from 1707 to 1801....
. Although the fort was repaired in advance of an expected attack on Brooklyn by the British during the War of 1812
War of 1812

The War of 1812, between the United States of America and the British Empire , was fought from 1812 to 1815.There were several immediate stated causes for the U.S....
, it slowly deteriorated after.

19th century


In 1801 the United States Government purchased land on Wallabout Bay for the construction of the Brooklyn Navy Yard
Brooklyn Navy Yard

The United States Navy Yard, New York - better known as the Brooklyn Navy Yard or the New York Naval Shipyard - is an American shipyard, located in Brooklyn, northeast of Battery Park on the East River in Wallabout Bay, a semicircular bend of the River across from Corlear's Hook in Manhattan....
, stimulating some growth in the area. Ferry
Ferry

A ferry is a form of transport, usually a boat or ship, used to carry passengers and their vehicles across a body of water. Ferries are also used to transport freight and even railroad cars....
 service linking Manhattan
Manhattan

Manhattan is one of the five borough of New York City, located primarily on Manhattan Island at the mouth of the Hudson River.With a United States Census of 1,620,867 living in a land area of 22.96 square miles , Manhattan, coextensive with New York County, is the most population density county in the United States, w...
 and Brooklyn launched in 1814, and Brooklyn's population exploded from 4,000 to nearly 100,000 by 1850. Fort Greene was known as The Hill and was home to a small commuter population, several large farms - the Post Farm, the Spader farm, the Ryerson Farm, and the Jackson farm - and a burial ground. As early as the 1840s the farm owners began selling off their land in smaller plots for development. Country villa
Villa

A villa was originally an upper-class country house, though since its origins in Roman Republic times the idea and function of a villa has evolved considerably....
s, frame row houses
Row houses

In architecture and city planning, a terrace or row house or townhouse is a style of medium density housing that originated in Europe in the late 17th century, where a row of identical or mirror-image houses share side walls....
, and the occasional brick row house dotted the countryside, and one of them was home to poet Walt Whitman
Walt Whitman

Walter Whitman was an United States Poetry of the United States, essayist, journalism, and humanism. He was a part of the transition between Transcendentalism and literary realism, incorporating both views in his works....
, editor of the Brooklyn Eagle
Brooklyn Eagle

The Brooklyn Eagle, also called The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, was a daily newspaper published in Brooklyn, New York from October 26, 1841 to March 16, 1955, and is also a successor daily newspaper by the same name....
 newspaper.

Since the early 19th century, African American
African American

African Americans or Black Americans are citizens or residents of the United States who have origins in any of the Black people populations of Africa....
s have made significant contributions to Fort Greene's development. New York State outlawed slavery
Slavery

Slavery is a form of forced labor where a person is compelled to Labor for another . Slaves are held against their will from the time of their capture, purchase, or birth, and are deprived of the right to leave, to refuse to work, or to receive Remuneration in return for their labor....
 in 1827 and 20 years later "Coloured School No. 1", Brooklyn's first school for African-Americans, opened at the current site of the Walt Whitman Houses. Abolitionists formed the Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church in 1857, and hosted speakers such as Frederick Douglass
Frederick Douglass

Frederick Douglass was an American Abolitionism, History of women's suffrage in the United States, editing, orator, author, statesman and Reform movement....
 and Harriet Tubman
Harriet Tubman

Harriet Tubman was an African-American abolitionist, humanitarian, and Union spy during the American Civil War. After escaping from Slavery in the United States, into which she was born, she made thirteen missions to rescue over seventy slaves using the network of antislavery activists and safe houses known as the Underground Railroad....
 and also aided in the work of the Underground Railroad
Underground Railroad

The Underground Railroad was an informal network of secret routes and safe houses used by 19th century African American Slavery in the United States in the United States to escape to free state and Canada with the aid of Abolitionism who were sympathetic to their cause....
. Skilled African-American workers fought for their rights at the Navy Yard during the tumultuous Draft Riots of 1863 against armed bands of hooligans. The principal of P.S. 67 in the same year was African American, and Dr. Phillip A. White became the first black member of Brooklyn's Board of Education
Board of education

A board of education or a school board or school committee is the title of the board of directors of a school, local school district or higher administrative level....
 in 1882. By 1870, more than half of the blacks in Brooklyn lived in Fort Greene, most of them north of Fort Greene Park.

In the 1850s Fort Greene's growth spread out from stagecoach lines on Myrtle Avenue
Myrtle Avenue (New York City)

Myrtle Avenue in New York City is a street that runs from Flatbush Avenue in Downtown Brooklyn Brooklyn to Jamaica Avenue in Richmond Hill, Queens, Queens....
 and Fulton Street
Fulton Street (Brooklyn)

Fulton Street, street name after engineer Robert Fulton, exists mainly in two parts in what are today two borough s of New York City which Fulton linked by his steam ferries, and each segment has its own distinct identity....
 that ran to Fulton Ferry
Fulton Ferry, Brooklyn

Fulton Ferry is a neighborhood in the New York City borough of Brooklyn. The neighborhood is named for a prominent ferry line crossing the East River between Manhattan and Brooklyn, and is also the name of the ferry slip on the Brooklyn side....
, and The Hill became known as the home of prosperous professionals, second only to Brooklyn Heights
Brooklyn Heights, Brooklyn

Brooklyn Heights is a neighborhood within the New York City borough of Brooklyn; originally designated through popular reference as 'Brooklyn Village', it has, since 1834, become a prominent area of the Brooklyn borough....
 in prestige. During the 1850s and 1860s, blocks of Italianate brick
Brick

A brick is a block of ceramic material used in masonry construction, usually laid using mortar ....
 and brownstone
Brownstone

Brownstone is a brown Triassic sandstone which was once a popular building material. The term is also understood to be a terraced house clad in this material....
 row houses were built on the remaining open land to house the expanding upper and middle class population. The names of the most attractive streets (Portland, Oxford, Cumberland, Carlton, and Adelphi) came from fine London terraces and streets of the early 19th century. By the 1870s construction in the area had virtually ended, and the area still maintains hundreds of Italianate, Second Empire
Second Empire

Second Empire is an architectural style that was popular during the Victorian era, reaching its zenith between 1865 and 1880, and so named for the "French" elements in vogue during the era of the Second French Empire....
, Greek Revival, Neo-Grec
Neo-Grec

Neo-Grec is a term referring to late manifestations of Neoclassicism, early Neo-Renaissance now called the Greek Revival style, which was popularized in architecture, the decorative arts, and in painting during France's Second French Empire, or the reign of Napoleon III, a period that lasted approximately between 1848 and 1865....
, Romanesque
Romanesque architecture

Romanesque architecture is the term that is used to describe the architecture of Middle Ages Europe which evolved into the Gothic architecture style beginning in the 12th century....
 and Renaissance
Renaissance

The Renaissance was a cultural movement that spanned roughly the 14th to the 17th century, beginning in Italy in the late Middle Ages and later spreading to the rest of Europe....
 row houses of virtually original appearance.

As Manhattan became more crowded, the poor as well as the well-off made Fort Greene their home, and the unoccupied areas of Myrtle Avenue became a shanty town
Shanty town

Shanty towns are settlements of poverty people who live in improvised dwellings made from scrap materials—often plywood, Corrugated galvanised iron, and sheets of plastic....
 known as "Young Dublin". In response to the horrible conditions found there, Walt Whitman called for a park to be constructed and stated in a column in the Eagle, "[as] the inhabitants there are not so wealthy nor so well situated as those on the heights...we have a desire that these, and the generations after them, should have such a place of recreation..." The park idea was soon co-opted by longtime residents to protect the last open space in the area from development.

Fgpark
Washington Park, renamed Fort Greene Park
Fort Greene Park

Fort Greene Park is a municipal park in Brooklyn, New York, comprising 30.2 acres .The park includes the high ground where the Continental Army built Fort Putnam during the American Revolutionary War....
 in 1897, was established as Brooklyn's first park in 1847 on a plot around the site of the old Fort. In 1864, Frederick Law Olmsted
Frederick Law Olmsted

Frederick Law Olmsted was an United States journalist, landscape designer and father of American landscape architecture, famous for designing many well-known urban parks, including Central Park and Prospect Park in New York, New York....
 and Calvert Vaux
Calvert Vaux

Calvert Vaux , was an architect and landscape designer. He is best remembered as the co-designer , of New York's Central Park.Little is known about Vaux's childhood and upbringing....
, by now famous for their design of Central Park
Central Park

Central Park is a large public, urban park in New York City, with about twenty-five million visitors annually. Most of the areas immediately adjacent to the park are known for impressive buildings and valuable real estate....
, were contracted to design the park, and constructed what was described in 1884 as "one of the most central, delightful, and healthful places for recreation that any city can boast." Olmsted and Vaux's elegant design featured flowering chestnut trees
Chestnut oak

The Chestnut oak is a species of oak in the List of Quercus species#Section Quercus, Quercus sect. Quercus. It is native to the Eastern United States United States, where it is one of the most important ridgetop trees from southern Maine southwest to central Mississippi, with an outlying northwestern population in southern Michigan....
 along the periphery, open grassy spaces, walking paths, a vine-covered arbor
Arbor

Arbor or arbour may refer to:*Arbor , a shaded garden area*Arbor or mandrel*Arbor Networks, a P2P throttling company*Arbor knot, a knot commonly used to attach fishing line to a fishing reel...
 facing a military salute ground, a permanent rostrum
Rostrum

Rostrum may refer to:* Any platform or stage for public speaking* Australian Rostrum, an association of Australian public speaking clubs* Rostrum , an anatomical structure resembling a bird's beak...
 for speeches, and two lawns used for croquet
Croquet

Croquet is a game played both as a recreational pastime and as a competitive sport which involves hitting wooden or plastic balls with a mallet through hoops embedded into the grass playing arena....
 and tennis
Tennis

Tennis is a sport played between two players or between two teams of two players each . Each player uses a strung racquet to strike a hollow rubber Tennis ball covered with felt over a net into the opponent's tennis court....
. The park's success prompted the creation of the larger Prospect Park
Prospect Park (Brooklyn)

Prospect Park is a 585-acre public park in the New York City borough of Brooklyn located between Park Slope, Brooklyn, Prospect-Lefferts Gardens, Brooklyn, Kensington, Brooklyn, Windsor Terrace, Brooklyn and Flatbush Avenue, Grand Army Plaza and the Brooklyn Botanic Garden....
. At the highest point of the park, The Prison Ship Martyrs Monument and vault was erected in 1908 to house the bones of some of the 12,000 Revolutionary soldiers and civilians whose bodies were thrown off British prison ships and later washed ashore. The monument, designed by the firm of McKim, Mead, and White
McKim, Mead, and White

McKim, Mead, and White was a prominent architect in the eastern United States at the turn of the twentieth century. The firm consisted of Charles Follen McKim, William Mead, and Stanford White....
, was the world's largest Doric column at tall, and housed a bronze urn at its apex. Restoration work is currently under way to restore the monument and will be complete in the fall of 2007.

On April 24, 1888, the Fulton Street Elevated Line began running from Fulton Ferry to Nostrand Avenue
Nostrand Avenue

Nostrand Avenue is a major street in Brooklyn, New York. It runs from Emmons Avenue in Sheepshead Bay to Flushing Avenue in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, where it continues as Lee Avenue....
, shortening the commute of Fort Greene residents, while also blocking light and adding street noise to residents facing Fulton Street. Elevated lines also ran along Lafayette Avenue and Myrtle Avenue
Myrtle Avenue (New York City)

Myrtle Avenue in New York City is a street that runs from Flatbush Avenue in Downtown Brooklyn Brooklyn to Jamaica Avenue in Richmond Hill, Queens, Queens....
.

20th century


Fort Greene in the early 20th century became a significant cultural destination. After the original Brooklyn Academy of Music
Brooklyn Academy of Music

Brooklyn Academy of Music is a major performing arts venue in Brooklyn, New York, a borough of New York City, known as a center for progressive and avant garde performance....
 in Brooklyn Heights burned down in 1903, the current one was built in Fort Greene, and opened in 1908 with a production of Charles Gounod
Charles Gounod

Charles-Fran?ois Gounod was a French composer, best known for his Ave Maria as well as his operas Faust and Rom?o et Juliette....
's Faust
Faust (opera)

Faust is an opera in five acts by Charles Gounod to a French language libretto by Jules Barbier and Michel Carr? from Carr?'s play Faust et Marguerite, in turn loosely based on Goethe's Faust Part One....
 featuring Enrico Caruso
Enrico Caruso

Enrico Caruso was an italians tenor. Caruso was also one of the most significant and renowned singers in any genre in both the 19th and 20th Centuries, and one of the most important pioneers of recorded music....
 and Geraldine Farrar
Geraldine Farrar

Geraldine Farrar was a soprano opera singer and film actress. She had a large following among young women, who were nicknamed "Gerry-flappers"....
 (Caruso suffered a throat hemorrhage while singing at BAM in 1920 and died several days later). At the time, BAM was the most complexly designed cultural center in Greater New York
New York metropolitan area

The New York metropolitan area or Tri-State Region is the most populous metropolitan area in the United States and is also List of metropolitan areas by population....
 since the construction of Madison Square Garden
Madison Square Garden

Madison Square Garden, often abbreviated as MSG and known colloquially as The Garden, has been the name of four arenas in New York City....
 15 years earlier. Fort Greene also showcased two stunning movie theaters, built in the 1920s: The Paramount Theater has been converted into Long Island University
Long Island University

Long Island University is a Private university, coeducational, nonsectarian institution of higher education in the State of New York in the United States....
's Brooklyn Campus; and the Brooklyn Fox Theatre on Flatbush Avenue
Flatbush Avenue (Brooklyn)

Flatbush Avenue is one of the major avenues in the New York City borough of Brooklyn. Flatbush Avenue runs from the Manhattan Bridge southeastward to Jamaica Bay, where it becomes Marine Parkway and the Marine Parkway-Gil Hodges Memorial Bridge which connects Brooklyn to the Rockaway, Queens in Queens....
 at Fulton Street which was demolished in 1971. Built from 1927-1929, the Williamsburgh Savings Bank Tower
Williamsburgh Savings Bank Tower

The Williamsburgh Savings Bank Tower, or One Hanson Place, is the tallest building in the borough of Brooklyn, New York City and a familiar Brooklyn landmark....
, Brooklyn's tallest building, is considered one of the 10 greatest skyscrapers in New York
List of tallest buildings in New York City

This list of tallest buildings in New York City ranks skyscrapers in the United States city of New York City, New York by height. The tallest building in New York City is the 102-storey Empire State Building, which rises 1250 ft and 1472 ft by pinnacle height, in Midtown Manhattan and was completed in 1931....
. It is located next to the Brooklyn Academy of Music
Brooklyn Academy of Music

Brooklyn Academy of Music is a major performing arts venue in Brooklyn, New York, a borough of New York City, known as a center for progressive and avant garde performance....
. Brooklyn Technical High School
Brooklyn Technical High School

Brooklyn Technical High School, commonly called Brooklyn Tech or just Tech, and also administratively as High School 430, is a New York City public high school that specializes in engineering, math and science and is the largest specialized high school for science, technology, engineering, and mathematics in the United State...
, one of New York's most selective public high schools began construction on Fort Greene Place in 1930.

The poet Marianne Moore
Marianne Moore

Marianne Moore was a Modernism American poet and writer....
 lived and worked for many years in an apartment house on Cumberland Street. Her apartment, which is lovingly recalled in Elizabeth Bishop's essay, "Efforts of Affection", has been preserved exactly as it existed during Moore's lifetime—though not in Fort Greene. To see the Moore apartment you need to travel to Center City Philadelphia
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Philadelphia is the largest city in Pennsylvania and the List of United States cities by population city in the United States. It is the fifth-largest metropolitan area and fourth-largest urban area by population in the United States, the nation's fourth-largest consumer media market as ranked by the Nielsen Media Research, and the 49th-most...
, to the Rosenbach Museum & Library
Rosenbach Museum & Library

The Rosenbach Museum & Library is located within two 19th-century townhouses at 2008 and 2010 Delancey Place in the United States city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania....
. After her death, the furnishings and contents of Marianne Moore's apartment were purchased by the Rosenbach brothers, renowned collectors of literary ephemera. These pieces were then painstakingly reassembled in the top floor of their Philadelphia townhouse. Richard Wright
Richard Wright (author)

Richard Nathaniel Wright was an African-American author of powerful, sometimes controversialnovels, short stories and non-fiction.Much of his literature concerned racial themes....
 wrote Native Son
Native Son

Native Son is a novel by United States author Richard Wright . The novel tells the story of 20-year old Bigger Thomas, an African American living in utter poverty....
 while living on Carlton Avenue in Fort Greene.

During World War II, the Brooklyn Navy Yard employed more than 71,000 people. Due to the resulting demand for housing, the New York City Housing Authority
New York City Housing Authority

The New York City Housing Authority , created by urbanist Charles Abrams, provides housing for low and moderate income residents throughout the five boroughs of New York City....
 built 35 brick buildings between 1941 and 1944 ranging in height from six to fifteen stories collectively called the Fort Greene Houses. Production at the yard declined significantly after the war and many of the workers either moved on or fell on hard times. In 1957-1958 the houses were renovated and divided into the Walt Whitman Houses and the Raymond V. Ingersoll Houses. One year later Newsweek
Newsweek

Newsweek is an United States weekly newsmagazine published in New York City. It is distributed throughout the United States and internationally....
 profiled the housing project as "one of the starkest examples" of the failures of public housing
Public housing

Public housing is a form of housing tenure in which the property is owned by a government authority, which may be central or local. Social housing is an umbrella term referring to rental housing which may be owned and managed by the state, by not-for-profit organizations, or by a combination of the two, usually with the aim of providi...
. The article painted a picture of broken windows, cracked walls, flickering or inoperative lighting, and elevators being used as toilets. Further depressing the area was the decommissioning of the Navy Yard in 1966 and dismantling of the Myrtle Avenue elevated train in 1969 which made the area much less attractive to Manhattan commuters.

From the 1960s through the 1980s, Fort Greene fought hard times that came with city-wide poverty, crime and drugs. While some houses were abandoned, artists, preservationists and Black professionals began to claim and restore the neighborhood in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Herbert Scott Gibson, a resident of the street called Washington Park, organized the Fort Greene Landmarks Preservation Committee which successfully lobbied for the establishment of Historic District
Historic district

A historic district is a section of a city which which contains historic building considered valuable for historical or architectural reasons. In some countries, historic districts receive legal protection from development....
 status. The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission
New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission

The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission is the New York City agency charged with administering the city's Historic preservation Law....
 designated two districts, the Fort Greene and BAM Historic Districts, in 1978. The Committee is now known as the Fort Greene Association. Spike Lee
Spike Lee

Shelton Jackson "Spike" Lee is an Emmy Award-winning and Academy Award-nominated United States film director, Film producer, screenwriter, and actor, noted for his films dealing with controversial Society and Politics issues....
 established his 40 Acres & A Mule Filmworks
40 Acres & A Mule Filmworks

40 Acres & A Mule Filmworks is the production company of noted American filmmaker Spike Lee .The company is named for a famous episode of early Reconstruction era of the United States....
 company in Fort Greene in the mid 1980s, further strengthening the resurgence of the neighborhood.

Recent history

The late 1990s and early 2000s saw the influx of many new residents and businesses to Fort Greene. While issues of gentrification are raised, Fort Greene stands to many as one of the best examples of a truly racially and economically diverse neighborhood with what The New York Times
The New York Times

The New York Times is an American daily newspaper published in New York City. The largest metropolitan newspaper in the United States, "The Gray Lady"?named for its staid appearance and style?is regarded as a national newspaper of record....
 referred to as a "prevailing sense of racial amity that intrigues sociologists and attracts middle-class residents from other parts of the city." It is also home to a large gay population, with one of the highest concentration of same-sex couples in New York City according to the US Census.

The controversial Atlantic Yards
Atlantic Yards

The Atlantic Yards is a mixed-use commercial and residential development project of 16 high-rise buildings, currently proposed in the neighborhoods of Prospect Heights, Brooklyn and Park Slope, adjacent to Downtown Brooklyn and Fort Greene, Brooklyn in Brooklyn, New York City....
 project to build a stadium for and relocate the New Jersey Nets
New Jersey Nets

The New Jersey Nets are a professional basketball team in the National Basketball Association that plays in the Eastern Conference 's Atlantic Division ....
 (which would become the Brooklyn Nets) along with a complex of large commercial and residential high-rises on the border of Fort Greene and Prospect Heights
Prospect Heights, Brooklyn

Prospect Heights is a neighborhood in the northwest of the New York City borough of Brooklyn. It is bounded by Flatbush Avenue to the west, Atlantic Avenue to the north, Eastern Parkway to the south, and, Washington Avenue to the east, at the end of Prospect Hill....
  - the "Brooklyn Nets Arena
Brooklyn Nets Arena

The Barclays Center is a proposed sports arena to be built partly on a platform over the Metropolitan Transportation Authority -owned Atlantic Yards at Atlantic Avenue in the New York City borough of Brooklyn....
" has garnered opposition from many neighborhood residents including Councilwoman Letitia James
Letitia James

Letitia "Tish" James is an United States lawyer, activist and politician in the Working Families Party. She is the current New York City Council member for Brooklyn's 35th Council District....
 and author Jhumpa Lahiri
Jhumpa Lahiri

Jhumpa Lahiri is an United States author of Bengali people Indian descent. Lahiri's debut short story collection, Interpreter of Maladies , won the 2000 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, and her first novel, The Namesake , was adapted into the popular The Namesake ....
.

Press-worthy trivia

New York Times, 1858, "Homes of the Poor" "The poverty stricken condition of the inhabitants residing in the Fort Green (sic)/Clinton Hill district] of Brooklyn render it almost an unknown land,". Focusing on a certain section of the east Brooklyn area defined as "between Flushing and Dekalb Avenues, as far east as Classon Avenue and as far west as Ryerson, extending across Fulton Avenue," the Times item said the real estate boom has resulted in class conflict among a majority of the area's longtime residents (identified as "renters or squatters") and its new neighbors—middle to upper income homeowners (identified as out-priced Manhattanites attracted to the spatial wealth of Brooklyn and able to afford the high price of its grand scale Neo-Gothic brownstones.) The paper further explained the conflict as one that had existed for some time, evidenced perhaps by a letter to the editor of a local Brooklyn paper published prior to the Times profile. The author, a new homeowner, wrote "Perchance there are but few places about more desirable for residences, or more pleasant for our evening walks...(but) on every side filthy shanties are permitted to be erected from which issue all sorts of offensive smells...It is indeed a fact that many of the inmates of these hovels keep swine, cattle, etc. in their cellars and not an unusual circumstance to witness these animals enjoying side by side with their owners the cheering rays of the sun; whilst offal and filth of the assorted family is suffered to collect about their premises and endanger the lives of those in their neighborhood by its sickening and deadly effluvia."

Notable residents in Fort Greene/Clinton Hill (past and present)


Politicians

  • Councilmember
    New York City Council

    The New York City Council is the lawmaking body of the New York City. It has 51 members from 51 council districts throughout the five boroughs. The Council serves as balance of power against the List of mayors of New York City in a "strong" mayor-council government model....
     Letitia James
    Letitia James

    Letitia "Tish" James is an United States lawyer, activist and politician in the Working Families Party. She is the current New York City Council member for Brooklyn's 35th Council District....
  • State Senator
    New York State Senate

    The New York State Senate is one of two houses in the New York State Legislature and has members each elected to two-year terms. There are no limits on the number of terms one may serve....
     Velmanette Montgomery
    Velmanette Montgomery

    Velmanette Montgomery represents District 18 in the New York State Senate, which comprises Fort Greene, Boerum Hill, Red Hook , Bedford-Stuyvesant, Sunset Park and Park Slope, among other neighborhoods located within the borough of Brooklyn....
  • Assemblymen
    New York State Assembly

    The New York State Assembly is the lower house of the New York Legislature, the state legislature of the U.S. state of New York. The Assembly is composed of 150 members representing an equal amount of districts, with each district having an average population of 128,652....
     Hakeem Jeffries
    Hakeem Jeffries

    Hakeem Jeffries is the Assemblyman in New York's 57th Assembly District. A qualified supporter of Bruce Ratner's controversial Atlantic Yards project, he defeated Bill Batson-a former union organizer and opponent of the planned Forest City Ratner development in downtown Brooklyn-by a margin of 64%-25% in September 2006....
     and Joseph Lentol
    Joseph Lentol

    Joseph Lentol represents District 50 in the New York State Assembly, which comprises Greenpoint, Brooklyn, Williamsburg, Brooklyn and Fort Greene, Brooklyn, among other neighborhoods located in the northern portion of the New York City borough of Brooklyn....
  • U.S. Congressman Edolphus Towns.
All of Fort Greene's representatives are Democrats, although Letitia James was elected on the Working Families Party
Working Families Party

The Working Families Party is a List of political parties in the United States#Categorizing U.S. political parties political party in the United States founded in New York in 1998....
 line.

Writers

  • Poet Walt Whitman
    Walt Whitman

    Walter Whitman was an United States Poetry of the United States, essayist, journalism, and humanism. He was a part of the transition between Transcendentalism and literary realism, incorporating both views in his works....
    , who was influential in the creation of Fort Greene Park in 1843
  • Poet Marianne Moore
    Marianne Moore

    Marianne Moore was a Modernism American poet and writer....
  • Novelist Richard Wright
    Richard Wright (author)

    Richard Nathaniel Wright was an African-American author of powerful, sometimes controversialnovels, short stories and non-fiction.Much of his literature concerned racial themes....
     wrote Native Son
    Native Son

    Native Son is a novel by United States author Richard Wright . The novel tells the story of 20-year old Bigger Thomas, an African American living in utter poverty....
     while living at 175 Carlton Ave.
  • Novelist John Steinbeck
    John Steinbeck

    John Ernst Steinbeck III was an American literature. He wrote the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Grapes of Wrath, published in 1939 and the novella Of Mice and Men, published in 1937....
    's first apartment when he moved to New York in 1925 was on Fort Greene Place.
  • Novelist Jhumpa Lahiri
    Jhumpa Lahiri

    Jhumpa Lahiri is an United States author of Bengali people Indian descent. Lahiri's debut short story collection, Interpreter of Maladies , won the 2000 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, and her first novel, The Namesake , was adapted into the popular The Namesake ....
  • Novelist/Poet/Playwright/Recording Artist Carl Hancock Rux
    Carl Hancock Rux

    Carl Hancock Rux, is a published poet, playwright, novelist, essayist and recording artist. He is the author of the collection of poetry, Pagan Operetta ; the novel Asphalt and the OBIE Award winning play Talk, and head of the MFA Playwrights Program at California Institute of the Arts....
  • Music Journalist Touré
    Touré

    Tour? is an United States novelist, music journalist, cultural critic, and television personality based in New York City....
  • Music Journalist/Novelist Nelson George
    Nelson George

    Nelson George is an African American author, music and culture critic, journalist, and filmmaker. He has been nominated twice for the National Book Critics Circle Award....
  • Playwright Michael Weller
    Michael Weller

    Michael Weller is a Brooklyn-based playwright who is best known for his plays Moonchildren and Loose Ends . Weller is one of the founders of the Cherry Lane Theatre's acclaimed Mentor Project, which pairs pre-eminent playwrights with emerging playwrights for a season-long mentorship....
  • Novelist Colson Whitehead
    Colson Whitehead

    Colson Whitehead is a New York-based novelist. He is best-known as the author of of the 2001 novel John Henry Days. In 2002, he received a MacArthur Foundation, often referred to as the "Genius grant."...
  • Novelist Colin Channer
    Colin Channer

    Colin Channer is a Jamaican writer, often referred to as "Bob Marley with a pen," due to the spiritual, sensual, social themes presented from a literary Jamaican perspective....
  • Novelist Jennifer Egan
    Jennifer Egan

    Jennifer Egan is an United States novelist and short story writer. She was raised in San Francisco, California. She graduated from San Francisco University High School before attending the University of Pennsylvania and St John's College, Cambridge....
  • Harlem Renaissance writer/artist Gwendolyn Bennett
  • Novelist Truman Capote
    Truman Capote

    Truman Capote was an United States writer whose short stories, novels, plays, and non-fiction are recognized literary classics, including the novella Breakfast at Tiffany's and In Cold Blood , which he labeled a "non-fiction novel"....
     (17 Clifton Pl., 1946)


Artists

  • Photographer Robert Mapplethorpe
    Robert Mapplethorpe

    Robert Mapplethorpe was an United States photographer, known for his large-scale, highly stylized black and white portraits, photos of flowers and naked men....
  • Photographer Gertrude Kasebier
  • Artist/Theater Director Robert Wilson
    Robert Wilson

    Robert Wilson may refer to:* Rob Wilson , British politician and entrepreneur, MP for Reading East* Rob Wilson , Canadian rap artist better known as Fresh I.E....


Musicians

  • El-P (underground hip hop artist and founder of Definitive Jux Records). His critically acclaimed album "I'll Sleep When You're Dead
    I'll Sleep When You're Dead

    I'll Sleep When You're Dead is the second full-length studio album by New York hip hop music artist El-P, released on his own Definitive Jux record label on March 20, 2007....
    " was recorded at his residence in Fort Greene
  • Late rapper Ol' Dirty Bastard
    Ol' Dirty Bastard

    Russell Tyrone Jones was an American rapper who went by the stage name Ol' Dirty Bastard . He was one of the founding members of the hip hop music group Wu-Tang Clan....
  • Rapper Just-Ice
    Just-Ice

    Just-Ice A former bouncer at Punk rock clubs, Ice was one of the first of the New York rappers to embrace hardcore rap , and when he burst out of Fort Greene, Brooklyn, as Just-Ice, he gained instant notoriety....
  • Betty Carter
    Betty Carter

    Betty Carter , born Lillie Mae Jones, was an United States jazz singer renowned for her Musical improvisation technique and idiosyncratic vocal style....
  • Cecil Taylor
    Cecil Taylor

    Cecil Percival Taylor is an United States pianist and poet. Classically trained, Taylor is generally acknowledged as one of the inventors of free jazz....
  • Branford Marsalis
    Branford Marsalis

    Branford Marsalis is an United States saxophonist, composer and bandleader. While primarily known for his work in jazz as the leader of the Branford Marsalis Quartet, he also performs frequently as a soloist with classical ensembles and has led the group Buckshot LeFonque....
  • Gary Bartz
    Gary Bartz

    Gary Bartz is an United States alto and soprano saxophonist and clarinetist....
  • Patti Smith
    Patti Smith

    Patricia Lee "Patti" Smith is an United States singer-songwriter, poet and artist who was a highly influential component of the punk rock movement with her 1975 debut album Horses ....
  • Rev. Hezekiah Walker(Walt Whitman Houses on Myrtle Ave)
  • Lester Bowie
    Lester Bowie

    Lester Bowie was an American jazz trumpet player and composer. He was a member of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians, and cofounded the Art Ensemble of Chicago....
  • Steve Coleman
    Steve Coleman

    Steve Coleman, born , is an United States saxophone player, spontaneous composer, composer and band leader. His music and concepts have been a heavy influence on contemporary jazz....
  • Bill Stephney of The Bomb Squad
    The Bomb Squad

    The Bomb Squad is an influential hip hop production team, known for their work with Public Enemy . The Bomb Squad are noted for their dense, distinct, innovative production style, often utilizing dozens of samples on just one track....
  • Vernon Reid
    Vernon Reid

    Vernon Reid is an English guitarist, songwriter, composer and bandleader. Best known as the founder and primary songwriter of the heavy metal band Living Colour, Reid was named #66 on Rolling Stone's 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time....
     of Living Colour
    Living Colour

    Living Colour is an American funk metal band from New York City, formed in 1983. A prominent all-African American band of that movement, which also included Jane's Addiction, Faith No More, Primus , and 24-7 Spyz in the late 1980s, Living Colour rose to fame with their debut album Vivid in 1988....
  • Citizen Cope
    Citizen Cope

    Citizen Cope is the pseudonym of Clarence Greenwood, an American musician. Greenwood was raised in Washington, DC and now lives in Brooklyn, New York....
  • Lisa Fischer
    Lisa Fischer

    Lisa Fischer is an United States Grammy Award winning R&B singer. She is known for her beautiful image, impressive vocal range and talents that reach high up to the whistle register, and her 1991 smash hit single "How Can I Ease the Pain"....
  • Dana Dane
    Dana Dane

    Dana Dane is an United States Hip hop music artist known for humorous lyrics and for his fashion sense. He was born in the Walt Whitman housing project in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, Brooklyn, in New York City, and began his career as part of the Kangol Crew with fellow emcee Slick Rick, to whom he sounded markedly similar, although Slick Rick's...
  • Bill Lee
    Bill Lee (musician)

    William "Bill" James Edwards Lee III is an United States musician. He has played the bass for many artists including Aretha Franklin, Odetta and Bob Dylan....
  • Slide Hampton
    Slide Hampton

    Locksley Wellington "Slide" Hampton is an United States jazz trombonist, composer and arranger. He was a Grammy Awards of 1998 winner for "Best Jazz Arrangement Accompanying Vocalist", as arranger for "Cotton Tail" performed by Dee Dee Bridgewater....
     lived at 245 Carlton Avenue where he rented rooms to Eric Dolphy
    Eric Dolphy

    Eric Allan Dolphy was an American jazz alto saxophone, Western concert flute #In jazz, and bass clarinetist.Dolphy was one of several groundbreaking jazz alto saxophone players to rise to prominence in the 1960s....
    , Freddie Hubbard
    Freddie Hubbard

    Frederick Dewayne Hubbard was an United States jazz trumpeter. He was known primarily for playing in the bebop, hard bop and post bop styles from the early 60s and on....
    , Wes Montgomery
    Wes Montgomery

    John Leslie "Wes" Montgomery was an United States jazz guitarist. He is generally considered one of the major jazz guitarists, emerging after such seminal figures as Django Reinhardt and Charlie Christian and influencing countless others, including Pat Martino, George Benson, and Pat Metheny....
    , and Wayne Shorter
    Wayne Shorter

    Wayne Shorter is an United States jazz composer and saxophone, commonly regarded as one of the most important American jazz saxophonists and composers since the 1960s....
    . John Coltrane
    John Coltrane

    John William Coltrane was an United States jazz saxophonist and composer.Starting in bebop and hard bop, Coltrane later pioneered free jazz. He influenced generations of other musicians, and remains one of the most significant tenor saxophonists in jazz history....
     was also a frequent visitor.
  • Carla Cook
    Carla Cook

    Carla Cook is Grammy-nominated jazz vocalist.A Detroit, Michigan native, music seized hold of Cook at an early age. As a student at Cass Technical High School she played string bass in the school orchestra, studied piano and voice on weekends, and sang in her church?s choir....
  • Toshi Reagon
    Toshi Reagon

    Toshi Reagon is an United States folk music/blues musician. She is the daughter of Sweet Honey in the Rock co-founder Bernice Johnson Reagon, with whom she has sometimes collaborated on musical projects and of Cordell Hull Reagon, a leader of the civil rights movement in Albany, member of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee , and c...
  • John Wesley Harding
    John Wesley Harding (singer)

    Wesley Stace is a folk music/pop singer-songwriter who goes by the stage name John Wesley Harding and who has called his style of music "folk noir" and "gangsta folk"....
  • Rapper Talib Kweli
    Talib Kweli

    Talib Kweli Greene , better known as Talib Kweli, is an United States MC from Brooklyn, New York. He is one of the best-known and critically, if not commercially, successful rappers in alternative hip hop....
  • Actor/Rapper Mos Def
    Mos Def

    Dante Terrell Smith , is an American MC and actor known by the stage name Mos Def. Mos Def started his hip hop music career in a group called Urban Thermo Dynamics, after which he appeared on albums by Da Bush Babees and De La Soul....
  • John Flansburgh
    John Flansburgh

    John Conant Flansburgh is an actor and musician. He is half of the longstanding Brooklyn, New York-based alternative rock duo They Might Be Giants, for which he writes, sings and plays rhythm guitar....
     and John Linnell
    John Linnell

    John Sidney Linnell , musician, is known primarily as one half of Brooklyn, New York alternative rock duo They Might Be Giants. In addition to singing and songwriting, he plays accordion, Baritone saxophone and bass saxophone, clarinet, and Keyboard instrument for the group....
     of the band They Might Be Giants
    They Might Be Giants

    They Might Be Giants is a Grammy Award-winning Music of the United States alternative rock band which began as a duo of John Flansburgh and John Linnell, and currently also includes Marty Beller, Dan Miller , and Danny Weinkauf....
  • Rapper Chubb Rock
    Chubb Rock

    Chubb Rock is a New York-based rapper who released several commercially successful hip hop music albums in the early 1990s. His stage name is thought to be inspired by the name of "Chuck Robb", although this is most likely more of a clever play on words than a tribute to the politician....


Actors and directors

  • Spike Lee
    Spike Lee

    Shelton Jackson "Spike" Lee is an Emmy Award-winning and Academy Award-nominated United States film director, Film producer, screenwriter, and actor, noted for his films dealing with controversial Society and Politics issues....
      maintained his movie studio 40 Acres & A Mule Filmworks
    40 Acres & A Mule Filmworks

    40 Acres & A Mule Filmworks is the production company of noted American filmmaker Spike Lee .The company is named for a famous episode of early Reconstruction era of the United States....
     there. Several of his films, including She's Gotta Have It
    She's Gotta Have It

    She's Gotta Have It is a 1986 in film comedy-drama film screenwriter and film director by Spike Lee. It was also Lee's first feature-length film....
    , and She Hate Me
    She Hate Me

    She Hate Me is a 2004 in film LGBT independent comedy-drama feature film directed by Spike Lee and starring Anthony Mackie, Kerry Washington, and Ellen Barkin....
     were partially shot in Fort Greene.
  • Chris Rock
    Chris Rock

    Christopher Julius "Chris" Rock III is an United States comedian, actor, screenwriter, television producer, film producer and Film director....
  • Academy Award nominated actor Rosie Perez
    Rosie Perez

    Rosa Mar?a "Rosie" P?rez is an Academy Award-nominated United States actress, dancer, choreographer and film director. She is recognized for her nasal voice and thick New York dialect....
  • Film director and cinematographer Ernest Dickerson
    Ernest Dickerson

    Ernest Roscoe Dickerson is an United States Film director and television director and cinematographer. He is known for his frequent collaborations with Spike Lee....
  • Saul Williams
    Saul Williams

    Saul Stacey Williams is an American poet, writer, actor and musician known for his blend of poetry and alternative hip hop and for his leading role in the 1998 independent film Slam ....
  • Academy award nominated actor Terence Howard
  • Roger Guenveur Smith
    Roger Guenveur Smith

    Roger Guenveur Smith is an American writer, director, and actor.Smith was born in Berkeley, California, the son of Helen, a dentist, and Sherman Smith, a judge....
  • Tony award winning actor Denis O'Hare
    Denis O'Hare

    Denis O'Hare is an American Tony Award-winning actor....
  • Adrian Grenier
    Adrian Grenier

    Adrian Grenier is an United States actor, musician and Film director. He is best known for his lead role on the HBO original series, Entourage , as Vincent Chase....
  • Keri Russell
    Keri Russell

    Keri Lynn Russell is an American actor and dancer. After appearing in a number of made-for-television films and series during the mid-1990s, she came to fame for portraying the title role of Felicity Porter on the hit series Felicity, which ran from 1998 to 2002, and for which she won a Golden Globe Award....
  • Jeffrey Wright


Non arts-related fields


  • Dr. Susan McKinney Stewart 1847-1918: the first African American woman to receive a medical degree in New York State and the third in the U.S.


  • Nicky Cruz
    Nicky Cruz

    Nicky Cruz is the former leader of a New York City gang, Mau Maus. He later became a world-renowned religious minister.Nicky Cruz was born to a Theistic Satanist family in Puerto Rico, into a home where his parents brutally abused him, both physically and mentally, his mother saying that she did not want him and his father locking him in...
     (December 6, 1938 in San Juan, Puerto Rico
    San Juan, Puerto Rico

    San Juan is the Capital and largest Municipalities of Puerto Rico in Puerto Rico. As of the United States Census Bureau, it has a population of 433,733, making it the List of United States cities by population city under the jurisdiction of the United States....
    ) Former leader of a notorious New York City gang
    Gang

    A gang is a Group of people who through the organization, formation, and establishment of an assemblage share a common Identity . In current usage it typically denotes a organized crime or else a criminal affiliation....
    , The Mau-Maus
    Mau Maus

    Mau Maus was the name of a 1950s street gang in New York. The book and the adapted film The Cross and the Switchblade and biography Run Baby Run document the life of its most famous leader, Nicky Cruz....
    , he later became a world renowned religious minister.


  • Kelvin Martin
    Kelvin Martin

    Kelvin Darnell Martin , known to the underworld as 50 Cent, was an African American who grew up in the Bronx, New York, but later moved to Brooklyn, New York and was known as a stick-up kid in a Public housing in the United States and Canada in Fort Greene, Brooklyn....
     an infamous robbery expert (stick up kid) and criminal. Also known as the original 50 Cent
    50 Cent

    Curtis James Jackson III , better known by his stage name 50 Cent, is an American rapper. He rose to fame with the release of his albums Get Rich or Die Tryin' and The Massacre ....
    .


See also

  • List of Brooklyn neighborhoods
  • Junior's
    Junior's

    Junior's is a restaurant at the corner of Flatbush Avenue and DeKalb Avenue in Brooklyn . The restaurant also has an outlet inside Grand Central Terminal in Midtown Manhattan and one in the Times Square area....
  • Atlantic Terminal Urban Renewal Area
    Atlantic Terminal Urban Renewal Area

    The Atlantic Terminal Urban Renewal Area is a section of the New York City In the Downtown Brooklyn area of the borough of Brooklyn, adjacent to the neighborhoods of Prospect Heights, Brooklyn, Park Slope, Brooklyn and Fort Greene, Brooklyn, near the Atlantic Terminal train station....
  • Atlantic Yards
    Atlantic Yards

    The Atlantic Yards is a mixed-use commercial and residential development project of 16 high-rise buildings, currently proposed in the neighborhoods of Prospect Heights, Brooklyn and Park Slope, adjacent to Downtown Brooklyn and Fort Greene, Brooklyn in Brooklyn, New York City....
  • Atlantic Terminal Mall
    Atlantic Terminal Mall

    Atlantic Terminal Mall is a shopping mall located on Atlantic Avenue surrounded by Hanson Place, Fort Greene Place and Flatbush Avenue in the Fort Greene, Brooklyn section of Brooklyn, New York....


External links