Obscura Day
Obscura Day 2012 Participant Pictures
More than sixty people joined us on an exploration of New Dorp and Cedar Grove Beaches on Staten Island’s eastern shore. Here are some of the photographs from that day!
Obscura Day photos by Dan Selzer.
Obscura Day photos: learning history from Jen Fitzgerald and Josh Jakob.
Obscura Day photos by Aimee Monko.
Also be sure to click over to the blog We Heart NY and to BK Rabblerouser to see more great documentation of the event.
Staten Island as a Resort
The New York Times, August 23, 1942
At the end of what is frequently termed “the world’s biggest excursion for a nickel,” is Staten Island—this year coming into new prominence as a vacation objective. Remembered by old-timers as a place of big estates and old-fashioned farms, the island retains wooded stretches and grass uplands. Its highest hills still offer the fine panoramic vistas that attracted early settlers seeking a rural retreat within easy reach of Manhattan. Twenty minutes from the Battery, holiday-makers are finding a new field of exploration.
And surprises are in store for the Manhattanite who has never toured the island’s fifty-seven square miles. For the nature lover, there is contrast in the seascapes and the shoreline rising steeply to wooded hills. For the energetic excursionist there are plenty of amusements—South Beach with its boardwalk, picnic grounds and sports fields; thirty-five miles of water front; bathing beaches facing the open sea yet sheltered from heavy surf; Great Kills and Princes Bay with their protected harbors for small sail boats. Indeed the list is a long one.
Some of the early movies were filmed on the island and hard-riding cowboys whooped over hills that present-day hikers climb to view the bay and the skyline of Manhattan. Well-known are Wolfe’s Pond Park, Silver Lake Park and Dongan Hills. Todt Hill, on the ridge that runs across the center of the island, is said to be the highest point of land along the entire Atlantic Coast between Maine and the Florida Keys. At New Dorp and Tottenville, at Willowbrook and Richmondtown, are historic houses. One of them, Conference House, was reputedly the scene of a meeting called to discuss reconciliation between the Colonies and England. Today, horseback riders and golfers are keeping fit on acres where Benjamin Franklin and Admiral Howe once walked and talked.
Subscribe to Surfaced
Bi-monthly featured stories, & notification of upcoming events
Recent Posts
- Antiseptic Six-Pack: Six Fragments from Dead Horse Bay by Nora Maynard
- UNY Contributor Book Round-Up
- They Come To Me by Allison Amend
- The Right Way to Tell a Story by Carolyn Ferrell
- The River and the Skull by Rich Villar
- Oshun’s Bolero by Rich Villar
- The Orisha of Iron, or, How The Horseshoe Came Back To Homeboy by Rich Villar
- Poem in Which the Poet Attempts to Teach Children on a Walking Tour of Their Own Neighborhood About the Purpose of Urban Poetry, Completely Ignoring the Tree and the River in Front of His Face by Rich Villar
- UNY in the Bronx!: Reading this Friday February 22nd
- The Art of Hurricanes by Lissa Kiernan