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Wikipedia

Elmhurst, Queens

Elmhurst (formerly Newtown) is a neighborhood in the borough of Queens in New York City. It is bounded by Roosevelt Avenue on the north; the Long Island Expressway on the south; Junction Boulevard on the east; and the New York Connecting Railroad on the west.[4]

Elmhurst
Queens Center Mall in Elmhurst
Location within New York City
Coordinates: 40°44′N 73°53′W / 40.74°N 73.88°W / 40.74; -73.88Coordinates: 40°44′N 73°53′W / 40.74°N 73.88°W / 40.74; -73.88
Country United States
State New York
City New York City
Borough Queens
Community DistrictQueens 4[1]
Settlement (Dutch)1652
Area
 • Total3.036 km2 (1.172 sq mi)
Population
 • Total88,427
 • Density29,000/km2 (75,000/sq mi)
Race/Ethnicity
 • Hispanic46.1%
 • Asian43.8%
 • White6.6%
 • Black1.3%
 • Other/Multiracial2.2%
Time zoneUTC−5 (EST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)
ZIP Code
11373
Area codes718, 347, 929, and 917
Websitewww.elmhurst.nyc

The village, originally named Middleburgh, was established in 1652 by English Puritans, approximately 7 miles from New Amsterdam. When the British took over New Netherland in 1664, they renamed it New Town, which was eventually simplified to Newtown. It remained a rural community until the late 1890s, when it was renamed Elmhurst and became part of the City of Greater New York. Elmhurst became heavily developed with residential and commercial structures in the early 20th century, and many immigrants started moving in during the latter part of the century.

Elmhurst is located in Queens Community District 4 and its ZIP Code is 11373.[1] It is patrolled by the New York City Police Department's 110th Precinct.[5] Politically, Elmhurst is represented by the New York City Council's 25th District and small parts of the 21st, 24th, and 29th Districts.[6]

History

17th and 18th centuries

The village was founded in 1652 in the Dutch colony of New Netherland (Nieuw Nederland) by English Puritans from Connecticut and Massachusetts. They named it Middelburgh ('Middleburgh') after the capital of the Dutch province of Zeeland, which had been a refuge of Puritans fleeing religious persecution in England. The village was located approximately 7 miles from the growing city of New Amsterdam (Nieuw Amsterdam) and just east of the settlement at Maspat (now called Maspeth), which had been abandoned following threats and attacks by local Lenape Native Americans.[4][7] When the British took over New Netherland in 1664, they renamed Middleburgh as Nieuwe Stad (New Town) to maintain a connection to its Dutch heritage.[7] This was eventually simplified to Newtown. In a deed dated July 9, 1666, the settlers took title to the lands of Newtown from the Native American tribes.[8]

A town building, near what is now Broadway and Dongan Street, was erected to serve as both a community and religious building. Use of this building was shared by the different religious denominations in Middleburgh: the Church of England, the Dutch Reformed Church, the Presbyterians, and the Quakers.[9] In 1669, the town planned a new church for all of these denominations, on a plot of land donated by Ralph Hunt near Grand Avenue and Queens Boulevard. According to the town records, the new building was to cost forty pounds, half in corn and half in cattle.[10] The village of Newtown was established as the town seat for the township in 1683,[4] when Queens County was reorganized as a "one county, five towns" model. The Town of Newtown, which had a town hall, jail, tax office, and town clerk's office, was the center of a municipality that comprised the villages that were located north of present-day Forest Park and west of Flushing Meadows.[7]

By 1700, the town had a population of 1,000, including 405 youths under the age of sixteen, 434 adults, and 161 slaves.[8] Among the English settlers in the present Elmhurst section of Newtown was Gershom Moore, who lived at what is now the intersection of Broadway, 45th Avenue, and Elmhurst Avenue. A chance seedling on his farm eventually produced the Newtown Pippin, Colonial America's most famous apple.[11] The St. James Church was founded in 1704,[12] followed by the Reformed Church of Newtown in 1731.[13] The Colonel Bernardus Bloom Farmhouse at 90-11 56th Avenue, which existed from the 17th century to 2015, was one of the oldest surviving farmhouses in Newtown through the 21st century.[14]

19th century

 
1910 map of old roads in New Town

Newtown was also the center of a population of free blacks and slaves by the early 19th century. With the program of gradual abolition and the manumission of some slaves by masters following the American Revolution, the free population increased. In 1828, a year after slavery was finally abolished in the state, landowner James Hunter and his wife deeded two acres to the community for a church and parsonage. They had already been using land at Corona Avenue and 90th Street as a burial ground since about 1818. This was associated with the United African Society of Newtown, by 1906 known as St. Mark's A.M.E. Church. By 1886 more than 300 burials had been made in the cemetery. The church moved further east and gradually the burial ground was forgotten until remains were discovered of a woman in an iron coffin in 2011 during development. The church is hoping to buy the land for preservation.[15]

More concentrated residential development in the area was spurred by the completion of a horsecar line, the Grand Street Line, which reached New Town in 1854. The Long Island Rail Road's Main Line was built through Newtown in 1876, attracting more residents to the neighborhood.[7]

Renaming and incorporation into city

Cord Meyer bought land at Broadway and Whitney Avenue in 1896. He proposed that the town be renamed "Elmhurst", meaning "a grove of elms"; in 1897, one year before Queens County was incorporated in the Greater City of New York, the town was renamed.[7] The renaming was done partially to disassociate the town from nearby Maspeth and the smelly, polluted Newtown Creek, and partially to celebrate the elm trees (Ulmus americana) that abounded in the area.[4][16]

Elmhurst developed as a fashionable district due to a housing development built by the Cord Meyer Development Company between 1896 and 1910, north of the Port Washington Branch railroad station. Cord Meyer expanded its holdings between 1905 and 1930, including Elmhurst Square, Elmhurst South, Elmhurst Heights, and New Elmhurst. Elmhurst also was the site of the Grand Street LIRR station just west of the current Grand Avenue – Newtown subway station. The Grand Street LIRR station was served by the Main Line and the former Rockaway Beach Branch.[4][16] In the 1930s, the Independent Subway System's Queens Boulevard line was built through the neighborhood, spurring economic development but also destroying many old buildings.[7]

Prior to World War II, Elmhurst had become an almost exclusively Jewish and Italian neighborhood, made up of early 20th century immigrants and their descendants. Following the war, Elmhurst evolved into what has been considered one of the most ethnically diverse neighborhoods in New York City, as immigrants arrived from new areas.[17] By the 1980s, there were persons from 112 nations in residence in the neighborhood, which has continued to diversify since then.[4] Among the most numerous ethnic groups that have settled in the area are Latinos and Chinese Americans.[18]

For many years, the Elmhurst gas tanks, a pair of large natural gas storage structures built in 1910 and 1921 on 57th Avenue between 74th and 80th Streets, were well-known landmarks, standing 200 feet (61 m) high. Because the Long Island Expressway frequently became congested in that area, "backup at the Elmhurst Gas Tanks" became a familiar phrase in radio traffic reporting. The gas storage facilities were removed in 2001.[19][20] The site was redeveloped and opened as Elmhurst Park in 2011.[21]

Land use

Elmhurst contains a variety of zoning districts, including manufacturing, commercial, residential, and mixed-use. Much of the neighborhood is composed of detached or multi-family houses, though there are also rowhouse districts, apartment buildings of up to six or seven stories, and large developments such as LeFrak City. Commercial overlays are located primarily along Queens Boulevard, Broadway, and Grand and Corona Avenues. Several tracts are also zoned for shopping centers, which are occupied by Elmhurst's malls. Light-manufacturing zones are located near the western end of the neighborhood, mainly between the LIRR's Port Washington Branch and 51st Avenue.[22]

Official landmarks

Some buildings in Elmhurst are listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) and/or are designated New York City Landmarks (NYCL):

The Elmhurst branch of the Jamaica Savings Bank was previously a New York City Landmark, but the designation was removed in 2005.[31]

Demographics

Based on data from the 2010 United States Census, the population of Elmhurst was 88,427, an increase of 455 (0.5%) from the 87,972 counted in 2000. Covering an area of 750.28 acres (303.63 ha), the neighborhood had a population density of 117.9 inhabitants per acre (75,500/sq mi; 29,100/km2).[2]

The racial makeup of the neighborhood was 6.6% (5,870) White, 1.3% (1,140) African American, 0.2% (133) Native American, 43.8% (38,699) Asian, 0.0% (28) Pacific Islander, 0.4% (338) from other races, and 1.6% (1,423) from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 46.1% (40,796) of the population.[3] Elmhurst's Latino population is 20.4% South American (9.8% Ecuadorean, 7.2% Colombian, 1.8% Peruvian, 0.4% Argentinean, 0.4% Bolivian, 0.2% Chilean, 0.2% Venezuelan), 11.6% Mexican, 3.1% Dominican, 1.8% Puerto Rican, 1.5% Central American (0.5% Salvadoran, 0.4% Guatemalan, 0.3% Honduran), and 0.7% Cuban.[32]

The entirety of Community Board 4, which comprises Elmhurst and Corona, had 135,972 inhabitants as of NYC Health's 2018 Community Health Profile, with an average life expectancy of 85.4 years.[33]: 2, 20  This is higher than the median life expectancy of 81.2 for all New York City neighborhoods.[34]: 53 (PDF p. 84) [35] Most inhabitants are middle-aged adults and youth: 17% are between the ages of 0 and 17, 39% between 25 and 44, and 24% between 45 and 64. The ratio of college-aged and elderly residents was lower, at 8% and 12% respectively.[33]: 2 

As of 2017, the median household income in Community Board 4 was $51,992.[36] In 2018, an estimated 27% of Elmhurst and Corona residents lived in poverty, compared to 19% in all of Queens and 20% in all of New York City. One in fourteen residents (7%) were unemployed, compared to 8% in Queens and 9% in New York City. Rent burden, or the percentage of residents who have difficulty paying their rent, is 62% in Elmhurst and Corona, higher than the boroughwide and citywide rates of 53% and 51% respectively.

As of the 2020 census data from New York City Department of City Planning, Elmhurst is primarily populated by 55,800 Asian residents and 42,600 Hispanic residents, however there were between 5,000 to 9,999 White residents and less than 5000 Black residents.[37][38][39]

Chinese enclave

 
Elmhurst's Chinatown (唐人街, 艾浒) on Broadway is a satellite of the Flushing Chinatown.

Elmhurst's rapidly growing Chinatown (艾浒 唐人街)[40] is the second largest in Queens, the other Chinatown being located in Flushing.[18] Previously a small area with Chinese shops on Broadway between 81st Street and Cornish Avenue, this newly evolved second Chinatown in Queens has now expanded to 45th Avenue and Whitney Avenue and is developing as a satellite of the Flushing Chinatown.

In Chinese translation, Elmhurst is named 艾浒 (Àihǔ in Standard Chinese). There are also many other Southeast Asian businesses and shops in the area, including Malaysian Chinese, Singaporean Chinese, Indonesian, Thai, and Vietnamese. Hong Kong Supermarket and New York Supermarket serve as the largest Chinese supermarkets selling different food varieties to the Elmhurst Chinatown.[41][42] The Asia Bank serves as the only Chinese bank and the main financial resource business for the growing enclave,[43] though USA HSBC, Chase, and other banks also are located in Elmhurst along Broadway. Like Flushing's Chinatown, it is also very highly populated by Mandarin speakers, although many also speak other varieties of Chinese.

Since the 2000s, Elmhurst Chinatown has expanded to the neighborhood of Corona, Queens.[44][45][46]

Police and crime

Elmhurst and Corona are patrolled by the 110th Precinct of the NYPD, located at 94-41 43rd Avenue.[5] The 110th Precinct ranked 15th safest out of 69 patrol areas for per-capita crime in 2010.[47] As of 2018, with a non-fatal assault rate of 34 per 100,000 people, Corona and Elmhurst's rate of violent crimes per capita is less than that of the city as a whole. The incarceration rate of 227 per 100,000 people is lower than that of the city as a whole.[33]: 8 

The 110th Precinct has a lower crime rate than in the 1990s, with crimes across all categories having decreased by 83.2% between 1990 and 2020. The precinct reported 4 murders, 29 rapes, 270 robberies, 359 felony assaults, 196 burglaries, 485 grand larcenies, and 138 grand larcenies auto in 2020.[48]

Fire safety

 
Engine Co. 287/Ladder Co. 136/Battalion 46, one of two fire stations in Elmhurst

Elmhurst is served by two New York City Fire Department (FDNY) fire stations:[49]

  • Engine Co. 287/Ladder Co. 136/Battalion 46 – 86-53 Grand Avenue[50]
  • Engine Co. 289/Ladder Co. 138 – 97-28 43rd Avenue[51]

FDNY EMS Station 46 is located on the grounds of Elmhurst Hospital Center.

Health

As of 2018, preterm births are less common in Elmhurst and Corona than in other places citywide, but births to teenage mothers are more common. In Elmhurst and Corona, there were 83 preterm births per 1,000 live births (compared to 87 per 1,000 citywide), and 25.8 births to teenage mothers per 1,000 live births (compared to 19.3 per 1,000 citywide).[33]: 11  Elmhurst and Corona have a high population of residents who are uninsured. In 2018, this population of uninsured residents was estimated to be 25%, which is higher than the citywide rate of 12%.[33]: 14 

The concentration of fine particulate matter, the deadliest type of air pollutant, in Elmhurst and Corona is 0.0077 milligrams per cubic metre (7.7×10−9 oz/cu ft), slightly higher than the city average.[33]: 9  Fifteen percent of Elmhurst and Corona residents are smokers, which is equal to the city average of 14% of residents being smokers.[33]: 13  In Elmhurst and Corona, 20% of residents are obese, 9% are diabetic, and 23% have high blood pressure—compared to the citywide averages of 20%, 14%, and 24% respectively.[33]: 16  In addition, 24% of children are obese, compared to the citywide average of 20%.[33]: 12 

Eighty-eight percent of residents eat some fruits and vegetables every day, which is about the same as the city's average of 87%. In 2018, 68% of residents described their health as "good," "very good," or "excellent," lower than the city's average of 78%.[33]: 13  For every supermarket in Elmhurst and Corona, there are 16 bodegas.[33]: 10 

The Elmhurst Hospital Center is located in Elmhurst.[52]

Incidents

In March 2020, Elmhurst Hospital became the "center of the center" of the COVID-19 pandemic in New York state as the state itself experienced the most cases in COVID-19 pandemic.[53] The neighborhoods of Corona, East Elmhurst, Elmhurst, and Jackson Heights were most affected by the pandemic in New York City.[54] As of August 10, these communities, with a cumulative 303,494 residents, had recorded 12,954 COVID-19 cases and 1,178 deaths.[55]

Post office and ZIP Code

Elmhurst is covered by ZIP Code 11373.[56] The United States Post Office operates two post offices in Elmhurst: the Elmhurst A Station at 80-27 Broadway[57] and the Elmhurst Station at 59-01 Junction Boulevard.[58]

Religion

Places of worship include:

 
The First Presbyterian Church of Newtown on Queens Boulevard dates from 1652, though the building was erected in 1895.
 
The Elks Lodge 878 building on Queens Boulevard is now the New Life Fellowship Church.
  • Ascension Roman Catholic Church (86-13 55th Avenue)
  • Bangladesh Hindu Mandir (94-39 44th Avenue)
  • Christian Testimony Church (87-11 Whitney Avenue).[59] Originally a synagogue—as evidenced by the former presence of the word Mizpah (watchtower) above the front door—the building is now a Christian church with a congregation composed mainly of Chinese people, with services in both English and Mandarin Chinese.[60]
  • Elmhurst Baptist Church (87-37 Whitney Avenue), founded in 1900, built in 1902. The congregation is very diverse and multi-ethnic.[60] The church building is constructed of stone.[59]
  • Elmhurst Islamic Center (EIC) (87-07 55th Avenue)
  • Elmhurst Muslim Center (42-12 79th Street)
  • First Presbyterian Church of Newtown (Queens Boulevard and 54th Avenue) built in 1895, the congregation was established in 1652[25]
  • Geeta Temple Asharam (92-09 Corona Avenue)
  • Jain Center of America (43-22 Ithaca Street), founded in 1973[60]
  • New Life Fellowship Church (82-10 Queens Boulevard) is housed in the building of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, Lodge Number 878.
  • The Reformed Church of Newtown (85-15 Broadway), founded in 1731. The original church was built in 1733, with a replacement built in 1831, expanded in 1851, and fitted with stained glass by 1874. The church has a small, historic graveyard on the side facing Corona Avenue.[59]
  • The Rock Church at Elmwood Theatre (57-02 Hoffman Drive), at 57th Avenue and Hoffman Drive, is housed in the former Loews Elmwood Theater.[59] The theater, built in 1928, was formerly one of the largest theaters in the city and currently seats 3,000 people. Its name was a portmanteau word, composed of the names "Elmhurst" and "Woodhaven", the latter alluding to nearby Woodhaven Boulevard.[59] One of the city's last community theaters, it was considered for demolition in 1968 and in 1999; both times, the site was planned as an adjunct for the nearby, now-closed, St. John's Queens Hospital.[61] The theater closed in 2002 and was purchased by the Rock Church, but was temporarily used as a music venue[62] before the church opened in 2006. The theater has a water tower and a huge sign saying "Elmwood" on the roof.[61][63]
  • Satya Narayan Mandir (75-15 Woodside Avenue)
  • St. Adalbert Roman Catholic Church (52-29 83rd Street), founded in 1892
  • St. Bartholomew's Church (43-22 Ithaca Street), founded in 1906, present structure built in 1930. The original church, built in 1910, is at Whitney and 43rd Avenues.[60]
  • St. James Church (originally St. James Episcopal Church, at Broadway and 51st Avenue) is Elmhurst's oldest extant building, having been built in 1734 under the rule of British King George III. In 1848, it became a community center and Sunday school, upon which the church moved to a new building that later burned down. A clock tower atop the original building was destroyed in an 1882 storm.[59] The original church building is now on the National Register of Historic Places.[59][64]

Malls

 
Side view of Queens Place from Queens Boulevard

Elmhurst has two urban shopping malls:[59] Queens Center[65] and the smaller Queens Place Mall.[66]

The 150-store Queens Center, bounded by Queens Boulevard, 57th and 59th Avenues, and 90th and 94th Streets, opened on September 12, 1973, and was renovated and expanded across 92nd Street in 2002–4. With a gross leasable area of 1,000,000 square feet (93,000 m2), the mall has had retail sales per square foot nearly triple the national average.[67] It was built on land previously occupied by a 24-ride children's amusement park named Fairyland, which opened in 1949 and closed in 1968.[68] The site was also formerly a supermarket and automobile parking.

The smaller Queens Place, bounded by Queens Boulevard and by Justice, 55th, and 56th Avenues, is designed in a cylindrical shape and opened in 1965. Originally planned as a traditional rectangular construction designed to replace several blocks of residences, the mall had to be redesigned because the owner of the corner house at 55th Avenue and Queens Boulevard, Mary Sendek, refused to sell what had been her childhood home. The site of the corner home was demolished after Sendek died, and that site is now a small collection of stores.[59]

Streets and street names

 
The intersection of Corona Avenue and Junction Boulevard in eastern Elmhurst

57th Avenue was known as the Flushing and Newtown Turnpike.[59] Built in 1801, it connected with present-day Flushing Avenue in Maspeth, and extended all the way to Williamsburg, Brooklyn.[69]

The Elks Lodge's name is shared by a local street, Elks Road, a short road in a cluster of 2- and 3-story orange and yellow brick buildings located between Grand Avenue, 79th Street, and Calamus Avenue, that were built in 1930 by Louis Allmendinger for the Matthews Company.[70]

Hoffman Drive is a remnant of the wide Hoffman Boulevard. Hoffman Boulevard was straightened and renamed Queens Boulevard, but a short slip road, Hoffman Drive, leads from 57th Avenue to Woodhaven Boulevard.[59]

Horace Harding Expressway was once a turnpike called Nassau Boulevard, which went from Elmhurst to Flushing, Bayside, and Little Neck. It was renamed for Horace J. Harding (1863–1929), a finance magnate who directed the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad and the New York Municipal Railways System; Harding encouraged city planner Robert Moses's system of parkways on New York, and after Harding died, the boulevard—now the service road of the Long Island Expressway—was renamed after him.[71]

Horse Brook Island is a traffic island at the intersection of 90th Street, Justice Avenue, and 56th Avenue.[16] The traffic island is reminiscent of the former Horse Brook, a creek that flowed to the Flushing River from the present-day intersection of Kneeland Avenue and Codwise Place.[59][72] The space was renovated from 1986 to 1994.[16]

Justice Avenue, an Elmhurst road that has existed since the American colonial period, follows an unusual curved path through Elmhurst due to a now-defunct railroad line immediately to the south.[59]

Queens Boulevard, a wide at-grade highway that stretches from Long Island City to Jamaica, was formerly composed of two small dirt roads: Old Jamaica Road and Hoffman Boulevard. In the 1910s, it was paved and widened to 12 lanes. It is sometimes called the "Boulevard of Death" because of the high fatality rate on Queens Boulevard.[59]

The majority of Whitney Avenue, which stretches from 83rd Street in the west to Roosevelt Avenue and 93rd Street to the northeast, is on a tilted street grid, developed in the early 20th century. The street grid consists of Broadway; Aske, Benham, Case, Denman, Elbertson, Forley, Gleane, Hampton, Ithaca, Judge, Ketcham, Layton, Macnish Streets; Ketcham Place; and Baxter, Pettit, Britton, Vietor, Elmhurst, Whitney, and Lamont Avenues. Whitney Avenue also has the most religious institutions of any street in Elmhurst.[60]

Woodhaven Boulevard was known as Trotting Course Lane because it was named when horses were the main mode of transport. Although it extends to Cross Bay Boulevard in the Rockaways, two small parts of the original lane still exist in Forest Hills.[73]

Parks

Elmhurst Park is on 57th Avenue west of 80th Street. There is a children's playground with slides, swings, and exercise machines, as well as walking paths and a lawn atop a hill. The land for the park was formerly occupied by gas tanks. The park itself was opened in 2011.[74] It includes the Queens Vietnam Veterans Memorial, which was finished in 2019.[75][76]

Moore Homestead Park is located between Broadway and 45th Avenue. There is a children's playground with slides and swings and there are different sections where people can play basketball, handball, and chess. The park is named after a nearby homestead owned by Clement Clarke Moore, whose ancestor John Moore helped negotiate Newtown's land area with the Native American population there. The park, originally acquired by the Independent Subway System and then turned into a playground, was renovated in the 1990s, and again in the 2020s.[77]

Frank D. O'Connor Playground is located on Broadway between Woodside Avenue and 78th Street. There is also a children playground, basketball and handball area. Opened in 1937 and renovated in 1996, the park is named after former state senator Frank D. O'Connor.[78]

Veterans Grove is located on 43rd Avenue by Judge and Ketcham Streets. It is a small park mainly for younger children. The park's plaque states that it was dedicated "to the memory of those soldiers from Elmhurst who lost their lives serving in World War I." The park land was acquired in 1928, and the park was originally called the Elmhurst Memorial Park. It was renovated in 1994–6.[79]

Horsebrook Island is a small triangular green space at the junction of 56th Avenue, Justice Avenue and 90th Street that was named after a stream that once ran through the Newtown settlement. The creek was buried in the first three decades of the twentieth century.[80][81]

Libra Triangle is a small triangular green space at the junction of Justice Avenue and Broadway.[82]

Newtown Playground is located on 92nd Street and 56th Avenue. There are two children's playgrounds, chess tables, swings, sprinklers, and a small lawn. The park is named after the original name of Elmhurst given by the English. It is one block away from Queens Center Mall and Newtown High School's athletic field.

Education

Elmhurst and Corona generally have a lower ratio of college-educated residents than the rest of the city as of 2018. While 28% of residents age 25 and older have a college education or higher, 30% have less than a high school education and 42% are high school graduates or have some college education. By contrast, 39% of Queens residents and 43% of city residents have a college education or higher.[33]: 6  The percentage of Elmhurst and Corona students excelling in math rose from 36% in 2000 to 66% in 2011, and reading achievement rose from 42% to 49% during the same time period.[83]

Elmhurst and Corona's rate of elementary school student absenteeism is less than the rest of New York City. In Elmhurst and Corona, 11% of elementary school students missed twenty or more days per school year, lower than the citywide average of 20%.[34]: 24 (PDF p. 55) [33]: 6  Additionally, 81% of high school students in Elmhurst and Corona graduate on time, more than the citywide average of 75%.[33]: 6 

Schools

Elmhurst contains the following schools:

  • PS 7 - Louis F. Simeone[84]
  • PS 13 - Clement C Moore[85]
  • PS 89 - Elmhurst[86]
  • PS 102 - Bayview[87]
  • PS 877 - 51st Avenue Academy- now called PS 7 Academy[88]
  • St. Adalbert School[89]
  • St. Bartholomew School[90]
  • IS 5 - The Walter Crowley Intermediate School[91]
  • Newtown High School is located in a Baroque, C. B. J. Snyder-designed building at Corona Avenue and 90th Street that was built in 1897.[59][92]
  • Cathedral Preparatory School and Seminary, the last full-time Roman Catholic high school seminary day school in operation in the United States.[93]
  • The Elmhurst Educational Complex is a renovated spice factory housing multiple educationally robust schools. Opened in 2008, it contains three high schools, an elementary school, and an early childhood center.[94]
  • Central Queens Academy Charter School[95]

Library

Elmhurst Queens Public Library branch
 
The former building
 
The current building

The Queens Public Library's Elmhurst branch is located at 86-01 Broadway.[96] The original Elmhurst branch, a Carnegie library constructed in 1906, was closed in 2011 and demolished in 2012 for a complete rebuild that was designed to double the building's original size. Planned to be completed in two years, the reconstruction of the library took more than twice the original expected time and exceeded its $27.8 million budget. The new four-story, 32,000-square-foot (3,000 m2) building, which included elements of the original structure, was opened to the public in December 2016 at a cost of $32 million.[97][98]

Transportation

New York City Subway stations include Jackson Heights–Roosevelt Avenue, Woodhaven Boulevard, Grand Avenue–Newtown, and Elmhurst Avenue, all served by the E, ​M, and ​R trains of the IND Queens Boulevard Line. In addition, the IRT Flushing Line, served by the 7 and <7>​ trains, runs along Roosevelt Avenue, the north border of Elmhurst, with stations at 74th Street–Broadway, 82nd Street–Jackson Heights, and 90th Street–Elmhurst Avenue.[99]

Local buses include the Q11, Q21, Q29, Q38, Q47, Q52 SBS, Q53 SBS, Q58, Q59, Q60, Q72 and Q88. Express buses going to and from Manhattan during weekday rush hours include the QM10, QM11, QM12, QM40 and QM42.[100]

Elmhurst is bounded by the Long Island Expressway to the south and by the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway to the west. Queens Boulevard, Woodhaven Boulevard, Junction Boulevard, Roosevelt Avenue, and Broadway are major roads in the community. Elmhurst is connected to Manhattan and Jamaica by Queens Boulevard, and is connected to John F. Kennedy International Airport by Woodhaven Boulevard and to LaGuardia Airport by Junction Boulevard.[101]

Notable residents

In popular culture

McDowell's, the fictional restaurant depicted in the 1988 film Coming to America, is located in Elmhurst. For the week-long shot, the filmmakers cosmetically altered an existing Wendy's restaurant, which was closed in May 2013 and was razed by December 2013 to make way for condominiums.[122] Images of surrounding streets were also used in the movie.[123]

The CBS show Blue Bloods filmed for its third season on the residential streets of Elmhurst in 2012.

Part of the Revenge of the Green Dragons was filmed in Elmhurst with cameos from locals.[124]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "NYC Planning | Community Profiles". communityprofiles.planning.nyc.gov. New York City Department of City Planning. Retrieved April 7, 2018.
  2. ^ a b Table PL-P5 NTA: Total Population and Persons Per Acre - New York City Neighborhood Tabulation Areas*, 2010, Population Division - New York City Department of City Planning, February 2012. Accessed June 16, 2016.
  3. ^ a b Table PL-P3A NTA: Total Population by Mutually Exclusive Race and Hispanic Origin - New York City Neighborhood Tabulation Areas*, 2010, Population Division - New York City Department of City Planning, March 29, 2011. Accessed June 14, 2016.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Marques, Amanda (August 4, 1985). "If You're Thinking of Living in: Elmhurst". The New York Times. Retrieved August 7, 2014.
  5. ^ a b "NYPD – 110th Precinct". www.nyc.gov. New York City Police Department. Retrieved October 3, 2016.
  6. ^ Current City Council Districts for Queens County, New York City. Accessed May 5, 2017.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Vincent F. Seyfried; William Asadorian (August 28, 2012). Old Queens, N.Y., in Early Photographs: 261 Prints. Courier Corporation. pp. 23–. ISBN 978-0-486-13601-1.
  8. ^ a b "Residences Which Are Historical". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. October 22, 1899. p. 26. Retrieved July 4, 2020 – via Brooklyn Public Library; newspapers.com  .
  9. ^ "St. James Church" (PDF). National Register of Historic Places, National Park Service. November 12, 1999. pp. 6–7.
  10. ^ "Newtown Presbyterians Plan 275th Anniversary Program". Brooklyn Times-Union. September 25, 1927. p. 18. Retrieved July 3, 2020 – via newspapers.com  .
  11. ^ David, Karp. "It's Crunch Time for the Venerable Pippin", The New York Times, November 5, 2003. Accessed September 20, 2018. "The Newtown Pippin arose in the late 17th or early 18th century as a seedling in the Moore family orchard, which stretched from the East River to what is now 54th Street in Elmhurst (formerly Newtown), Queens."
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  105. ^ Brian Brady, Baseball-Reference.com. Accessed August 29, 2017.
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  108. ^ Purnick, Joyce. "Joan Hackett, 49, The Actress; Won 1982 Oscar Nomination", The New York Times, October 10, 1983. Accessed September 20, 2018. "Joan Hackett, daughter of an Italian mother and an Irish-American father, was born March 1, 1934, in East Harlem. The Hacketts soon moved to Elmhurst, Queens, and that was home when the future actress with the high cheekbones and the aristocratic nose dropped out of her senior year in high school to work as a model."
  109. ^ Hoby, Hermione. "Homeboy Sandman: 'I don't want to write something to be a conversation piece. It has to help change something'", The Guardian, April 25, 2015. Accessed August 29, 2017. "Sandman grew up in the multicultural Elmhurst neighborhood of Queens, playing his uncle’s saxophone and listening to his father’s jazz and merengue albums."
  110. ^ Butler, J.P. "Butler: After 60 years, SBU’s Kenville gets his ring", Olean Times Herald, May 11, 2015. Accessed August 29, 2017. "With his team down 17 in the deciding game, the Elmhurst, N.Y. native was brought in off the bench by head coach Al Cervi, who told his young shooting guard, 'get in there and win this thing.' Kenville wound up scoring a team-high 15 points as Syracuse came back to beat the Fort Wayne Pistons, 92-91, for the title."
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  119. ^ Talbot, Margaret."Profiles, Supreme Confidence", The New Yorker, March 28, 2005, p. 40. Accessed October 22, 2007. "Tells about Scalia’s childhood in Trenton, New Jersey and Elmhurst Queens. His father, Eugene, was a professor at Brooklyn College and a believer in the principles of the New Criticism."
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  121. ^ Villanueva, Charlie. "Villanueva: 'It's a privilege to be able to give back'", ESPN, December 3, 2008. Accessed July 20, 2016. "I grew up in New York City, in a neighborhood called Elmhurst, in Queens."
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  123. ^ Hirshon, Nicholas (June 14, 2013). "Queens Boulevard Loses a Movie Icon, Disguised as a Fast Food Joint". Wall Street Journal Blog. Retrieved June 14, 2015.
  124. ^ Chang, Justin. "Film Review: Revenge of the Green Dragons", Variety (magazine), October 28, 2014. Accessed July 20, 2016. "As laid out in Fredric Dannen's detailed 1992 New Yorker account (the authoritative basis for Loo and Michael Di Jiacomo's patched-together script), the Green Dragons were a ruthless street gang in Elmhurst, Queens, consisting primarily of first-generation Chinese youths whose awareness of their third-class citizenship bred a particularly menacing form of social rebellion."

Further reading

  1. Via Internet Archive (Queens Public Library). 1995.

External links

  • Pictures of Elmhurst with descriptions (In lower right options, choose "Always show title and description" for descriptive titles to appear)
  • Old Elmhurst Blog, A blog discussing the history of Elmhurst

elmhurst, queens, confused, with, elmhurst, chautauqua, county, york, elmhurst, formerly, newtown, neighborhood, borough, queens, york, city, bounded, roosevelt, avenue, north, long, island, expressway, south, junction, boulevard, east, york, connecting, railr. Not to be confused with Elmhurst Chautauqua County New York Elmhurst formerly Newtown is a neighborhood in the borough of Queens in New York City It is bounded by Roosevelt Avenue on the north the Long Island Expressway on the south Junction Boulevard on the east and the New York Connecting Railroad on the west 4 ElmhurstNeighborhood of QueensQueens Center Mall in ElmhurstLocation within New York CityCoordinates 40 44 N 73 53 W 40 74 N 73 88 W 40 74 73 88 Coordinates 40 44 N 73 53 W 40 74 N 73 88 W 40 74 73 88Country United StatesState New YorkCityNew York CityBoroughQueensCommunity DistrictQueens 4 1 Settlement Dutch 1652Area Total3 036 km2 1 172 sq mi Population 2010 2 Total88 427 Density29 000 km2 75 000 sq mi Race Ethnicity 3 Hispanic46 1 Asian43 8 White6 6 Black1 3 Other Multiracial2 2 Time zoneUTC 5 EST Summer DST UTC 4 EDT ZIP Code11373Area codes718 347 929 and 917Websitewww wbr elmhurst wbr nycThe village originally named Middleburgh was established in 1652 by English Puritans approximately 7 miles from New Amsterdam When the British took over New Netherland in 1664 they renamed it New Town which was eventually simplified to Newtown It remained a rural community until the late 1890s when it was renamed Elmhurst and became part of the City of Greater New York Elmhurst became heavily developed with residential and commercial structures in the early 20th century and many immigrants started moving in during the latter part of the century Elmhurst is located in Queens Community District 4 and its ZIP Code is 11373 1 It is patrolled by the New York City Police Department s 110th Precinct 5 Politically Elmhurst is represented by the New York City Council s 25th District and small parts of the 21st 24th and 29th Districts 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 17th and 18th centuries 1 2 19th century 1 3 Renaming and incorporation into city 2 Land use 2 1 Official landmarks 3 Demographics 3 1 Chinese enclave 4 Police and crime 5 Fire safety 6 Health 6 1 Incidents 7 Post office and ZIP Code 8 Religion 9 Malls 10 Streets and street names 11 Parks 12 Education 12 1 Schools 12 2 Library 13 Transportation 14 Notable residents 15 In popular culture 16 See also 17 References 18 Further reading 19 External linksHistory Edit17th and 18th centuries Edit The village was founded in 1652 in the Dutch colony of New Netherland Nieuw Nederland by English Puritans from Connecticut and Massachusetts They named it Middelburgh Middleburgh after the capital of the Dutch province of Zeeland which had been a refuge of Puritans fleeing religious persecution in England The village was located approximately 7 miles from the growing city of New Amsterdam Nieuw Amsterdam and just east of the settlement at Maspat now called Maspeth which had been abandoned following threats and attacks by local Lenape Native Americans 4 7 When the British took over New Netherland in 1664 they renamed Middleburgh as Nieuwe Stad New Town to maintain a connection to its Dutch heritage 7 This was eventually simplified to Newtown In a deed dated July 9 1666 the settlers took title to the lands of Newtown from the Native American tribes 8 A town building near what is now Broadway and Dongan Street was erected to serve as both a community and religious building Use of this building was shared by the different religious denominations in Middleburgh the Church of England the Dutch Reformed Church the Presbyterians and the Quakers 9 In 1669 the town planned a new church for all of these denominations on a plot of land donated by Ralph Hunt near Grand Avenue and Queens Boulevard According to the town records the new building was to cost forty pounds half in corn and half in cattle 10 The village of Newtown was established as the town seat for the township in 1683 4 when Queens County was reorganized as a one county five towns model The Town of Newtown which had a town hall jail tax office and town clerk s office was the center of a municipality that comprised the villages that were located north of present day Forest Park and west of Flushing Meadows 7 By 1700 the town had a population of 1 000 including 405 youths under the age of sixteen 434 adults and 161 slaves 8 Among the English settlers in the present Elmhurst section of Newtown was Gershom Moore who lived at what is now the intersection of Broadway 45th Avenue and Elmhurst Avenue A chance seedling on his farm eventually produced the Newtown Pippin Colonial America s most famous apple 11 The St James Church was founded in 1704 12 followed by the Reformed Church of Newtown in 1731 13 The Colonel Bernardus Bloom Farmhouse at 90 11 56th Avenue which existed from the 17th century to 2015 was one of the oldest surviving farmhouses in Newtown through the 21st century 14 19th century Edit 1910 map of old roads in New Town Newtown was also the center of a population of free blacks and slaves by the early 19th century With the program of gradual abolition and the manumission of some slaves by masters following the American Revolution the free population increased In 1828 a year after slavery was finally abolished in the state landowner James Hunter and his wife deeded two acres to the community for a church and parsonage They had already been using land at Corona Avenue and 90th Street as a burial ground since about 1818 This was associated with the United African Society of Newtown by 1906 known as St Mark s A M E Church By 1886 more than 300 burials had been made in the cemetery The church moved further east and gradually the burial ground was forgotten until remains were discovered of a woman in an iron coffin in 2011 during development The church is hoping to buy the land for preservation 15 More concentrated residential development in the area was spurred by the completion of a horsecar line the Grand Street Line which reached New Town in 1854 The Long Island Rail Road s Main Line was built through Newtown in 1876 attracting more residents to the neighborhood 7 Renaming and incorporation into city Edit Cord Meyer bought land at Broadway and Whitney Avenue in 1896 He proposed that the town be renamed Elmhurst meaning a grove of elms in 1897 one year before Queens County was incorporated in the Greater City of New York the town was renamed 7 The renaming was done partially to disassociate the town from nearby Maspeth and the smelly polluted Newtown Creek and partially to celebrate the elm trees Ulmus americana that abounded in the area 4 16 Elmhurst developed as a fashionable district due to a housing development built by the Cord Meyer Development Company between 1896 and 1910 north of the Port Washington Branch railroad station Cord Meyer expanded its holdings between 1905 and 1930 including Elmhurst Square Elmhurst South Elmhurst Heights and New Elmhurst Elmhurst also was the site of the Grand Street LIRR station just west of the current Grand Avenue Newtown subway station The Grand Street LIRR station was served by the Main Line and the former Rockaway Beach Branch 4 16 In the 1930s the Independent Subway System s Queens Boulevard line was built through the neighborhood spurring economic development but also destroying many old buildings 7 Prior to World War II Elmhurst had become an almost exclusively Jewish and Italian neighborhood made up of early 20th century immigrants and their descendants Following the war Elmhurst evolved into what has been considered one of the most ethnically diverse neighborhoods in New York City as immigrants arrived from new areas 17 By the 1980s there were persons from 112 nations in residence in the neighborhood which has continued to diversify since then 4 Among the most numerous ethnic groups that have settled in the area are Latinos and Chinese Americans 18 For many years the Elmhurst gas tanks a pair of large natural gas storage structures built in 1910 and 1921 on 57th Avenue between 74th and 80th Streets were well known landmarks standing 200 feet 61 m high Because the Long Island Expressway frequently became congested in that area backup at the Elmhurst Gas Tanks became a familiar phrase in radio traffic reporting The gas storage facilities were removed in 2001 19 20 The site was redeveloped and opened as Elmhurst Park in 2011 21 Land use EditElmhurst contains a variety of zoning districts including manufacturing commercial residential and mixed use Much of the neighborhood is composed of detached or multi family houses though there are also rowhouse districts apartment buildings of up to six or seven stories and large developments such as LeFrak City Commercial overlays are located primarily along Queens Boulevard Broadway and Grand and Corona Avenues Several tracts are also zoned for shopping centers which are occupied by Elmhurst s malls Light manufacturing zones are located near the western end of the neighborhood mainly between the LIRR s Port Washington Branch and 51st Avenue 22 Official landmarks Edit Some buildings in Elmhurst are listed on the National Register of Historic Places NRHP and or are designated New York City Landmarks NYCL Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks Lodge Number 878 NRHP NYCL built in 1923 1924 once the largest Elks lodge in the Eastern United States 23 24 First Presbyterian Church of Newtown NRHP built in 1895 25 Newtown High School NYCL a Flemish Renaissance Revival style building erected in 1921 and expanded in 1931 26 Reformed Church of Newtown NRHP NYCL one of the oldest wood churches in New York City first established by Dutch immigrants in 1731 27 28 St James Church NRHP NYCL built in 1735 and the oldest surviving Anglican building in the city 29 30 The Elmhurst branch of the Jamaica Savings Bank was previously a New York City Landmark but the designation was removed in 2005 31 Demographics EditBased on data from the 2010 United States Census the population of Elmhurst was 88 427 an increase of 455 0 5 from the 87 972 counted in 2000 Covering an area of 750 28 acres 303 63 ha the neighborhood had a population density of 117 9 inhabitants per acre 75 500 sq mi 29 100 km2 2 The racial makeup of the neighborhood was 6 6 5 870 White 1 3 1 140 African American 0 2 133 Native American 43 8 38 699 Asian 0 0 28 Pacific Islander 0 4 338 from other races and 1 6 1 423 from two or more races Hispanic or Latino of any race were 46 1 40 796 of the population 3 Elmhurst s Latino population is 20 4 South American 9 8 Ecuadorean 7 2 Colombian 1 8 Peruvian 0 4 Argentinean 0 4 Bolivian 0 2 Chilean 0 2 Venezuelan 11 6 Mexican 3 1 Dominican 1 8 Puerto Rican 1 5 Central American 0 5 Salvadoran 0 4 Guatemalan 0 3 Honduran and 0 7 Cuban 32 The entirety of Community Board 4 which comprises Elmhurst and Corona had 135 972 inhabitants as of NYC Health s 2018 Community Health Profile with an average life expectancy of 85 4 years 33 2 20 This is higher than the median life expectancy of 81 2 for all New York City neighborhoods 34 53 PDF p 84 35 Most inhabitants are middle aged adults and youth 17 are between the ages of 0 and 17 39 between 25 and 44 and 24 between 45 and 64 The ratio of college aged and elderly residents was lower at 8 and 12 respectively 33 2 As of 2017 the median household income in Community Board 4 was 51 992 36 In 2018 an estimated 27 of Elmhurst and Corona residents lived in poverty compared to 19 in all of Queens and 20 in all of New York City One in fourteen residents 7 were unemployed compared to 8 in Queens and 9 in New York City Rent burden or the percentage of residents who have difficulty paying their rent is 62 in Elmhurst and Corona higher than the boroughwide and citywide rates of 53 and 51 respectively As of the 2020 census data from New York City Department of City Planning Elmhurst is primarily populated by 55 800 Asian residents and 42 600 Hispanic residents however there were between 5 000 to 9 999 White residents and less than 5000 Black residents 37 38 39 Chinese enclave Edit Elmhurst s Chinatown 唐人街 艾浒 on Broadway is a satellite of the Flushing Chinatown Further information Chinatowns in Queens Elmhurst s rapidly growing Chinatown 艾浒 唐人街 40 is the second largest in Queens the other Chinatown being located in Flushing 18 Previously a small area with Chinese shops on Broadway between 81st Street and Cornish Avenue this newly evolved second Chinatown in Queens has now expanded to 45th Avenue and Whitney Avenue and is developing as a satellite of the Flushing Chinatown In Chinese translation Elmhurst is named 艾浒 Aihǔ in Standard Chinese There are also many other Southeast Asian businesses and shops in the area including Malaysian Chinese Singaporean Chinese Indonesian Thai and Vietnamese Hong Kong Supermarket and New York Supermarket serve as the largest Chinese supermarkets selling different food varieties to the Elmhurst Chinatown 41 42 The Asia Bank serves as the only Chinese bank and the main financial resource business for the growing enclave 43 though USA HSBC Chase and other banks also are located in Elmhurst along Broadway Like Flushing s Chinatown it is also very highly populated by Mandarin speakers although many also speak other varieties of Chinese Since the 2000s Elmhurst Chinatown has expanded to the neighborhood of Corona Queens 44 45 46 Police and crime EditElmhurst and Corona are patrolled by the 110th Precinct of the NYPD located at 94 41 43rd Avenue 5 The 110th Precinct ranked 15th safest out of 69 patrol areas for per capita crime in 2010 47 As of 2018 update with a non fatal assault rate of 34 per 100 000 people Corona and Elmhurst s rate of violent crimes per capita is less than that of the city as a whole The incarceration rate of 227 per 100 000 people is lower than that of the city as a whole 33 8 The 110th Precinct has a lower crime rate than in the 1990s with crimes across all categories having decreased by 83 2 between 1990 and 2020 The precinct reported 4 murders 29 rapes 270 robberies 359 felony assaults 196 burglaries 485 grand larcenies and 138 grand larcenies auto in 2020 48 Fire safety Edit Engine Co 287 Ladder Co 136 Battalion 46 one of two fire stations in Elmhurst Elmhurst is served by two New York City Fire Department FDNY fire stations 49 Engine Co 287 Ladder Co 136 Battalion 46 86 53 Grand Avenue 50 Engine Co 289 Ladder Co 138 97 28 43rd Avenue 51 FDNY EMS Station 46 is located on the grounds of Elmhurst Hospital Center Health EditAs of 2018 update preterm births are less common in Elmhurst and Corona than in other places citywide but births to teenage mothers are more common In Elmhurst and Corona there were 83 preterm births per 1 000 live births compared to 87 per 1 000 citywide and 25 8 births to teenage mothers per 1 000 live births compared to 19 3 per 1 000 citywide 33 11 Elmhurst and Corona have a high population of residents who are uninsured In 2018 this population of uninsured residents was estimated to be 25 which is higher than the citywide rate of 12 33 14 The concentration of fine particulate matter the deadliest type of air pollutant in Elmhurst and Corona is 0 0077 milligrams per cubic metre 7 7 10 9 oz cu ft slightly higher than the city average 33 9 Fifteen percent of Elmhurst and Corona residents are smokers which is equal to the city average of 14 of residents being smokers 33 13 In Elmhurst and Corona 20 of residents are obese 9 are diabetic and 23 have high blood pressure compared to the citywide averages of 20 14 and 24 respectively 33 16 In addition 24 of children are obese compared to the citywide average of 20 33 12 Eighty eight percent of residents eat some fruits and vegetables every day which is about the same as the city s average of 87 In 2018 68 of residents described their health as good very good or excellent lower than the city s average of 78 33 13 For every supermarket in Elmhurst and Corona there are 16 bodegas 33 10 The Elmhurst Hospital Center is located in Elmhurst 52 Incidents Edit In March 2020 Elmhurst Hospital became the center of the center of the COVID 19 pandemic in New York state as the state itself experienced the most cases in COVID 19 pandemic 53 The neighborhoods of Corona East Elmhurst Elmhurst and Jackson Heights were most affected by the pandemic in New York City 54 As of August 10 update these communities with a cumulative 303 494 residents had recorded 12 954 COVID 19 cases and 1 178 deaths 55 Post office and ZIP Code EditElmhurst is covered by ZIP Code 11373 56 The United States Post Office operates two post offices in Elmhurst the Elmhurst A Station at 80 27 Broadway 57 and the Elmhurst Station at 59 01 Junction Boulevard 58 Religion EditPlaces of worship include The First Presbyterian Church of Newtown on Queens Boulevard dates from 1652 though the building was erected in 1895 The Elks Lodge 878 building on Queens Boulevard is now the New Life Fellowship Church Ascension Roman Catholic Church 86 13 55th Avenue Bangladesh Hindu Mandir 94 39 44th Avenue Christian Testimony Church 87 11 Whitney Avenue 59 Originally a synagogue as evidenced by the former presence of the word Mizpah watchtower above the front door the building is now a Christian church with a congregation composed mainly of Chinese people with services in both English and Mandarin Chinese 60 Elmhurst Baptist Church 87 37 Whitney Avenue founded in 1900 built in 1902 The congregation is very diverse and multi ethnic 60 The church building is constructed of stone 59 Elmhurst Islamic Center EIC 87 07 55th Avenue Elmhurst Muslim Center 42 12 79th Street First Presbyterian Church of Newtown Queens Boulevard and 54th Avenue built in 1895 the congregation was established in 1652 25 Geeta Temple Asharam 92 09 Corona Avenue Jain Center of America 43 22 Ithaca Street founded in 1973 60 New Life Fellowship Church 82 10 Queens Boulevard is housed in the building of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks Lodge Number 878 The Reformed Church of Newtown 85 15 Broadway founded in 1731 The original church was built in 1733 with a replacement built in 1831 expanded in 1851 and fitted with stained glass by 1874 The church has a small historic graveyard on the side facing Corona Avenue 59 The Rock Church at Elmwood Theatre 57 02 Hoffman Drive at 57th Avenue and Hoffman Drive is housed in the former Loews Elmwood Theater 59 The theater built in 1928 was formerly one of the largest theaters in the city and currently seats 3 000 people Its name was a portmanteau word composed of the names Elmhurst and Woodhaven the latter alluding to nearby Woodhaven Boulevard 59 One of the city s last community theaters it was considered for demolition in 1968 and in 1999 both times the site was planned as an adjunct for the nearby now closed St John s Queens Hospital 61 The theater closed in 2002 and was purchased by the Rock Church but was temporarily used as a music venue 62 before the church opened in 2006 The theater has a water tower and a huge sign saying Elmwood on the roof 61 63 Satya Narayan Mandir 75 15 Woodside Avenue St Adalbert Roman Catholic Church 52 29 83rd Street founded in 1892 St Bartholomew s Church 43 22 Ithaca Street founded in 1906 present structure built in 1930 The original church built in 1910 is at Whitney and 43rd Avenues 60 St James Church originally St James Episcopal Church at Broadway and 51st Avenue is Elmhurst s oldest extant building having been built in 1734 under the rule of British King George III In 1848 it became a community center and Sunday school upon which the church moved to a new building that later burned down A clock tower atop the original building was destroyed in an 1882 storm 59 The original church building is now on the National Register of Historic Places 59 64 Malls Edit Side view of Queens Place from Queens Boulevard Elmhurst has two urban shopping malls 59 Queens Center 65 and the smaller Queens Place Mall 66 The 150 store Queens Center bounded by Queens Boulevard 57th and 59th Avenues and 90th and 94th Streets opened on September 12 1973 and was renovated and expanded across 92nd Street in 2002 4 With a gross leasable area of 1 000 000 square feet 93 000 m2 the mall has had retail sales per square foot nearly triple the national average 67 It was built on land previously occupied by a 24 ride children s amusement park named Fairyland which opened in 1949 and closed in 1968 68 The site was also formerly a supermarket and automobile parking The smaller Queens Place bounded by Queens Boulevard and by Justice 55th and 56th Avenues is designed in a cylindrical shape and opened in 1965 Originally planned as a traditional rectangular construction designed to replace several blocks of residences the mall had to be redesigned because the owner of the corner house at 55th Avenue and Queens Boulevard Mary Sendek refused to sell what had been her childhood home The site of the corner home was demolished after Sendek died and that site is now a small collection of stores 59 Streets and street names Edit The intersection of Corona Avenue and Junction Boulevard in eastern Elmhurst 57th Avenue was known as the Flushing and Newtown Turnpike 59 Built in 1801 it connected with present day Flushing Avenue in Maspeth and extended all the way to Williamsburg Brooklyn 69 The Elks Lodge s name is shared by a local street Elks Road a short road in a cluster of 2 and 3 story orange and yellow brick buildings located between Grand Avenue 79th Street and Calamus Avenue that were built in 1930 by Louis Allmendinger for the Matthews Company 70 Hoffman Drive is a remnant of the wide Hoffman Boulevard Hoffman Boulevard was straightened and renamed Queens Boulevard but a short slip road Hoffman Drive leads from 57th Avenue to Woodhaven Boulevard 59 Horace Harding Expressway was once a turnpike called Nassau Boulevard which went from Elmhurst to Flushing Bayside and Little Neck It was renamed for Horace J Harding 1863 1929 a finance magnate who directed the New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad and the New York Municipal Railways System Harding encouraged city planner Robert Moses s system of parkways on New York and after Harding died the boulevard now the service road of the Long Island Expressway was renamed after him 71 Horse Brook Island is a traffic island at the intersection of 90th Street Justice Avenue and 56th Avenue 16 The traffic island is reminiscent of the former Horse Brook a creek that flowed to the Flushing River from the present day intersection of Kneeland Avenue and Codwise Place 59 72 The space was renovated from 1986 to 1994 16 Justice Avenue an Elmhurst road that has existed since the American colonial period follows an unusual curved path through Elmhurst due to a now defunct railroad line immediately to the south 59 Queens Boulevard a wide at grade highway that stretches from Long Island City to Jamaica was formerly composed of two small dirt roads Old Jamaica Road and Hoffman Boulevard In the 1910s it was paved and widened to 12 lanes It is sometimes called the Boulevard of Death because of the high fatality rate on Queens Boulevard 59 The majority of Whitney Avenue which stretches from 83rd Street in the west to Roosevelt Avenue and 93rd Street to the northeast is on a tilted street grid developed in the early 20th century The street grid consists of Broadway Aske Benham Case Denman Elbertson Forley Gleane Hampton Ithaca Judge Ketcham Layton Macnish Streets Ketcham Place and Baxter Pettit Britton Vietor Elmhurst Whitney and Lamont Avenues Whitney Avenue also has the most religious institutions of any street in Elmhurst 60 Woodhaven Boulevard was known as Trotting Course Lane because it was named when horses were the main mode of transport Although it extends to Cross Bay Boulevard in the Rockaways two small parts of the original lane still exist in Forest Hills 73 Parks Edit Queens Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Elmhurst Park Elmhurst Park is on 57th Avenue west of 80th Street There is a children s playground with slides swings and exercise machines as well as walking paths and a lawn atop a hill The land for the park was formerly occupied by gas tanks The park itself was opened in 2011 74 It includes the Queens Vietnam Veterans Memorial which was finished in 2019 75 76 Moore Homestead Park is located between Broadway and 45th Avenue There is a children s playground with slides and swings and there are different sections where people can play basketball handball and chess The park is named after a nearby homestead owned by Clement Clarke Moore whose ancestor John Moore helped negotiate Newtown s land area with the Native American population there The park originally acquired by the Independent Subway System and then turned into a playground was renovated in the 1990s and again in the 2020s 77 Frank D O Connor Playground is located on Broadway between Woodside Avenue and 78th Street There is also a children playground basketball and handball area Opened in 1937 and renovated in 1996 the park is named after former state senator Frank D O Connor 78 Veterans Grove is located on 43rd Avenue by Judge and Ketcham Streets It is a small park mainly for younger children The park s plaque states that it was dedicated to the memory of those soldiers from Elmhurst who lost their lives serving in World War I The park land was acquired in 1928 and the park was originally called the Elmhurst Memorial Park It was renovated in 1994 6 79 Horsebrook Island is a small triangular green space at the junction of 56th Avenue Justice Avenue and 90th Street that was named after a stream that once ran through the Newtown settlement The creek was buried in the first three decades of the twentieth century 80 81 Libra Triangle is a small triangular green space at the junction of Justice Avenue and Broadway 82 Newtown Playground is located on 92nd Street and 56th Avenue There are two children s playgrounds chess tables swings sprinklers and a small lawn The park is named after the original name of Elmhurst given by the English It is one block away from Queens Center Mall and Newtown High School s athletic field Education EditElmhurst and Corona generally have a lower ratio of college educated residents than the rest of the city as of 2018 update While 28 of residents age 25 and older have a college education or higher 30 have less than a high school education and 42 are high school graduates or have some college education By contrast 39 of Queens residents and 43 of city residents have a college education or higher 33 6 The percentage of Elmhurst and Corona students excelling in math rose from 36 in 2000 to 66 in 2011 and reading achievement rose from 42 to 49 during the same time period 83 Elmhurst and Corona s rate of elementary school student absenteeism is less than the rest of New York City In Elmhurst and Corona 11 of elementary school students missed twenty or more days per school year lower than the citywide average of 20 34 24 PDF p 55 33 6 Additionally 81 of high school students in Elmhurst and Corona graduate on time more than the citywide average of 75 33 6 Schools Edit Elmhurst contains the following schools PS 7 Louis F Simeone 84 PS 13 Clement C Moore 85 PS 89 Elmhurst 86 PS 102 Bayview 87 PS 877 51st Avenue Academy now called PS 7 Academy 88 St Adalbert School 89 St Bartholomew School 90 IS 5 The Walter Crowley Intermediate School 91 Newtown High School is located in a Baroque C B J Snyder designed building at Corona Avenue and 90th Street that was built in 1897 59 92 Cathedral Preparatory School and Seminary the last full time Roman Catholic high school seminary day school in operation in the United States 93 The Elmhurst Educational Complex is a renovated spice factory housing multiple educationally robust schools Opened in 2008 it contains three high schools an elementary school and an early childhood center 94 Central Queens Academy Charter School 95 Library Edit Elmhurst Queens Public Library branch The former building The current building The Queens Public Library s Elmhurst branch is located at 86 01 Broadway 96 The original Elmhurst branch a Carnegie library constructed in 1906 was closed in 2011 and demolished in 2012 for a complete rebuild that was designed to double the building s original size Planned to be completed in two years the reconstruction of the library took more than twice the original expected time and exceeded its 27 8 million budget The new four story 32 000 square foot 3 000 m2 building which included elements of the original structure was opened to the public in December 2016 at a cost of 32 million 97 98 Transportation EditNew York City Subway stations include Jackson Heights Roosevelt Avenue Woodhaven Boulevard Grand Avenue Newtown and Elmhurst Avenue all served by the E M and R trains of the IND Queens Boulevard Line In addition the IRT Flushing Line served by the 7 and lt 7 gt trains runs along Roosevelt Avenue the north border of Elmhurst with stations at 74th Street Broadway 82nd Street Jackson Heights and 90th Street Elmhurst Avenue 99 Local buses include the Q11 Q21 Q29 Q38 Q47 Q52 SBS Q53 SBS Q58 Q59 Q60 Q72 and Q88 Express buses going to and from Manhattan during weekday rush hours include the QM10 QM11 QM12 QM40 and QM42 100 Elmhurst is bounded by the Long Island Expressway to the south and by the Brooklyn Queens Expressway to the west Queens Boulevard Woodhaven Boulevard Junction Boulevard Roosevelt Avenue and Broadway are major roads in the community Elmhurst is connected to Manhattan and Jamaica by Queens Boulevard and is connected to John F Kennedy International Airport by Woodhaven Boulevard and to LaGuardia Airport by Junction Boulevard 101 Notable residents EditTommie Agee 1942 2001 baseball player Mose Allison 1927 2016 jazz player Eric B born 1965 DJ from the hip hop duo Eric B amp Rakim 102 Harry Belafonte born 1927 calypso singer and Grammy winner 103 Julissa Bermudez born 1983 Dominican American actress co host for countdown show 106 amp Park 104 Brian Brady born 1962 right fielder who played for the California Angels 105 William J Casey 1913 1987 director of CIA born in Elmhurst 106 Patty Duke 1946 2016 former president of Screen Actor s Guild recipient of an Academy Award of Merit for her role in the movie The Miracle Worker 107 Joan Hackett 1934 1983 the actress who appeared on television film and stage 108 Homeboy Sandman born 1980 rapper 109 Bill Kenville 1930 2018 former NBA basketball player 110 Omar Minaya born 1958 former General Manager of the New York Mets raised in Elmhurst Newtown High School alumnus 111 Benjamin Moore 1748 1816 bishop of New York father of Clement C Moore 112 Clement Clarke Moore 1779 1863 author of the poem A Visit from St Nicholas the site of his home is now a paved playground at Broadway and 82nd Street 112 John Moore founder of Elmhurst and the first independent minister allowed in New England Tony Pastor 1832 1908 vaudeville entertainer and theater manager sometimes called The Father of American Vaudeville 113 Carroll O Connor 1924 2001 actor best known for his role as Archie Bunker on All in the Family 114 Frank D O Connor 1909 1992 attorney and judge 115 Smush Parker born 1981 former NBA basketball player attended Newtown High School 116 Lindy Remigino 1931 2018 sprinter who won two gold medals at the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki 117 Tommy Rettig 1941 1996 who played Jeff on the Lassie TV series attended PS 89 citation needed Dixie Roberts vaudeville tap and specialty dancer who was a featured dancer in the Ziegfeld Follies 118 Antonin Scalia 1936 2016 former Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States 119 attended PS 13 120 Rise Stevens 1913 2013 opera singer attended Newtown High School citation needed Charlie Villanueva born 1984 Dominican American NBA power forward for the Detroit Pistons 121 In popular culture EditMcDowell s the fictional restaurant depicted in the 1988 film Coming to America is located in Elmhurst For the week long shot the filmmakers cosmetically altered an existing Wendy s restaurant which was closed in May 2013 and was razed by December 2013 to make way for condominiums 122 Images of surrounding streets were also used in the movie 123 The CBS show Blue Bloods filmed for its third season on the residential streets of Elmhurst in 2012 Part of the Revenge of the Green Dragons was filmed in Elmhurst with cameos from locals 124 See also Edit New York City portalChinatown Avenue U 唐人街 U大道 Chinatown Bensonhurst 唐人街 本生浒 Chinatown Brooklyn 布鲁克林華埠 Chinatown Flushing 法拉盛華埠 Chinatown Manhattan 紐約華埠 Chinatowns in the United States Chinese Americans in New York City Koreatown Fort Lee Koreatown Long Island Koreatown Manhattan Koreatown Palisades Park Little Hong Kong Guangdong 小香港 廣東 Little Fuzhou 小福州 Sunset Park BrooklynReferences Edit a b NYC Planning Community Profiles communityprofiles planning nyc gov New York City Department of City Planning Retrieved April 7 2018 a b Table PL P5 NTA Total Population and Persons Per Acre New York City Neighborhood Tabulation Areas 2010 Population Division New York City Department of City Planning February 2012 Accessed June 16 2016 a b Table PL P3A NTA Total Population by Mutually Exclusive Race and Hispanic Origin New York City Neighborhood Tabulation Areas 2010 Population Division New York City Department of City Planning March 29 2011 Accessed June 14 2016 a b c d e f Marques Amanda August 4 1985 If You re Thinking of Living in Elmhurst The New York Times Retrieved August 7 2014 a b NYPD 110th Precinct www nyc gov New York City Police Department Retrieved October 3 2016 Current City Council Districts for Queens County New York City Accessed May 5 2017 a b c d e f Vincent F Seyfried William Asadorian August 28 2012 Old Queens N Y in Early Photographs 261 Prints Courier Corporation pp 23 ISBN 978 0 486 13601 1 a b Residences Which Are Historical Brooklyn Daily Eagle October 22 1899 p 26 Retrieved July 4 2020 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com St James Church PDF National Register of Historic Places National Park Service November 12 1999 pp 6 7 Newtown Presbyterians Plan 275th Anniversary Program Brooklyn Times Union September 25 1927 p 18 Retrieved July 3 2020 via newspapers com David Karp It s Crunch Time for the Venerable Pippin The New York Times November 5 2003 Accessed September 20 2018 The Newtown Pippin arose in the late 17th or early 18th century as a seedling in the Moore family orchard which stretched from the East River to what is now 54th Street in Elmhurst formerly Newtown Queens Ilel Neille August 5 2004 Elmhurst Parish Turns 300 Celebrates With Major Facelift Queens Chronicle Retrieved June 21 2020 Kleiman Dena November 15 1982 Immigrants Spur Renaissance for Queens Churches The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 21 2020 Honan Katie October 23 2015 Newtown Civic Association Fights to Save Historic Farmhouse From Demolition DNAinfo New York Retrieved June 30 2020 Laterman Kaya June 14 2019 This Empty Lot Is Worth Millions It s Also an African American Burial Ground The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 5 2020 a b c d Libra Triangle Horsebrook Island New York City Department of Parks and Recreation Retrieved June 8 2015 A Hospital Where Ethnic Change Is Constant The New York Times October 6 1982 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 5 2020 Dr Stanley Bleich had been an intern less than a month at the municipal hospital in Elmhurst Queens one of the city s 16 municipal hospitals which is in what immigration officials have described as the city s most ethnically diverse neighborhood a b Kerry Murtha February 9 2015 Housing gains in Elmhurst Queens leave many cold Crain s New York Retrieved June 8 2015 Hevesi Dennis September 20 1993 Memory Filled Tanks Queens Loses 2 Roadside Landmarks The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 5 2020 The Elmhurst tanks those 200 foot monoliths that stood sentinel to the changing landscape of Queens and as harbingers of hair tearing delay on the highway to Manhattan are down deflated forever their skeletal remains waiting to be dismantled Elmhurst gas tanks Queens Tribune Archived from the original on June 8 2007 Retrieved June 4 2007 But when the beloved landmarks weren t really doing the business anymore they came down in 1996 and by 2001 there was almost no trace of the tanks that once supplied business and homes across the city Elmhurst Park New York City Department of Parks amp Recreation Accessed July 7 2016 Elmhurst Park once an eyesore and traffic landmark opened to the public in 2011 as a magnificent community greenspace The site of Elmhurst Park was once the location of two KeySpan Newtown gas holders a highway landmark popularly known as the Elmhurst gas tanks NYC s Zoning amp Land Use Map nyc gov Retrieved November 17 2018 Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks Lodge Number 878 PDF New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission August 14 2001 Retrieved June 11 2020 Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks Lodge Number 878 PDF National Register of Historic Places National Park Service November 19 2014 Retrieved June 11 2020 a b First Presbyterian Church of Newtown PDF National Register of Historic Places National Park Service September 9 2013 Retrieved June 11 2020 Newtown High School PDF New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission June 24 2003 Retrieved June 11 2020 Reformed Dutch Church of Newtown and Fellowship Hall PDF New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission July 19 1966 Retrieved June 11 2020 Reformed Church of Newtown Complex PDF National Register of Historic Places National Park Service April 23 1980 Retrieved June 11 2020 St James Church PDF National Register of Historic Places National Park Service November 12 1999 Retrieved June 11 2020 Old Saint James Episcopal Church Old Saint James Parish Hall PDF New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission September 19 2017 Retrieved June 11 2020 Steele Lockhart October 28 2005 Elmhurst s Jamaica Savings Bank Landmark Or Not Curbed NY Retrieved June 13 2020 Bureau U S Census U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved March 4 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Elmhurst and Corona Including Corona Corona Heights Elmhurst and Lefrak City PDF nyc gov NYC Health 2018 Retrieved March 2 2019 a b 2016 2018 Community Health Assessment and Community Health Improvement Plan Take Care New York 2020 PDF nyc gov New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene 2016 Retrieved September 8 2017 New Yorkers are living longer happier and healthier lives New York Post June 4 2017 Retrieved March 1 2019 NYC Queens Community District 4 Elmhurst amp South Corona PUMA NY Census Reporter Retrieved July 17 2018 Key Population amp Housing Characteristics 2020 Census Results for New York City PDF New York City Department of City Planning August 2021 pp 21 25 29 33 Retrieved November 7 2021 Map Race and ethnicity across the US CNN August 14 2021 Retrieved November 7 2021 Gebeloff Robert August 21 2021 Inside the Diverse and Growing Asian Population in the U S The New York Times A Growing Chinatown in Elmhurst Retrieved October 1 2010 Alperson Myra 2003 Nosh New York The Food Lover s Guide to New York City s Most Delicious Neighborhoods Macmillan ISBN 9780312304171 Greenhouse Steven Supermarket to Pay Back Wages and Overtime The New York Times December 9 2008 Accessed September 20 2018 Elmhurst Branch asiabank na com Lawrence A McGlinn Department of Geography SUNY New Paltz Beyond Chinatown Dual Immigration and the Chinese Population of Metropolitan New York City 2000 Page 4 PDF Middle States Geographer 2002 35 110 119 Journal of the Middle States Division of the Association of American Geographers Archived from the original PDF on October 29 2012 Retrieved March 19 2013 https www aafederation org wp content uploads 2020 12 2019ch pdf bare URL PDF https www1 nyc gov assets immigrants downloads pdf Fact Sheet NYCs API Immigrant Population pdf bare URL PDF Corona and Elmhurst DNAinfo com Crime and Safety Report www dnainfo com Archived from the original on April 15 2017 Retrieved October 6 2016 110th Precinct CompStat Report PDF www nyc gov New York City Police Department Archived PDF from the original on April 13 2018 Retrieved January 18 2021 FDNY Firehouse Listing Location of Firehouses and companies NYC Open Data Socrata New York City Fire Department September 10 2018 Retrieved March 14 2019 Engine Company 287 Ladder Company 136 Battalion 46 FDNYtrucks com Retrieved March 7 2019 Engine Company 289 Ladder Company 138 FDNYtrucks com Retrieved March 7 2019 Finkel Beth February 27 2014 Guide To Queens Hospitals Queens Tribune Archived from the original on February 4 2017 Retrieved March 7 2019 Glenza Jessica Rao Ankita Villarreal Alexandra March 27 2020 It s what was happening in Italy the hospital at the center of New York s Covid 19 crisis The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved March 27 2020 Correal Annie Jacobs Andrew Jones Ryan Christopher April 9 2020 A Tragedy Is Unfolding Inside New York s Virus Epicenter The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 9 2020 COVID 19 Data by ZIP Code of Residence City of New York August 10 2020 Retrieved August 10 2020 Zip Code 11373 Elmhurst New York Zip Code Boundary Map NY United States Zip Code Boundary Map USA Retrieved March 9 2019 Location Details Elmhurst A USPS com Retrieved March 7 2019 Location Details Elmhurst USPS com Retrieved March 7 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Walsh Kevin June 2002 ELMHURST Queens Forgotten NY Retrieved June 8 2015 a b c d e Walsh Kevin March 2014 WHITNEY AVENUE HOLINESS Elmhurst Forgotten NY Retrieved June 14 2015 a b Nicholas Hirshon January 19 2006 A BORN AGAIN THEATER FAMED ELMWOOD SITE CONVERTED TO PRAYER CENTER New York Daily News Retrieved June 13 2015 Keach Hagey July 17 2003 The Rock Of All Ages Church Turns Elmwood Theatre Into Music Venue Queens Chronicle Retrieved June 13 2015 Cinema Treasures Elmwood Theatre National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service March 13 2009 John Roleke Queens Center Mall About com Travel Forest City Properties Shop Urban Retail Queens Place forestcity net Archived from the original on April 9 2014 Retrieved April 8 2014 Siwolop Sana Commercial Real Estate Regional Market Queens Renovations And Renewal For a Mall The New York Times March 3 2004 Accessed July 7 2016 Macerich says that the center had average sales of 953 a square foot in 2002 the last year for which figures are available the national average for similar enclosed shopping regional centers around the country in 2002 was 330 a square foot according to the International Council of Shopping Centers Coangelo Lisa L February 18 2015 Bringing the magic of Queens long gone amusement parks back to life New York Daily News Retrieved June 14 2015 Fairyland Park Elmhurst Queens Chronicle Retrieved June 2 2015 Lorraine Sciulli November 27 2009 Return to Fairyland Juniper Park Civic Association Retrieved June 14 2015 Riker James 1852 The Annals of Newtown in Queens County New York D Fanshaw p 258 newtown turnpike queens ny Walsh Kevin April 2002 MASPETH Queens Forgotten NY Retrieved May 7 2015 Walsh Kevin November 2013 NYC STREETS FEATURING FULL NAMES Forgotten NY Retrieved June 14 2015 Kadinsky Sergey 2016 Hidden Waters of New York City A History and Guide to 101 Forgotten Lakes Ponds Creeks and Streams in the Five Boroughs New York NY Countryman Press pp 122 131 ISBN 978 1 58157 566 8 Walsh Kevin May 1999 WOODHAVEN TROTTING COURSE Forgotten NY Retrieved June 13 2015 Walsh Kevin November 2013 TROTTING COURSE LANE Forest Hills Forgotten NY Retrieved June 14 2015 Elmhurst Park NYC Parks Nycgovparks org May 24 2011 Retrieved December 12 2013 Russell David December 26 2019 They remain ageless in our minds vet Queens Chronicle Retrieved December 29 2019 Brand David December 27 2019 Queens first Vietnam War Memorial finally opens in Elmhurst Queens Daily Eagle Retrieved December 29 2019 Moore Homestead Playground Highlights NYC Parks New York City Department of Parks amp Recreation Retrieved September 22 2015 Frank D O Connor Playground Highlights NYC Parks New York City Department of Parks amp Recreation Retrieved September 22 2015 Veterans Grove Highlights New York City Department of Parks amp Recreation Retrieved September 22 2015 HORSE BROOK Queens Forgotten New York March 22 2008 Retrieved July 7 2016 Horsebrook Island Highlights Horsebrook Island NYC Parks Retrieved July 7 2016 Libra Triangle nycgovparks org New York City Department of Parks amp Recreation Retrieved July 7 2016 Elmhurst Corona QN 04 PDF Furman Center for Real Estate and Urban Policy 2011 Retrieved October 5 2016 PS 7 nyc gov January 9 2015 PS 13 nyc gov January 9 2015 PS 89 nyc gov January 12 2015 PS 102 nyc gov January 12 2015 51st Avenue Academy Saint Adalbert School saintadalbertschool com Home stbartholomewca org IS 5 nyc gov April 30 2015 newtownhighschool org Brachear Manya A June 3 2007 High school once known as a priest factory will see its last students scatter as devout path of seminary gets few young followers and fewer clergymen remain to guide them Chicago Tribune via HighBeam Research subscription required Archived from the original on July 15 2014 This month Cathedral Preparatory Seminary in the Diocese of Brooklyn will become the only full time high school seminary in the nation Richard Gentilviso June 11 2008 School Dist 24 To Get 5 New Schools Queens Gazette Archived from the original on September 15 2015 Retrieved June 8 2015 Central Queens Academy Charter School CQA centralqueensacademy org Branch Detailed Info Elmhurst Queens Public Library Retrieved March 7 2019 Barca Christopher September 25 2014 New Elmhurst library set to open next year Despite the construction delays the project has not gone over budget Queens Chronicle Retrieved August 29 2017 Honan Katie December 14 2016 32 4M Elmhurst Library Finally Reopens After Yearslong Construction DNAinfo com Archived from the original on August 30 2017 Retrieved August 29 2017 The neighborhood s library is finally set to reopen in a brand new 32 4 million space that officials say honors the original building build 110 years ago The Elmhurst branch of the Queens Library at 86 01 Broadway closed in 2011 for a demolition and rebuild that was originally only supposed to take two years The four story library which at 32 000 square feet is double the size of the original building will be celebrated with a grand reopening on Tuesday Dec 20 officials said Subway Map PDF Metropolitan Transportation Authority September 2021 Retrieved September 17 2021 Queens Bus Map PDF Metropolitan Transportation Authority August 2022 Retrieved September 29 2022 Google June 8 2015 Elmhurst NY Map Google Maps Google Retrieved June 8 2015 Erik B amp Rakim Archived October 5 2016 at the Wayback Machine Long Island Music Hall of Fame Accessed August 1 2016 Eric B was born in Elmhurst Queens and Rakim grew up in Wyandanch Gates Jr Henry Louis Belafonte s Balancing Act The New Yorker August 26 1996 Accessed July 20 2016 In 1953 enjoying his first real taste of affluence Belafonte moved from Washington Heights into a white neighborhood in Elmhurst Queens Century Douglas A Night Out With Julissa Bermudez A Song Before Dinner The New York Times August 20 2006 Accessed August 1 2016 While on air chitchat about college applications and prom dresses has its moments Ms Bermudez who was born in the Dominican Republic and was raised in Elmhurst Queens harbors slightly loftier show business dreams Brian Brady Baseball Reference com Accessed August 29 2017 Pace Eric William Casey Ex C I A Head Is Dead At 74 The New York Times May 7 1987 Accessed July 20 2016 William Joseph Casey was born on March 13 1913 in Elmhurst Queens the son of William J and Blanche La Vigne Casey Blake Meredith and Hill Libby Patty Duke dies at age 69 Oscar winning actress and mental health advocate Los Angeles Times March 29 2016 Accessed July 20 2016 Blake Meredith and Hill Libby Patty Duke dies at age 69 Oscar winning actress and mental health advocate Los Angeles Times March 29 2016 Accessed July 20 2016 The actress was born Anna Marie Duke on Dec 14 1946 in Elmhurst N Y the youngest of three children in a blue collar family plagued by alcoholism and mental illness Purnick Joyce Joan Hackett 49 The Actress Won 1982 Oscar Nomination The New York Times October 10 1983 Accessed September 20 2018 Joan Hackett daughter of an Italian mother and an Irish American father was born March 1 1934 in East Harlem The Hacketts soon moved to Elmhurst Queens and that was home when the future actress with the high cheekbones and the aristocratic nose dropped out of her senior year in high school to work as a model Hoby Hermione Homeboy Sandman I don t want to write something to be a conversation piece It has to help change something The Guardian April 25 2015 Accessed August 29 2017 Sandman grew up in the multicultural Elmhurst neighborhood of Queens playing his uncle s saxophone and listening to his father s jazz and merengue albums Butler J P Butler After 60 years SBU s Kenville gets his ring Olean Times Herald May 11 2015 Accessed August 29 2017 With his team down 17 in the deciding game the Elmhurst N Y native was brought in off the bench by head coach Al Cervi who told his young shooting guard get in there and win this thing Kenville wound up scoring a team high 15 points as Syracuse came back to beat the Fort Wayne Pistons 92 91 for the title Berkow Ira Baseball Amid Some Uncertainty The Expos Play to Win The New York Times June 18 2002 Accessed September 20 2018 Minaya born in the Dominican Republic but raised since age 8 in Elmhurst Queens was the assistant general manager with the Mets when Selig called last winter and offered him the job with the Expos a b Staff Industry Growth In 1879 Queens Queens Gazette February 13 2013 Accessed July 20 2016 On Shell Road in Newtown known today as Elmhurst sat a stately elegant mansion one of several homes in the area once occupied by the Moore family Benjamin Moore an Episcopal bishop and president of Columbia University and his brother Samuel Moore a distinguished physician were raised here The bishop s son Clement Clark Moore also raised on the family property wrote the yuletide poem A Visit from St Nicholas better known as Twas the Night before Christmas Staff Tony Pastor Dead In His 77th Year Famous Theatrical Man Expires After a Long Illness at His Elmhurst L I Home Family With Him At End His Name Long Identified with the Fourteenth Street Theatre Gave Many Noted Actors Their Start The New York Times August 27 1908 Accessed September 20 2018 Severo Richard Carroll O Connor Embodiment of Social Tumult as Archie Bunker Dies at 76 The New York Times June 22 2001 Accessed November 18 2007 The O Connors lived well at first in the Bronx later in a larger apartment in Elmhurst Queens and finally in a nice single family home in Forest Hills Queens then an enclave for people of means Hevesi Dennis Frank D O Connor 82 Is Dead Retired New York Appellate Judge The New York Times December 3 1992 Accessed July 20 2016 Mr O Connor was born on the West Side of Manhattan on Dec 20 1909 the son of Irish immigrants James and Margaret O Connor The family moved to Elmhurst Queens the following year Hunt Christopher June 28 2002 NBA Snub Stinger for Smush Daily News New York New York p 96 Lindy Remigino Sports Reference Accessed August 29 2017 Rosen Helen Former dancer Dixie Roberts had exciting career Sarasota Herald Tribune April 19 2004 Accessed August 29 2017 Born in Elmhurst N Y to a Georgia born mother she was raised a tomboy in Kent Cliffs N Y where the family owned a summer resort named Dixie Villas Talbot Margaret Profiles Supreme Confidence The New Yorker March 28 2005 p 40 Accessed October 22 2007 Tells about Scalia s childhood in Trenton New Jersey and Elmhurst Queens His father Eugene was a professor at Brooklyn College and a believer in the principles of the New Criticism Barker Kim In Queens Antonin Scalia Took Pride in Melting Pot and Confrontation The New York Times February 14 2016 Accessed August 1 2016 But in spirit and at heart Justice Scalia found dead Saturday at a resort in West Texas was a Queens man He spent much of his childhood in a red brick home in Elmhurst a neighborhood of Queens that is now largely Asian and Latino Villanueva Charlie Villanueva It s a privilege to be able to give back ESPN December 3 2008 Accessed July 20 2016 I grew up in New York City in a neighborhood called Elmhurst in Queens Beloved Coming To America Restaurant McDowell s Will Soon Be Demolished Gothamist June 16 2013 Archived from the original on May 9 2015 Retrieved June 14 2015 Hirshon Nicholas June 14 2013 Queens Boulevard Loses a Movie Icon Disguised as a Fast Food Joint Wall Street Journal Blog Retrieved June 14 2015 Chang Justin Film Review Revenge of the Green Dragons Variety magazine October 28 2014 Accessed July 20 2016 As laid out in Fredric Dannen s detailed 1992 New Yorker account the authoritative basis for Loo and Michael Di Jiacomo s patched together script the Green Dragons were a ruthless street gang in Elmhurst Queens consisting primarily of first generation Chinese youths whose awareness of their third class citizenship bred a particularly menacing form of social rebellion Further reading EditAIA Guide to New York City 3rd Edition 1988 ISBN 0 15 104040 0 Hardcover ISBN 0 15 603600 2 Paperback Jackson Kenneth T ed 1995 The Encyclopedia of New York City New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 0300055366 Seyfried Vincent Francis 1918 2012 March 1995 Elmhurst From Town Seat to Mega Suburb Queens Community Series Vincent F Seyfried September 8 2021 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link OCLC 34164618 all editions Via Internet Archive Queens Public Library 1995 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Elmhurst Queens Pictures of Elmhurst with descriptions In lower right options choose Always show title and description for descriptive titles to appear Old Elmhurst Blog A blog discussing the history of Elmhurst Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Elmhurst Queens amp oldid 1123035035, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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