Day 831


Day 831

New paint job

April 9th, 2014



at the old lighthouse on Shell Bank Creek

Day 831

Canda Avenue

April 9th, 2014



Another of Sheepshead Bay's narrow little thoroughfares

Day 831

Swans on Sheepshead Bay

April 9th, 2014


Day 831




This overly basketed (look at the ceiling!) gourmet grocery store occupies a good portion of what used to be Lundy's, a massive seafood restaurant with seating for some 1,700 diners. Here's some info about (and more photos of) the sumptuous decor, and here's an exterior shot of the block-long building, which looks out onto the waters of Sheepshead Bay.

Day 831

Kenmore Court

April 9th, 2014



This block-long alley runs between East 21st and East 22nd Streets. Four and a half miles north along East 21st Street, as we've seen, lies a little cul-de-sac named Kenmore Terrace. The fact that the two Kenmores share a name is not a coincidence: it turns out that East 21st, the street that connects them, used to be a Kenmore itself — Kenmore Place. (It appears that a short stretch of East 21st Street was actually officially co-named Kenmore Place in 2000, restoring its historical appellation, although the street signs in that section do not reflect this change.)

Day 831

Yeshiva of Kings Bay

April 9th, 2014



A private Jewish school in what seems to have once been Public School 98. (The building looks nothing like it did in its architectural drawings, however.)

Day 831

A prestigious address

April 9th, 2014



Right up there with Humid Alley and Moist Terrace

Day 831

Portal of the day

April 9th, 2014



Wider view

Day 831

NO PARKING

April 9th, 2014


Day 831

A wobbly walker

April 9th, 2014



As I approached this gentleman and peered into his open shoulder bag, I began to discern the cause of his wobble.

Day 831

Cherries in bloom

April 9th, 2014


Day 831

Johannes Van Nuyse House

April 9th, 2014



This "especially fine example of a traditional Dutch Colonial farmhouse" was built in the first few years of the 19th century. After the house changed hands in 1916, the new owner moved it here from its original site farther south and added the dormer windows; the little entrance portico was a 1952 addition.

Day 831

Wyckoff-Bennett Homestead

April 9th, 2014



Built around 1766, this house is "the best preserved, and considered by many the most beautiful example of Dutch Colonial architecture in Brooklyn". Two Hessian soldiers who were quartered here during the Revolutionary War scratched their names into the windows; the framed panes now hang inside on the wall amid a huge collection of relics. In the 250 or so years of the house's existence, it's been occupied by a string of only three different families: the Wyckoffs, the Bennetts, and, since 1983, the Monts. For a look inside the place, check out this photo gallery and this eight-minute video.

Day 831

An old-timey bank mural

April 9th, 2014



on a new-timey bank

Day 831

Ocean Avenue Bridge

April 9th, 2014



If you're in the mood for a long, crazy story, check out the post I wrote last time we saw this footbridge over Sheepshead Bay. (Looking at the previous photo, you'll notice that the bridge has since been fully repainted following its post-Sandy reconstruction.)

Day 831

2235 Emmons Avenue

April 9th, 2014



This is the last of the large houses that once looked out onto Sheepshead Bay from the northern side of Emmons Avenue. Compare this 1924 aerial image with one from 2012.

Day 831

Stella Maris

April 9th, 2014



Star of the Sea, opened by six brothers (including an Anthony and a Tony) in 1947

Day 831

Lincoln Terrace

April 9th, 2014



One last little Sheepshead Bay passageway