My Brooklyn

Readers Report


Michael Wolfson, M.D.

Pitkin Ave in 1956 where a blue suit,charcoal grey tie, topped off with a pink shirt and black shoes transformed me into a bar-mitzvah boy.

?? July 1997


Sean Fox

For many years, my Brooklyn existed only in the stories my father told me. Growing up Depression-era Brooklyn, Irish-Catholic and poor. The Dodgers, his job as a paperboy for the the Eagle. Phone calls and peanut brittle from Uncle Bob, the gardener at Greenwood Cemetary. How the neighborhood changed and all the Irish moved out on the Island. My dad left New York with his young family in the early 1960s. The last family I knew of died in 1979. Last year I decided I needed to know Brooklyn. The City I found was nothing like the media makes it out to be. I found beautiful architecture and one of the greatest parks in America (Prospect, of course). I also found the graves of my ancestors, my grandmother's family from Ireland in the 1790s and my grandfathers from Ireland in the 1880s. I found Washington Cemetary, a Jewish cemetay, founded by my great-great-grandfather, James Arlington Bennett. I found memories and happiness, a jewel of a city covered in mystery. I plan to return and I plan to leave a legacy for my family, the family who called Brooklyn home.

?? July 1997


Kevin

I spent most of my childhood on the docks of Sheepshead Bay. I was a mate on the Pilot II from 1979-1984.

I have started my own Sheepshead Bay Website dedicated to the place where I grew up & learned all about life. On theses pages you will see pictures of the fishing fleet. I also added a new page for Coney Island & misc. brooklyn pix. Stop by & enjoy.

29 July 1997


Readers' reports continue . . .

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