Mostly hidden in the woods inside Prospect Park, this still-active Quaker burial ground, established in 1849, is older than the park itself, which was built around it beginning in 1866. The 10-acre cemetery contains over 2,000 graves marked with simple headstones like the ones you see above. It is generally off limits to the public, although tours are occasionally given. Even on those tours, however, the location of the grave of the cemetery's most famous resident, Montgomery Clift, is kept a secret.
Peering through the gate at the rather inconspicuous entrance to Friends Cemetery in Prospect Park
Towering in the background is the long-defunct Parachute Jump, an amusement ride relocated to Coney Island from the 1939-40 World's Fair. Just last year, the Parachute Jump's lighting scheme was given a $2 million upgrade — check it out!
In 1916, Nathan Handwerker opened a frankfurter stand here at the corner of Surf and Stillwell Avenues in Coney Island. From that point on, for over 96 years, this flagship Nathan's reportedly opened for business every single day until it was finally forced to close by Hurricane Sandy. (Damage from the storm kept the place shuttered for several months.)
From a previous post about Charles Feltman, the purported inventor of the hot dog:
Feltman died in 1910, but his restaurant stayed in business, and it was a few years later that a young Polish immigrant named Nathan Handwerker found work there slicing rolls. Supposedly with some encouragement and borrowed money from his then-unknown co-workers Eddie Cantor and Jimmy Durante, Nathan opened his own hot dog joint in 1916 at the corner of Surf and Stillwell Avenues, where he and his wife served up frankfurters for just a nickel apiece, half the price his former employer charged.
According to legend (and Nathan's grandson), with some variations from one telling to another, people were initially skeptical about the quality and contents of a wiener that could be sold for a mere five cents. To alleviate these concerns, Nathan hired people to dress as doctors and eat hot dogs in front of his stand, giving the impression that medical professionals considered his food perfectly healthy. Before long, with the arrival of the subway in Coney Island (and with the terminal station located right across the street), the dogs started selling like crazy, and now, almost a century later, Nathan's Famous remains a household name.
Os Gêmeos, identical-twin artists from Brazil, painted this eerily fanciful mural across from the Coney Island subway terminal back in 2005. For a much clearer view, check out this stitched-together image of the entire wall.
That's the Cyclone at left and the Wonder Wheel at right. I wasn't actually walking when I took this photo (don't tell); I was heading home on the Q train at the end of the day.