Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/03/30
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Vince, My in-laws had a 100 year old farm house on 891 Woodrow Avenue about six blocks west of the commuter train line. It was midway between the ocean and the land fill. Actually the landfill didn't smell too bad but when the wind was wrong the fumes from the New Jersey refineries could run your car. I had an apartment on Grimes Hill next to Wagner College. This was considered an elite living area. At 430 feet it was almost the tallest hill on the East Coast waterfront.It was also near Clove Lake Park with a very good public golf course. Because the island was isolated from New York, very few people played on the course and it was easy to get a tee time. A brief slide down the hill and I could take the bus to the Staten Island ferry for a 5 cent, half hour, ocean excursion to Manhattan past the Statue of Liberty. My two bedroom apartment with a garage cost me all of $138 per month. The boat pictures at the beginning of my LUG Gallery album were all taken in the Great Kills harbor, now a part of Gateway National Park. But all good things come to an end. After the Verrazano Bridge opened, half of Brooklyn migrated to Staten Island. Old houses were replaced by homes that looked like Mafia Mansions from Long Island. Traffic exploded. Many green areas disappeared. But by that time my new wife and I had moved to the Hudson Valley and visited Staten Island only for weddings and funerals. The downside is that we couldn't get decent bagels anymore. Larry Z