··?'*·' 7/lAl Seven new marginal playgrounds, three reconstructed playgrounds, children's farm garden and two comfort stations completed and opened. 7/2/hl Eight tennis classes started. 7/3A-1 Second of series of fourffaumburgMemorial Concerts will be given July h. 7/k/kl Five acre general recriation field and playground on Rockaway Blvd., John Adams High School, opened. 19^-1 After five years of construction, major part of Grotona Park reguilt, nearing completion. 7/7/^1 Children of 23 Park Department playgrounds will celebrate anniveraary of opening during fuly. 7/9/^1 Half-acre playground west of Flatbush Avenue opened. 7/1 V+l New York State Amplji theatre to be reopened. 7/l5/*+l Overlook sitting area on Hudson River opened. 7/16/^1 Two of the nation's most outstanding feminine swimmers will race on July 16. 7/16A-1 Fourteen Japanese Saika deer donated to the Department of Parks. 7/17A1 Amateur golfers enter trounament for Newbold Morris Trophy. 7/18/^1 Bids opened for construction of bridges of Francis lewis Blvd. 7/19/^1 Largest tennis tournament ever held will reach finals on July 19. 7/20A1 GifttoyLongillland College Hospital to City of New York of four parcels of land. 7/21A-1 Queensbridge Park playground development completion announced. 7/22/k-l New playground and comfort station on a three-quarter acre plot at Avenue V and East 2*+th Street, Brooklyn, announced. 7/22A1 Bids pSpfiediullGiraMpaizMgrs gxtotieoft of Queens section of Bronx-Whitestone Parkway. 7/25A1 Travelling puppet troupe formed. 7/25A1 Flushing Meadow Amphitheatre to be opened by Mayor LaGuardia. Team of eight from each of ten municipal golf courses 7/26A1 compete for team championship for Itfewbold Morris Tournament, Completion and opening of new playground in Queens 7/28A1 at Laurelton and Southern Parkways, and of four sitting areas, announced. Aquatic Syow postponed due to inclement weather. 7/3OA1 Finals and semi-finals of tennis tournament scheduled. 7/31A1 Additions to contract for park lighting (#M-10-21+l^ 7/31A1 in connection with repaying of East Drive, Central Park, East 59th Street and Fifth Avenue to East 7lfth Street, Manhattan. 7/31A1 Match play begins i$ Newbold Morris gold tournament. 8AAl First section of Shore Road Park, BBroiafcJyn^oc ample ted. 8AAl Bids opened for reconstructing a portion of the lighting system in Central Park from West 110th Street, to East 74-th Street. 7AA1 GojiplGomplietlonecf development of Plpm Island, Marine Park, Brooklyn, 8/6A1 First of series of aquatic and stage shows to be presented at Flushing Meadow Amphitheatre. 8/6Al City-wide finals of girls' softball tournament will take place Aug. 9 at Heckscher Playground. 8/9A1 Final round in Municipal Golf Coampionships to be held on Sunday, August 10. 8/9AI Completion and opening of neighborhood playground on Nostrand Avenue, south of Kings Highway, Brooklyn, announced. 8/llAl Construction work at Ferry Point Park completed. 8/12Al Variety of tournaments at parks for boys and giils planned for remainder of summer. 8/13A1 Seven-acre Bushwick Park at Knickerbocker and Irving Avenues, Suydam and Starr Streets, reopened. 8/16A1 Finals of Paddle Tennis Tournament for boys and girls scheduled at North Meadow, Central Park, on August 16. 8/20A1 Finals of Softball tournament, junior and intermediate divisions, to take place at Heckscher Playground. 8/22A1 Finals of checker tournament will take place at Heckscher Playgrounds, Central Park, on August 23. 8/23A1 Marginal playgrounds at Prospect Park West, from Garfield Road to 15th Street, and at the Lincoln Road entrance, completed. 8/25A1 Concert to be given at Flushing Meadow Park on Aug. 26. During S&ptember, children of 21 playgrounds will celebrate the anniversaries of official openings. 8/30A1 Naumburg Orchestra gives last of four concerts on Labor Day. 9/5A1 Bids taken for unloading f i l l in Sound View Park. 9/6A1 Closing of ourdoor swimming pools on Sept. 7» 9/6A1 Bids taken for workiii Flushing Meadow Park. 79/7A1 Dedication of Time Capsule on 9/23Al. 9/llAl Rikers Island Mursery Report. 9/12A1 Finals of softball tournament on 9/13Al/ 9/12A l Planned a c t i v i t i e s for f a l l and winter. 9/12 A l Prizes awarded to children interested in Crotona Park, 9/12A1 Finals of Boys B a seball Tournament on 3/lh/h-l/ 9/13A1 Closing date for amateur photo contest on 9/2OA1/ 9/19/41 Finals of shuffleboard tournament on 9/20/41 9/22/41 Construction begun on 13 parks by WPA D/23/41 New playground in Manhattan fe/26/41 Completion of reconstruction of playground at Grave send Park 9/26/41 Harvest festival to be held 9/29 9/27/41 New play area on Cross Island Parkway in Queens 9/27/41 New playground at Collins Zimmerman Playground, the Bronx 9/28/41 Instructions and suggestions for planting trees in city streets 9/29/41 Reconstructed playground in Morning side Park 9/30/41 Announcing three park improvements in Queens 9/30/41 Bids opened for widening Hutchinson River Parkway Extension 10/1/41 Construction of three new playgrounds (one in Manhattan and two in Brooklyn) begun 10/1/41 Children of 22 palygrounds will have special activities during Oct. to comemerate official openings of the play areas 10/1/41 Work begun on 3 new playgrounds: Park Ave, # 108 St., Manhattan; and Shore Parkway, Homecrest Ave, and Third Ave at 64 St, both in Brooklyn 10/1/41 Parking field and concession building completed on Canarsie Pfer by Belt Parkway at foot of Rockaway Parkway 10/2/41 Vanishing farms in Queens 10/3/41 Plans being made to extend Pennsylvania Avenue to provide new access to Belt Parkway 10/4/41 Martins Field playground reopened 10/4/41 Children's orchestras to give concerts Oct. 5 10/5/41 "Wishing Tree" 1 repaired in Harlem 10/6/41 Two reconstructed parks opened in Manhattan and Brooklyn 10/6/41 Revenues for first nine months show 20% increase over 1940. (2 charts) 10/10/41 Ice skating rink at City Building, Flushing, Queens open 10/13/41 Draft for release on reconstruction of Crotona and St. Mary's Parks in the Bronx 10/11/41 Sfocial dancing now going on at designated recreation build ngs in the 5 boroughs 10/12/41 Winne rs of photo contest announced 10/13/41 200 car parking field, practice tee and fairway in Queens compiled 10/13/41 Two puppet and marionette shows to be presented on the Mall 10/13 10/14/41 Bids opened for construction of steel bulkhead and reinforced concrete bridge in Marine Park 10/15 Children's handcraft exhibition opens 10/16 in Junior Museum of Metropolitan Museum of Art 10/17 Development of new playfields on Randall's Island announced (2 drawings dated 10/9/41 #104-1006 and $104-1007) 10/20 Statement of Robert Moses urging vote of "yes" on amendment #4 for development of ski activities 10/21/ Traffic relief road connecting Mosholu Avenue and the Henry Hudson Parkway and restoration of Park and golf course in Van Cortlandt Park, the Bronx, completions announced 10/23 Bids opened on 4 contracts for reconstructions in Brooklyn Institute of Arts (one drawing dated 10/21/41 file # B-48-141) 10/24/41 City wide finals of Roller Skating Contest announced 10/25/41 Completed arrangements for transportation to and from N.Y. City Buildings ice and roller skating rinks announced 10/31 Irving Jaffee will conduct ice skating ¥ class at New York City Bldg. 11/1 Annual Fall chrysanthemum show in Prospect Park, Brooklyn will open Nov. 2 11/9 Comment upon crime in Parks (no map though release says one is attached) 11/10 Reconstruction of Isaac L. Rice Memorial Section of Pelham Bay Park announced. 11/11 New playground adjacent to East River Drive completed 11/13 Bids opened for construction of a bulkhead along south and east shore of Sound Viw Park 11/14 Speed ice skating sessions planned. 11/14 Irving Jaffee will conduct ice skating class at N.Y. City Bldg, Flushing Meadow Park, Queens on Nov 15 11/15 Letter from Robert Moses to Victor Gettner, New York City Civil Liberties Committee, concerning issue of permits for meetins in the parks. 11/17/41 Two playgrounds completed at Cross Island Parkway and Hempstead Ave. 11/24 3 small parks at Washington Square Park, Manhattan, cpmpleted 11/29 Bolf courses at Jacob Riis Park closed for the winter to prevent damage to grass. 11/30 Children will e7 celebrate openings anniversaries of 8 parks playgrounds. 12/1 Start of work in connections with 3 new playgro unds announced (one in Queens, two in Manhattan) 12/4 Two new playgrounds con trcuted in the Bronx 12/5 New additon to playground at Howard Ave between Pacific and Dean Streets, Brooklyn, completed 12/8 Completion of reconstruction of section of Kissena Park, Queens, announced. 12/12 City wide finals of ping pong tournament planned for Dec. 13 12/12 Bids opened for traffic directional signs to be installed at intersection of connecting highway, Tribo rough Bridge Plaza ·$$$,/ and Boody Street atfyfcfyO/Grand Central Parkway 12/13 Japanese Pavilion At World's Fair being demolished 12/16 Christmas program will feature 30 puppet and marionette shows 12/16 Opening of reconstructed playground at Bay Parkway, Ave P and West 12th St., Brookly, announced 12/17 Gene Tunney will advise in boxing program 12/17 Children to participate in Christmas programs 12/18 Ceremonies in connection with Christmas trees in parks announcfed 12/19 Cadets of La Salle Military Academy to present winter drill 12/20 Christmas exhibit of flowers opens 12/20 Corrected release on ceremonies to be held in connection with Christmas trees, updated from 12/18 to 12/21, announcing change of date of ceremonies to 12/21 12/21 Program of winter sports activities announced. 12/22 Bids opened for cleaning and repairing stone faced bridges in Central Park 12/22/41 Bids opened for new buldhead in Battery Park 12/22 Widening of 4 lane Hutchinson River Parkway extension 12/22 New playground opened at south end of Highbridge Park 12/22 Two sitting parks by the public baths at Cherry and Oliver Sts and Rutgers Place, Manhattan 12/29 Objectives of waterfront reclamation program. DEPARTMENT QF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRA! PARK FOR RELEASE MOKDAY T e l . REGENT 4 - 1 0 0 0 December 2 9 , 1941 TO THE PRESS: Riker's Island, Soundview Park at the mouth of the Bronx River, and Larine Park at Great Kills, Staten Island, are three closely related objectives in a long range waterfront reclamation program. The Riker's Island dump has disappeared. A tree nursery for the Park Department and a vegetable garden, orchard and other facilities for the Department of Correction take the place of the dump. The scow operations of the Department of Sanitation moved to the mouth of the Bronx River to help fill in the new Soundview Park back of a bulkhead constructed by the Park Department with the aid of rock and dredged material obtained from the federal dredging operation further up the river. This scow dumping supplements land dumping at the north end of the new park. It will take two years to fill up Soundview Park and to complete the recrea- tion facilities planned there. At the end of this period the Bronx Parkway Southerly Extension will give additional access to this reclaimed area. Finally in 1944 Marine Park St*aten Island, where reclamation activities were started some years ago with W.P.A. funds, and which is now being partially filled as part of a joint federal and city dredging contract, will obtain Sanitation scov? fill for a period of approximately two years, at the end of which Marine Park will appear as one of the finest shorefront bathing areas on the Atlantic seaboard. The coordinating and dovetailing of this work has involved many complications. From tirae to time the Park Department will announce the pass- ing of an important milestone. The beginning of scow dumping at Soundview represents such a milestone. The attached release, maps and pictures tell the story and will enable the press to select such material as it deems interesting. /S/ ROBERT mOSES Commissioner DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE, Monday Tel. REGENT 4-1000 December 29, 1941 The Department of Parks announces further progress in the preliminary development of Soundview Park, a 160 acre water front site on the ^ast River Bronx shore. By a series of contracts involving the dredging of channels and the construction of bulkheading and unloading facilities a portion of the shore front near the mouth of the Bronx River has been prepared for docking and un- loading Department of Sanitation scows which formerly deposited their waste at Riker's Island. The diversion of scow dumping from Riker's Island, shortly after the first of the year, permits the continuation of a program started in 1937 for transforming this former mountain of refuse and ashes into an attractive and useful farm garden and tree nursery as well as accelerating land filling opera- tions which have been proceeding for the past two years over the marsh areas of Soundview Park. The development and maintenance of airee nursery on Riker's Island, using penitentiary labor, is of immense benefit to the city. In addition to replacing an unsightly and oaorous nuisance and providing healthful occupation to the prison inmates the nursery will soon produce, at relatively small cost, an annual crop of shade ana ornamental trees for parks, parkways and park streets, This twenty-five acre nursery which was started in the Fall of 1940 now contains over 13,000 trees consisting of European Planes, Norway Maples and American Sims. The completed nursery will cover sixty acres. Each year 10,000 additional saplings will be added. In 1947 the first 10,000 trees will be trans- pianted to permanent locations in city parks, parkways and city streets. The existing fifty acre prison farm development consisting of a wide variety of vegetables will be expanded over a period of five years to 260 acres including fruit orchards and a poultry plant. It is expected that the gardens will provide a high percentage of the vegetables used at the penitentiary. * -2- i'he Soundview Park site originally consisted of 93 acres of upland. In 1940 sixty-six additional acres were acquired by condemnation for park pur- poses. Forty-eight acres of the new acquisition was land under water. The up- land was typical barren salt marsh interlaced with natural creeks and artificial drainage ditches. The Bronx River and JEast River frontages consisted of an ir- regular and muddy shore line. Joint filling operations by the Departments of Parks and Sanitation have been proceeding concurrently with the channel dredging and bulkhead con- struction. During the past 'two years approximately five million cubic yards of fill from various sources have been spread over the marsh land and used for bulkhead construction. A Federal dredging contract in the Bronx River provided and placed 50,000 cubic yards of riprap along the face of the earth bulkheading. Rock excavation along Eastern Boulevard was the source of over 15,000 cubic yards of riprap bulkhead. City refuse deposited by Department of Sanitation trucks was confined to the uplands. The material which is dumped from the col- lection trucks is leveled and compacted to approximate established grades by heavy caterpillar tractor bulldozers. Clean earth fill is spread over the refuse for sanitary reasons. Over 6,000 lineal feet of earth and riprap bulkheading now approaching completion extends along the entire Bronx River and -^ast River frontages thus preventing flotation and dispersal of the new fill and affording a smoothly aligned permanent shore. Ten million cubic yards of fill are needed to raise the entire area to finished, grades. It is estimated that scow dumping now in its early stages will double the tempo of operations. The loaded steel barges are anchored to a wooden pile supported rock and steel foundation which carries the unloading equipment. A traveling bucket of eleven cubic yards capacity transfers the material from the barges to a hopper on the unloading platform. Tractor drawn wagon trains are loaded from the hopper and dump the material throughout the -3- area. The process of leveling and companion is the same as for truck deposited waste. It is estimated that the filling operations will be completed in 1944 at which time scow dumping will be transferred to marine Park, Staten Island. Soundview Park will be completed in 1944 as a Capital improvement, 'lhis large shore front neighborhood park lying at the terminus of the Bronx River Parkway Extension will round out the major recreational needs of the southeastern section of the Bronx. The future Park has already been instrumental in the build- ing development of adjacent property and this trend is expected to continue. When the park is completed the following park facilities will be pro- vided: Shore front promenade Three comfort stations Picnic area Four marginal playgrounds Three overlook areas Court games area Two athletic fields including 250 Car parking field concrete bleachers Bench-lined malls, promenades Field house and walks Recreation building Formal and informal tree planted lawns. *** DEPAHEOTT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR KSI2AS3 Monday , T3L. R2C-MT 4-1000 December 22, 1941 T3ae Department of Parks announces the completion of two snail sitting parks adjacent to the Public Baths located at Cherry and Oliver Streets and Rutgers Place near Jefferson Street, Manhattan. Both sitss have frontages of 26 feet and depths of approximately 100 feet. The par* eels were condemned by the City to permit the removal of a 3-| story and 6 story building and the installation of windows in the sides of the bath- houses for additional light and air» The properties thus acquired serve a double purpose by allowing the development of much needed sitting areas in this congested lower sec- tion of downtown Manhattan. Irrigated sand pits and drinking fountains have been included in both areas. Continuous benches have been placed around the small asphalt surfaced free play areas. The exterior walls of adjoining buildings have been plastered and painted with White Port- land Cement Wash to provide additional reflected light to the sitting areas and bathhouses. The work was performed by the Work Projects Administration from plans prepared by the Department of Parks. * * ## DEPARTMENT OF FARES F0R ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK P i x : 21088 RELEASE M2?t433!ji TEL. REGENT 4-1000 21089 December"^7*1941 Blans: M L 37-2100 Ml 37-2101 The Department of Paries announces the completion and opening of a new playground at the south end of Elghbridge Barton the east side of Sdgecombe Avenue just north of its intersection with ·Harlem River Drive- way. This playground, one of seven marginal recreational areas along Edgecombe Avenue, was built under a large project for the general recon- struction of a considerable portion of the park involving new-grading, drainage, irrigation and planting, new playgrounds and comfort station, fencing, walks, benches and park lighting. It is expected that these items will be completed early next year. The new playground is an asphalt surfaced, fence enclosed quadrant approximately l/4 acre in extent, with two gate controlled en- trances from the Edgecombe Avenue promenade. Kindergarten swings, slides and seesaws are provided. A sand pit with continuous benches on three sides is included. Two large existing shade trees were retained within the playground area* The work was performed by the Work Projects Administration from plans prepared by the Department of Parks. In 1934 there were 119 playgrounds in the five boroughs. There are now with this addition 462 playground^ in the park system. * * * * DEPARlMS-Tl OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR RELSAS5 MONDAY TIL. KEGffiT 4-1000 December 22, 1941 The Department of Parks announces the widening of the old four-lane Hutchinson River parkway Extension in Pelham Bay Park between the WestChester County Line and the beginning of the new three and one-half six-lane parkway extension opened to traffic on October 11, 1941. The old pavement within the City limits consisted of two 23 foot wide concrete roadways and curbs separated by a 28 foot wide grass panel. Originally it, was made exceptionally wide in anticipation of the need for the current im- provement, 'i'he widening was done under two separate contracts prepared by the State Department of Public Works and the Department of Parks and was paid for with State and City funds. They provided for the removal of the existing mall curbs and the addition of two 11 foot wide lanes to each roadway. The new curbs are of white cement to indicate clearly the edge of the roadways. New timber guide railing has been added at points where the outer shoulders slope off sharply. Certain necessary adjustments were made to the existing drainage system to meet the changed conditions and new drainage structures were added. The central mall will be seeded with grass next spring. The recently opened parkway extension olus this widened section per- mits an uninterrupted and safe flow of traffic from the Belt Parkway over the Bronx-Whitestone Bridge and other arterial connections to the parkways of West Chester, upper New York and Connecticut. It lias also relieved the heavy flow.of mixed traffic formerly carried by the Eastern Boulevard approach to the Triborough Bridge. *** *** **· DEPAKttlBNT 0? PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE MONDAY, TEL. REGENT 4-1000 DECEE^IR 22, 1941 Bids were opened today b3^ the Department of Parks on a contract for the demolition of existing structures and clearing the site for a new bulkhead in Batter:/ Park, Borough of Manhattan. These preliminary clearing operations in preparation for the com- plete reconstruction of the park vail be confined to the immediate vicinity of the existing bulkhead. The major items of work will include the removal of the Fire Department buildings and the reinforced concrete and timber decks and framing of the wharf. The iron pipe railing, stanchions and mooring devices along the face of the wharf will be salvaged for replacement on the new bulkhead which will be provided under a future contract. The alignment will follow closely the existing structure except at the south end where it will be extended approximately thirty feet into the bay and at the north end where a large portion of the Pier A boat basin will be eliminated. Other items in the contract provide for the removal of granite fence posts and coping, the cutting or pulling of all timber piles within designated areas and the relocation of ths gangplank and float to the westerly end of the north boat basin. The contract allows sixty consecutive aaiendar days for the com- pletion of the work. The three lowest bids were submitted by the following: 1. John J. AbramsSn Company, Inc, $24,811. 864 WLdtlock Avenue, Bronx, N. Y. 2. Albert A. Volk Company 28,533. 1319 Broadway, New York City 3. Nicholas DiMenna oc Sons, Inc. 34,904. 1525 Blondell Avenue, Bronx, N.Y. * * * * DSPAHHSST OF PANICS ARS3NAL, C3NTRAL 'BASK FOR REL3ASS M MONDAY^ _ TEL. Timmi 4-1OOU DECEMBER 22,~T94i 'B'ids were opened today by t h e Department of Parks a t t h e Arsenal Building in Central Park on a c o n t r a c t for r e p a i r i n g and cleaning two stone faced b r i d g e s i n C e n t r a l Park, Borough of Manhattan. The work on t h e s e s t r u c t u r e s which a r e l o c a t e d near F i f t h Avenue in the v i c i n i t y of 77th S t r e e t and 85th S t r e e t r e p r e s e n t s one phase of a g e n e r a l program under which t h e en- t i r e park i s b e i n g reconstructed or repaired. The contract provides for the erection of new a r t i f i c i a l stone balusters, wrought iron railings, ^concrete copings, steam cleaning a l l stonework and brickwork and pointing up mortar j o i n t s . The three lowest bids were submitted by the following: 1. Robert Cook, Inc. lp3281.00 250 East 43 Street, N.T.C. 2. G-oldberger Construction Corp. 3653.00 11 vfest 42 Street, E.Y.C, 3. Kennedy & Smith, Inc. 4015.00 131-20 41st Ave., Flushing,N.Y. * * * * *-r\ DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE SUNDAY TEL. REGMT 4 - 1 0 0 0 December 21, 1941 The Department of Parks announces that an extensive program of winter sports activities has been arranged for juveniles, adolescents and adults, in- cluding carnivals, skiing, ice skating and coasting. Two hundred and five park areas, in all, have been set aside for ice skating throughout the five boroughs. In addition to 27 lakes in the large parks, 15 tennis court/ areas will be sprayed, 134 wading pools and 29 other suitable recreation facilities will be flooded for this popular winter sports activity. Five ice skating carnivals will be held on Saturday, January 10, 1942, 2:00 p.m., at the following locations: Manhattan - Conservatory LaKe, Central Park, near 72 Street and Fifth Avenue Brooklyn - Prospect Parii Lake, near Empire Boulevard and Lincoln Road Queens - Cunningham Park, Union Turnpike and 192 Street, H o H i s Bronx - Van Cortlandt park Lake, near West 242 Street Richmond - Clove Lakes, near Victory Boulevard and Clove Road These carnivals will feature events for juveniles, juniors and sen- iors as well as exhibitions of figure, pair and novelty skating. Special events will be included for members of the Middle Atlantic Skating Association. A city-wide winter sports carnival will be held on Saturday, January 24, at the Conservatory Lake, Central Park, at which the first five competitors in eech of the boroug,:. contests will be eligible to compete. Gold, silver and bronze medals will be awarded to those who place 1st, 2nd and 3rd in each event. --2- An indoor ice skating carnival, exclusively for children up to 14 years of age, will take place at the City Building, Flushing Meadow Park, Queens, on Tuesday, December 30j from 10 a.m. to 1 p.mi While the program will include races, the special feature will consist of a masquerade, in which those children wearing the most attractive costumes, will receive prizes. Of course, all the participants will be admitted free of charge, but spectators will have to pay the usual admission fee of 11^. Twenty nine hills in the various parks of the five boroughs have been designated for coasting, together with fifteen areas suitable for ski- ing. In the event of snow, a contest in snow sculpture ana snow archi- tecture will be held on Saturday, January,17, at 2 p. m. Prize-s will be awarded to the winners. The attached list indicates the respective park areas for ice skating, skiing and coasting. DEPARTMENT OF PARKS CITY OF NEW YORK ICE SKATING AREAS 1 9 4 1 - 1 9 4 2 M A N H A T T A N (37) LAKES (4) 59. .Street Lake, Central Pork , near Fifth /.venue 72 Street and West Drive Lake, Central Park Conservatory Lake, 72 Street and 5 Avenue, Central Park Lake, North of 79 Street end Transverse Road, Central Park TENNIS COURTS 93 Street and West Drive, Central Park FLOODED AREAS East River Drive and Broome Street (27 Riverside Drive end 148 S t r e e t WADING POOLS Carl Schurz Playground, East 84 Street end East End Avenue Colonial Playground, West 152 Street end Bradhurst Avenue (30) DeWitt Clinton Playground, West 52 S t r e e t end 11 Avenue F t . Tryon Playground, Broadway end Dyckmon Street Gulick Playground, Columbia, Sheriff end Broome Streets Hamilton Place Playground, West 141 Street end Hamilton Piece Highbridge-167 Street Playground, West 167 Street and Edge comb Ave0 Highbridge-180 Street Playground, West 180 Street end Amsterdam Ave,, Highbridge-189 Street Playground, 1/1rest 189 Street and Amsterdam Ave.,, J. Hood Wright Playground, West 173 S t r e e t and F t . Washington i.ve, Kelly Playground, West 17 Street b e t . 8th end 9th Avenues McCray Playground, West 138 Street b e t . 5th and Lenox Avenues Mt. Morris East Playground, East 120 S t r e e t and Madison Avenue Mt. Morris West Playground, West 122 S t r e e t and Nethen Davis Place Riversidc-75 Stre-'t, West 75 Street end Henry Hudson Parkway Riversidc-97 S t r e e t , West 97 Street end Henry Hudson Pcrkway Riversidc-102 S t r e e t , West 102 Street and Henry Hudson ParJ-wcy Rumsey Playground, 72 Street end Erst Drive in Central Park Roosevelt Pieyground, Forsythc and Broome S t r e e t s S t . Gabriel's Playground, East 35 S t r e e t , between 1st and 2nd Avenues S t . Nicholas Playground, " r . 141 Street and S t . Nicholas Ave, Seward Playground, East Broadway end Canal Street Thomas Jefferson Playground, Ee.st 114 Street end Pleasant avenue Tompkins Square Playground, .Avenue "A" and East 10 Street Yorkville Playground, East 101 S t r e e t between 2nd and 3rd Avenues. Playground, 83 Roosevelt Street Playground, West 130 S t r e e t end Fifth Avenue Mornings id e-123 Street Playground, Forningsidc Avenue r.nd 123 Street Payson Avenue Playground, Payson Avenue end Dyckman Street Corlcars Playground, Cherry end Jackson S t r e e t s * * BROOK L Y N (57) LAKES P r o s p e c t Park Lake TENNIS COURTS F o r t Greene P a r k , M y r t l e Avenue rnd S t . Edwards S t r e e t FLOODED AREAS A t l a n t i c Avenue and Linwood S t r e e t ( A s p h a l t b a s e b c l l f i e l d ) (10) Bushwick P l a y g r o u n d , Putnam and K n i c k e r b o c k e r A v e s , ( A s p h a l t b a s c b e l l field) Douglass end 3rd Avenue (Asphalt baseball field) Dykcr Beach Park, 86 Street and 7 Avenue (Pond on golf course) Kelly Memorial Playground, Avc. S and E, 14 St. (Asphalt bescball field) Lincoln Terrace Park, Buffalo & E, New York Ave. (Asphalt baseball field) McKinlcy Park, Ft. Hamilton Parkway end 75 St. (Boys playground) Red Hook Recreation Center, Clinton & Bay Sts. (Roller skating area) Scth Low Playground, Bay Parkway & Ave. P (Asphalt baseball field) McCarrcn Park, Driggs Ave, and Lorimcr Street (Children's playground) WADING- POOLS Avenue L and East 18 Street Playground Bill Brown Memorial Playground, Bedford Avenue ::nd Avenue X (45) Blake and Euclid Avenues Playground Bushwick Park, Knickerbocker rnd Putnam Avenues Carroll Park, Smith and Carroll Streets City Park, Flushing Avenue and % v y Street Crispus Attucks Playground, Fulton Street and Classon Avenue Dahill Roed and 38 Street P]a yground Dreier Offerman Playground, Cropsey Avenue end 2 7 Avenue Ft. Hamilton Parkway and 52 Street Playground Ft. Hamilton High School, Colonial Road and 83 Street Greenpoint Playground, Commercial and DuPont Streets Heckscher Playground, Grove Street and Wilson Avenue Hopkinson Avenue and Marion Street Playground Howard Avenue, Pacific and Dean Streets Playground Jas.J, Byrne Memorial Playground, 3 Street and 4 Avenue Lafayette and Reid Avenues Playground Leiv Eiricksson Playground, 56 Street and 8 Avenue Lynch Street and Lee Avenue Playground McKibben Playground, McKibben and White Streets Mclaughlin Playground, Tillary and Jay Streets Marine Park, Marine Parkway and Fillmore Avenue Marine Playground, Gerritsen Avenue and Avenue X Neptune Avenue and West 28 Street Playground New Lots Playground, Riverdale Avenue and Sackman Street New Utrecht Avenue and 70 Street Playground Ocean Parkway and Avenue P Playground Owls Head Park, Colonial Road and 67 Street Pitkin and New Jersey Avenues Playground Prospect and Greenwood Avenues Playground Prospect Park West and 11 Street Playground Prospect Place and Underhill Avenue Playground Riverdale and Snediker Avenues Playground Schermerhorn Street and 3 Avenue Playground Sheridan Playground, Grand Street and Wythe Avenue Shiplacoff Playground, Pitkin Avenue and Powell Street South 3rd and Berry Streets Playground Stephen A. Rudd Playground, Bushwick Avenue and Aberdeen Street B E O O K L Y K ( cont.) S t i l l w e l l Avenue and Avenue U Playground Taaffe Place and Park Avenue Playground Tenth Avenue and 42 Street Playground Tompkins Park, Tompkins and Lafayette Avenues Union and Van Brunt S t r e e t s Playground Vandervoort and Cherry S t r e e t s Playground Williamsburg Housing, Manhattan Avenue and Scholes Street QUEENS (75) LAKES (13) Alley Pond Park Lake, World's Fair Blvd. & Douglaston Pkway, Hollis Alley Pond Picnic Lake, Grand Central Parkway, 233 Street, Hollis Bowne Park Lake, 158 Street and 32 Avenue, Flushing Baisley Park Lake, Sutphin Blvd., 125 St., opp. 153 St., Baisley Park Brookville Park Lake, Brookville Blvd. and 143 Avenue, Rosedale Crooheron Park Lake, 35 Avenue and 214 Place, Baysid e Jackson Pond, 108 Street and 30 Avenue, Richmond Hill Kissena Lake, Oak Avenue and Kissena Blvd., Flushing Linden Park Lake, 41 Avenue and 103 Street, Corona Oakland Lake, Alley Pond, Hollis Pea Pond, Hollis Court Blvd. and Grand Central Parkway, Hollis Capt. Tilly Park Lake, Highland Avenue, 85 Ave., 165 Street, Jamaica Twin Ponds, Brookville Blvd. end Merriok Road, Rosedale TENNIS COURTS Adams, Centerville, 102-103 Street, Ozone Park (8) Alley Pond Park, Grand Central Parkway, Winchester Blvd., Hollis Astoria Park, 25 to 21 Avenue, Astoria Brookville Park, Brookville Blvd., end So. Conduit Highway, Rosedale Cunningham Park, Union Turnpike, opposite 192 Street, Hollis Wayanda Park, Hollis Avenue and Springfield Blvd., Hollis Woodhaven Playground, 89 Avenue and 90 Street, Woodhaven Baisley Park, Sutphin Blvd. and 125 Street, Baisley Park FLOODED AREAS Atlantic Avenue and 88 Street, Ozone Park (Softball area) (22) 95 Street and 125 Street, Richmond Hill (games area and handball cts.J Broadway and 78 Street, Jackson Heights (Roller Skating) Braddock Avenue and 240 Street, Queens Village (Softball area) Chisholm Park, Poppenhausen Ave & 115 St., College Pt. ( l (Roller skat- ing area) Grover Cleveland, Grandview Avenue & Stanhope St., Ridge-wood (Soft- ball area) Corona 111 Street, 46 Ave. & 111 St., c o r o n a (Softball area) Flushing Memorial, 25 Ave. & 149 St., Flushing (Handball courts) Glendale, 78 Avenue & 74 Street, Glendale (Games e.rea) Jackson Heights Plgd., 84 St. & 30 Ave,, Jackson Heights (Handball Cts Liberty Park, Liberty Ave. & 172 St., Jamaica (Paddle tennis courts) Marconi Plgd., 155 St. & 108 Ave., Jamaica (Softball area) Maurice Plgd., Maurice, Borden and 54 Aves., Maspeth (Games area) 0'Connell Plgd., 113 Ave. & 196 St., St. Albans (Handball courts) Rockaway, Boardwalk & 80 Street, Rock away Riis Park, Neponsit (Parking field) 30th Road, 45 Street and 30 Road, Astoria (Softball area) Q U E E I S (oont.) Thomson H i l l , 47 Avenue and 43 S t r e e t , Sunnyside (frames a r e a , upper) Tudor F i e l d , 80 S t r e e t and N, Conduit A v e . , So. Ozone Park ( S o f t - b a l l area) Victory Field, Woodhaven Blvd. and Myrtle Ave,, Glendale Von Dohlen Plgd., 138 S t r e e t end Archer Ave,, Jamaica (Handball c t s . ) Woodhaven, 89 Avenue & 90 S t r e e t , Woodhaven (Sofbball area) WADING POOLS Atlantic Avenue and 88 S t r e e t , Ozono Par?: . (32) 95 Avenue and 125 S t r e e t , Richmond H i l l Benninger Playground, Madison Ave. & Fresh Pond Roed, Ridgewood Braddock Playground, Braddock Avenue & 240 S t r e e t , Queens Village- Cleveland Playground, Grandview Avenue and Stanhope S t . , Ridgewood Corona 111 S t r e e t - 111 S t r e e t and 46 Avenue, Corona Dry Harbor Playground, 80 Street and Myrtle Avenue, Glendale Francis Lewis Playground, 3 Ave., 147 Street to Parson Blvd., Whitestc Glendale Playground,78 Avenue end 74 S t r e e t , Glendale Highland Lower Playground,Jamaica Ave. & Elton S t , , Cypress H i l l s Jackson Pond Playground, 108 Street end Myrtle Avenue, Richmond H i l l Jackson Heights Playground, 84 S t r e e t and 30 Ave., Jackson Heights Jamaica 179 Place Playground, off Jamaica Avenue, Jamcica Junction Blvd. Playground, Junction Blvc!, and 34 Ave., Corona Juniper Valley Playground, Dry Harbor Road, 74 St, 62 Ave, Rego Park Liberty Avenue and 102 S t r e e t , Ozone Park Liberty Park, Liberty Avenue end 173 S t . , 106 Ave., Jamaica Martins Field, 164 Street and Queens Avenue, Flushing Marconi Playground, 155 S t r e e t , 108 Avenue, Jamaica Maurice Playpround, Maurice and Borden Ave., 54 Ave., Faspeth Newtown Playground,'56 Avenue and 92 S t r e e t , Elmhurst O'Connor Playground, 32 Avenue and 210 S t r e e t , Bayside 0'Connell Playground, 113 Avenue, 196 S t r e e t , S t . Albans Queensbridge Playground, Vernon Blvd & Bridge Plaza N., L. I . Gg 30th Road Playground, 30 Road and 45 S t r e e t , Astoria Thomson Hill,Playground, 47 Avenue and 43 S t r e e t , Sunnyside Triboro 66B Playground, Hoyt Avenue and 21 S t r e e t , Long Island City Triboro 66F Playground, Hoyt Avenue end 2 A v e , Long Island City Van Wyok Playground, 111 Avenue end 134 S t r e e t , Ozone Park Von Dohlen Playground, 138 Street end Archer Avenue, Jamaica Windmuller, Woodside Avenue and 54 S t r e e t , Woodside Whitcstone N, E , , Kurd Ave., 17 Road, 20 Avenue, Whitestone BRONX (33) LAKES (3) Bronx Park, Twin Lakes, north of Mosholu Parkway, east of Webster Avo< Crotona Park Lake, Crotona Park East and East 173 Street Van Cortlandt Park Lake, 242 S t r e e t , east of Broadway TEMIS COURTS Bronx Park East, Bronx Park East end Brcdy Avenue (3) S t . James Park, Jerome Avenue end East 192 Street S t . Mary's East, T r i n i t y Avenue end Ecst 145 S t r e e t FLOODED AREAS Pelham Bay Park, Pelham Parkway, Eastern Blvd. & Middletown Road Waterbury, Edison and L a Sallc Avenues Playground (Softball field) Watson, Gleason and Noble Avenues Playground (Softball f i e l d ) Clfiremont Park, East 170 S t . and c l r y Ave. (Roller skating ores.) BRONX (cont.) WAVING POOLS Mullaly Playground, Jerome Avenue and East 165 Street Claremont Park Playground, East 170 Street and Clay Avenue S t . Mary's w e s t Playground, S t . Ann's Avenue and East 146 Street Williamsbridge Playground, East 208 S t r e e t and Bairibridge Ave, Zimmerman Playground, Olinville Avenue, s. of B r i t t o n Street Van Cortlandt S. Playground, Van Cortlt-ndt Street and 240 Street Pelham Bay Plgd. #1 - Eastern Bird, Willow Lane and Buhre Ave, Crotona Park, Plgd. #5 - Crotona Park East, and East 173 Street Crotona Park Plgd. #7 - Crotona Park East and Charlotte Street Ft, Schuyler Park Playground - Pcnnyficld Avenue and Shore Drive Devoe Park, East Playground, University Avenue and East 188 Street Ciocarone Playground, East 188 Street and Hughes Avenue East 166 Street and Morris Avenue Playground East 178 S t r e e t and Cedar and Sedgwick Avenues Playground East 167 Street and Stdbbins Avenue Playground East 182 Street and Belmont Avenue Playground East 141 Street and Brook Avenue Playground Cauldwell Avenue between East 161 S t r e e t and East 163 Street Plgd. East 136 S t r e e t and Alexander Avenue Playground East 177 Street and Noble Street Playground Watson, Gleason and Noble Avenues Playground 1Br aterbury, Edison and LaSalle Avenues Playground Bronx Park ^ a s t and w a r i n g Avenue Playground RICHMOND (13) LIKES (6) Brooks Pond, Slosson Avenue, off Clove Road Clove Lake $2, Victory Boulevard LaTourette Pond, Rockland ^venue and Forest H i l l Road Martling's Pond, Slosson Avenue and Clove Road Willcwbrook Lake, Richmond Avenue and Victory Boulevard Wolfe's Pond Park, Holton and Cornelia Avenues TENNIS COURTS Silver Lake Park, Hart Boulevard and Revere S t r e e t (2) Walker Park, Bard and Davis Avenue FLOODED AREAS Silver Lake Golf Course, Victory Boulevard (Parking ^rca) WADING POOLS Clove Lakes Playground, Victory Boulevard and Clove Road (T) Do Matti Playground, Tompkins Avenue, Roscbank Levy Playground, Jewett and Castle ton Avenues McDonald Playground, Forest Avenue and Broadway CITY OF NET YORK DEPARTJ < : * SKIING LOCATIONS: M A N H A T TA N C e n t r a l Park Section of #4 (Cedar Hill), 79 Street and East Drive Section of #3 (Burns Lawn), 79 Street and West Drive BROOKLYN P r o s p e c t Park Southwest of Music Stand Empire Boulevard Entrance Sugar Bowl H i l l Prospect Park W. & 9 St, Ent. Tennis House H i l l Prospect ^ark w, s and New-1 bold Morris, President of the Council, will also participate in the exercises. Selections will be played by the Department of Parks' Band and Christmas Carols will be sung by the Police Department's Glee Club, and the Boys Choir of Saint Cecilia's Church. Borough Presidents Cashmore, Barvfly., Lyons and Palma will light the trees in their respective boroughs where exercises will be conducted under the direction of the Borough Park Directors who have ar- ranged appropriate programs, A special decorative scheme has been designed for the Park Department Headquarters at The Arsenal, Central Park, which will depict the Three Wise Men proceeding to the Star in the East, centered in a holly wreath ten feet in diameter. The trees will be l i t each evening from*I un- t i l January £. Christmas trees will be erected at the following locations: --2-- I^nhattan: City H a l l Park Conservatory Garden - 104 to 105 S t r e e t s and F i f t h Avenue Thomas J e f f e r s o n Park - F i r s t Avenue and 111 S t r e e t Roosevelt Park - Forsyth and Canal S t r e e t s Fort Tryon Park - Riverside Drive, Broadway and Dyckman S t r e e t Carl Schurz Park - 85 S t r e e t and East End Avenue Ivlt. Morris Park - F i f t h Avenue and 124 S t r e e t Bellevue H o s p i t a l - East River Drive and 26 S t r e e t 5-ESB-L. Joyce Kilmer Park - 161 S t r e e t and Grand Concourse S t . Mary's Park - S t . Ann's Avenue and East 144 S t r e e t S t . James Park - East 191 S t r e e t and Jerome Avenue 3rooklyn Borough H a l l Grand Army Plaza - Prospect Park Leiv S i r i k s s o n Park - 67 S t r e e t between 4th and oth Avenues McCarren Park - Driggs Avenue and Lorimer S t r e e t ^ueerLS_ Queensborough H a l l - Hew Gardens King Park - Jamaica Avenue and 151 S t r e e t Flushing Park - Northern Boulevard and Main S t r e e t Forest Park - Park Lane South and 108 S t r e e t Highland Park - Jamaica Avenue and E l t o n S t r e e t Richmond Borough H a l l - Bay S t r e e t and Borough Place former yeaps the Triborougli" 3jing^S'[['CT10i'l!lt'y %oll booths at Bronx^Sfcfitestone andJHtfiiry Hudson, a3y^fell as one * * jWJn*WlMto6 'i«wt- DEPABTiSKT 0? PARES Arsenal, Central Park Kffi 3EL3ASS Saturday, Tel, REgent 4-1000 December 20, 1941 The annual Christmas exhibit of the season's flowers are on exhibition in the Greenhouse in Prospect Park at Prospect Park West and 9th Street, Brooklyn. This year's display and exhibit comprises over 2,000 Poinsettia plants in three varieties, white, pink, and red. Some of these Poinsettia measure twelve inches in diameter. In addi- tion there are various groupings of other flowering plants inter-* spaced. Some of these are the attractive and well known Cyclemen and Christmas cherries. The exhibit will be open every day from December 21 to January 2, from 10 A. M. to 4 P. K. and the Park Department ex- tends a cordial invitation to the nublie to view the display. ***** DEPARTMENT OF TASKS ARSMAL, CENT2ftL PARK FOR RELEASE Friday, TEL. HEG3HT 4-1000 December 19, 1941 At 8 P. M. Friday evenin£, December 19, the Corps of Cadets of La Sails Military Academy will present its annual winter drill and review in the City Building at Flushing ueadow Park. In past years it has been the practice to holdVbhis annual re- view in one of the city armories. Because of the national defense situa- tion no armory was available to the academy this year and the Park De- partment agreed to allow the review to be held in the City Building so that these young, prospective officers, could carry through their annual program which at this time, of course, is more important than ever. To accommodate the review it will be necessary to close the roller and ice skating rinks from the end of the evening session on Thursday to the afternoon session on Saturday. Both rinks will be re- opened to the public at 2 P. K. on Saturday, December 20th. The program of events is as follows: Battalion Review lianual of Arms Competition Calisthenics Exhibit Silent Drill Exhibition Ceremony of Formal Guard Mount Retreat Parade Presentation of Awards The Seventh Regiment Band vail furnish the music and the Corps will be reviewed by Major General William Ottman, Commanding General of the New York Guard. -2- The following officers of tlie Regular Army will act as judges in the various competitive events: Lieutenant Colonel Glenn A. Ross Lieutenant Colonel Timoteo Sapi«.-Bosch Lieutenant Colonel B. T. Fay, U. S. Marine Corps liajor C.leo Z, Shugart Major August J« Regnier DEPARTMENT OF PARKS , ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE Thursday, TEL. REGENT 4-1000 December 18, 1941 The Park Department announces that ceremonies in connection with the twenty-one Christmas trees, which are being erected and decorated in parks throughout the five boroughs, will take place on Friday, December 19, at 5:00 P. M. A special program will be held at the principal trees in each borough, which will be at City Hall Park, Manhattan; Borough Hall Park, Brooklyn; Joyce Kilmer Park, The Bronx; Queensborough Hall, Kew Gardens, and Borough Kail, Richmond. At City Hall Park, the ceremonies will start at 5:00 P. M. and will be broadcast over Station \W£C. Mayor LaGuardia will throw the switch that will light the tree at 5:25 P. M., officially starting New York Citjr's obser- vance of the Christinas season. Borough President Stanley M. Isaacs and New- bold Morris, President of the Council, will also participate in the exercises. Selections will be played by the Department of Parks* Band and Christmas Carols will be sung by the Police Department's Glee Club, and the Boys Choir of Saint Cecilia's Church. Borough Presidents Cashmore, Harvey, Lyons and Palma will light the trees in their respective boroughs where exercises will be conducted under the direction of the Borough Park Directors who have ar- ranged appropriate programs. A special decorative, scheme has been designed for the Park Department Headquarters at The Arsenal, Central Park, which will depict the Three Wise Men proceeding to the Star in the East, centered in a holly wreath ten feet in diameter. The trees will be lit each evening from 4:30 P. LI. to 2:00 A.M. un- til January 2. Christmas trees will be erected at the following locations: -2- Manhattan: City Hall Park Conservatory Garden - 104 to 105 Streets and Fifth Avenue Thomas Jefferson Park - First Avenue and 111 Street Roosevelt Park - Forsyth and Canal Streets Fort Tryon Park - Riverside Drive, Broadway and Dyckman Street Carl Schurz Park - 85 Street and East End Avenue Mt. Morris Park - Fifth Avenue and 124 Street Bellevue Hospital - East River Drive and 26 Street Bronx _ Joyce Kilmer Park - 161 Street and Grand Concourse St. Mary's Park - St. Ann's Avenue and East 144 Street St. James Park - East 191 Street and Jerome Avenue Brooklyn Borough Hall Grand Army Plaza - Prospect Park Leiv Siriksson Park - 67 Street between 4th and 5th Avenues HcCarren Park - Driggs Avenue and Lorimer Street Queens Q,ueensborough Hall - Jlew Gardens King Park - Jamaica Avenue and 151 Street Flushing Park - Northern Boulevard and Main Street Forest Park - Park Lane South and 108 Street Highland Park - Jamaica Avenue and Elton Street Richmond Borough Hall - Bay Street and Borough Place As in former years the Triborough Bridge Authority has erected large Christmas trees at the toll booths at each of its five bridges: Triborough, Marine Parkway, Cross Bay, Bronx-'Whitestone and Henry Hudson, as well as one in front of their Administration Building on Randall's Island. * * XEEARHK2KT OF PARKS ARSMAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR H3IZCASE TEL. 3SGaiT 4-1OOO December 1 7 , 1941 The Department of P a r k s announces t h a t t h e c h i l d r e n of P a r k D e p a r t - ment playgrounds w i l l p a r t i c i p a t e i n s p e c i a l l y . p r e p a r e d Christmas programs of r e c r e a t i o n a l a c t i v i t i e s , beginning Wednesday, December 1 7 , and running through Wednesday, December 31* While t h e s p i r i t of gaietj?- w i l l predominate a l l t h e programs, t h e singing of patriotic songs, pledges of allegiance and salute to the Flag will be included. The singing of well known Christmas carols, folk dancing, puppet and magic shows, dramatic productions portraying subjects appropriate to the Mule- tide season, concerts by children's orchestras and recitations will also form part of the program. Of course, Christmas parties, accompanied by group games, refreshments, decoration of Christmas trees, v i s i t s by Santa Claus, the ex- change of gifts among the playground children will also be included in the l i s t of events. Christmas trees have been provided by the Park Department for 52 cen- t r a l l y located playgrounds throughout the five boroughs. Many of the Mothers * Clubs have made arrangements for trees at tha other recreational areas. All of these trees will be properly decorated and lighted for the parties. large trees will ba erected and illuminated at the following tions in aacli borough during the Christmas holidays. Manhattan City Eall Park, Broadway and Murray Street Conservatory Garden, 104 Street and Fifth Avenue Thomas Jefferson Park, First Avenue and 111 Street Roosevelt Park, Block 7, Forsyth and Canal Streets -- 3** llaniattari (Continued) Mount Morris Park, center line of Fifth. Avonuo, top of h i l l , 120 Street Fort Tryon Park, Dyclanan and Broadway Carl Schurz Park, 85 Stroot and East End Avenue Bro^oklyjn. Borough Hall Park, Fu.lton and Joralomon Streets Grand Array Plaza, Prospect Park, Flatbush Avenue and Union Street Leiv Eiriksson Park, 67 Street, between Fourth and Fifth Avenues McCarren Park, Driggs Avenue and Lorimer Street Bronx Joyce Kilmer Park, 161 Street and Grand Concourse St. Mary's Park, St. Ann's Avenue and East 144 Street St. James Park, center of oval Lawn, Jerome Avenue and East 193 St. .9&SSBS. Borough Hall, Queens Boulevard and Union Turnpike King Park, Jamaica Avenue and 151 Street Flushing Park, Northern Boulevard and Main Stroet Forest Park, Park Lane South and 108 Street Highland Park, Jamaica Avenue and Elton Street City Building, Flushing Meadow Park, in front of fountain niches City Building, Flushing Meadow Park, inside building, between rinks Richmond Borough Hall, Bay Stroet and Borough Place Special ceremonies will be held in connection with the i n i t i a l lighting of those trees set up at City Kail, Manhattan, and a t the Borough Hall in Brooklyn, Queens and Richmond; while the ceremony in the Bronx w i l l take place at Joyce Kilmer Park, 161 Street and Grand Concourse. * * * * Form 26A-5M-73141 «tfm*> 155 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS i? ARSENAU, CENTRAL PARK t OT TEU REGENT 4-1000 December 1 7 , 1941 e Al ^P it" ^ £)ePar"';men'k °f Parks announces tliat Gene Tunney, former World's HeavyT ^C weight Champion, has offered to serve in an advisory capacity in connection with a program for young men and boys over fourteen years, which will be inaugurated f o r the first time at nine Park recreation buildings located in the various "boroughs, commencing Wednesday, December 17. Mr. Tunney has agreed to do this, not only be- cause of his interest in the sport, but because of his interest in Kew York's muni- y cipal gymnasia, where lie did much of his early training. The Department hopes in this way to provide additional recreation for the older boys and young men and, at the same time, give the older people in the community the opportunity to see some of the exhibitions. -/£-*/( After intensive training during the winter months, the regular partici- I ^ O^feant s at these boxing sessions x«;ill be eligible to compete in a city-wide tournament leading up to championship bouts next spring, at which prizes will be awarded to the winners. Mr. Bernard Gimbel, president of G-imbel Brothers department store, an ardent promoter of sports, and former amateur champion, has consented to donate some of the prizes for the city-wide tournament. Park personnel, chosen to conduct this program because of their past ex- perience in the boxing field, have just completed a six-weeks review course in the methods of teaching the fundamentals of the art of self-defense. While some boxing champions may be developed at those sessions, the main purpose of the program, will be to enhance the physical well being of young men in wholesome surroundings. To insure skill in boxing, special emphasis will be placed on those ex- ercises and calisthenic drills which brin^ about the necessary coordination between mind and muscle, agility in movement and quickness of perception. This will be fol- lowed by instructions on the punching bag, footwork, and various styles of boxing. All the necessary equipment will be provided by the Park Department, such as: boxing gloves, punching bags, skipping ropes, mats, rings, first aid material,etc The boxing centers are located as follows: MAHEATTAN Gymnasium - 342 East 54 Street Gymnasium - 407 West 28 Street Colonial Play Center - Bradhurst Avenue and West 145 Street Thomas Jefferson Play Center - East 111 Street & First Avenue BROOKLYN McCarren Play Center - Driggs Avenue and Lorimer Street q^EESKS Astoria Play Center, 19 Street opposite 23 Drive Jackson Heights Playground - 25 Avenue and 84 Street BRONX Crotona Park Play Center - East 173 Street and Fulton Avenue RIGEMQKB Cromwell Play Center Pier #6 - Murray Hulbert Avenue, Tompkinsville * * * 7 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR TTETiElAFiR Tuesday, TEL. REGENT 4-1OOO December 1 6 , 1 9 4 1 The Department of Parks announces the opening of a reconstructed playground and a new sitting area on the two plots bounded by Bay Parkway, Avenue P and West 12th Street, Brooklyn. The reconstructed and enlarged 4^ acre playground is separated by Stillwell Avenue from the new -J acre sitting area developed on the intersection triangle known as Bealin Square, This old residential section is closely packed with 2-3 story homes and 6 story apartments along Bay Parkway. The recreation facilities will also serve the school children attending Seth Low High School located oppo- site the playground on West 12th Street. The old layout, retained with some alterations and additions, con- tained two asphalt surfaced play apparatus areas on each side of a central brick comfort station and concrete wading pool. An interior walk bordered the playground in the center of a 60 foot tree and shrub planted grass strip paralleling the street sidewalk along Bay Parkway and West 12th Street; leaving an undeveloped and unkempt dirt surfaced triangular portion at the south end. Bealin triangle, directly across Stillwell Avenue, dirt surfaced and supporting a few street trees, was unimproved. The kindergarten area has been reduced in size and resurfaced. The existing seesaws and swings were relocated to permit a better organiza- tion with the new slides, irrigated sand pit and extensive continuous benches. The space along West 12th Street adjacent to the school has been provided with new swings, slides and an exercise unit. The wading pool and comfort station area required minor revisions to tie in with tho reconstructed court games area to the south. -a- This section which partly overlaps the former unimproved portion, in addition to the existing combination baskotball and volleyball court added four new paddle tennis courts within the same chain link enclosure. A rectangular offset extending to Avenue P contains two concrete surfaced handball courts protected by 16 foot high chain link fencing. The new addition has been provided with a bituminous paved soft- ball diamond. A hooded backstop and complete 12'-16f fence enclosure is included. This area may be used for roller skating and flooded for ice skating» A new concrote sidewalk centered on two new block-paved, tree- planted malls was constructed along Avenue P and Stillwell Avenue so lo- cated as to permit future widening of the latter. Tho new sitting area on the triangle west of Still well Avenue has been given tho typical si&awalk treatment consisting of concrete boundary walk bordered by block panels and trees. The interior, surfaced with asphalt, contains 300-lineal feet of tree shaded benches. The work was performed by tho Work Projects Administration from plans prepared by tho Department of Parks. In 1934 there were 119 play- grounds in the five boroughs; 62 of which have boon reconstructed. There are now 461 playgrounds in the park system. ***** Form 26A-5M-73141 .riflBte 1S5 PARTME.NT OF DEPARTMENT PARKS OF PARKS r D j Tuesday ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK ?OT Release Z±- R E G E N T 4-1000 December 16, 1941 The Department of Parks announces that the Christmas program of playground children's activities will feature 30 puppet and marionette shows depicting the famous fairy tale "Hansel and Gretel" and "The Lonely Elm", written by Park rec- reation personnel, the theme of which dealswith the obligation of children to prevent the unnecessary destruction of natural landscaped areas and physical equip- ment in the city's parks and playgrounds. Both these shows will be given aC 11 a.m. and 3:30 p.m., at centrally located playgrounds in the five boroughs, beginning Tuesday, December 16, and run- ning through Wednesday, December 31, according to the attached schedule. With five scenes in "Plansel and G-retel" and one in "xhe Lonely Elm", the entire performance will last approximately one hour. For the past five weeks, the playground directors, assigned to put on these shows, have attended regular rehearsals in order to acquire that ambidexter- ity and deftness so necessary to a skillful manipulation of the marionettes as well as to obtain the proper nuances for each of the various speaking parts peculiar to the characters that make up the dramatis personnae of the respective plays. While the stage and all the physical equipment was constructed in the Park Department shops, each of the puppet figures was made and costumed by the play- ground directors. In addition, 28 magic shows, lasting, one hour and including a variety of magical tricks and hand puppetry will be given at other designated playgrounds in the five boroughs, by the recreation personnel in charge of children's magic clubs conducted by the Park Department, beginning 'Xuosd^., December 16, and continuing through Wednesday, December 31, according to the attached schedule. CITY OF NEW YORK DEPARTMENT OF PARKS SH1CIAL HOLIDAY MARIONETTE PROGRAM "Hansel and Gretel" (In Five Scenes - Characters:- Father, Mother, Hansel, Gretel, Sandman, '''fitch and Good Fairy) "The Lonely Elm" (A One A c t ' P l a y - C h a r a c t e r s : - Boy, G i r l , F a i r y , Gnome ond Tree) if if if if QUEENS Tuesday, December 16 11 A, M. - Dry Harbor Playground, 80 St. & Myrtle Ave., Glendale II II U 3;30 P.M. - Dry Harbor Playground, 80 S t . & Myrtle Ave., Glendale Wednesday, December 17 11 A. M, - Jackson Heights Plgd., 84 St. & 30 Ave. 3:30 P.M. - Jackson Heights Plgd., 84 St. k 30 Avc. MANHATTAN Thursday, December 18 -11 A. M, - East River Park at 12 Street ti ii n 3:30 P. M. - East River Park at 12 Street Friday, December 19 11 A. M, - North Mecdow, 97 Street and Central Park it tt it 3:30 P. M.- North Meadow, 97 Street end Centred Park Saturday, December 20 11 A, M, - Seward Park, Cenel and Jefferson Streets 3:30 P.M. - Seward Park, Conol and Jefferson Streets Sunday, December 21 2:00 P.M. - Colonial Pool Bldg., 147 St. & Bradhurst Avenue BRONX 1sr Monday, December 22 11 A. M, - iliinmsbrir"e-e Plsrd., E, 208 S t . & Bain- bridge Avenue 3:30 P.M. - Wiiiirmsbridgc Plgd., E. 208 St.. & Bain- bridge Avenue Tuesday, December 23 11 A. M, - Mullaly Plgd., Jerome Ave. & E« 165 S t . 3:30 P.M. - MuUaly Plgd., Jerome Ave, & E. 165 S t . Wednesday, December 24 11 A. M, - S t . Mary's F , , St. Ann's Ave. & E, 146 St» 11 " " 3:30 P.M. - S t . Mary's W., S t . Ann's ^vc-. & E, 146 S t . BROOKLYN Fridav, December 26 11 4,. M. - S u n s e t P a r k , 4 3 S t r e e t & 7 Avenue II u II 3 : 3 0 P.M. - S u n s e t P a r k , 43 S t r e e t and 7 Avenue Saturday, December 27 11 A, M« - McCarren P a r k . P o o l , D r i g g s & M a n h a t t a n Avc it II II 3 : 3 0 P . M. - McCarren P a r k P o o l , Drigp-s & M a n h a t t a n Ave Monday, December 29 11 A. M» - B e t s y Head P a r k P o o l , Hopkinson & Dumont Avenues tt ti tt 3 : 3 0 P.M. - B e t s y Head P a r k P o o l , H o p k i n s o n & Dumont Avenues RICHMOND Tuesdav, December 30 11 A, M. - McDonald, Forest Avenue nesr Broadway 5:30 P.M., - McDonald, Forest Avenue near BrocdT'ay n r * ednesday, December 31 11 - .-« M, - Levy Playground, Jewett & Co.stletor A " " " 3:30 P.M.- Levy Playground, Jewett &· Castleton Aves * * ** CITY OF IWT YORK DEPARTf'«5NT OF PARKS SPECIAL HOLIDAY PROGRAM "Magic, Music and Puppetry - x\ll kinds of Christmas Fun - Songs, - Health and Safety Talks, All rolled into one J " *** BRONX Tuesday, December 16 11 A, M, - S t . James Park, Jerome Ave, & E . 192 St« 3:30 P.M. - St. James Park, Jerome Ave, & E , 192 St. Wednesday, December 17 11 A. M. - Crotona Pool, E . 173 Street & Fulton Ave. II I! , II 3:30 P.M. - Crotona Pool, E . 173 Street & Fulton Ave. BROOKLYN T h u r s d a y , December 18 11 A. M. - Bill Brown Plgd. - Bedford Ave. & Ave. X it it 3:30 P.M. - Neptune Avenue & West 28 St, Playground Friday, December 19 11 A, M. - Carroll Park, Smith and Carroll Streets H tl It 3:30 P.M. - Third St.. & Fourth Avenue Playground Saturday, December 20 11 A. M, - Park and Taaffe Place Playground ti it tt 2 P. M. - New Utrecht Ave. & 70 St. Playground MANHATTAN Monday, December 22 11 A, M. - Mt. Morris w. } 120 St, & Mt. Morris Pk. W , ti ti it 3:3o P.M. - McCray, 138 Street near 5th Avenue Tuesday, December 23 11 A, M. - Riverside and 168 Street it it n 3:30 P. M. - Annunciation Plgd. - 134 St. & Amsterdam Ave. Wednesday, December 24 11 A. M. - Kelly Plgd., 17 Street near 8th Ave, ti ti it 3 : 30 P.M. - Yorkville, 101 St, near 2nd Avenue QUEENS F r i d a y , December 26 11 ii. M. - Grover Cleveland Plgd., Grandview & Stan- hope S t s . , Ridgewood ii ti 3:30 P.M. - Dry Harbor Rd. Plgd., 80 S t . & Myrtle Ave, S a t u r d a y , December 27 11 A. M. - Von Dohlen Plgd., 138 S t . & Archer PI. Jamaica 3:30 P. M. - 0'Connell Plgd., 196 St, & 113 Ave,, S t . Albans Monday, December 29 11 A, M, - Flushing Memorial Plgd., 149 S t r e e t , off 25 Avenue, Flushing 3:30 P.M. - O'Connor Plgd., 210 S t , and 25 Ave,, Bay- side RICHMOND Tuesday, December 30 11 A, M, - McDonald Plgd., Forest Ave., near Broadway tt tt tt 3:30 P.M. - Cromwell Cen+er, Pier ^ 6 , Murray Hulbert Avenue """"ednesday, December 31 11 A. M, - Abraham Levy Pls:d., Jewett & Castleton Avenues 3:30 P.M. - DeMatti Playground, Tompkins Avenue * ** HEPAHBJH5T OF PAHKS j&BSH&AL," CENTRAL P / FOR K3LSA3B Saturday, T3L. R SG SNT 4-1000 December 13, 1941 The Japanese Pavilion at tlie TJorld's Fair was never satisfactory to park officials, but the Japanese Consul General in llew York and other Japanese residents pressed the City to keep i t in Flushing Meadow Park as a permanent structure symbolizing good w i l l between the two nations. I t seemed advisable at the time to accede to their request. Recent investigation disclosed that the pavilion does not meet the requirements of the City Building Code. I t would be difficult to maintain. I t does not f i t in m t h our final plans, and would serve no permanent park use. Park forces have already begun demolition. * * * DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENiRAL PARK FOR RELEASE FRIDAY TEL. R3GMT 4-1000 DSCJMBER 12, 1941 Bids were opened today by the Department of parks at the Arsenal Building, in Central Park on a contract for traffic directional signs, to be installed at the intersection of Connecting Highway and Triborough Bridge Plaza and Boody Street at Grand Central Parkway* These new arterial junctions are at the northern terminus of the Brooklyn- Queens Connecting Highway which forms two branches around St» Michaels Cemetery at Grand Central Parkway. When completed, this link will provide a more direct route from the heart of Brooklyn and Manhattan to LaGuardia Field. The traffic signs, designed and located to facilitate a safe and efficient flow of traffic between parkway, highway and service roads, are of the reflectorized and aluminized types. Most of the text is formed of perforated steel plates with special corrugated aluminum alloy reflecting background. Part of the wording is made of aluminum letters applied to a black background by a silk screen process. Concisely worded and easily read they will be located to provide adequate warning time for entrance or exit. The signs will be supported by simple attractive wooden standards and frames. Additional interior illuminated signs consisting of black sandblasted let- ters on opalescent glass will be provided und ; :$· a subsequent electrical contract, The lowest bids were submitted by the following: Item 1 Item 2 Sign Supports Reflectorized Sign Faces 1. Frank Scerbo 39-04 210 S t . , Bayside, K.Y. # 934,00 2. Charles V. Meyer 35-18 57 S t r e e t , Woodside, K.Y. 1,045.00 3. Bryant Sign Shop 134 East 60 S t r e e t , K.Y.C. 1,394.00 4. J . P, McWalters, Inc. 54 Dey S t r e e t , K.Y.C. #2,448.00 5. Allen Morrison Sign Co. 512 F i f t h Avenue, K.Y.C. 2.526.75 *** *** DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE! Friday, TEL. REGENT 4-1000 December 12, 1941 The Department of Parks announces that the city-wide finals of the ping pong tournament will take place at Mullaly Recreation Building, 161 Street and Jerome Avenue, Bronx, on Saturday, December 13, at 2:00 P. K. Playground, district and borough eliminations have been going on for the past 5 weeks. The competitors in this tournament have been divided into the following age groups; Junior - children up to 17 years Intermediate - persons 17 to 21 years Senior - persons 21 years and over There will also be a special tournament for service men. Separate matches will be held for boys and girls in the re- spective age classifications. Prizes will consist of a gold medal for the city champion and silver for the runner-up in each division; small leaf pins will be awarded to the local playground winner and a bronze pin to the borough winner. * * * * ·DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE MONDAY REGENT 4-1000 December 8, 1941 The Department of Parks announces the completion of the reconstruction of the section of Kissena Park, Queens, bounded by the Long Island Railroad, 164 Street, Oak- Avenue and Rose Avenue, to make it a genuine usable and maintainable local facility. Included in the new improvement is a new modern one story brick boat house and boat landing constructed on the east shore of the lake replacing the old outmoded frame boat house and dock formerly located on the south bank ad- jacent to the old park drive. The broad side of the main quarters serving the public faces the lake. A flat topped service wing is attached to the north side. Facilities in the building are: 1. A central cafeteria with adjacent supply room and refrigerator. 2. Check room. 3. Men's and women's comfort station with interior and exterior access. 4. Carettina storage and supply room. 5. Boat accessory storage. 6. Supervisor's office and park maintenance storage. 7. Boiler room. For the convenience of ice sKaters removable wood slat sectional plat- forms will be used during the skating season on the quarry tile cafeteria floor. The boat landing is located in front of the boat house at the end of a wiaened portion of the promenade which encircles the lake. This ramping cleat surfaced wood bent structure, (10' X 65'), supported on wood piles, slopes beneath the water surface to facilitate the removal ana storage of boats. The balance of the work includes the 1. Reconstruction of lake, including dredging, boundary retaining wall ana promenade. 2. Reconstructed culvert inlet and new culvert outlet and weir. 3. A plaza setting for the boat house. 4. Reconstructed comfort station. 5. One baseball and three softball diamonds on filled ground. # -2- 6. Two new playgrounds equipped with play apparatus and sand pits. 7. A new system of walks, ramps, gutters, drainage and irrigation. 8. rBrinking fountains, flagpole, benches and floodlighting. Extensive planting operations covering 20 acres include new topsoil and grass seed, 24,000 shrubs in various varieties and 1,000 trees. Kissena Park, approximately 225 acros in extent, which has become more and more a neighborhood recreation facility and less a wild woodland area, lies midway between Flushing Meadow Park and Cunningham Park. Plans have been prepared for the development of the so called Kissena Corridor which will con- nect Kissenna Park with Flushing Meadow Park and with Cunningham Park by a similar corridor. The work was performed by the Work Projects Administration from plans prepared by the Department of Parks. In 1934 there were 110 playgrounds in the five boroughs; 61 of which have been reconstructed. Ihero are now with theso two additions 461 playgrounds in tha park system. DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE Friday, Tel. REgent 4-1000 December 5, 1941 The Department of Parks announces the completion of a new addition to the existing one and half acre playground west of Howard Avenue between Pacific and Dean Streets, Brooklyn. The land occupied by the addition to the playground was acquired as part of the Kingsborough Housing Project and was paid for by the city on condition that it be set aside for recrea- tional use. The property was formerly owned by the Brooklyn Hebrew Orphan Asylum and the four-story brick building was de- molished by the New York City Housing Authority. The addition to the playground, approximately three quarters of an acre in extent, has been developed as a play field by the Work Projects Administration from plans prepared by the Department of Parks. The asphalt surfaced enclosure, bordered by block paving, trees and benches, contains a soft- ball diamond and combination volley ball and basketball court. Removal standards permit the use of the area for roller skating. The project also included a stairway connection to the old playground, a four foot high concrete retaining wall, gateway to Dean Street, new concrete street sidewalks, drainage, irri- gation and park lighting, 25 Norway Maples were planted around the chain link fence enclosure. The old playground and its addition will be used by the entire neighborhood as well as the residents of the Kings- borough Houses. Form 26A-5M-73141 rfflb. 155 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS p R A\ Thursda fcAR?ENAL CENTRAL C E N T R A L PARK tOr K ' '' P A R K TEL. REGENT 4-1000 Dl^b^"47 The Department of Parks announces the beginning of construction of two new play areas in the Bronx, i At White Plains Road between East 225 Street and East 226 Street, a 1^ acre site, approximately 230 feet square at the rear of Public School 21, was recently acquired by the City for school and recreational purposes. The Board of Education has removed the old 1^- story frame school annex adjacent to the newly acquired property and is adding a wing to the existing 2 story brick building. The new playground which will be used for both school and neighborhood recreation will be operated by the Board of Education during school hours and at all other times by the Department of Parks for community usage. A one-quarter acre parcel of the old school property located north of the new school wing will be included in the playground development. Sixteen 1 to 3 story brick and frame structures are being removed by the Work Projects Administration in preparation for the new work. The L-shaped area will be completely enclosed and sub-divided into five asphalt surfaced rec- tangular units by 10'-16' high chain1 link fencing. Gate controlled entrances will connect the various units and provide access from the school grounds and adjoining streets. The following facilities will be included in the development: .Court Games Area. One combination volleyball and basketball court Three paddle tennis courts Two shuffleboard courts Wading Pool Area Concrete wading pool Volleyball court School Age Apparatus Area Brick comfort station Two slides Pipe frame exercise unit Battery of swings Pre-school Age Apparatus Area Irrigated sandpit with benches on three sides Two slides Four seesaws Battery of chair swings Free Play Area and Ball Field Softball diamond with hooded chain link backstops Four handball courts Two practice basketball standards At the north end of the block formed by East 182 Street, Crotona Avenue, East 181 Street and Belmont Avenue in the Bronx, the existing three-quarter acre playground i s being txpwted to 3£ acres. The balance of the property within t h i s block, with, the exception of two parcels at the northeast and souteast corners, was recently acquired by the City for school and recreational purposes. This 1% acre addition will permit more adequate play facilities for the neighborhood and for the new Vocational High School to be constructed at the south end of the block. Twenty-one structures including twelve two to four story brick and frame residences, sheds and garages, are being removed in preparation for the new development. The existing brick comfort station, concrete wading pool and handball courts xvill be retained with no modifications. The balance of the existing layout, consisting of several pieces of play apparatus, will be changed to permit a unified development of the enlarged area. The old play surfaces as well as the new addi- tions will be surfaced with bituminous material. The newly acquired parcel,at the corner of Belmont Avenue and East 182 Street will be divided into two fence enclosed apparatus units as follows: Pre-school Age Apparatus Area 4 Seesaws Battery of fence protected chair swings 2 Slides School AgeApparatus Area 2 Slides Pipe frame exercise unit Battery of fence protected swings Two wide grass panels containing flowering Hawthornes and Linden trees will extend along the west boundary of these areas on each side of the entrance walk loading from Belmont Avenue. The planted panels will be protected by a wrought iron picket fence. A new concrete sidewalk and row of Lindens will be placed along the north and west street curbs. An irrigated sandpit with tree shaded benches on three sides will be located within the old play area north of the wading pool. The existing roller skating track south of the two handball courts will be replaced by two asphalt surfaced tennis courts with removable posts. The balance of the development will lie within the one acre L-shaped addition extending southward and along Crotona Avenue at a lower level. A new 16 foot high concrete retaining vra.ll will replace an existing stone wall di- viding the L-shaped addition into two levels to be connected by concrete stepped ramps. A combined ice skating rink and Softball diamond will be built south of the v/ading pool and tennis courts on the upper level with access from the school grounds to the south. The lower level, approximately 100' x 200', will contain the following facilities: 7 Shuffleboard courts 4 Handball courts utilizing 16 foot high retaining wall as backstops 1 Combination volleyball and basketball court 1 Practice basketball standard Two gate controlled entrances will provide access to the court games area from the north side of the school grounds and from Crotona Avenue. A new concrete sidewalk bordered by block paved panels and trees will be placed along Crotona Avenue between the limits of the playground. The work is being done by the Work Projects Administration from plans prepared by the Department of Parks and approved by the Board of Education. * * * * Form 26A-SM-73141 155 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK For Release Monday, TEL. REGENT 4-1000 December 1, 1941 The Department of Parks announces the start of work in connection with three new playgrounds, one of which is in Queens and the other two in Manhattan. In Queens the new playground is adjacent to Public School #68 located in the area bounded by Seneca Avenue, St. Felix Avenue, 60th Place and the Man- hattan Division of the Long Island Railroad. This irregular shaped plot was assembled by the condemnation of two parcels north of the school building on each side of 60th Street which has been closed and transferred to the Department of Parks. These three properties totaling 3 acres together with the existing i acre playground wsst of the school will permit the development of an adequate neigh- borhood playground. When completed it will be operated during school hours by the Department of Education and at all other times by the Department of Parks, The new playground consisting of 3 asphalt surfaced, fence enclosed, subdivided sections will contain the following items: softball diamond with hooded chain link backstop and a 5 tier concrete bleachers extending along 2 sid-:-s of the diamond; combination volleyball and basketball courts with removable stan- dards, paddle tennis courts with removable nets and posts, shuffleboard courts, concrete surfaced handball courts, children's farm garden; irrigated sand pit and sitting area, seesaws, slides, swings; brick comfort station, concrete wading pool and a pipe frame exercise unit. The entire development as well as the separate units will be bordered with chain link fence and a 5 foot wide panel of blocks containing benches and trees. The project will also include drainage, irrigation, drinking fountains, park lighting, fencing and a new concrete sidewalk along the north side of St. Felix Avenue. In Manhattan, one of the new playgrounds will be located on the west margin of Highbridge Park between West 175th Street and West 178th Street. This project represents one phase of a larger project embracing the general recon- struction of a considerable portion of the park involving new planting and grading, drainage, new playgrounds and comfort station, irrigation, fencing, walks, park lighting and benches. Located just north of Highbridge Swimming Pool, it will be the seventh in a row of marginal recreation areas on the east side of Sdgecomb and Amsterdam Avenues from West 167th Street to West 189th Street. It will contain slides, swings, a pipe frame exercise unit, seesaws and horseshoe pitching courts. The south, half will consist of 3 fence enclosed court game areas with a single stairway entrance from Amsterdam Avenue and connecting gateways to con- trol and permit access between the various units. The following court games will Toe provided: combination basketball and volleyball courts, double handball, shuffleboard and paddle tennis. The other new playground in Manhattan is on the west side of East River Drive between 102nd Street and 105th Street. It was acquired for playground pur- poses before the housing development was thought of. It was also to be used as a landing place for a pedestrian bridge which will connect Manhattan with the park on Ward's Island. Delay in construction of this facility was due to refusal on the part of the Housing Authority to include construction of the park, even though'the area was essential for proper operation of the housing project. A wide strip running east and west through the middle of the playground will be paved with asphalt but will be reserved, clear of obstruction, for a future ramp approach to the proposed Ward's Island Footbridge. A comfort station will be built in the playground under this approach. The north half of the playground will contain the following: Concrete wading pool(50' x 70') Kindergarten Apparatus Area Irrigated sand pit(13* x 27') Sitting area 4 Seesaws 2 Slides Battery of chair swings(60 lineal feet) School-Age Ap-oaratus Area Pipe frame exercise unit 2 Slides Battery of Swings(30 lineal feet) The south end will be provided with court games including: 1 Basketball Court 2 Shuffleboard Courts 4 Paddle Tennis Courts The projects are being constructed by the Work Projects Administra- tion from plans prepared by the Department of Parks. * * * DSPARTMMT OF PARKS ' ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE November 50.1941 TEL. REGENT 4-1000 Sunday The Department of Parks announces that the anniversary of the official opening of 8 Park Department playgrounds will be celebrated by the children of these recreation areas during the month of December by participating in specially prepared Birthday Party programs. While the regular schedule of daily recreational activities, including ping pong, paddle tennis, checkers, chess, group games, dramatics and dancing, will not be. changed, the day's program will feature events of both a patriotic and festive nature, such as:, solo and community singing, of the "Star Spangled Banner" and "God Bless America", salute to the Flag, recitations, concerts by junior orches- tras and a variety of birthday party games, with refreshments and prices for the winners. Plans for contests in snow sculpture and snow architecture and children's ice skating carnivals have also been prepared, should the weather permit the hold- ing of such activities. The December schedule for playground birthday celebrations is as follows: BOROUGH PLAYGROUND & LOCATION OPENED TIME OF CELEBRATION Manhattan Inwood Park Playground, West 207 Street Dec. 1, 1940 3:30 P.M. & Seaman Avenue 82 Street and Riverside Drive Dec. 4, 1937 3:30 P.M. Brooklyn Prospect and Underhill Avenues Dec. 3, 1938 2:00 P.M. Prospect and Greenwood Avenues Dec.19, 1935 2:00 P.M. Heckscher Playground, Grove Street and Dec.19, 1935 3:30 P.M. Wilson Avenue- Bronx Watson, Gleason & Noble Avenues Dec. 4., 1939 4:00 P.M. East 177 Street & Noble Avenue Dec. 4, 1939 4:00 P.M. East 178 Street, Cedar «, Sedgwick Dec.19, 1935 4:00 P.M. Avenues *** #*# DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSMAL, CEMTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE SAI'URDAY TEL. REGMT 4-1OOO November 29, 1941 The Department of .-.Parks announces the closing of the ten municipal golf courses and the pitch and putt course at Jacob Riis Park, at the close of play on Sunday, November 30th. With the alternate freezing and thawing of the ground, it would be impractical to keep them open beyond this date, as irreparable da&age would be done to the grass by the players. During the past season, more than 650,000 rounds of golf were played over the ten courses, as compared with 575,000 rounds playeo. during the season Of 1940. 25,294 rounds were played at the pitch and puct course in Jacob Riis Park this year, as compared to 21,027 rounds in 1940. The increase in play has been due to the favorable weather during the entire season. The Park Department also announces that after Novem- ber 30th and through the winter months it will not be necessary to have permits to play tennis on the hard surface courts oper- ated by the Department, but players must furnish their own ten- nis nets. DEPARTMENT OF PARES AJSMAL, CEN1RAL PARK FOR RELEASE MONDAY TEL. REGENT 4-1000 N0VSMB2R 24, 1941 The Department of Parks announces the completion of three small marginal playgrounds at Washington Square Park - Manhattan. Furnished with kindergarten and play apparatus these fence enclosed paved areas located as near as possible to park entrances now intercept children who formerly spent their energy in the park to -ohe detriment of lawns, shrubbery and park facilities. By eliminating the constant need for further reseeding of grass and replacement of shrubs the planted areas will be premitted to attain some measure of maturity and refinement. One of the play areas is located at the south boundary of the park in the island formed by the Fifth Avenue Extension and the Thompson Street entrance. The following equipment has been included: 2 slides 1 pipe frame exercise unit Battery of swings 1 · Free play area 16 bench units A high wrought iron fence set in concrete curbing extending around the semi-cir- cular plot is bordered by a screen planting of European Hornbeams and Oriental Planes. In a short time this material will develop to form a screen which will hide the playground from the interior park development. An existing shade tree has been retained within the playground enclosure. A gate controlled entrance provides access from the west side of the area. The other two areas, which are located adjacent to Fifth Avenue Exten- sion at the north and south margins of the park, are approximately 70' x 100'. They are enclosed by new wrought iron fencing and have single gate controlled entrances connecting with existing park walks. Each have been provided with the following kindergarten apparatus: Irrigated sand pit with benches around three sides 2 slides 4 seesaws Battery of chair swings ,·.. -2- Boundary plantings designed for screen purposes are similar to those of the semi- circular playground. Existing trees have been retained within the enclosures for shade purposes. A survey of adjacent recreational areas and juvenile population indicates the urgent need for these additional active recreation facilities, There are six elementary schools serving 4500 children within seven blocks of the park, none of which have adequate playgrounds. Within this same area there are hundreds of chil- dren of pre-school age. Two small playgrounds on Sixth Avenue, southwest of the Square, under permit fi*om the Board of Transportation have formerly served this group inadequately. The work was performed by the Work Projects Administration from plans prepared by the Department of Parks. In 1934 there were 119 playgrounds in the five boroughs. There are now with these three additional 459 playgrounds in the park system. *** *** *** Form 26A-5M-73141 155 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK For Release MCKDAY TEL. REGENT 4-1000 NOVEMBER 17, 1941 ihe Department of parks announces the completion of two playgrounds, a com- bination sand box for children and sitting area for adults and two new parkway ac- cess drives near the intersection of Cross Island Parkway and Hempstead Avenue ad- jacent to the Nassau County line, out of funds provided by the Westchester Racing Association. A chain link fence enclosed softball diamond has been constructed in the circular lawn area formed by the sweep of the southbound parkway exit to Hempstead Avenue. A 100 foot seven-tier section of portable wood and steel bleachers has been erected along the first base line. last of this field at the northeast corner of 225 Street and 104 Avenue an irrigated sand pit has been built in the center of a 45' x 70' asphalt surfaced en- closure formed by continuous tree shaded benches. A nei asphalt walk extends along the east side of 225 Street between HeiTrosteati Avenue and 104 Avenue with short con- necting paths to both of the above play areas. Between the West Service Road and southbound Cross Island Parkway opposite Stewart Avenue, a one-half acre bituminous surfaced playground enclosed with high chain link fence has been provided with the following items separated by continuous benches and trees into three units; Central Section Provides a free play area containing a 30 foot circular shower basin. North Section-Kindergarten Apparatus Area Irrigated sand pit and sitting area 2 slides Battery of swings bordered by a 4 foot chain link fence 4 seesaws South Section-School Age Apparatus Area Pipe frame exercise unit 2 slides Battery of swings bordered by a 4 foot chain link fence Six hundred and fifty feet of wide asphaltic concrete sidewalk has been . .. . : v; placed along the east side of the West Service Road extending northward from Hemp-' stead Avenue providing entrance to the west side of the new playground. Two new exit drives from the southwest and northwest corners of the Belmont Race Irack parking field provide direct connection with the northbound parkway avoid- ing conflict with local traffic on adjacent highways, and eliminating traffic jams on the parkway. In 1934 there were 119 playgrounds in the five boroughs; 61 of which have been reconstructed; with these additions there are now 456 playgrounds in the park system. DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK For Release November 17. 1941 November 15, 1941 Mr. Victor S. Gettner New York City Civil Liberties Committee 285 Madison Avenue New 'York City Dear Sir: I have your letter of October 30th saying that you have been informed that street meetings at Union Square Park and the adjoining streets are forbidden without a permit from the Park Department, You indicate that this is a new order and you add this astonishing sentence: "We have assumed that your administration has always recognized that it is good policy to keep certain prem- ises always available for street meetings irrespective of whether or not technical provisions of the Administrative Code or Park Department Regulations may require permits." You know quite well that permits have always been re- quired for meetings in the park area at Union Square under the jurisdiction of the Park Department, and you also know that we do not waive provisions of the Code and Regulations. Several areas under the jurisdiction of the Park Depart- ment have been set aside for meetings to be held under a permit. One of these is in Union Square. These areas have been selected so that there will be as little damage to park property as possible and as little interference as possible with the general public in the use of parks for recreational purposes. The regulations govern' ing such permits are part of the general park regulations promul- gated by the Park Commissioner and designed to regulate the use of - 2 - Mr. vietor D . G-ettner parks for the greatest benefit of the public at large. Permits are required for public meetings in Union Square for very simply reasons not infringing upon the rights of free assemblage and free speech. They are required among other things in order to prevent duplication. The times for meetings are specified in the request for a permit. If an organization seeks the use of Union Square for a public meeting at 8:00 P.M., for example, and a permit is issued for that hour, a request by another organization for that hour is denied, but is granted for another hour which does not conflict. By issuing permits in this manner it is a simple matter to control and police the meeting areas, prevent fights between conflicting groups who attempt to meet at the same time, and thereby to lessen damage to park property and interference with the general use of recreation facilities. For similar reasons permits are required for parades on public streets,, In executing the duly promulgated regulations of the Park Department of the City of New York, no attempt has been made to censor what is said in Union Square and other places where meet- ings are held. There has been no abridgement or denial of the rights of free assembly and free speech. I challenge you to point to a single instance in which up to this time an application has been denied for a permit to speak in Union Square or any other place designated for public meetings during my administration as Com- missioner of Parks except when the requested application conflicted _ 3 - Mr, Victor S. G-ettner with a permit previously granted for the use of the area at the same hour. Let me add this reservation, however, so that you may not be under any misapprehension as to the policy of this depart- ment. It may be that permits for meetings in the park system will be requested in the future by persons of known vicious and irres- ponsible character with a recent record of creating racial, religious and other animosities among our people, the proximate result of which is disorder, riots and fatalities. If men with such records, especially if they have previously been convicted on these counts, apply for permits, such applications will be examined with a view to preserving peace and good order. This problem has recently arisen in the streets, If it arises in the parks, where we have plenty of trouble now with a minority of thugs and vandals, it will be met in accordance with law, You claim that the case of Hague v. C..I..O,., 307 U.S. 496, determined that parks are dedicated for public meetings. This case did not hold that reasonable regulation of the use of parks is unconstitutional, nor that the public has a general unrestricted license and right to assemble in parks without regard to proper regulation by authorized officials in the interest of the general public. As Mr. Justice Roberts said (pp. 515, 516): n The privilege of a citizen of the United States to use the streets and parks for communication of views on national questions may be regulated in the interest of all; it is not absolute, but relative, and must be exercised in subordination to the general comfort and convenience, and in -- 4-- Mr, Victor S, Gettner consonance with peace and good order; but it must not, in the guise of regulation, be abridged or denied," May I suggest to your law firm and to the Civil Liber- ties Committee which presumably employs you, that the spirit of free discussion is not served by the writing of tricky letters which misrepresent the laws, regulations and administration re- lating to park property and twist decisions of the United States Supreme Court, Very truly yours, ROBERT MOSES Commissioner C O P Y NEW YORK CITY CIVIL LIBERTIES COMMITTEE 170 Fifth Avenue New York, N, Y. PLEASE ADDRESS REPLY TO: VICTOR S. GETTNER 285 Madison Ave. N. Y, October 30, 1941 Hon, Robert Moses Park Commissioner Arsenal Building 64th Street and Fifth Ave, New York City Honorable Sir: We have been informed that street meetings have been forbidden in Union Square Park and the adjoining streets without a permit from the Park Department. This new regulation is extremely surprising in view of the almost immemorial tradition that Union Square is an ap- propriate place for street meetings, There certainly has been no change in the traffic situation or in the layout of the X'ark which would seem to justify the new regulation. We have assumed that your administration has always recognized that it is good policy to keep certain premises always available for street meet- ings irrespective of whether or not technical provisions of the Administrative Code or Park Department Regulations may require permits. The United States Supreme Court in the famous case of Hague vs CIO has given recognition to the fact that parks are dedicated for public meetings and that any unreasonable prohibition of such meetings in parks is unconstitutional. Of course, we do not take the position that a meeting can be held where it would damage park property. We cannot believe that this question has arisen at Union Square* We will appreciate hearing from you setting forth the exact terms of the new regulations and letting us know that law- ful meetings can be held at Union Square without undue restrictions. Respectfully yours, NEW YORK CITY CIVIL LIBERTIES COMMITTEE BY: GETTNER, SIMON AND ASHER DHPAR'MSNT OF PARKS ARSMAL? CENTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE FRIDAY TEL. REGENT 4-1000 NOVMBER 14, 1941 On Saturday, November 15, at 10:30 a.m., Irving Jaffee, National Director of Ice Skating for physical Training for Civil- ian Defense, will personally conduct an ice skating class at the New York City Building, in Flushing Meadow Park, Queens. He will be assisted by Miss Alice Marble, Director of Women's Division for Physical Training for Civilian Defense. Besides demonstrations of the proper instruction and technique for beginners, an exhibition of speed, figure and comedy skating will be given by Mr. Jaffee. This program will be conducted during the Saturday morn- ing free session for children under 14 years of age. Parents will be admitted as spectators at the usual spectator adruission price of 11$ including tax. Irving Jaffee is a New Yorker, and learned all his skat- ing in the metropolitan area. In addition to winning three Olympic skating championships for the United States, he holds the world's record in the one-mile and five-mile fields. - OF PARKS ARSENAL, CMTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE FRIDAY T3L. REGENT 4-1000 NOVEMBER 14, 1941 The Department of Parks announces that due to a large number of requests, there will be a speed ice skating session every Saturday evening from 5:15 to 6 p.m. at the New York City Building, Flushing keadow Park. The first session is scheduled for November 15. Admission for these sessions will be 40#. With the cold weather setting in, attendance at the City Building has increased immensely; on Tuesday, November 11, 2601 people used the building. Of this number 398 were children under 14 years of age who were admitted free on this holiday be- tween 10 a.m. and 12 noon. Fifty thousand people have used the ice skating and roller rink since September 15. The regular skating sessions are from 2:30 to 5:30 p.m. and from 7:30 to 11 p,ia. The prices of admission are 20# in the afternoon and 40^ in the evening, all taxes included. Buses to the building run from the 111 Street Station on the I.R.T. and B.M.1'. lines and also from the 74 Street and Roosevelt Avenue Station on the Independent Line. Free parking space is available on both sides of the building. *** *** ***. DEPAR'ikSNT OF PARKS · # ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE THURSDAY iSL. REGENT 4-1000 NOVSiaBSR 13, 1941 Bids were opened today by the Department of Parks at vhe Arsenal Building in Central Park on a contract for the construction of a bulkhead along the entire south and east shore of Sound View park, Borough of the Bronx. Approximately 6200 linear feet of earth fill bulkhead faced with riprap will be placed along the Bronx River and East River frontages at the U. S. Pierhead and Bulkhead Line. This will permit controlled filling operations by the Department of Sanitation from barges and trucks. The new bulkhead which will replace the existing irregular and muddy shore line will require about 170,000 cubic yards of earth fill to raise an em- bankment twelve feet above the river bed to an elevation approximately three feet above the general levsl of the park. The sloping face of the fill, on the river side will be surfaced with rock to provide a smoothly aligned and per- manent shore line. The river bed adjacent to the new bulkhead will be dredged to a depth of two feet below mean low water so that a clean rock trimmed short; line will be exposed at all tides. Previous contracts let by the War Department and the City of New York have provided adequate channels for the approach of barges to a new unloading platform near the mouth of the river. The superstructure for unloading opera- tions will be installed in the near future. Filling operations will then start preparatory to the development of xhe much needed 93 acre shore front park. The three lowest bids were submitted by the following: 1. Tully & Di Eapoli, Inc. $159,577. 30-11 12 Street, Long Island City, K.Y. 2. Slattery Contracting Company, Inc. 185,950. 51 Avenue & 72 Place, Winfield, K.Y. 3. Nicholas Di Menna & Sons 211,205. 1525 Blondell Avenue, Bronx, K.Y. *** *** *** Form 26-5M-60241 ° ^ » > 155 4 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL., CENTRAL PARK For HfleOSe TUESDAY TECREOENT 4-1000 NOVEMBER 1 1 , 1 9 4 1 Loc: M-L-158-107 Dev: M-L-158-108 ^ e Department of Parks announces t h e completion of a new playground ad- jacent to East River Drive between East 41 Street and East 42 Street occupying about 2/3 of the block extending to First Avenue. This entire tract was purchased by the 10 Board of Estimate in 1937 from the Consolidated Edison Company for Park, Tunnel and P r\ Street purposes. Eleven buildings were demolished in preparation for the new facil- ities. A Midtown Tunnel ventilating shaft separated from the playground development by high chain-link fence has been built by the New York City Tunnel Authority on a central portion of the block. The excessive slope from First Avenue to the Drive necessitated the construc- tion of concrete retaining walls of varying heights extending completely around the recreation area. A high boundary chain-link fence surmounts these walls and controls access via a stairway entrance from First Avenue and a grade entrance from 42 Street., New concrete sidewalks have been provided along the two streets and drive. The west end of the playground contains a combination free play area, roller skating rink and softball diamond with hooded backstop. A wi 155 Y DEPARTMENT OF PARKS v D / ARSENAU, CENTRAL PARK t'or Release.-- TEU REGENT 4-1000 NOVEMBSR 1 0 , 1 9 4 1 JLOC: X-L-39-2013 Dev: X-L-39-2014 Fix 20914 The Department of parks announces t h e completion of t h e reconstruction of 20915 iiie 20916 Isaac L. Rice Memorial section of Pelham Bay park. This old park area, approx- 20917 20918 imately 60 acres in extent, in addition to having the many advantages of a water 20919 20920 front location conveniently accessible to adjacent residential communities and 20921 20922 transportation, is amply provided with, a heavy stand of mature shade trees, 20923 20924 A number of the original Rive Memorial features which no longer serve 20925 any park purpose and which had fallen into dangerous disrepair were demolished and removed. The stadium structure and the natatorium building were retained and re- paired. A new concrete parking field has been completed east of the stadium. Construction work was scheduled for the early completion of two new mar- ginal playgrounds adjacent to the west border of the park at Eastern Boulevard. These fence enclosed asphalt surfaced areas were provided with a wading pool, com- fort station, play apparatus, sand pits, shuffleboard, horseshoe and bocci courts. Several large existing trees were retained within the play areas and were supple- mented with a variety of new shrubs and trees around the borders. A comprehensive system of asphalt walks totaling about four miles has been completed providing access to the various areas. Certain paths permit short cut connections through the park between the boundary streets. A one mile section of bicycle path skirting the park margin will be extended into adjacent park areas and future connections will be made to a system-which is being built as part of the Eutchinson River Parkway Extension. A one story brick building designed with interesting marine motives and centrally located in a heavily wooded picnic area contains comfort stations and a food concession. Three hundred new picnic tables and one hundred double stone fireplaces have been informally arranged under the trees. A new water supply sys- tem will supply the buildings and seventeen drinking fountains located throughout the play and picnic areas and along the bench lined walks. Hundreds of new shrubs and trees were planted in the picnic groves, grouped around the open grass areas and along the paths. Two baseball fields with clay mixture base lines, sodded infiel'ds and seeded outfields have been completed along the south boundary of the park west of the stadium. Hooded chain-link back stops and fencing separate the fields from two adjacent five-tier concrete bleachers. These fields have been completely enclosed with temporary fencing and will not be opened for play until a suitable grass turf has become established. A large portion of the area was regraded and s#©ded with new grass. ·· ·· -2- A narrow strip of park property along Eastern Boulevard lias been trans- ferred to the Borough President of the Bronx for the construction of a new north- bound roadway which will connect with a grade separation at Pelham Parkway to be built by the Department of Parks. The work was performed by the Work projects Administration from plans prepared by the Department of parks. In 1934 there were 119 playgrounds in the five boroughs. There are now with these two additions 453 playgrounds in xhe park system. *** *** *** Form 26A "iM-73141 155 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK For Release S TEL, REGENT 4-1000 Nov. 3, 1941 PARK POLICING AND THE HARLEM PROBLEM For several days I have been asked to comment on recent park assaults. The attitude of this Department is summed up in our recent eight year report to the Mayor. Crime and vandalism in the parks are caused by a minority of trouble makers who can be controlled only by adequate policing. The present undermanned police and park forces cannot cope with the problem. We need more police and more park personnel and there is no substitute for them. It is too bad that it seems to require a serious outbreak of crime and vandalism to prove this obvious point, but if the conclusion is now established and re- flected in additional personnel in the next budget, the recent injuries to persons and property will not havs^been in vain. Temporary assignment of additional forces to meet public clamor will not solve anything. There is, however, more to this problem than additions to park and police personnel, especially as it affects south Harlem. We must get at the causes, especially the causes of juvenile delinquency. A good deal is being done in this direction and the Mayor has taken a lively interest in the problem. Naturally, the Park Department views this problem primarily from the angle of pro- viding of adequate recreation facilities which are now woefully lacking. More recreation facilities are being provided by the recon- struction of the north end of Central Park and. the construction of a new combination school and neighborhood park playground at 108th Street and Madison Avenue. Both of these jobs are under way. Additional school, playground and improved housing facilities are required in this neighborhood. The new parks and playgrounds along the Harlem River Drive should be acquired promptly. If funds cannot be found to acquire all the balance of land needed for the Harlem River Drive, then at least the new play areas should be acquired immediately and construction started. The proposed Capital Budget for 1942 includes acquisition of land for another school in the vicinity of Lexington Avenue and 114th Street. Sufficient land should be acquired for neighborhood recreation facilities, as well as for the school. The housing development proposed for the southeasterly section of Harlem should be initiated at once as a State project, but unlike most of the other housing projects, should include complete neighbor- hood rehabilitation and the necessary recreation facilities* A map is attached on which these Harlem projects are indicated. The parks must be made safe throughout the entire city. As to Harlem, the conditions under which people are living are intolerable and these conditions are basically responsible for the crimes and vandalism in the Harlem parks, particularly at the northeast end of Central Park, Form 26;5M-60241 155 · t ^ '·..;.·/>· DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK For Release Nov. 1,1941 TEL. REGENT 4-1000 The Park Department announces that the Annual Fall Chrysanthemum Show in the Prospect Park, Brooklyn, Greenhouse will open on Sunday, November 2, at 10 A.M. The Greenhouse is located at Prospect Park Vest and 9th Street, Brooklyn, and may be reached by way of the IRT subway, Grand /rmy Plaza Station; the Independent subway, 7th Avenue Station, and by the Vanderbilt and Smith Street oar lines, Ninth btreet stop, or by automobile direct to the Greenhouse by way of the East Drive in Prospect Park. The Greenhouse will be open every day from 10 jfUI-f. to 4 P.w. and the Park Department extends a cordial invitation to view the display which will run for three weeks. Fore than four thousand pots of chrysanthemums will be on exhibi- tion. The ground bed is laid out in groups of various formations with the popular large bloom varieties in all shades of pink, yellow, reel and bronze. Some of the attractive plants ore the Pooketts, Turners, John in. Bush, Rise of Day and the Melba. Surrounding this feature of the display, banked on the sides, of the Show House are smeller size Chrysanthemums in 75 varieties, such as the Pompons, the Anemone and the Single Daisy type. Some of the outstanding chrysanthemums to be exhibited ere in shades of bronze, red, yellow end white in the varieties known, r-s Crimson Red, Purple Queens, Red Rover, Orchid Beauty, Cleoprtre and New York Form 26-5M-60241 >3Ul> 155 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL., CENTRAL. PARK pQf Rf>leg$e , .^I^?^! TEL. REGENT 4-1000 On Saturday, November 1, at 10:30 £ .¥., Irving Jpffee, National Director of Ice okating for Physics! Training: for Civilian Defense, will begin a nation-wide tour of the larger c i t i e s of the United States by personally conducting an ice skating class ct the New York City Build ins;, in Flushin.fr Meadow Park, Oueens. Besides demonstretions of the proper instruction and technique for beginners, an exhibition of speed, figure and comedy skating will be given by 'iTr. Jaffee . This program will be conducted during the Saturday morn- ing free session for children under 14 years of r iT e. Parents will be sdiaitted es spectators at the usm. 1 spectator admission price of 11/ including tax* Irving Jrffee is a lie?.- Yorker, FI d learned a l l his skating in the metropolitan area. In addition to winninr three Olympic skating championships for the United b t r t e s , he holds the world's record in the one-mile and five-mile fields. Form 26-5M-60241 1S5 # DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL., CENTRAL PARK For Release Saturday, TEL. REGENT 4-1000 October 25, 1941 The Park Department announces the completion of arrangements with the Triborough and North Shore Bus Companies to provide transportation to and from the New York City Building's ice and roller skating rinks at*' Flushing Meadow Park. The following is a schedule of routes and bus stops now in opera- tion: TjgBOROIKSl BUSES - From 104th Street and Roosevelt Avenue along Roosevelt Avenue with stops at 108th Street - 111th Street Subway Station (IRT, BMT), and then directly to the City Building. At Independent Subway Station, 74th Street and Roosevelt Avenue, take bus directly to City Building. NORTEL.SHOES BUS COMPANY - From West Farms and Boston Road, Bronx, to Main Street, Flushing, then LaGuardia Airport Bus to City Building. Buses will be scheduled to run more frequently during the skating session, so that patrons will not have to wait too long. The North Shore Bus Company, serving Forest Hills, Jamaica and Flushing and the Triborough Company running through Astoria,, Woodside, Sunnyside, Jackson Heights, Forest Hills, Eew Gardens, Corona and Slmhurst will accommodate the people coming from Queens. With the operation of these bus lines, the City Building can easily be reached. * * * Form 26-5M-60241 155 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK For Release. Saturday, -- TEL. REGENT 4-1000 October 25, 1941 The Park Department announces the completion of arrangements with the Triborough and North. Shore Bus Companies to provide transportation to and from the New York City Building's ice and roller skating rinks at*' Flushing Meadow Park. The following is a schedule of routes and bus stops now in opera- tion: TRIBOROUCSl 3U53S - From 104th Street and Roosevelt Avenue along Roosevelt Avenue with stops at 108th Street - 111th Street Subway Station (IRT, EMT), and then directly to the City Building. At Independent Subway Station, 74th Street and Roosevelt Avenue, take bus directly to City Building. ffORTJBMSH0_K3_ BUS; _COMPANY - From West Farms and Boston Road, Bronx, to Main Street, Flushing, then LaGuardia Airport Bus to City Building. Buses will be scheduled to run more frequently during the skating session, so that patrons will not have to wait too long. The North Shore Bus Company, serving Forest Kills, Jamaica and Flushing and the Triborough Company running through Astoria, Woodside, Sunnyside, Jackson Heights, Forest Hills, Kew Gardens, Corona and Slmhurst will accommodate the people coming from Queens. With the operation of these bus lines, the City Building can easily be reached. * ** /V ' ·;'-' ».' Form 26-SM-60241 155 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK TEL. REGENT 4-1000 October 24, 1941 The Department of Parks announces that the City-wide finals of the Holler Skating Contest conducted annually by the Park Department for both children and adults will take place at the roller skating rink at Red Hook Play Center, Clinton, Bay and Henry Streets, Brooklyn, on Satur- day, October 25, at 2:00 P. M, The program will consist-of the following events: Boys and Girls Who Eave HotReached Their IS Birthday · t .Class Boyjs Girls A. Children up to 4 f 3" 60 yards 40 yards B. Children 4 f 8" to 5'3" 100 yards 60 yards C. Children 5'3M to 5*6" 220 yards 100 yards D. Children over 5'6" 220 yards 100 yards Boys and Girls 18 Years and Older E. Unlimited 220 yards 100 yards Roller Skating Carnivals have been held in each borough during the past three weeks at each of the 92 Park Department roller skating rinks, Svery borough will be represented at the finals by five competitors in each event. Pins will be awarded to the borough vJinners, and gold, silver and bronze medals to the winners at the f i n a l s . ALTERATIONS TO BfKLYN M'SEUM OFARTSaSCIE BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN o too tooo tooo 8CALC BROOKLYN CENTRAL MUSEUM- BROOKLYN FILE NO. ft-4-8-14-1 ALTERATIONS · · · · / , · · ' " ' -- . / · - · , · · · / · Form 26A-5M-73141 < ^ ^ > 155 ^ K ^ ^ ^ fi^mi 4Hk^'' -f> DEPARTMENT OF PARKS p Release Thursday L ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK Or JXetHUili- s. £ October 23, 1941 O / ,4:, ' · *-"* J i " ·'' Bids were opened today by the Department of Parks at the Arsenal Building, Central Park, on four contracts which provide for the following work in connection with the reconstruction of the Electrical Power, Mechani- cal, and Elevator Systems, in the six story Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences, Central Museum, located at Eastern Parkway and Washington Avenue, Borough of Brooklyn: 1. Electrical Installations 2. Electric Fixture Installations 3. Heating and Ventilating 4. Elevator Installation and alterations to existing Elevators These contracts provide in general for the replacement of obsolete and inefficient high pressure coal fired boiler direct current electric gen- erating plant by a modern alternating current electrical and power supply, and the installation of a new electrical distribution and wiring system through various museum sections and the power house. The existing boilers are to be operated at low pressure for heat only after the generating system is abandoned and the steam engine drives for the various equipment are replaced with elec- trical motor drives. Many new lighting fixtures will be installed and many are to be rewired and refinished. Special lighting units are to be installed in the Exhibit Galleries. The existing heating system will be re-equipped with new heating stacks to replace the present defective ones. A new condensate and vacuum pumping system will be installed where required. Gas fired boiler equipment will be installed to produce hot water for kitchen and laboratory use during the summer months to permit shutting down of the central plant during the months when no general heating is required. The ventilating system will be altered to fit in with the new elec- trical distribution system* An existing obsolete passenger elevator car and elevator plant will be replaced. Alterations will be made to four passenger elevators and a freight elevator. The contracts which will require approximately one year for completion will be Controlled and coordinated so that the work will be entirely completed by sections to interfere as little as possible with the continued operation of the Museum. -2- The lowest bids were submitted by the following on each, of tho four contracts: 1, Electrical I n s t a l l a t i o n s : 1. Hoffman & S l i a s , Inc. ^112,600.00 254 West 31 Street, N.Y.C. 2. Martin Epstein Co., Inc. 114,800.00 227 Lewis Ave., Brooklyn, K.Y. 3. L. I . Waldman & Co., Inc. 119,500.00 38-06 28 S t . , Long Island City, N.Y. %* Electric Fixture I n s t a l l a t i o n s : 1. The Simes Company, Inc. ^52,249.00 26 West 15 Street, K.Y.C. 2. McFhilben Mfg. Co. 55,223.00 102 Wooster S t . , K. Y. C. 3. Heating and Ventilating: 1. Harry Starkman & Bros. ^30,533.00 348 Brook Ave., Bronx, 1- J . Y. 2. A. Dierks & Co. 32,835.00 44 Steuben S t . , Brooklyn, K.Y. 3. II. Sand & Co., Inc. 38,672.00 611 Broadway, K. Y. C. 4. Elevator Installation & Alterations to Existing Elevators^: 1. Otis Elevator Company $41,360.00 260 11th Ave. New York City 2, Watson Elevator Company 45,842.00 407 West 36 Street Now York City Form 26A-5M-73141 155 DEPAJ^TMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL., CENTRAL PARK For Release. TUESDAY-- T E U RESENT 4-1000 October 2 1 , 1941 Department of Parks announces the completion of work in connection with the construction of a traffic relief road connecting Mosholu Avenue and the Henry Hudson Parkway and the restoration of the park and golf course in the north central section of Van Cortlandt Park, The Bronx. This new parkway connection swings west from old Mosholu Road, elimin- ating the former narrow and curving detour to the north, and serves as an approach to the new concrete bridge completed last year over the New York Central Railroad tracks. The 30 foot wide pavement section, consisting of a six inch thick emul- sified limestone screening base with a cold laid bituminous wearing surface, branches into two 22 foot wide parkway connections. Work in connection with the demolition of the abandoned stretch of Mosholu Avenue included the removal of the old bituminous road surface, wood and concrete curbs and gutters, concrete and granite block approaches, the old steel bridge with concrete abutments, existing fences and water and drainage lines. Extensive alterations to the Van Cortlandt Golf Course were necessary. Six holes were completely reconstructed on the north end of the Van Cortlandt Park "Flats". The sections of the old fairways supporting satisfactory turf were undistrubed. Worn surfaces together with the sections disturbed by grad- ing operations were also topsoiled and seeded. These six new well trapped holes were provided with broad, sloping greens scodadvath Asfcaria and Seaside Bent. Parallel fairways have been effectively demarcated by groupings of 3 inch to 5 inch caliper pin oaks. The new yardage and par for these holes are: Hole No. 3 - 295 yards - par 4 No. 4 - 175 yards - par 3 No. 5 - 375 yards - par 4 No,,6 - 334 yards - par 4 No. 7 - 275 yards - par 4 No. 8 - 225 yards - par 3 This section of the golf course will remain closed to the public until a satisfactory turf has become established. *** Form 26-SM-60241 155 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS M0KDAY ARSENAL., CENTRAL PARK TEL. REGENT 4-1000 For Release October 20, 1941 tSU: STAEEMEIT -BY H0JI0RA3L3 ROBERT L^ Commissioner of Paries and Chairman. New York State Council of Parks I urge voters to vote "Yes" on Anendnent No. 4 on Election Day. New York Staters park program today is deficient in one re- spect. It does not include any first-class skiing center coiiparable to those of New England and the far west. To be sure some provision has been made for skiing in various state parks and in the Forest Pre- serve, but these developments have been on a relatively small scale. Obviously,.such a development to be successful must be in a region of dependable snow. In our State the Adirondacks alone provide such a condition. The development of ski trails on the Forest Preserve has been restricted by the provision of the State Constitution that the Forest Preserve shall be forever kept as wild forest land. A slight change ap- plying only to TJliiteface Mountain wnicii will in no way open the Forest Preserve to any timber, power or other private interests, will permit the establishment of a ski center. The state conservation officials and other sponsors of Amendment" No. 4 have shown vision and judgment in proposing to remove the present constitutional restrictions so as to provide & much needed recreation facility for the benefit of tliose interested in winter shorts. NORTH PLAYFIELD NEW BASEBALL DIAMONDS ^RANDALLS SUNKEN MEADOW ISLAND /£> - < ·* r PEDESTRIAN OVERPASS NEW BASEBALL DIAMONDS BOROUGH OF MANHATTAN 200 400 600 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL. CENTRAL PARK pQr Rf,]ea^ , FRIDAY Ta REOEI 1000 2 pix: " "*- October 17, 1941 M-104 20762 M-104 20763 Loo. ML-1006 The Department of parks announces the completion of another step to- Dev. ML-1007 wards providing adequate recreational facilities for the crowded lower end of the Bronx and the northern east side of Manhattan. The new playfields on Ran- dall's Island afford a type of recreation which could not be provided on the mainland because of the ^space requirements. The north end of Randall's Island, which remained as the only uncom- pleted portion of the Island, has been developed with five grass-surfaced soft- ball diamonds. Tilese facilities were constructed on fill transported from the new Benjamin Franklin High School site on East River Drive, Manhattan. A 15 foot wide boundary path system and waterfront promenade have been joined with the main park walks and drives. A convenient parking field is located immedi- ately south of the adjacent drive. The former gas station has been remodeled as a Field House and Comfort Station. Direct pedestrian access will be provided from the Bronx in accord- ance with plans prepared by the Department of Parks, which call for a bridge over the New York, Kew Haven and Hartford Railroad Yard connecting Brook Ave- nue with the existing dyke across the Bronx Kills. The project will be con- structed by the Borough President of the Bronx under a contract to be paid for by citywide and borough assessment. The completion of these improvements will culminate seven years of planning and construction by the Triborough Bridge Authority and the Depart- ment of Parks in a program which has transformed Randall's Island from a neglected, inaccessible area in the heart of the city to an important municipal recreational center readily accessible by means of the Triborough Bridge. Form 26-5M-60241 155 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL., CENTRAL, PARK TEL. REGENT 4-1000 For WEDNESDAY October 15, 1941 The Department of Parks announces that the annual playground chil- dren's Handcraft Exhibition will take place in the recently constructed Jun- ior Museum of the Metropolitan Museuia of Art, Park Entrance - 79 Street off Fifth Avenue, Manhattan, beginning Thursday, October 16, and running through Thursday, October 23, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. On Sunday, October 19, the hours will be from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. There will be no admission charge. This Handcraft Exhibition will include objects made by children of all age groups in the various handcraft classes supervised by the Department of Parks at the numerous playgrounds under its jurisdiction as an integral part of a comprehensive all year-round recreation program. Leather and basketry work, soap and chip carving, raffia, reed, bead, and weaving will comprise this heterogeneous collection of handiwork. Useful and decorative articles for home and school have been made from such materials as cork, wood, metal, leather, wool, beads, crepe paper, cord and felt. Discarded material of all sorts has been salvaged from the waste heap by the young craftsmen and converted into instruments of practical value, viz; rugs made of rags, lamps made of bottles, and flower vases made from cardboard milk containers. Other contributions to the handcraft display consist of wearing apparel such as sweaters, scarfs and hats with singular designs and beautiful color schemes. Form 26-SM-60241 155 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK TEU REGENT 4-1000 October 14, 1941 Bids were opened today by the Departnent of Parks at the Arsenal Building'on a contract which provides for the construction of approximate^ 3,400 lineal feet of steel bulkhead and a granite veneered reinforced con- crete bridge in Marine Park, Borough of Richnond. The new installation will be placed along the north end of Great lulls Harbor as a continuation of the existing steel bulkhead. This sec- tion, approximately one mile long, together with a narrow strip of fill, which were provided in 1934 with Relief Labor, joined Crookes Point with the mainland.. The new work will be progressed concurrently with the dredging of Great Kills Harbor which is being, done under a War Department Contract. In addition to naking the basin safe for navigation the dredging operations will provide one and. one-half million cubic yards of sand which-will be pumped to f o m an extensive beach east of the bulkhead and backfill for the proposed extension. The bridge, which is being provided to carry a future park access drive, will be built over a narrow stream connecting the harbor with a park lake to be developed in the future on the existing marshland to the north. The contract also provides for painting the existing bulkhead. The two lowest bids were submitted by the following: Charles F. Yacliris, Inc. 327 Rer:isen Avenue, Brooklyn, K.Y. $297,520.00 E. *.?. Foley, Inc. 16 Court Street, Brooklyn, K.Y. 312,060.50 Form 26-5M-6O241 « ^ & » 155 I·^LA^. DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FoT Release Monday, TEL. RESENT 4-1000 October 13, 1941 The Department of Parks announces that two puppet and mario- nette shows including "Hansel and Gretel" and "Jack and the Beanstalk" will be presented on the Mall, 71 Street and Center Drive, Central Park, Manhattan, Monday, October 13, at 2:30 P. M. These performances will take place on a trailer stage and will b^ the last of a series of 156 open air puppet and marionette shows which were given in various park playgrounds of the five boroughs during the past summer to an audience of approximately 231,000 children. Arrangements are being made for a series of indoor puppet and marionette shows at designated recreation buildings, beginning December 1. As a special feature of next Monday's program, there will be a demonstration of hand puppetry, magic and community singing. 184 of these demonstrations have been given in park playgrounds of the 5 boroughs since the latter part of July before audiences totaling about 92,000 children. Besides the entertainment value of such demonstrations, which will continue to be presented until November 23, the children have been instructed in the art of carving, moulding1 ajid costuming hand puppets from discarded stockings, rubber balls, and paper bags, as well as learning the technique of many magical tricks. * * DEPARTMENT OF PARKS FOR '*"·* ABSBMLL, CENTRAL PARK TEL. REGSHT 4-1000 DRAFT The Department of Parks announces the completioi the reconstruction of Crotona and St. Mary's Parks in The Bronx. In Crotona Park, The Bronx, a one-quarter acre semi-Circular asphalt surfaced marginal playground at the north end of the park near Mar^ion Avenue con- tains the following play apparatus: Kindergarten swings, slides and seesaws. Swings, slides and exercise unit for older children. Open free play area. Continuous benches along the chain link fence enclosure. A one- half acre asphalt surfaced free play area and roller seating track is located at the Crotona Park East and 174th Street. The tennis court area, centrally located in the park east of Gi Avenue has been extended southward to include the following: f 24 Handball courts 12 Horseshoe Courts y Four regulation size baseball fields and one softball diamond with concrete bleachers have been completed but will not be opened for play until a suitable turf has become established. The softball diamond is located, south of the swimming pool east of Fulton Avenue. One baseball field is located north of the pool, two at Crotona Park North near Prospect Avenue and one at Claremont Park- way and Crotona Park last. The addition of these new play facilities represents the completion of a program, started in 1936 with the construction of the swimming pool. The work involved the entire reconstruction of this old 150 acre neighborhood park, one of the most heavily used play centers in the City. Prior to the reconstruction pro- s' '* ject the outmoded and rundown recreation areas were inadequate to satisfy the excessive requirements of a congested neighborhood which resulted in the destructi&a. of adjacent lawns and vegetation. The completed improvements affording an outlet #©r,tbe various rec- - 2 - reational needs of all age groups, provides the following facilities: 1. 8 miles of interior park walks and promenades lined with 20,000 linear feet of hencaes and fJTtnirjng fountains. 2. 100 acres of shrub and tree planted lawns, requiring new topsoil, 2,800 new trees and 18,000 shrubs. 3. A boathouse and concession building. .3. Swimming pool and bathhouse. 5. Gentrall mall and lake promenade. 6. 12 Playgrounds containing court games, play apparatus and comfort stations. 7. One softball diamond and concrete bleachers. 8. Four baseball diamonds and concrete bleachers. 9. Reconstructed children's farm gardens. St. Mary's Park consisting in large part of steep and rocky terrain had fallen into a state of shabbiness and disrepair owing to hard usage, outsaoded design and erosion due to failure of old drainage systems. The large size of the area made it necessary to attack the rehabilitation problem in sections. For the past few years, by means of relief labor and contract work the Department of Parks, has progressed the improvement of the park and its facilities, installing a large children's playground at East 147 Street and St. Ann's Avenue, Constructing walks, comfort stations, erecting benches, etc. Under the current project the remainder of the area has been improved. Some walis have been eliminated and all others have been regraded, repaved and corrected as to alignment. A new playground has been provided on St. Mary's Street near Crimmins Avenue. Various overlook sitting areas have been added and the ground topsoiled, seeded and landscaped. Fencing of the planted areas, while regrettable from the standpoint of appearance, has been found essential for maintenance of the lawns and plantations and to discourage indiscriminate trespass especially in slopes subject to erosion. -3- It is hoped that such fencing may be removed wholly or in part, in the future when plant life has become firmly rooted. The work was carried out by the Work Projects Administration from plans prepared by the Department of Parks. In 1934 there were 119 playgrounds in the five boroughs; ** * of which have been reconstructed; with these three additions there are now^T_3jHpl ay grounds in the park system. r ** ' " fx&f&aaatt at mob* la Grotona ?«yk, Tim Broaxt e one^uartsar taias tite following pi^f epparestuai t a d E©«j#ews« A oa©-. biuLf ©or© ssphslt mi*tmm& f i t s play a 2 *@© aad r o l l e r E>u Is lo«st#4 et the Cs-otoaa Perk S&at end 174tb .>tj?ee4# 'Us© fecaal* court &mmf vmtomXttf loofited in tlia p®?ls Mat of urotoa© aourta 4 Boeol Four S'e^ulistioa sis® b«»«S«ai fieXte «r4 aa« a o f t ^ l l »et ivwaii® »ad os«i end atfitoM F$Si£ ^ss*# Tfe® edditloa of tMmm mm play feeillt£«» s^prasmiis ths oo^l^tieti of /»;:!5r©-::, etert«4 la 195S witli ihd construction of tLa awiimaia,^, pool. *Bm »ork tfee ttotlv* «Mtot*afi?u«U«Ma of tiila oid iiKJ mm sel^boyto;>4 parttf «MI of «nd ruiulosa rea^setloa &mm :®-r® irm&equsta to s&tisfy ,Si.t» of 8 caii,.:,aistsd Ji®i^bor5iood whioli ^aultad, in %bm of odjscent leswaa «aS ?9,.;«tetloa# ?&# Oonpl«t4A ie@l«f»isiMi|«. HffoMiJig «& QtttUit fo'r-tlie various red- *» & JUMNI* af « H age X* $ a t l a s of iaterior pane walks «o& ;;>rom©iit®4se lia#d with ff*t of b®nobma and Asistag fount etna. I* 100 ©or©s of afevufe mfew*©planted 3, 4tost.hoi.ii3®aad buildiag. f* 8* ee>aos»@1;e it* ^d pert of isto e etat® of sh Umrspmiv wtl&g %& h.~ v& usage, aut.^ded to old ds»in«^« #y»t*a*t ^ « IJK^I -»ist of i t mt^ssoM^' to of teg of its at* tha af tl«» -to ormlook at for of to sio ©rosioe. m8 * It is pleat lit* hm out of ia Wm p 'M,'-.J' 4 -£ ^i DEPARTMENT OF PARKS Arsenal, C e n t r a l Park ^ For ReTease T e l . , REgent 4-1000 DRAFT ST. MARY'S PARK - BRONX S t . Mary's Park of ; consisting in large part of steep and rocky terrain had fallen into a state of shabbiness and disrepair owing to hard usage, outmoded design and erosion due to failure of old drainage systems. The large size of the area made it necessary to attack the rehabilitation pro- blem in sections. For the past few years, by means of relief labor and con- tract work the Department of Parks, has progressed the improvement of the park and its facilities, installing a large children's playground at East 147 Street and St. Ann's Avenue, constructing walks, comfort stations, erecting benches, etc. Under the current project the remainder of the area has been im- proved. Some walks have been eliminated and all others have been re- graded, repaved and corrected as to alignment. A new playground has been provided on St. Mary's Street near Crimmins Avenue. Various over- look sitting areas have been added and the ground topsoiled, seeded and landscaped. Fencing of the planted areas, while regrettable £rom the stand- point of appearance, has been found essentiaL.--^£_jfch«»>«a«iafed^^a«*®* of the lawns and plantations and to discourage indiscriminate trespass especially in slopes subject to erosion. It is hoped that such fencing may be removed wholly or in part, in the future when plant life has be- come firmly rooted. was ,.a#rfe"*b/ the tforK^Jtojects(Administration from p l a n s and s ^ e e i f i c e ^ f o n s p r e p a ^ T " b y the D i v i s i o n of feeeign o f ' t h e * · -»-, -2- of Parks. there were 119 playgrounds ed. ground r "* · A D R A F T DEPARTMENT CF PARKS Arsenal, Central Park For Release Tel. 'REgent 4-1000 OT playgrounds -tasdr-fitvv-^mif^t^r^^^^^ Crotona Park, Bronx..,, ^,,,_m,.,,,t,.1,.--,^,.....,.,,. ,,. , _J Jj
Test 137 Street, New York City - Age 1&| Bernard J. Fox, 1944 Ecst 12 Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. - Age 15 Irwin Friedman, 210 Ecst 166 Street, Bronx, N. Y. - Age 14 Lorraine Siegel, 1270 East 18 Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. - Age 12 Barbara Dickters 1200 East 18 Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. - Age 12 Virginia Kearney, 1023 - 76 Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. - Age 11 Theresa Wernli, 440 Riverside Drive, New York City - Acre 14 Irwin Bergknoff, 1136 Teller Avenue, New York City - Age 15^ Andrew J. Pernician, 8625 - 14 Avenue, Brooklyn - Age 15 SENIOR DIVISION (over JH3_years of age) 1st Place - Jack Garber, 308 East 5 Street, Brooklyn, N.Y. Title of Picture - "Me - Get Off the Swing!" 2nd Place - Albert Aboff, 40 Monroe Street, New York City Title of Picture - "Centre 1 Park Skiing Hill" 3rd Pls.ce - Ifilliam H. Greene-, 3341 Reservoir Oval W., Bronx Title of Picture - "Child on a Jungle Gym" Honorable Mention was given to the following contestants: M. Moskowitz, 667 Crotona Park N., Bronx Irving Waxier, 119 Peyson Avenue, New York City -2- Peter Huss, 83 Coleridge Street, Brooklyn, N.Y. David B. Hussakof, 380 Knickerbocker Ave- nue, Brooklyn, N.Y. N. Field, 625 Caton Avenue, Brooklyn, N.Y. Jack Lane, 80 Strong Street, Bronx, N. Y. Norman Boudreau, 419 - 16 Street, Brooklyn, N.Y. Rose Ludlum, 148 T"rest 4 Street, New York City Frederick Steiner, 1440 '""bod Road, Parkchester, Bronx,-N. Y. M. Mansfield, 297 Pulaski Street, Brooklyn, N.Y. D. K. Stein, 1115 Jerome Avenue, Bronx, N. Y, Sol Linderman, 64 West 175 Street, New York City Samuel Kaplan, 2727 University Avenue, N. Y. C. Eddie Goodman, 1272 Grand Concourse, Bronx, N.Y. The prizes consist of the following: JUNIOR PIVISION 1st Brize - $10 gift certificate for Photographic Supplies- donated by Abe Cohen's Exchange 2nd Prize - Camera - donated by Davega City Radio, Inc. 3rd Prize - Photo Oil Colors - Academy Set - donated by John G. Marshall Inc. SENIOR DIVISION 1st Prize - |15 gift certificate for Photographic Supplies - Awarded by the Department of Parks 2nd Prize - $10 gift certificate for Photographic Supplies - Awarded by the Department of Parks 3rd Prize - Photo Oil Colors - Academy Set - donated by John G. Marshall Inc. Certificates of merit will be awarded to the contestants receiving honorable mention. The judges of the contest were: Paul J. Woolf, Rodney McKay Morgan, and, PauJ Schum» All the prize pictures, together with those credited with honorable mention, will be on display in the new Junior Museum of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 79 Street and Fifth Avenue, Manhattan, beginning Thursday, October 16, and continuing through Thursday, October 23, from 10 A. M. to 5 P. M, with, the exception of Sunday, October 19, when the hours will be from 1 P. M. to 6 P. M. Presentation of prizes to the winninr competitors will take place on Tuesday, October 21, at 4 P, ¥,, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, * * * Form 26-5M-60241 ' ' 155 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL., CENTRAL. PARK For TEL.. RESENT 4-1000 October 11, 1941 The Department of Paries announces tliat social dancing is now going on at designated recreation buildings in the five boroughs, with ausic furnished by orchestras assigned to the Park Department by the Hew York City 7JPA Music Project. Dancing commences at 8:30 p.m. and continues until 10:30 p.m. days and at the locations listed as below: II&^II'TM_ Mondays - West 28 Street Gymnasium, 407 'Jest 28 Street Highbridge Play Center,, 174 Street and Amsterdam. Avenue Thomas Jefferson Play Center, 114 Street and First Avenue Colonial Play Center, Bradhurst Avenue and 145 Street Wednesdays - Eaailton Fish Play Center, Pitt and Houston Streets Fridays - Carmine Street Gymnasium, Claricson Street and Seventh Avenue 'BROOKLIK Mondays - Prospect Park Picnic House, Prospect Park Wednesdays - Sunset Play Center, 41 Street and Fifth Avenue McCarren Play Center, Lorimer, Bayard and Driggs Avenue Fridays - Red Hook Play Center, Clinton, Bay and Eenry- Streets ^UES-TS Fridays - Astoria Play Center, 19 Street and 25 Avenue RICELOiVD Thursdays - Cromwell Play Center, Pier 6, Toapkinsville DEPAREJELiT OF PARKS ARSENAL CEilTRAL PARK TEL. KSGSWT 4-1000 . . FOR HSLSASS__J2IDAY 1 October lo, 1941*" The Departroent of Parks announces that the ice skating rink at the City Building, Flushing Meadow Park, Queens, will open for the 1941-42 season on Saturday- morning, October 11, at 9:30 a.m. Since the closing of the rink last Spring, several improvements have been made to make this facility more attrac- tive to patrons. The checking counter has been moved to the end of the build- ing so that those waiting to check clothing will not have to wait outside ex- posed to inclement weather. Floor covering lias been provided along the concrete walks, which' should add greatly to the comfort of the patrons. A completely new sound system and organ have been installed. The food counter and eating space have been enlarged and a new women's rest room will shortly be completed at the south end of the building so that ice skaters will not have to mingle with roller skaters off the rink. The rink will be operated on the following schedule: Free norning ses- sions for children under fourteen on Saturdays, vacation days and holidays, ex- cept Christmas, frori 9:30 to 12 noon. Afternoon sessions, admission 20$ - includ- ing tax - Saturdays, Sundays and holidays 2 to 5 p.m., all other days 2:30 to 5:30 p...i.; eyening sessions - 7:30 to 11, admission 400 - including tax. Shoe skates can be rented at a charge of 500. General admission for spectators to the building is 9$ for children under twelve and 110 including tax for all others. There is no additional charge for checking clothes. The increase from 350 to 360 plus 40 tax for evening admission was necessitated by the new Fedral tax bill which requires the collection of the tax. The afternoon price of 200 .was main- tained at last year's level so that the child attendance would not be burdened by the tax. Tiie tax will be absorbed by the city The section of the park surrounding the building has been reconstructed witi:. a revised walk system and improved landscaping. Hew parking spaces have been constructed iLimediately to the south and to the north of the building. Autonobilists can reach the parking spaces from the Horace Harding Boulevard and Roosevelt Avenue gates. The City Building may be reached via the following transportation lines; IRT, H'/iT and 2nd Avenue Lines to 111 Street Station Flushing-Ridgewood Trolley to 52nd Avenue "fell: one block north to Park v ,, Independent Subway - Queens lines to Woodhaven boulevard / '"· '· and Triborough 3us Q.-S3 to 51st Avenue DEPARTMENT OF PARKS CITY OF NEW YORK COMPARISON OF REVENUES FOR THE FIRST NINE MONTHS OF 1940 AND 1941 SYMBOL $5,000={j tGOLF 1941 · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·····$278,506.10 -40 · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · « $244,244.52 CONCESSION 1941 · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ········$242,526.91 - 4 0 · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · « $196,910.22 SWIMMING POOLS 1941 · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·········$193,875.20 - 4 0 · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · < $181,259.10 BEACHES 1941 · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · $ 1 1 5 , 0 6 7 . 4 0 - 4 0 · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · < $92,811.25 TENNIS 1941 · · · · · · · · · · I I I $6U22.75 - 4 0 · · · · · · · · · · · · < $60,319.00 SKATING RINKS 1941 · · · · · · · · · · $ 4 8 , 5 2 3 . 3 2 -40 PARKING 1941 · · · · · · · ! $36,981.60 - 4 0 · · · · · · < $33,735.15 DAMAGE TO PARK PROPERTY TOT AI Q 1941BI$523852 NINE MONTH 1 U I A L O -40 ···$14,138.82 $463,823.97 · · · · · · · · · · 1933 OTHER PERMITS & PRIVILEGES $ ft5 >q 7 qq Rfi ^ ^ ^ _ - _ . IQAn 1941 · · · $ 11,766.00 8 2 9,7 9 9. 6 6^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ -- 1940 -4O*f$6,38l.6O $993,607.80 · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · i H B 1941 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS CITY OF NEW YORK COMPARISON OF REVENUES FOR THE FIRST NINE MONTHS OF 1940 AND 1941 SYMBOL $5,000={j G0LF # 1 1941 ·········· ·········· ·········· ·········· ·········· ····l$278,506.10 -40 ·········· ·········· ···················· ········ $244,244.52 CONCESSION 1941 ·········· ·········· ·········· ·········· ········$242,526.91 -40 ·········· ·········· ···················« $196,910.22 SWIMMING POOLS 1941 ·········· ·········· ·········· ·········$193,875.20 -40 ·········· ·········· ·········· ······< $181,259.10 BEACHES 1941 · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · $ 1 1 5 , 0 6 7 . 4 0 -40 · · · · · · · · · · ········$92,811.25 TENNIS 1941 · · · · · · · · · · I I I $6U22.75 - 4 0 · · · · · · · · · · ··< $60,319.00 SKATING RINKS 1941 · · · · · · · · · · $ 4 8 , 5 2 3 . 3 2 -40 PARKING 1941 · · · · · · · ! $36^981.60 - 4 0 · · · · · · « $33,7^5.15 DAMAGE TO PARK PROPERTY NINE M0NTH T OT A I Q l U 1941 Bl$5,238.52 ·A L O - 4 0 ···$14,138.82 $ 4 6 3 , 8 2 3 . 9 7 H H H H H H H M i 1933 OTHER PERMITS & PRIVI LEGES $ fl9Q7QQ_ 1941 ···$11,766.00 o^,f»y.bb -4O*l$6,38l.6O DEPARTMENT OF PARKS FOR RElJkm j Monday Arsenal, Central Park October 6, 1941 Tel. REgent 4-1000 The Department of Parks announces that the revenues for the first nine months of 1941, compared with the sama period for the year 1940, indicate approx- imately a 20/? increase, and the increase over 1933 is more than 100^. The figures are as follows: 1933 $463 ,823 .97 1940 829 ,799 .66 1941 993 ,607 .80 The ten golf courses, at which 19,878 seasonal permit holders and 235,363 daily permit holders played 548,367 rounds of golf, show a 14% increase. The concessions for the sale of food, gasoline, newspapers, etc., increased 23%. The new facilities opened this year include the Flushing Bay Boat at Flushing Meadow Park; food bars at the Amphitheater, Flushing Meadow Park; concession build- ing and pier at Canarsie Park; and concession buildings at Plum Beach and Pelham Bay Park. The seventeen outdoor swimming pools showed a 7% increase; 2,055,797 peo- ple used the pools; 671,729 of those were children admitted free; 837,792 were children who paid 10^, and 546,287 were adults who paid a 20f admission charge. The amphitheater and swimming pool at Flushing Meadow Park opened for public use on July 27, 1941, and judging from the heavy usage of these facilities during this short season, they will be a most popular addition to the park system. The thirteen miles which makes up the five beaches show a 24% increase in revenue and were used by approximately forty million people* The 510 tennis courts showed a slight increase in revenue, and were used 349,960 times by 19,300 permit holders. The roller and ice skating rinks at the City Building, Flushing Meadow Park, were, opened to the public on January 12, 1941. The facility was used by 180,399; of these, 21,675 were children admitted free, and 158, 724 paid an admission fee. The new federal tax law requires that the City pay a tax on admissions to swimming pools and the skating rinks, starting October 1. As far as possible, the new rates have been arranged so as to favor the children using these two facilities. At the roller and ice skating rinks at Flushing Meadow Park, the total admission for the afternoon session, which is attended mainly by children, has been kept the seme. The admission charge is eighteen cents with a two-cent tax. The evening price has been increased to thirty-six cents with a four-cent tax or total charge of forty cents. At the swimming pools next summer it is planned to reduce the price for children under twelve years of age to nine cents, so that the children will be ex- empt from a tax. * * * * * DEPARTMENT OP PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE Monday, TEL. REGENT 4-1000 October 6, 1941 The Department of Parks announces the completion of work in connection with two reconstructed parks, one in Manhattan, and the other in Brooklyn which includes a new playground. In Manhattan, the old 6 acre DeWitt Clinton Park extending from West 52 Street to 54 Street between 11 and 12 Avenues, acquired in 1901, was domina- ted by an outmoded classical brick and stone pavilion more ornate than useful. The old comfort stations and showers located in the basement of the pavilion pre- sented difficult maintenance problems. The remainder of the development, con- sisting of a wading pool, a few pieces of play apparatus and a cinder surfaced baseball field, did not efficiently utilize this property for active recreational purposes in an underprivileged neighborhood where such services are greatly needed and used. The old pavilion and comfort station was demolished and replaced by a modern brick building. The play was enlarged by the construction of retaining walls· There are two wide gate controlled entrances on each side of the new comfort station, which is located on the center line adjacent to the east fence,, leading to the wading pool area. The wading pool may also be used for basketball and volleyball in the fall and winter. Two shuffleboard courts are parallel to the west end of the pool. A gate in the north fence of the pool area leads to the court games area which contains two combination basketball and volleyball courts and two handball courts completely bordered by a high chain link fence. Play apparatus areas for preschool and older children are located in. two fence enclosed units south of the pool. The following facilities are included? 45 lineal feet play swings 45 lineal feet kindergarten swings 2 play slides 2 kindergarten slides 4 seesaws 1 pipe frame exercise unit 1 irrigated sand pit The playground is bordered by a block paved panel containing a row of plane trees, alternating with benches facing the new asphalt surfaced interior boundary walks. These connect, at each corner of the playground, with the existing stairways which lead to the boundary street sidewalks. The north, south and west slopes between the playground and property line have been planted with a variety of trees and shrubs including hawthornes, flowering crabapples, viburnums, privets and oriental plane trees. The baseball field recently seeded will not be opened until the turf has become sufficiently established to withstand usage. In Brooklyn, the old four acre informal 3rower Park formerly known as Bedford Park is located in a residential area bounded by Flatbush Avenue, Eastern Parkway, Buffalo Avenue and the Atlantic Division of the Long Island Railroad. It contained a children's museum and library, War Memorial and comfort station joined by interlacing paths in a setting of worn out patches of grass. This is the only < park available to this densely populated section* The new development, which reserves 8 Pioneer Streets Leiv Eiriksson Playground, 5 Ave. & 66 St. Oct. 12, 1934 4:00 P. Mo Crispus Attucks Playground, Fulton Street Oct. 26, 1934 4:00 P. M. & Classon Avenue Taaffe Place Playground, Myrtle Ave. & Oct. 28, 1934 4*00.P. M. Taaffe Place Williamsburg Housing Playground, Manhattan-Oct· 29, 1937 4:00 P» M. Avenue & Scholes Street Dahill Road & 38 Street Oct. 29, 1937 4:00 P. M. Queens Tudor Field, N. Conduit Ave., 80-88 Sts. Oot. 6, 1938 3:00 P. M. Baisley Park Playground, 116 Ave. & 155 St.-Oct. 19,1940 3:00 P. M. Thomson Hill Playground, Greenpoint Ave. Oct. 25, 1937 lltOO A . M. and 47 Avenue Bronx Pulaski Playground, E . 133 Street & Oct. 11, 1939 4:00 P. M. Willis Avenue Macombs South, Sedgwick, Jerome Avenues, Oct. 14, 1935 4:00 P. M. & Exterior Street Spofford Avenue & Faile Street Oct. 14, 1935 4i00: P. !!#· Teasdale Place and East 164 Street Oct. 14, 1935 4:00 P. II. Fort # 4 - Reservoir Avenue between Oct. 14, 1935 4:00 P. M. Sedgwick and Webb Avenues * * * * \ DEPARTMENT OF PARKS · # ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE Wednesday, TEL. REgent 4-1000 October 1, 1941 The Department of Parks announces the beginning of work in connec- tion with the construction of three new playgrounds, one in Manhattan at Park Avenue and East 108 Street and two in Brooklyn at Shore Parkway and Eomecrest Avenue and at 3rd Avenue and 64 Street. In Manhattan on the eastern half of the block bounded by Madison Avenue, Park Avenue, East 108 Street and East 109 Street, the frontage of the block, which was recently acquired for a school site and playground, is BQ% occupied by four to five story brick and brownstone dwellings and two garages. Demolition of the structures on the playground site has been started* The remaining buildings will be removed under a Board of Education contract in preparation for a new school to be erected next year. The recreation area will have two entrances immediately adjacent to the west portals of the future school as well as entrances from 108 Street and from 109 Street. Besides a large asphalt surfaced open play area, the follow- ing facilities will be provided: Brick comfort station 2 handball courts 3 shuffleboard courts Combination basketball and volleyball court with removable goal posts Practice basketball court Softball diamond with hooded backstop While school is in session the area will be reserved for school children. At all other times it will be operated by the Department of Parks for the general public. At Shore Parkway, East 12 Street, William Court and Homeorest Ave- nue, Brooklyn, the two and one-third acres unimproved property was acquired by condemnation for recreational purposes in the proceedings for the acquisi- tion of the Belt Parkway right of way. A four foot strip was released by the Department of Parks to the Borough President of Brooklyn to permit the widening of East 12 Street as a ramp approach to the parkway. A considerable amount of sideslope fill and 350 lineal feet of retaining wall at the southwest corner of the plot was required for the bridge approach and to permit pedestrian con- nections between the marginal playground walks and the parkway path system. The playground will be divided into three main sections with sub- divisions bordered by chain link fence, block surfaced panels,.be»ohee and trees* The north section will contain four units providing the following: Brick comfort station Concrete wading pool Irrigated sandpit(l2' x 15') and mothers' sitting area Swings Slides Seesaws Pipe frame exercise unit 4 concrete surfaced handball courts 1 drinking fountain The middle section, surfaced with asphalt, will contain a basketball court with removable goal posts to permit roller and ice skating* The south section extending to the parkway will be asphalt surfaced and provided with a softball diamond. On the west side of 3rd Avenue between 64th and 65th Streets, Brooklyn, the one and one-quarter acre plot was acquired for recreational and parkway purposes in connection with the construction of the Gowanus Parkway. The Triborough Bridge Authority, under whose direction the con» necting link between the Belt Parkway and the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel is being erected, cleared the site of several building obstructions preparatory to the construction of the Parkway and playground. The elevated structure passes diagonally through the property in a broad westerly sweep from 3rd Avenue to the Belt Parkway at Owls Head Park. Carried on light, graceful arched supports the superstructure affords a minimum of obstruction to light and air. When completed the playground will contain the following: Irrigated sand pit Seesaws Slides 1 pipe frame exercise unit 4 shuffleboard courts Brick comfort station Concrete wading pool 1 combination volleyball and basketball court 3 paddle tennis courts with removable posts and nets Roller skating area 6 concrete surfaced handball courts A new 15' concrete sidewalk will be constructed along the boundary streets and new trees will be planted in block panels around the playground and its various units. These three projects are being constructed by the Work Projects Administration from plans prepared by the Department of Parks. * * * * Form 26-5M-60241 · · 155 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS Tuesda ARSENAL., CENTRAL PARK For Release y» TEL. RESENT 4-1000 September 30, 1941 Bids were opened today by the Department of Parks at the Arsenal Building on a contract which provides for the vddening of approximately one- half mile of the Hutchinson River Parkway Extension extending westerly from the Westchester County Line. The existing pavement consists of two 23 foot wide concrete road- ways and curbs separated by a 28 foot wide grass panel. The contract pro- vides for the removal of the existing mall curbs and the addition of two 11 foot lanes to each roadway. The new inner curbs along the 6 foot separating mall will be constructed of white cement to clearly mark the edge of the roadways. lew timber guide railing will be placed at danger points along the outer shoulders. Additional drainage structures and adjustments to the existing drainage system to meet new conditions are included in the contract* The separating mall will be reseeded. Widening of the pavement between the westerly end of this contract and the new parkway extension over the Hutchinson River will be provided unde: a separate contract, bids for which will be opened on October 8th» Parkway traffic will be maintained for the duration of the new work which is expected to be completed early in January. The three lowest bids were submitted by the followingj 1. Harlem Contracting Company, Inc. $30,218.50 44 Exchange Place, New York City 2. Melwood Construction Corporation 32,450.00 507 Fifth Avenue, New York City 3. Tuckahoe Construction Company 32,640.00 116 Columbus Ave., Tuckahoe, N. Y, * * ** DESSftHJENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK t FOR RELEASE Tuesday;,^ TEL. REGENT 4 - 1 0 0 0 September 30, 1941 The Department of Parks announces the completion of work in connection with three park improvements in Queens. Victory Field, a section of Forest Park, Queens, bounded by Myrtle Ave- nue, Woodhaven Boulevard, Park Drive and the Rockaway Division of the Long Is- land Railroad has been entirely reconstructed. This 12 acre athletic field dedicated to the unknown soldier of the first World War, replaces the former inadequate facilities which consisted of a cinder running track overcrowded with dirt surfaced baseball diamonds. The new development will provide a well rounded recreational area for the use of all the residents of this section of Queens. The entire field is enclosed by double fencing consisting of an outer wrought iron picket fence separated from a chain link fence by a tree planted grass panel. Access to the five main fence enclosed areas from the boundary sidewalks is provided by seven entrances on Myrtle Avenue and Woodha,ven Boulevard A grass surfaced baseball field and concrete bleacher is located at the corner of Myrtle Avenue and Woodhaven Boulevard. The track and field events area occupies the east half of the development and contains the following: 440 yard cinder running track Grass surfaced football field with removable goal posts 2 softball diamonds with hooded backstops Facilities for broad jump, high jump and pole vault 370 foot concrete bleacher extending along the west side of the track West of the track is a large bituminous surfaced open play area which will be used alternately for roller and ice skating, dancing and softball. South of this area facing Park Drive is a battery of seven handball courts. These two areas are floodlighted for night use. A small square sitting area with a central memorial flagpole centers on one of the main entrances from Woodhaven Boulevard south of the renovated comfort station. Benches under oriental plane and pin oak trees in block paved panels extend along the fences separating these areas. The comfort station, sitting area, open play area and handball courts including softball and roller skating will be opened immediately. The baseball field and field events area must remain closed until the grass areas have become sufficiently established to withstand usage. At St. Albans Memorial Park the additional new play area, a three acre rectangular plot occupying the entire block south of the main park area, and bounded by 169th Street, Sayres Avenue, Merrick Boulevard and 113th Avenue, is one of two additions acquired by condemnation in 1936* -2- The development consists of two grass surfaced softball diamonds lo- cated diagonally at the northeast and southwest corners of the block. Portable steel bleachers for spectators have been installed on the high bank extending a- long the Merrick Boulevard property line. The field is completely enclosed by chain link fence with two gate controlled entrances from Merrick Boulevard. This project also included concrete curbs and stairway, drainage, drinking fountains, benches, topsoil, seeding and shrub planting. At the rear of Public School 119 located in the middle of the block bounded by 78th Avenue, Central Avenue, 74th Street and 75th Street, Queens, a new playground has been completed and opened. The playground was constructed in cooperation with the Board of Edu- cation. While school is in session the area is used by school children. At all other times the playground is operated by the Department of Parks for the general public. The plot is divided into two main fence enclosed sections. Entrance to the south portion of the playground from the school grounds is by a gate cen- tered on the soyth fence. A central free play area is flanked by three combina- tion volleybal Legend basketball courts with removable goal posts, and a string, "i three shuffleboard courts and four paddle tennis courts. This entire section may be used for roller skating and flooded for ice skating. Entrance to the north section is provided by a central gate in the separating fence and also through gates from 74th and 75th Streets. This section is subdivided into small units by block paved panels containing benches and trees. Centrally located is a brick comfort station east of which is a large wading pool designed to provide for volleyball and basketball during cool weather. South of the comfort station are eight seesaws and three slides for pre-school children. To the west, separated by a chain link fence is a battery of kindergarten swings. An irrigated sandpit is bounded on three sides by con- tinuous benches under a row of trees. These projects were constructed by the Work Projects Administration from plans prepared by the Department of Parks. In 1934 there were 119 playgrounds in the five boroughs; 60 of which have been reconstructed, with this now addition, there are now 447 playgrounds in the park system* * * * DEPARTMENT OF PARKS Arsenal, Central Park For Release Mbndayy Tel. REgent 4-1000 September 29, 1941 The Department of Parks announces the opening of a reconstructed playground located in the northeast corner of Morningside Park at Morningside Avenue and West 123rd Street. The old playground, pear-shaped enclosure, sur- faced with bluestone screenings, consisted of a few pieces of overworked play apparatus, one basketball court and four horseshoe courts* The existing brick comfort station has been retained in the new development. The expanded one and three-quarter acre recreational area at the north end of the park will provide more adequate facilities for this crowded section of Harlem and represents the first stage of the general reconstruction of the entire 31 acre park which extends from 110th Street to 123rd Street between Morningside Drive and Morningside Avenue East. The new playground is completely enclosed with chain link fence. Street entrances are provided at the northeast and northwest corners. There are two access points, to the area, from the adjacent interior park walks. Two bench-lined tree shaded malls extend along the entire north and east sides of the playground connecting the park entrances with the resurfaced park walks. Sloping ground necessitated the construction of the various subdi visions on different levels retained by high curbs and interconnected by short stairways. The following equipment is provided: Brick comfort station 2 handball courts Wading pool 3 shuffleboard courts 3 basketball courts with removable backstops Pipe frame exercise unit Swings 2 slides Kindergarten Apparatus Area: 2 irrigated sand pits and sitting areas Swings 3 slides 8 seesaws The balance of the work connected with the general improvement of the park now in progress will include the construction of two softball diamonds, a new brick comfort station adjacent to the existing comfort station at Y\Test 114th Street, sand pits and sitting area, resurfacing walks and repairing steps, re- grading, topsoil and seeding, additional benches and fencing. The work was carried out by the Work Projects Administration from plans prepared by the Department of Parks. In 1934 there were 119 playgrounds in the five boroughs; 60 of which have been reconstructed. There are now 446 playgrounds in the park system* * * * * DEPARTMENT OF PARKS . Pnr. ,,-B _ , ARSENAL, CEFTRAL PARK Release Sunday^ TEL.'REGENT 4-1000 September 28, 1941 PLANTING OF TREES IK CITY STREETS The best time to plant trees is in the Fall season during the months of October and November,. Although the Department of Parks is charged with the care and maintenance of all trees in street areas,, it is not supplied with funds sufficient to plant new trees, nor to replace trees which have died from one cause or another. This must be done by property owners. The Park Department offers every form of cooperation to those who wish to plant trees in front of their property at their own expense. A permit is required which is issued, without charge, by the office of the Park Departmerit in the borough in which the tree is to planted. The permit specifies the kind of tree, excavation, fertilizer and other materials required to assure the best results. The department will supervise the planting operation. These regulations are promulgated so that the City streets may be lined with healthy trees so planted and located, that they will thrive and be an asset to the City and to the property owners. Trees planted without permits and which do not conform to Park Department requirements will be removed. In such cases the property owner is notified of his violation and is informed as to the proper pro- cedure to plant a tree which will be acceptable and which can be satis- factorily maintained. Permits for planting individual street trees may be obtained by applying to the borough offices at: MANHATTAN: Arsenal, 64th Street and Fifth Avenue, New York City BROOKLYN: Litchfield Mansion, Prospect Park, Brooklyn, New York BRONX? Birchall Avenue and Bronx Park East, The Bronx, New York QUEENS: The Overlook, Forest Park, Kew Gardens, New York RICHMOND: Clove Lakes Park, Victory Boulevard and Clove Road, West Brighton, Staten Island Form 26-5M-60241 · 155 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK For Release Saturday, . REGENT 4-1000 September 27, 1941 The iiJepartment of Parks announces the completion and opening of a sitting area at Louis Zimmerman Playground in the Bronx. This new addition is a rectangular plot 25' x 70' located in the northwest corner of the park at the corner of Barker Avenue and Britton Street. The development consists of two continuous rows of benches placed in granite block, tree planted panels facing an open central bituminous paved mall. Entrances to this area, which lies outside of the fenced-in portion of the playground, are provided from both ends of the mall. Zimmerman Playground approximately one acre in extent occupies most of the block bounded by Britton Street, Barker Avenue, Allerton Avenue and Olinville Avenue. It is one of eight War Memorial Playgrounds opened simul- taneously on July 15, 1934, two of which were located in Manhattan, one in Brooklyn, two in Queens, two in Richmond and one in the Bronx* Located in an apartment house neighborhood the playground is used to capacity at all times. The existing development which has been rehabilita- ted by the addition of new granite block paving, concrete sidewalks and curbs consists of a modern recreation building, wading pool, handball courts and playground apparatus. - The new sitting area developed on private property recently acquired by condemnation rounds out the playground by removing the small jog at the corner. The benches, which are segregated from the active recreation areas, supplement and relieve the overcrowded seating facilities within the play- ground. The work was carried out by the Work Projects Administration from plans prepared by the Department of Parks. · * * * ALLERTON BRONX SITTING AREA L0UI5 ZIMMERMAN PLAYGROUND BRITTON ST. EXISTING PLAYGROUND 0 20 40 SCALE IN FEET NEW SITTING AREA BOROUGH OF THE BRONX L0U15 ZIMMERMAN PLAYGROUND DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK For Release Saturday, Tel. REgent 4-1000 September 27,1941 The Department of Parks announces the completion and opening of four new sitting areas and a children's playground along the Laurelton sec- tion of Cross Island Parkway in the Borough of Queens. This section of the Belt Parkway System was built and opened by the Long Island State Park Com- mission in 1936, and was formerly known as the Laurelton Parkway. Lawns ad- jacent to the parkway and the banks of the brook paralleling the parkway have been used by local children for play purposes causing increased main- tenance problems* The new recreational facilities, designed to relieve this situa- tion and provide safe and adequate play space have been spotted on each side of the parkway between North Conduit Avenue and the Nassau County Line. The first, which is typical of the four new developments, is loca- ted on the east side of the parkway just north of North Conduit Avenue. It consists of a bituminous surfaced rectangular area offset from the existing path with a large central irrigated sand pit. Three sides of the sitting area are lined with continuous benches. Eleven oaks, maples and beeches were added to the existing planting to provide shade. The other two areas are located on the same side of the parkway, one is adjacent to Brookville Boulevard and 135th Avenue, and the other at Brookville Boulevard and 131st Avenue. Seven new sets of benches have been installed along the existing paths adjacent to these sitting areas and the planting has been supplemented with 20 new oaks, beeches and maples. The fourth area is west of the parkway just south of the 130th Avenue bridge. This differs from the others in that it provides a double entrance and is completely bounded by continuous benches. Fourteen sweet -2- gums and oaks hare been planted immediately adjacent to the benches. A drinking fountain is provided at all sand pit areas. North of 130th Avenue and west of the parkway a semi-circular bituminous surfaced playground has been provided. The area is completely enclosed by a six foot chain link fence. A single entrance on the west side connects with a new path which swings around the playground from the existing park walk system to the street sidewalk over the bridge. Facili- ties provided include kindergarten swings, four seesaws, a kindergarten slide and play slide, one pipe frame exercise unit and a fence enclosed battery of swings for older children. Numerous benches and a drinking fountain are included. The work was carried out by the Work Projects Administration from plans prepared by the Department of Parks. In 1934 there were 119 playgrounds in the five boroughs; 59 of which have been reconstructed, with this addition, there are 446 playgrounds in the park system. * * * Form 26-5M-60241 155 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK For Release TEL. REGENT 4-1000 September 26, 1941 The Department of Parks announces that on Monday, Septem- ber 29, 8s30 P. M#, at 105 Street and Riverside Drive, Manhattan, a special Harvest Festival will be held, featuring solo and community singing and demonstrations in American Square Daning. Approximately 20,000 persons have taken part in American Square Dancing every Monday night since its inception last July. On several occasions, well known exponents of Square Dancing were invited to give exhibitions. Interest ir. the variety of American folk dancing steps in vogue throughout different parts of the United States became so widespread at the Riverside location, that plans are being formulated for holding similar Square Dancing sessions next summer at other Park locations in each borough. Music for this Harvest Festival next Monday will be sup- plied by the Park Department Band. * * ** OF FARR3 ^k D CEHTRAL PARK ^ R -For ReWTse TEL. REGENT 4-1000 A . . F The Department of Parks announces the completion of work in connection with the reconstruction of the 6%-acre playground at Gravesand Park (located w£s of 18th Avenue, between 55th and 56th Streets, Brooklyn, tffofcf The old play facilities which were located in four fence enclosed linits had become worn and unserviceable. The apparatus area divided into two sections contained a central brick comfort station and typioal pieces of apparatus which were widely spaced around the border of a gravel surfaced combination free play area and basketball oourt. Two handball courts with ancient wooden backstops a a gravel surfaoed baseball field without backstops were located in the adjacent central area. The south end of the field was provided with eight poorly surfaced clay tennis oourts. The new development permits greater utilisation of space by segrega- tion of smaller compact use areas equipped with increased facilities. A central tree shaded bench lined mall extends from the main park gate to the existing comfort station which has been given a new setting of block paving, trees and a flagpole. On both sides of the mall two main fence enclosed sections, approximately 1 acre each, are subdivided into various use areas. Alternate benches and trees are spaoed in a 5 foot block paved border extending along the inside of the fence enclosure. The following items are contained in these unitss Combination roller and ioe skating rink 5 shuffleboard and 2 handball oourts Wading pool with saniijary foot bath Play swings 1 pipe frame exercise unit 2 play slides Horizontal ladder, horizontal bars and parrallel bars Combination irrigated sand pit and sitting area 3 kindergarten seesaws 2 kindergarten slides Kindergarten swings -2- Two softball diamonds with hooded backstops have been provided in an adjacent 2-acre asphalt surfaced enclosure with entrances from the comfort sta- tion plaza. The tennis courts remain within the same enclosure but have been resurfaced. The work was performed by the Work Projects Administration from plans prepared by the Department of Perks. In 1934 there were 119 playgrounds in the five boroughs, of which have been reconstructed. There are now playgrounds ia the park system. *** *** *** DEB&RTMENT OF PARKS Arsenal, Central Park FOR RELEASE: Tuesday, Tel. Regent 4-1000 September 23, 1941 The Department of Parks announces the completion of a new play- ground and sitting area on Fort Washington Avenue at 190th Street, Manhattan. Speakers at the opening ceremonies which will be held on Tuesday, September 23rd, at 3 P. M. will include Major Irving V. A. Huie, Work Projects Ad- ministrator and Mayor La Guardia with Robert Moses, Park Commissioner, pre- siding as Chairman. This one and three-quarter acre tract of land at 190th Street fronting on the east side of Fort Washington avenue immediately adjacent to the south boundary of Fort Tryon Park is the most recent of the many gener- ous donations to the park system of New York City by Mr. John D. Rockefeller, Jr. It will permanently prevent undesirable private structures which might otherwise have been erected on this property. By arrangements with the owners of the plot south of the new playground who were about to build an apartment, the facade of this new structure facing the new playground was designed so as to provide windows and balconies overlooking Fort Tryon Park harmonizing with the park plan» The new recreational facilities supplement and balance the large plot on the west side of Fort Washington Avenue also made available to the Park Department by Mr. Rockefeller and developed as a children's playground in 1936* In this way an orderly and attractive treatment of all sides of the plaza at the entrance to Fort Tryon Park is assured, and active play areas which can not be made available in Fort Tryon Park, are provided south of its main entrance. An ornamental wrought iron fence matching the west playground enclosure has been erected along the Fort Washington Ave- nue frontage of the new play area. Surrounding the renovated Independent Subway Station the area descends sharply to the east. In order to provide usable surfaces the new development was adjusted to the slope by a series of granite-veneered wall-supported terraces joined by stone stairways. The stone in these con- spicuous walls matches the new granite walls of the subway building. The entrance from Fort Washington Avenue, marked by massive granite posts, gives joint access by way of a 15 foot flight of steps to the subway and playground. The station to the left is conveniently en- tered from the platform at the foot of the stairway. Southward, to the right, a sitting area has been developed on a slightly lower rectangular -2- terrace which extends over 100 feet to the base planting of an apartment building. Approximately 80 foot wide and 20 foot above the moderately pitched landscaped lawn, the terrace, which contains adequate seating accommodations, affords an unobstructed view of Fort George and the northeasterly end of Manhattan over the tree covered lower slopes. A second stairway leading from the central landing platform descends to a long narrow tree-shaded, bench-lined mall. Extending about 200 feet along the low stone wall at the toe of the sloping ground west of the subway structure this "spectators" terrace overlooks a quarter acre asphalt surfaced court games area 4 feet below. In this games area, the following facilities are provided: Three paddle tennis courts Two shuffleboard courts One badminton court Four ping-pong tables Additional benches and trees extend along the wrought iron railing on top of the 6 foot wall which retains the game court terrace. A rectangular fence enclosed area adjacent to the north fence contains two horse-shoe courts. Pedestrian connections to the main park path system have been provided at the north end of the play area. The plant material used in and around the terraces on the sloping lawns includes oriental plane trees, flowering crabapples, rhododendrons, azaleas and roses. The work was carried out by the Work Projects Administration from plans prepared by the Department of Parks. In 1934 there were 119 playgrounds in the five boroughs; 59 of which have been reconstructed, with this addition, there are 445 playgrounds in the park system. * * * * "DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE Monday, TEL. REGENT 4-1000 Sept. 22, 1941 The Department of Parks announces that construction has begun on thirteen park projects in various neighborhoods throughout the City by the Work Projects Administration. These areas will be completed and opened to the public next summer. Covering a total of 65 acres, two of the thirteen projects involve the reconstruction of existing parks and playgrounds, two reconstruction of and addition to existing playgrounds, and the others represent entirely new playgrounds ranging in size from one to ten acres. In most instances the new recreational facilities are being pro- vided in old underprivileged neighborhoods where existing park areas are completely lacking or are too distant to be accessible to mothers and children. Location of Projects Manhattan 1. Harlem Meer, Central Park 2. John Jay Park, East River Drive-E. 76th to E. 78th Streets Bronx 3. Playground - West 234 Street and Bailey Avenue 4. Harris Park - Bedford Park Boulevard and 205 Street Brooklyn 5. Playground - 3rd Avenue, 34th-35th Streets 6. Playground - 2nd Avenue, 55th & 56th Streets 7. Playground - Ft. Hamilton, 52nd-53rd Streets 8. Playground - Albany & Foster Avenues 9. Playground - Park Avenue East of Nostrand Avenue 10. Playground - Eastern Parkway Extension & Fulton Street 11* Playground - Central Avenue, 70th-71st Streets 12. Park & Playground - Utopia Parkway & 73rd Avenue 13. Playground - 45th Avenue & 45th Road The largest improvement is the reconstruction of the north- eastern corner of Central Park. This area extending from Conservatory Gardens to 110 Street and from Fifth Avenue to the East Park Drive, a section popularly known as the Harlem Meer, contains natural features, the outstanding of which is a four- teen acre lake, the surface of which lies about eight feet below the general level of the tree shaded banks which slope to the north, east and west. A series of rocky knolls separated by ravines rise sharply to the south attain- ing a height of fifty feet above the lake* The existing facilities are inadequate to meet the heavy demands of the large adjacent population and the result has been destructive to the natural features. The present layout, a product of the outmoded theory that -2- parks are passive recreation areas designed solely for visual pleasure, must be revamped to fulfill the many recreational needs of all the people of this section of Harlem. The new scheme retains with slight modifications the existing shape of the lake. A masonry wall about one foot high and a fifteen foot promenade will form the new shore line completely encircling the lake. Fre- quent connection will be made to a secondary path system which parallels the shore promenade and in turn connects with the main park entrances from Fifth Avenue, 110 Street, Conservatory Gardens and the general park path system. The south slopes and ravines will be interlaced with narrower foot paths and trails which will pass through interesting plantings and lead to resting places at the tree shaded overlook areas, from which views of the lake and Conservatory Gardens will be possible. Benches will be spaced a- long the lake promenade, the general path system including the trails, and the overlook areas. The main features of the north shore adjacent to 110 Street will be a U-shaped combination brick boat house, comfort station and refreshment concession with a three hundred and sixty foot boat landing platform thirty feet wide. Two new entrances will be cut through the north wall of the part with stone stairways leading to the boat house plaza. The existing entrance at the intersection of 110th Street and Fifth Avenue and at 106th Street will lead to the path system and lake pro- menade. Convenient approaches to the two existing marginal playgrounds which lie on the north and east sides of the lake will be provided. Appropriate trees including willows, oaks and dogwoods and various flowering shrubs will be added to the existing planting. John Jay Park, one of the older City parks, located between East 76th and East 78th Streets, Manhattan, adjacent to and overlooking the East River Drive is being reconstructed. A new diving pool will be built adjacent to the swimming pool, thus relieving some of the congestion which has existed in this small pool. The concession building will be relocated and a completely equipped play- ground will replace the existing inadequate facilities. The southerly half of the area will be paved but will continue as an open area for <;ourt games. A portion of Cherokee Place will be closed so that the existing old bath building now located at the northwest corner of Cherokee Place and 76th Street can be tied in to John Jay Park. Alteration plans have been completed for this structure providing a recreation room, gymnasium and auditorium. -3- Numerous benches will be installed under existing shade trees and additional trees are to be planted. Concrete bleachers will be provided a- round the pool* At Bailey Avenue and West 234th Street, The Bronx, approximately 3 acres located west of the New York Central Putnam Division at the corner of West 234th Street and Bailey Avenue was originally acquired for school pur- poses in 1929 and was assigned this year to the Department of Parks. A new- playground is under construction including in the south half of the area a large wading pool and comfort station* Two entrances will be provided from West 234th Street* The north half of the area will be paved with bituminous material and will be used for roller skating, softball and free play* At Harris Park, Bedford Park Boulevard and 2O5th Street, %he Bronx, a new 10 acre athletic field is being constructed. This property was acquired for water supply purposes as part of east basin of Jerome Park Reservoir in 1895. It was placed under the jurisdiction of the Department of Parks in 1940 by assignment from the Department of Water Supply, Gas and Electricity. The park is easily accessible from the Grand Concourse via West Bedford Park Boulo- vard and West 205th Street. It was necessary to remove several one-story stor- age sheds and buildings before construction could start. Considerable grading will be required to prepare level play areas necessitating stairway approaches to the field, the surface of which stands from 2 feet to 18 feet above the boundary sidewalk grades. The existing concrete walks adjacent to the park will be widened and double row of pin oak trees will be planted in block paved panels extending a- round the entire playground. Seventeen thousand five hundred honeysuckle vines will be planted on the steep slopes. Specimen hawthornes will be placed around the entrance stairways. Mass groupings of privets around the bleachers will complete the planting. When completed the project will also provide a brick field house of modern detail including lockers, comfort station and refreshment concession; also concrete bleachers, four regulation size baseball and two soft- ball diamonds with hooded backstops, four football fields with removable goal posts, a flagpole and benches and drinking fountains will be provided. At 3rd Avenue, 54th to 35th Streets, Brooklyn, is an L-shaped open lot acquired by the Triborough Bridge Authority in connection with the Gowanus Parkway and assigned to the Department of Parks being developed as a playground. Slightly over one acre in extent it lies immediately east of the Gowanus Park- way. The improvement will include new wide concrete sidewalks, a brick comfort -4- station, a wading pool, a combination basketball and volleyball court, two groups of play apparatus and a large irrigated diggery for children bordered with benches for mothers. Also four handball courts will be located in the rectangular offset at the south end of the playground* At 2nd Avenue, 55th-56th Streets, Brooklyn, additional property was acquired north of the existing playground by the Triborough Bridge Authority in connection with the Gowanus Parkway development and provides a more up to date and adequate play area. A continuous row of three and four story residences have been removed for the new development. The area will be similar in equip- ment and lay out to the playground under construction at 3rd Avenue and 34th Street* At Fort Hamilton Parkway, 52nd to 55rd Street, Brooklyn, two sections of the old playground development will be joined by closing 10th Avenue between 52nd and 53rd Streets. Existing play facilities will be reorganized and supple- mented with additional apparatus and the area resurfaced with bituminous mate- rial. Twenty-seven new trees, 3 inches in diameter, will be added to the street and park planting. At Albany and Foster Avenues, Brooklyn, a new 3^- acre park and play- ground occupying the entire block bounded by Albany Avenue, Foster Avenue, East 40th Street, and Farragut Road, will provide active and passive recreation for all age groups. It was purchased from the New York Water Service Corporation in 1941 for recreational use and placed under the jurisdiction of the Department of Parks. An existing grove of 18" to 20" caliper oak trees will be preserved in a fence enclosed grass plot at the north end of the park. Centrally located will be a brick comfort station and wading pool. Bordering these facilities an adjacent court games area will include 3 shuffleboard and 2 handball courts. The south end of the park will contains two bituminous surfaced softball dia- monds with hooded backstops. The existing concrete boundary walks will be widened and bordered with a double row of pin oaks in concrete block paved panels:. At Park Avenue East of Nostrand Avenue, Brooklyn, the one acre rec- tangular plot occupying a portion of the block between Park Avenue and Floyd Street was recently acquired by condemnation for playground purposes. It is located in one of the older underprivileged neighborhoods of Brooklyn where no recreational facilities are now available. Demolition of eight 3 and 4 story frame residences on the property has just been completed. The new playground built on two levels with connect- ing stairway will be an unusually compact development for active recreation* Entrance gates will be provided from Park Avenue and Floyd Street. A brick com- fort station, court games, roller and ice skating areas, a wading pool and appa- ratus will be provided. At Eastern Parkway Extension and Fulton Street, Brooklyn, the property slightly over 3-g- acres is divided into two sections by Sackman Street. Origi- nally acquired by the Board of Transportation for subway purposes, it was trans- ferred in 1940 to the Department of Parks* The Board of Transportation, in connection with the building of a subway entrance, will provide concrete retaining walls around the larger easter- ly section coordinating this work with the Department of Parks playground plans* The development of the smaller triangle between Eastern Parkway and Sackman Street will also include retaining walls and a subway entrance as part of the Work Projects Administration construction. The western half of the triangle at the narrow end will contain a sitting area with a memorial flagpole and a roller skating tract. The eastern end will be provided with a comfort station, wading pool and several pieces of kindergarten play apparatus. The large triangle east of Sackman Street which will be started when the Board of Transportation contract has been completed will contain two basket- ball, six shuffleboard, three paddle tennis, three handball, two bocci, and four horseshoe courts. A large central open play area will serve for roller skating and softball. At Central Avenue between 70th and 71st Streets, Glendale, Queens, a portion of the one acre rectangular plot was transferred fronic the Board of Education to the Department of Parks and rounded out by the purchase of adja- cent private property. The outmoded school building and private residences on the site are being demolished. The new development vri.ll include a brick comfort station, play apparatus, handball and basketball courts, a softball diamond and free play area. The general surface will be of bituminous paving enclosed with chain link fencing bordered by shade trees. At Utopia Parkway and 73rd Avenue, Queens, located in a rapidly de- veloping residential section, the nearest existing recreational areas to this new three acre park are approximately one mile away. The property was acquired for park purposes by condemnation of private property and by transfer to the Department of Parks of an abandoned school site. The old two story frame school house near the corner of Utopia Parkway and Jewel Avenue will be demol- ished. This portion of the park will be developed as a softball diamond which may be flooded for ice skating. Two basketball and two handball courts will be constructed south of this field. A central fence enclosed section of the park will contain a brick comfort station, a combination wading pool and basketball court, three paddle tennis and two shuffleboard courts. A third fenced-in area near the apex of the triangle will contain typical play apparatus. A bench lined mall will separate the active recreation area from the sitting park area at the narrow end of the park. A new one and one-half acre park located in the middle of the block bounded by 45th Avenue, 21 Street, 45 Road and 11 Street, Queens, was recently acquired by the City by oondemnation and purchase. The nearest existing rec- reation area in this congested neighborhood is the inadequate John Andrews playground approximately one-half mile to the south. The development of this rectangular fence enclosed plot vail in- clude a brick comfort station and a flagpole on the main axis of a central tree shaded mall. Entrances to this sitting area will be provided at each end from 45th Avenue and 45th Road. West of the mall will be a large open play area for roller and ice skating with two basketball courts at the south end. The eastern half of the park will contain a wading pool flanked by two fence enclosed play apparatus areas for pre-school and older children. The boundary planting in a block paved panel will consist of 50 three inch Norway maples. Sloping grades will require the construction of two sections of concrete retaining walls to permit level play surface. * * * * Form 26-5M-60241 155 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK For Release Friday TEL. REGENT 4-1000 September 19, 1941 The Department of Parks announces that the city-wide finals of the shuffleboard tournament will be held at North Meadow, 100 Street and West Drive, Central Park, Manhattan, on Saturday, September 20, at 2$3.0 p*m» There will be three divisions} one for women and one for men, and a special division for men in the armed forces of the United States. Playground, district and borough eliminations have been going on for the past six weeks to select the first and second place vdnners in each borough for the city championship contest next Saturday afternoon. Gold and silver medals will be awarded to the winner and runner-up of the finals and bronze medals to the remaining borough finalists. Sweatshirts, bearing the Park Department emblem, will also be awarded to the winner of each division. Any member of the armed forces, who is desirous of competing in this tournament, should be present in uniform, at North Meadow, next Saturday at 2:30 p.m» Of course, the same prizes will be awarded to the winner and runner- up of this division. Shuffleboard was introduced to the Park Department recreation program ten years ago, when the first court was constructed at Jasper Oval Playground, West 135 Street and Convent Avenue, Manhattan. At the present time, there are 554 shuffleboard courts under Park Department jurisdiction. In the beginning this activity attracted only children; but with the increase in the number of shuffleboard courts, especially during the past eight years, the game has become very popular with adolescents and adults, particularly since they can play evenings in the 76 floodlighted playgrounds, -which are oper- ated until 10 p.m. daily. * * * ** Form 26-5M-60241 155 _,G£PARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK For Release--Saturday, TEL. REGENT 4-1000 September 13,1941 The Department of Parks announces the roller skating rink at the City Building, Flushing Meadow Park, Queens, will open for the 1941-42 season Sunday afternoon, September 14, 1941, at two o'clock. Since the rink closed last spring, several improvements have been made to make this facility more attractive to patrons. The checking counter has been moved to the end of the building so that waiting lines can form inside of the building, not exposed to the weather, as was the case last winter; the floor of the rink has been re-surfaced; a railing has been placed around three sides to permit tired skaters to sit down at the floor level and b e protected from "natrons on the floor; a completely new loud speaker system has been installed, and will be supplemented in a few days with an organ so that the music will be more varied and of a better quality than the monotonous recorded music which was provided last season; the food counter and eating space have been enlarged; a new women's rest room is being constructed at the south end of the building so that ice skaters will not have to mingle with roller skaters off the rink. The rink will be operated on the following schedule: Free morn- ing sessions for children under 14 on Saturdays, school vacation days and holidays except Christmas, 9;30 to 12 noon; afternoon sessions, admission - 2Qgl, Saturdays, Sundays and holidays, 2;00 to 5s00 P. 1/t. All other days 2:30 to 5:30 P.M.; evening sessions, admission - 35#, 7:30 to 11:00 P. M. Frea use of the balcony, v4iich was the subject of considerable abuse by rowdy elements which annoyed the skaters last season, has been discontinued. There is no additional charge for checking clothes and for roller skates, although patrons may use their own skates provided the rollers are suitable for use on a wooden floor. The section of the park surrounding the building has been re- constructed with a revised walk system and improved landscaping. New parking spaces have been constructed immediately to the south and to the north of the building. Automobilists can reach the parking spaces from the Horace Harding boulevard and Roosevelt Avenue gates. The City Building may be reached via the following transporta- tion lines: IKT, EMT and 2nd Avenue Lines to 111th Street Station Flushing-Ridgewood Trolley to 52nd Avenue Walk one block north to park Independent Subway - Queens line to Woodhaven Boulevard and Triborough Bus Q-23 to 51st Avenue The ice skating rink will be opened about the 1st of October. Form 26-5M-60241 155 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK TEL. REGENT 4-1000 For Release, Saturday September 13, 1941 The Department of Parks announces that the closing date for entries in the Amateur Photo Contest is Saturday, September 20. All pictures submitted by the contestants must represent scenes in parks, parkways, pools, beaches or playgrounds under the juris- diction of the Department of Parks during the year 1941. Brtrants in this contest will be divided into two age groups: up to 16 years and over 16 years. The pictures should be forwarded on or before the closing date, to the Park Department Director of the Borough in which the contestant re- sides. The names and addresses of the borough directors follow: Manhattan - Philip J. Crusie, Arsenal Building, 64 Street and Fifth Avenue, Central Park Brooklyn - Richard C. Jenkins, Litchfield Mansion, Prospect Park West and 5 Street Queens - James J . Mallen, The Overlook, Union Turnpike and Park Lane, Kew Gardens Bronx - George L. Quigley, Bronx Park East and Birchall Avenue, Bronx Park Richmond - A. M. Anderson, Clove Lakes Park, 1150 Clove Road, West New Brighton Prizes of substantial and practical value to photographers, such as: cameras and photographic supplies will be awarded to those attaining first, second and third places in each division. Form 26-5M-60241 155 Friday- September 12, 1941 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL., CENTRAL. PARK TEL. REGENT 4-1000 For Release- The Departmet of Parks announces that the City-wide finals of the baseball tournament for play- ground boys up to 16 years of age will take place at Clove Lakes Park, Victory Boulevard and Clove Road, West Brighton, Richmond, on Sunday, September 14, at 3:00 P.M. Inter-playground and inter-district games have been played in a l l the boroughs since the month of July to determine the best qualified teams for the inter-borough competitions. The game next Sunday afternoon will be played by two championship teams from the boroughs of Brooklyn and Richmond. Gold medals and sweatshirts bearing the sycamore leaf, emblem of the Park Department, will be awarded to the members of the winning team and silver medals to the losers. Form 26-5M-60241 155 ·BEF^ARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK For Release^ Friday, TEL. REGENT 4-1000 September 12, 1941 The Department of Parks announces that special ceremonies have been ar- ranged in connection with the awarding of prizes to those children in Crotona Park, Third and Fulton Avenues and 177 Street, Bronx, who have demonstrated their inter** est in the ^protection and preservation of this large and reconstructed 151 acre park. The ceremonies will take place at Crotona Park Recreation Center on Saturday, September 13, at 10:30 A. M., as the first event in the opening of the fall recrea- tion program since the swimming pool closed last week. Upon completion of construction at Crotona Park, the fifth largest park in the borough of the Bronx, and providing facilities for all types of recreational activities at each of the 11 separate playgrounds located within the area, the executives of the Park Department were anxious to minimize vandalism as well as to encourage the children to take an interest in maintaining the beauty and general neatness of the park. As a result, an organization, called the "Crotona Park Boosters", was formed in each of the 11 playgrounds. Membership in this organiza- tion was open to all children who have not reached their 18 birthday and who are interested in enforcing the following four standards: cleanliness, prevention of vandalism, participation in recreational activities and safety. Each one, who enlisted as a booster, became a voluntary helper of the De- partment of Parks, Police and Sanitation, and was entitled to wear the official badge of this organization. Four thousand boys and girls have been active members of the organization since its inception a few months ago and there has been a de- cided curtailment of such vandalism as smashing lights, carving names on benches and trees and displacing fixtures. There has also been a definite drop in play- ground accidents. A competitive point system was used to determine the standing of the va- rious playgrounds and scores were posted weekly. Individual points were credited to members of playground teams in inter-playground competition, members of safety -2- and sanitation squads, active members of newspaper staffs, and participants in es- say, poster and photographic contests. The following boys and girls earned the highest individual scores for the past two months: Rosalie Brown Playground #5 - 208 points Stanley Weiss Playground #3 - 187 points Melvin Schneider Playground #5 - 155 points Melvin Kaplan Playground #8 - 136 points Jeanette Yokel Playground #8 - 132 points Prizes for these 5 highest scorers will consist of cameras, fountain pens, tennis rackets and sweatshirts. The 11 playgrounds engaged in the Booster Campaign rank as follows: 1st Place - Playground #8 - 821 points 2nd Place - Playground #5 - 714 points 3rd Place - Playground #3 - 684 points 4th Place - Playground #6 - 683 points 5th Place - Playground #9 - 642 points 6th Place - Playground #2 - 567 points 7th Place - Playground #10 - 542 points 8th Place - Playground #1 - 369 points 9th Place - Playground #7 - 311 points 10th Place - Playground #4 - 212 points 11th Place - Playground #11 - 164 points In addition to the awarding of prizes next Saturday morning, the program will include: The Pledge of Allegiance and the Boosters' Pledge by all the children of the 11 playgrounds of Crotona Park; one act plays, dancing demonstrations and community singing of patriotic songs by members of the Boosters' Club, a basketball game between playground numbers 5 and 9 and an exhibition of various articles made by the Boosters' Handcraft Club, *** DEPARTMENT 0? PARKS Arsenal, Central Park FOR RELEASE Friday Tel. Regent 4-1000 September 12, 1941 The Department of Parks announces that a comprehensive program of rec- reational activities has been planned for the fall and winter months at the vari- ous gymnasia, indoor pools, and floodlighted playgrounds under its jurisdiction. All the gymnasia have adequate shower and dressing facilities and will be open from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily beginning Monday, September 15. The pro- gram of activities includes: basketball, handball, shuffleboard, volley ball, badminton, ping pong, track, calisthenics, gymnastics, group games, magic demon- strations, puppet and marionette shows, club meetings, and social dancing, with music supplied by the SPA Federal Music Project. The various g-mnasia are located as follows: Borough Gymnasia and Locations Manhattan Carmine Street, Carmine and Varick Streets Rutgers Place - 5 Rutgers'Placo Baruch - Rivington and Mangin Streets West 134 Street - 35 West 134 Street East 54 Street - 342 East 54 Street West 60 Street - West 60 Street, between 10 and 11 Avenues West 28 Street - 407 West 28 Street Cherry and Oliver - Cherry and Oliver Streets Brooklyn President Street - President Street and Fourth Avenue Richmond Cromwell Center - Victory Boulevard and Murray Hulbert Avenue, Tompkinsville, Staten Island Faber Park Recreation Building - Richmond Terrace at Faber Street, Port Richmond, Staten Island Basketball teams, desiring to use these gymnasia, are requested to ap- ply for the necessary permit to the Borough Directors, whoso names and addresses follow: Manhattan - Philip J. Cruise, Arsenal Building, 64 Street and Fifth Avenue, Central Park Brooklyn - Richard C. Jenkins, litchfield Mansion, Prospect Park West and 5 Strcot, Prospect Park Richmond - A. M. Anderson, Clovo Lakos Park, 1150 Clove Road, West Now Brighton Basketball tournaments arc being organized in all gymnasium centers for boys, girls and men of the surrounding neighborhood and medals will be awarded to the members of the winning teams. - 2 - Playground directors arc present to assist boys in various gymnastic stunts, A monster demonstration in gymnastics will be given by those attending those classes in the latter part of January. Indoor swimming pools, which may bo used free of charge, are located in each of the gymnasium buildings, in the borough of Manhattan, with the exception of the one located at Cherry and Oliver Streets In addition, there is a Park Department indoor swimming pool at 23 Street and Avenue A, Manhattan, and at Metropolitan and Bedford Avenues. Brooklyn. Swimming classes are conductod for beginners at all these pools. Anyone, wishing to learn how to swim, is invited to register at the pool nearest his home. Lessons in life saving axe also given to the advanced swimmers. At various intervals during the fall and winter seasons, swimming tournaments will be held for all age groups. Eleven of the outdoor pools will bo converted into active play areas and reopened for use on Saturday, September 13. These play centers are free to the public and arc open from 2 P.M. to 10 P;M. daily except Saturdays, Sundays and holidays, when the hours of operation will be from 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. Facilities will be provided for paddle tennis,,shuffle- board, basketball, softball and various group game's. Seventy-six of the Park Department outdoor recreation areas are equipped with modern floodlighting equipment and their facilities may be used until 10 P.M. each night for such activities as: soccer, field hocky,football, roller hockey, roller skating, horseshoe pitching, paddle tennis and handball. DEPARTMENT OF PARKS { if Friday September 12 , 1941 ARSENAL. CENTRAL PARK tOT KeUdSt - -- TEL. RESENT 4-1000 The Department of Parks announces that the City-wide finals of the senior softball tournament will take place at the Parade Grounds, Caton and Coney Island Avenues, Brooklyn, Saturday, September 13, at 3:00 P.M. Preliminary games between the various play- ground teams in each borough have been held during the past six weeks. Championship teams from the boroughs of Queens and Richmond will play next Sat- urday afternoon for the title of nCity-wide Baseball Champions of Park Department Playgrounds". * Gold medals and sweatshirts bearing the sycamore leaf, emblem of the Park Department, will be awarded to the members of the winning team and silver medals to the losers. ** * ** Form 26-5M-60241 ^ V * 155 t DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL. CENTRAL PARK fOf RpJpnS? TEL. REGENT 4-1000 September 11, 1941 BIKER'S ISIAND NUBSERY The nursery area now under cultivation consists of 25 acres of disinte- grated refuse and ash fill collected throughout New York City during the past ten years. The work of establishing the nursery began on September 1, 1940, when 200 inmates of the Hiker's Island Penitentiary were assigned to cultivate the soil and remove all undesirable debris 2 feet below the surface in preparation for planting. Upon completion of this work, they planted 13,477 sapling trees, consisting of Ori- ental planes, American elms and Norway maples which were furnished by the Park De- partment. In addition, thousands of trees and shrubs were planted to act as wind- breaks during the winter months. Next spring, 10,000 more sapling .trees will be set out in the nursery by the inmates. It will take about 7 years for these saplings to grow to suitable size for planting in parks, on parkways and City streets. Each year 10,000 sapling trees will be set out in the nursery, and each year 10,000 trees will be removed for use throughout the City park system. Approximately 23 acres of the nursery area have been planted with a grecr, manure crop which at maturity is plowed under to enrich and improve the texture ox the soil. In the past year, 3 of such crops have been grown and plowed under. Tho present crop, which is now being turned into the ground, consists of common millet and cow peas. Perennial rye and hairy vetch will shortly bo sown as a winter crop. There are approximately 1,250,000 park treos and about 1,000,000 street trees which require maintenance by the Park Department, Each year approximately 6,000 to 8,000 trees die as a result of vandalism, storm damage, being struck by automobiles, and from old age. The purpose of establishing a nursery on Riker's Island was not only to furnish the City of New York with thousands of trees at low cost, but also to give the inmates constructive and outdoor work. Hundreds of inmates will bo kept busy cultivating, watering and spraying the trees throughout the year. ***** * . -- · « -1 MEMORIAL ON SITE OF TIME CAPSULE TO BE DEDICATED A A Park Department Ceremonies to be held s -I ii '' -I \\ September 23, in Flushing Meadow Park: Mayor LaGuardia, | * >v Park Commissioner Moses to Officiate. NEW YORK, , N.Y. N.Y. Sept. Sept. 7 7 - 4 -- The Park Department announces that a monument of black granite, erected at Flushing Meadow Park to marJc the loca- tion of the Westinghouse Time Capsule on the old site of the New York World's Fair, will be dedicated at noon on Tuesday, September 23. At the public ceremonies sponsored by the Park Department, Robert Moses, Park Commissioner, will preside. David S. Youngholm, Westinghouse Vice President, will present the marker and Mayor F. H. LaGuardia, or his represen- tative, will accept the memorial on behalf of the City of New York. Executives of the principal companies which had exhibits at the Fair, members of the Fair administration, City officials and civic leaders will attend. The Time Capsule, a metal tube containing a record of our civilization, was buried 50 feet underground at the Westinghouse Building at the World's Fair to remain there for 5 000 years. The memorial shaft is one of the few lasting reminders of the Fair. The ten foot black granite monument standing on a white granite base marks the exact spot where the Time Capsule is buried at latitude 4.0° UU* 34".089# north of the equator, longitude 73° 50" A3".8-42 ;vest of Greenwich* -- 2-- in inscription on the base of the shaft reads: "The Time Capsule, deposited 50 feet beneath this spot on September 23, 1938} preserving for the future a record of the history, faiths, arts, sciences and customs of the people then alive. Scientists and engineers de- signed it; scholars chose its contentsj the V/estinghouse Electric and Manu- facturing Company placed it here at the beginning of the New York World's Fair, 1939-194-0, to endure for 5000 years." As part of the development of Flushing Meadow Park, the Park Depart- ment approved the construction and erection by Westinghouse of a memorial to mark the Time Capsule site. Five white granite seats, with black granite arm rests, face the shaft in a semi-circle from the south end of the memorial plot which is 4-5 by 30 feet in area. The area is paved with dolomite flagstones from the court of the former Swedish Pavilion at the Fair. The shaft weighs 7000 pounds. It is of American black granite quarried at Sauk Rapids, Minnesota. White granite for the base and benches was quarried at Salisbury, North Carolina. The Time Capsule, containing 35 articles of common use and a micro~ film record equivalent to 10,000,000 words of printed matter, was placed in its deep resting place on September 23, 1938, v/ith leaders of American science, industry and public affairs as witnesses. The Capsule is made of copper alloy called Cupaloy which can be tempered to the hardness of steel and yet has a resistance to corrosion equal to pure copper. The torpedo-shaped shell is lined with an envelope of heat- resistant glass set in waterproof wax. Packed into the Time Capsule is a "cross section of our times", selected with the advice of leading archaeologists, historians and scientists. % · - 3- Objects in the Capsule include a woman's hat, alarm clock, children's toys, cosmetics, tobacco, watch, eyeglasses, electric lamp, safety pin, pan: and pencil. There are 75 samples of materials such as fabrics, metal, alloys, plastics, coal and common seeds. Three and one-half reels of microfilm in the Time Capsule contain reproductions of more than 22,000 pages of text and 1,000 pictures taken from books, articles, magazines, newspapers, reports and catalogs. It would take an ordinary person more than a year to read the microfilm record. In addition to the microfilm there is a 15 minute newsreel of us and our times , and instruc- tions for building a modern movie projector for showing it. To preserve the memory of the Time Capsule and perhaps aid future archaeologists in finding it, a permanent Book of Record was distributed to libraries, museums, monastaries, temples, lamaseries and other repositories throughout the world. The exact location of the Time Capsule, determined by the U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, was included in the Book of Record. A "Key to the English Language" was prepared to enable future peoples to understand and translate our language, A new system of phonetic spBlling, a "high frequency" vocabulary and diagrams will enable them to pronounce English as it is spoken in America today. More than 4-,000,000 persons peered down into the "Immortal Well" at the World's Fair to view the Time Capsule. On September 23, 194-0, the Time Capsule Well was sealed, again with leaders of science, industry and public affairs taking part. Five hundred pounds of plastic compound,Y/as poured down the shaft of the Well, covering the Capsule. It is believed that the water repellaht plastic covering and the construction of the Capsule shell will preserve this "letter to the future" from any natural hazards for at least 5,000 years. % A replica of the Time Capsule is on display at the Hayden Planetarium of the American Museum of Natural History in New Xork City, v/here duplicates of the original contents also are shown# # * * 155 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK TEL. REGENT 4-1000 For Release- Monday September 6, 1941 Bids were opened today by the Department of Parks at the Arsenal Building on a contract for alterations to two sections of the main floor in the City 3uilding at Flushing Meadow Park* Borough of Queens. The work consists of various changes in the southwest and south- east corners of the building to provide added facilities for ice and roller skating patrons during the coming indoor skating season. The southeast corner of the main floor will be altered to provide a storage room, skate shop, first-aid room, women's locker and comfort facilities and offices for supervisors. The southwest corner will be provided with, men's locker and comfort facilities and a concession storage booth for foodstuffs and other materials. The work generally comprises construction of tile partitions with concrete cement finish including doors, trim, metal partitions and necessary plumbing and shower equipment. Also included is all necessary lighting installations and ventilating equipment. The three lowest bidders for the contract were: 1. Wm. C. Crowe, Inc. 335 last 82 Street,New York City $5,731.00 2. Great Eastern Construction Co«,Inc» 110 West 40 Street, New York City 6,835.00 .3. Rolin Contracting Company li West 42 Street, New York City 6,910.00 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS For Release Saturday ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK September 6,1941 TEL. RHJMT 4-1000 -The Department of Parks announces t h e c l o s i n g of t h e 17 outdoor swimming p o o l s and 5 beaches under i t s jurisdiction on September 7 t h , 1 9 4 1 . No charge w i l l be made f o r p a r k i n g f a c - i l i t i e s after that date at either Jacob Riis Park or Orchard Beach. The Pitch Putt Golf Course at Jacob Riis Park will re- main open for play until November 30th. Immediately after closing, the following listed pools will be converted into active play areas and reopened for use on Saturday, September 13th. MANHATTAN Hamilton Fish Pool East Houston and Sheriff Streets Colonial Pool Bradhurst Ave, W. 145th to 147th Streets Highbridge Pool Amsterdam Ave. & 173rd Street Thomas Jefferson Pool 111th to 114th Streets & First Avenue BROOKLYN Sunset Pool 7th Avenue & 43 Street McCarren Pool Driggs Avenue & Xorimer Street Red Hook Pool Clinton, Bay & Henry Streets Betsy Head Pool Hopkinson, Dumont & Livonia Streets BRONX Crotona Pool 173rd Street & Fulton Avenue Q.UEESB Astoria Pool 19th Street & 23rd Drive RICHMOND Faber Pool Faber S t r e e t between Richmond Terrace & K i l l Van Kull - 2 - Facilities will be provided for paddle tennis, snuffleboard, basketball, soft ball and various group games. Leagues will be formed in these sports and regular scheduled games will be held between the pool clubs. These play centers will be opened free to the public from 2 P.M. until 10 P.M. daily except Saturdays, Sundays and holidays when the hours of operation will be from 10 A.M. until 6 P.M. On Monday, September 8th, the indoor pools at 60th Street, Carmine Street, and 23rd Street will reopen, making available for the winter season the followirg indoor pools, open daily from 2 P.M. to 10 P.M. weekdays, and 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. Saturdays, Sundays and holidays. MANHATTAN E. 23rd S t . Baths- E. 23rd S t . & East River Dr. E. 54th S t . Baths-342 East 54th Street Rutgers P I . Baths- 5 Rutgers Place Carmine S t . Baths- Clarkson & 7th Ave. South W. 28th S t . Baths- 407 West 28th Street W. 60th S t . Baths- 232 West 60th Street W. 134th S t . Baths- 35 West 134th Street Rivingtoxi; S t . Baths- Rivington and Goerck S t r e e t BR00KIZN Metropolitan Baths- Bedford & Metropolitan Aves. During the season, now closing, 2,024,532 persons have availed themselves of t h e swimming f a c i l i t i e s provided by the 17 outdoor pools; of these 664,725 were children admitted during the free periods; 823,092 were children who paid 100 and 536,615 were adults who paid for admission. Form 26-SM-60241 155 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK pQT TEL. REGENT 4-1000 September 5 , 1941 iff > The Department of Parks announces the opening of j bids today on a contract in connection with the work for preparing the facilities for unloading fill from sanitation scows in Sound View Park, Borough of the Bronx. The contract provides for the construction of a timber platform supported on steel beams connected to the existing tubular sheet pile bulkhead which is also the site of an unloading plant to be built by the Department of Sanitation. The platform will be used to tie up scows preparatory to unloading and will also serve as a fender rack for protection of the sheet pile bulkhead. Also in- cluded is the construction of a timber dock on piles, repairs to an existing dock and construction of a timber ramp inshore for handling fill by truck from the unloading plant to the dumping areas. The three lowest bidders were the following: 1. Melwood Construction Corp. #35,865.00 507 Fifth Ave., New York City 2. Phoenix Construction Associates 39,481.00 41 Park Row, New York City 3. Spencer, White & Prentis, Inc. 44,450,00 10 West 40 Street, New York City DEPARTMENT OF PARKS FOR RELEASE Saturday ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK August 30,1941 TEL. REG-EM1 4-1000 The Department of P a r k s announces t h a t t h e Naumburg O r c h e s t r a w i l l g i v e t h e l a s t of a s e r i e s of f o u r Naumburg c o n c e r t s on Labor Day, Monday,September 1 , 8 : 1 5 P.M. on t h e M a l l , C e n t r a l P a r k . Victor Bay w i l l be the conductor for t h i s Labor Day Concert, and Allan Gallu, the tenor s o l o i s t . I Some of the selections included in the program are: Flower Song from "Carmen" by Bizet; Overture "Die Meistersinger" by Wagner; First Movement Symphony No. 5 by Beethoven; Eight Russian Folk Songs by Liadoff; and Emperor Waltz by Strauss. DEPARTMiM1 0 ? PARKS For Release ARS2NAL, CENTRAL PARK August 29,1941 TEL. REGE17T 4 - 1 0 0 0 The Department of Parks announces that the children of twenty-one Park Department Playgrounds vail celebrate the anniversary of their official opening to the public by participating in special programs of recreational activities during the month of September. Besides the usual activities such as: handball, Softball, paddle tennis, ping pong, punchball, basketball, shuffleboard, and horseshoe pitch- ing, there will be a variety of special events including novelty raceu, com- munity and group singing of patriotic songs, birthday party games, salute to the flag, one act plays, folk dancing,, magic shows, handcraft exhibitions, and musical and vocal selections. The September schedule for playground birthday celebrations is as follows: Time of Borough Op_ened CelebjratjLcm Manhattan To.rapkins Square Playground Sept. 5, 1936 2 P.M. 10 Street bet. Ave. A. & B. Roosevelt Playground Sept. 13, 1934 2 P.M. Forsythe & Houston Sts. Thomas Jefferson Playground Sept. 23, 1934 2 P.M. East 111 St. 2c First Ave. Brooklyn Riverdale & Snediker Avenues Sept. 1, 1935 2 P.M. Stillwell Ave. "; Avenue- H- . Sept, 2, 1935 2 P.M. New Lots Ave. Hz Elton Street Sept. 4, 1933 2 P.M. McCarren Park Playground Driggs Ave. & Lorimer Street Sept. 6, 1935 2 P.M. Sunset Park Playground Sept. 9, 1935 2 P.M. Sixth Ave. Co 44 Street Queens 30th Road, 45 & 46 Streets Sept. 10, 1937 10 A.M. to 4 P.il. Jackson Pond'Playground Sept. 20, 1935 . 2:30 P.M. 108 Street & Myrtle Avenue -2- Tine of Op_ened Bronx Crotona Park West Sept. 2, 1935 2 P.M. Fulton Ave, & East 173 Street Williarnsbridge Oval Sept. 11, 1937 4 P.M. 203 St. & Bainbridge Avenue Sept. 12, 1938 4 P.M. Bronx Park East & Brady Avenue Sept. 12, 1938 4 P.M. Bronx Park East & Boston Road Claremorit Park - Teller & Morris Sept. 14, 1940 4 P.M. Monroe & Mt, Eden Avenues Mt. Eden " c Morris Avenues Mott Haven Health Center Sept. 20, 1938 4 P.M. East 140 St. near Alexander Ave. Crotona Park East & East 173 St. Sept. 20, 1937 4 P.M. Van. Cortlandt Stadium Sept. 22, 1939 4 P.M. 240 Street c c Broadway Cauldwell Avenue Playground Sept. 23, 1935 4 P.M. Cauldwell Ave. &· 161 Street Bronx Park East & 'Taring Avenue Sept. 28, 1939 4 P.M. Richmond liinter & Bisrnark Avenues Sept. 19, 1936 4 P.M. New Brighton DEPARTMENT OF PARKS For Release Monday ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK August 25, 194.1 TEL. REGENT 4-1000 The Department of Parks announces that a concert will be given by the Associated Musicians of Greater New York, Local 802, under the sponsorship of Mayor F.H, LaGuardia, and John S» Burke of the Friedsam Foundation, at the Amphitheatre, Flushing Meadow Park, Queens, on Tuesday, August 26th at 8:30 P.M. This is the nineteenth free outdoor concert in a series of twenty, given by Local 802, at various park areas, during the current summer season. The last concert is scheduled for Inwood Hill Park, 207th Street and Seaman Avenue, Manhattan, on Thursday, August 28th at 8:30 P.M. In order to prepare the pool for the evening concert there xvill be no swimming after 6 P.M. OF PARKS A W |f|" ARSMAL, CENTRAL PARK . F0TREL3&SE FOT Saturday, T3L. RHJMT 4-1000 " August 231 1941 Department of Parks announces the completion of work in connec- tion with the construction of marginal playgrounds, two sitting areas with t. sand pits, walks and bicycle path located in a strip of park area along the west boundary of Prospect Park West extending from Garfield Place to 15th Oflh 4> & a/2*7 Street, Brooklyn, and also a new marginal playground at the Lincoln Road en- trance on the east side of the park. 0* sn^'^y ^ n li n e with the Department's policy to provide active recreational %/LUv1 . facilities around the boundaries of the large informal parks to preserve the interior landscaped areas for proper usage these new play units will serve one of the finer residential sections of Brooklyn. Supplementing the new 2-j| acre recreation area with bandshell and playground opposite 10th Street which vras opened this spring, a semi-circu- lar sitting area, 100 feet in diameter, has been provided adjacent to an existing park walk opposite 13th Street. Paved with bituminous macadam the area has a large central sand pit and a continuous row of benches for guardians of the children extending along the arc of the semi-circle. This sitting area is conveniently reached from the park entrance two blocks south at the 15th Street traffic circle. A similar area is located at the north end of the park adjacent to Garfield Place. The sloping ground between the existing park walk and the west property line wall necessitated the construction of a 3tf high semi-cir- cular concrete retaining wall surmounted by a 4* high chain link fence lined with continuous benches which face the centrally located sand pit. The old existing shade trees around the top of this wall have been preserved for the comfort of the mothers and children. A new entrance has been cut through the existing wall and chain link fence opposite Garfield Place to provide access to the existing park walk which leads to the sitting area. The project also included a bituminous surfaced, fence enclosed playground between the West Drive and the Borough Headquarters in Litchfield Mansion, located in a natural depression the existing planting on the adja- cent slopes has been supplemented with a variety of trees including flower- ing dogwood, hornbeam, sweet gum and scarlet oak. The existing path system which passed through the site was removed in favor of more direct and smoothly aligned connections with the entrances at 3rd and 5th Streets and with the main path system. --2-- The playground at 5th Street and Prospect Park West, a rectangular area 85' x 130' with a semi-circular bay extending from the full width of one side, has an open central free play area which is bordered by facilities ad- jacent to the boundary fence: 60 feet of fence protected kindergarten swings; 4 see-saws; a circular shower basin; 2 small playhouses; a 16' x 22' irriga- ted sand pit; 2 kindergarten slides and 2 drinking fountains. Continuous park benches extend along three sides of the sand pit area. An existing 30" diameter cypress tree located within the play area, has been protected by a 7' high wrought iron picket fence and an underplanting of English Ivy. A new 12' wide bituminous surfaced bicycle path, 4,400 feet long, starting near the 15th Street entrance winds through the trees and around the slopes roughly paralleling the West Drive to a point north of the main- tenance buildings where it swings westward to the park boundary and ends at the 3rd Street entrance. For a short section near this entrance the path parallels a new section of hexagonal block surfaced walk from which it is separated by a 4' high wrought iron picket fence. The playground at Ocean Avenue and Lincoln Road, approximately one- half acre in size, is semi-circular in shape, paved with asphalt so as to pro- vide year round usage and equipped with a shower basin-, a sand pit, kindergar- ten swings, slides, see-saws and a pipe frame exercise unit. A large open area provides space for general play, skating, and organized games. Around the perimeter continuous benches have been provided for mothers and guardians. A new brick comfort station has been built at the entrance to the park, adjacent to the playground, where it will serve the general public as well as the playground patrons. The project also included: the construction of a short spur to the bridle path from Flatbush Avenue to East Lake Drive; hitching posts and mounting blocks near the Lincoln Road entrance: extensive regrading, topsoiling and seeding; planting of approximately 65 small trees and large shrubs and planting of more than 3,250 ground cover plants to pre- vent erosion on steep side slopes. In connection with the development of all of these areas additional drainage facilities were installed, irrigation provided and 10 acres of lawn area were seeded. The work was carried out by the Work Projects Administration from plans prepared by the Department of Parks. In 1934 there were 119 playgrounds in the five boroughs; 59 of which have been reconstructed. At the present time there are 444 playgrounds in the Park system. * * * DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE Friday, T e l . REgent 4-1000 August 2 2 , 1941 The Department of Parks announces t h a t t h e City-wide f i n a l s of t h e checker tournament w i l l take p l a c e a t Heckscher Playground, Central P a r k , on S a t u r d a y , August 23, a t 2:00 P . M. The City championship in t h e Park Department chess tournament w i l l a l s o be determined a t Heckscher playground on Sunday, August 2 4 , a t 2:00 P . 11. Contestants i n both t h e s e tournaments have been d i v i - ded into t h r e e age g r o u p s : boys and g i r l s through 16 y e a r s of age; persons 17 t o 50 y e a r s ; and, t h o s e 50 y e a r s of age and over. There w i l l also be a s p e c i a l d i v i s i o n f o r men i n t h e s e r v i c e . Each borough h a s b e e n conducting p r e l i m i n a r y matches in each of these divisions for the past three weeks to determine i t s two best players for the City-wide finals. Arrangements will be made at a later date for a contest between the winners of the under 16 years classification and the over 50 years group in both checkers and chess. This additional contest attracts a great deal of interest, and is usually de- scribed as "Youth vs Age in Chess and Checkers" contest. Gold and silver medals will be awarded to the first and second place winners in each division at the finals. Bronze pins will be given to borough winners. * * * * DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CMTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE Wednesday, TEL. RID-EOT 4-1OOO August 20, 1941 The Department of Parks announces t h a t t h e City-wide f i n a l s of t h e s o f t b a l l tournament, b o t h j u n i o r and i n t e r m e d i a t e d i v i s i o n s , w i l l t a k e p l a c e a t Heckscher Playground, Central Park, according t o t h e following s c h e d u l e : Junior Division!Boys up t o 17 y e a r s ) - Wednesday, August SO a t 2:00 P . M. Senior Division!Boys 17 to 21 years) - Thursday, August 21 at 6:00 P. M. In the junior division, teams from the Boroughs of Manhattan and Richmond will play for the City championship, ?/hile in the intermediate classification teams from the Boroughs of Queens and Manhattan will play off for the t i t l e . Gold and silver medals will be awarded to the winner and runner-up in each division. In addition, the City champions in each division will receive sweatshirts bearing a sycamore leaf, the Park Department emblem. **** DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE Saturday, TEL. RHJENT 4-1OOO August 1 6 , 1941 The Department of Parks announces t h a t t h e City-wide f i n a l s of t h e paddle t e n n i s tournament f o r Park playground boys and g i r l s w i l l t a k e p l a c e a t North Meadow, Central P a r k , on Saturday, August 16, according t o t h e f o l l o w i n g s c h e d u l e : G i r l s J u n i o r D i v i s i o n (13 - 15 y e a r s ) - 11:00 A. M. G i r l s Senior D i v i s i o n (15 - 18 y e a r s ) - 11:00 A. M. Boys J u n i o r Division (13 - 15 years) - 2:00 P . M. Boys Senior Division ( 1 6 - 1 8 years) - 2:00 P . M. These f i n a l s w i l l i n c l u d e s i n g l e s and doubles matches i n a l l divisions. Gold and silver medals will be awarded to the winner and runner up in each division. As an added attraction, the Park Department in coopera- tion with the U. S. Paddle Tennis Association has arranged an exhi- bition paddle tennis match between Bobby Riggs, former national tennis champion, and Jack Slotnick, holder of the junior national paddle tennis championship. Jean Maco w i l l also be present and will play with Bobby Riggs in a doubles match. *** DEPARTMENT OF PARKS FOR RELEASE: Wednesday, ARSENAL, CMTRAL PARK August 1 3 , 1941 TEL. RE3-EOT 4-1000 The Department of P a r k s announces t h e completion of t h e r e c o n s t r u c t i o n and t h e reopening t o t h e p u b l i c of t h e s e v e n - a c r e Bushwick Park bounded by Knickerbocker and I r v i n g Avenues and by Suydam and S t a r r S t r e e t s . The park in the heart of one of the most congested residential areas in Brooklyn is surrounded by many blocks of three and four story apartment houses. The f i r s t steps in the modernization of the park to serve the needs of a l l age groups were taken in 1936 when a one-half acre playground was built in conformity with a development plan for the entire park. The playground contains a modern wading pool, irrigated sand p i t , adequate play apparatus and is surfaced with asphalt to provide a l l year round usage. The renovation and reconstruction of the remaining six and one-half acres, provide a large paved area in the center of the park which can be used for roller and ice skating, dancing and concerts. This area forms the hub of the plan, on the north side of which is a ball diamond; on the south, the playground and new hand- ball courts; and on the other two sides informal lawn areas. A new brick comfort station was built at the south side of the central paved area, adjacent to the playground. Included in the reconstruction are a new flagpole with an ornamental base; drinking fountains; benches; wrought iron, pipe-rail and chain link fences* asphalt, hex block and concrete block paving. Approximately three quarters of the entire park consists of informal lawns and planted areas for passive use. Offsets in the main perimeter walk and at three of the four corner entrances have established five secluded sitting areas, including one with an irrigated sand pit where small children can dig and work off some of their energy. It is expected that the adequate provisions made for active recreation for a l l age groups will make i t possible to preserve the new lawns and planting areas which heretofore were overrun and worn bare. In addition to the splendid groups of mature trees which were preserved in the reconstruction, approximately seventy-five new trees were planted including maples, planes, scarlet oaks and lindens. The work was carried out by the Work Projects Administration from plans prepared by the Department of Parks. In 1934 there were 119 playgrounds in the five boroughs; 59 of which have been reconstructed. At the present time there are 442 playgrounds in the Park system. * * * DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSSIAi, CENTRA.! PARK FOR RSLMSE: Tuesday, TEL. RHJENT 4-1000 August 12, 1941 TOURNAMENTS AND ACTIVITIES TO BE CONDUCTED IN PARK DEPARTMENT PLAYGROUNDS DURING- RBoAINDES OF THE SUMMER The Department of Parks announces that a variety of tournaments of both the active and passive types of recreation will be conducted for boys and girls of Park Department playgrounds during the remainder of the summer. Any boy or girl, who has not reached his 16th birthday is eligible to compete in the Checker Tournament which is going on in all Park Depart- ment playgrounds at the present time. There is also a separate division for persons 16 years of age and older. Each borough will conduct its own eliminations to select the two best players(either girls or boys) to repre- sent the borough in the city-wide finals which will take place at Heckscher Playground, Central Park, on August 23 and 24 at 2:00 P. M. A Chess Tournament is also being conducted in all Park playgrounds for persons of identical age groups. Borough eliminations will determine the player who is most conversant with the intricate moves and strategic maneuvering of "pieces" to represent the borough in the city championship tourney, which will take place at Heckscher Playground, Central Park, on August 23 and 24 at 2:00 P. M. Men and women, 50 years of age and over, will be given an oppor- tunity to demonstrate their skill in checkers and chess by entering a tourna- ment restricted to persons of that age group. The city-wide finals will be held at Heckscher Playground, Central Park, on August 23 and 24 at 2 P. M. G-old and silver medals will be awarded to the first and second place winners of the city finals in both the Checker and Chess Tournaments-. Bronze medals will be awarded to the borough finalists. Finally, there will be a checkers and chess contest between the winners of the under 16 years classification and the over 50 years group. This contest attracts a great deal of interest and is usually described as "Youth vs. Age in the Battle of Wits". Medals will also be awarded to the winners of these contests. The Park Department, in cooperation with the Defense Recreation Committee, has decided to include a separate division in the checker and chess tournaments for the members of the armed forces of the United States. -2- Any man in the service, who is desirous of competing in either one of these contests, should report, in uniform, at Heckscher Playground, Central Park, on August 23 and 24 at 2:00 P. M. Prizes, consisting of gold, silver and bronze medals will be presented to 1st, 2nd and 3rd place winners. A contest in "jacks", the game that is popular with every girl, will take place in Park Department playgrounds during the next few weeks. Girls 15 years of age and under are eligible to enter this contest. The city finals, at which the two best girls from each of the five boroughs will compete for the city championships, at Heckscher Playground, Central Park, on August 27, at 2:00 P. M. Gold, silver and bronze medals will be awarded to the 1st, 2nd and 3rd place winners in the city finals. Entries for the amateur photography contest depicting "Youth and Age" in city parks will close on September 20. All pictures submitted by the contestants must represent scenes in parks, parkways, pools, beaches or playgrounds under the jurisdiction of the Department of Parks during the year 1941. Entrants in this contest will be divided into two age groups: up to 16 years and over 16 years. All pictures must be submitted on or before the closing date, to the Park Department Director of the Borough in which the contestant resides. The names and addresses of the borough directors are as follows: Manhattan - Philip J. Cruise, Arsenal Building, 64 Street and Fifth Avenue Brooklyn - Richard C. Jenkins, Litchfield Mansion, Prospect Park West and 5 Street, Prospect Park Queens - James J. Hallen, The Overlook, Union Turnpike and Park Lane South, Forest Park, Kew Gardens Bronx - George L. Quigley, Bronx Park East and Birchall Avenue, Bronx Park Richmond - A. M. Anderson, Clove Lakes Park, Clove Road, west of Victory Boulevard, New Brighton The trailer puppet and marionette show, which has visited various Park playgrounds in each of the five boroughs since last May and given per- formances to approximately 52,000 children and adults, will continue to be presented, according to schedule, until the final performance on August 19, Every show, until that date, will be given at designated playgrounds in the Borough of Queens. --3-- Interest in this type of activity became so widespread, that an- other travelling puppet and marionette troupe was organized. The program of this troupe includes the manipulation of hand puppets, community singing and magic demonstrations. Since their first appearance on July 28, magic and puppetry clubs have been organized in several of the playgrounds visited. In many instances, the children put on their own magic shows, and constructed and manipulated their own'puppets. According to the schedule, this newly formed troupe will continue to give two performances daily, at 11 A. M. and 2 P. M. , at designated playgrounds until the final show on August 29, The finals of the Children's Amateur Singing Contest will be held in the month of September at the Mall, Central Park. The participants in this contest will be divided into two age classifications: 8 to 12 years and 13 to 16 years, with separate divisions for boys and girls, A contest for amateur musicians is also planned for the early part of September. Boys and girls, 16 years of age and under, are eligible to compete. All types of instruments will be permitted. In the active game classification, the following tournaments will take place as follows: Activity Age Group Date of Finals Paddle Tennis Boys and girls - 13 to 15 years August 16 singles and doubles Boys and girls - 15 to 17 years singles and doubles A singles player cannot be a member of a doubles team. Shuffleboard Men and women - over 18 years September 6 Volley Ball Girls - 16 ysars of age and under September 21 Gold, silver and bronze medals will be awarded to the 1st, 2nd and 3rd place winners in the city finals of each of the above tournaments. Any boy or girl, who is interested in entering the tournaments, whether they are of the active or passive game type, is requested to apply to the playground director in charge of the Park Department playground nearest his home. Early registration is important because unless a contestant parti- cipates in the preliminary stages of elimination for each tournament, he is ineligible to represent his borough in the city finals. * * * : ^" DEPARTMENT OF PARKS B t t F TEL. REGENT 4-1000 August 4, 1941 The Department of Parks announces the completion of the f i r s t section of the newly developed Shore Road Park, Brooklyn, extending from Bay Ridge Avenue to 72nd Street, adjacent to the Belt Parkway. This area comprises a short section of the project for the general development of Shore Road Park, g£ miles in length be- tween Owl's Head Park and Fort Hamilton, a water-front park which borders the full length of the east shore of the Narrows. Consisting of a vriLde variety of active recreational f a c i l i t i e s including playgrounds, comfort stations, athletic fields and field houses, court games areas, bicycle paths, promenades, e t c . , approaching completion along the upper level of Shore Road and the lower level of the parkway, the entire development will be finished rapidly in successive stages. Preparatory to the new work and to pennit a coordinated development be- tween the Shore Road promenade and the lower park area, i t was necessary to remove a considerable quantity of old paving, benches and drinking fountains. The new pro- menade along the west side of Shore Road consists of a 12' wide central walk paved with hexagonal t i l e s flanked by two 6' wide concrete block paved panels containing benches and trees. A wrought iron picket fence has been set in the curb along the west side of the promenade. From the benches at the top of the slope fine views of the Narrows and Staten Island may be enjoyed. A large irrigated sand pit has been constructed in an offset of the promenade opposite 70th Street. Entrances to the lower area from the promenade have been made at a point midway between Bay Ridge Avenue and 70th Street and directly opposite 72nd Street. Wide bituminous surfaced walks lead to the oval grass surfaced free play area de- veloped in the bay formed by the curve in Shore Road. Benches and drinking foun- tains have been spaced at frequent intervals along the walks and around the play field. A wrought iron picket fence separates the park area from the parkway. A large quantity of trees and shrubs have been planted on the side slopes and around the play area including the Elms, Oaks, Planes, Hawthornes, Flowering Grab Apples, Beach Plums, Sweet Ferns, Elderberries, Bayberries, Suma<:3and several varieties of bank binding roses. The project which was designed by the Department of Parks and constructed by the Work Projects Administration also included drainage, irrigation and park lighting. * * * DEPARTMENT OF PARKS For Release ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK TEL. REGENT 4-1000 August 4, 1941 The Department of Parks announces the completion of the f i r s t section of the newly developed Shore Road Park, Brooklyn, extending from Bay Ridge Avenue to 72nd Street, adjacent to the Belt Parkway. This area comprises a short section of the project for the general development of Shore Road Park, Sfe miles in length be- tween Owl's Head Park and Fort Hamilton, a water-front park which borders the full length of the east shore of the Narrows. Consisting of a wide variety of active recreational f a c i l i t i e s including playgrounds, comfort stations, athletic fields and field houses, court games areas, bicycle paths, promenades, e t c . , approaching completion along the upper level of Shore Road and the lower level of the parkway, the entire development will be finished rapidly in successive stages. Preparatory to the new work and to permit a coordinated development be- tween the Shore Road promenade and the lower park area, i t was necessary to remove a considerable quantity of old paving, benches and drinking fountains. The new pro- menade along the west side of Shore Road consists of a 12* wide central Walk paved with hexagonal t i l e s flanked by two 6' wide concrete block paved panels containing benches and trees. A wrought iron picket fence has been set in the curb along the west side of the promenade. From the benches at the top of the slope fine views of the Narrows and Staten Island may be enjoyed. A large irrigated sand pit has been constructed in an offset of the promenade opposite 70th Street, Entrances to the lower area from the promenade have been made at a point midway between Bay Ridge Avenue and 70th Street and directly opposite 72nd Street. Wide bituminous surfaced walks lead to the oval grass surfaced free play area de- veloped in the bay formed by the curve in Shore Road. Benches and drinking foun- tains have been spaced at frequent intervals along the walks and around the play field. A wrought iron picket fence separates the park area from the parkway. A large quantity of trees and shrubs have been planted on the side slopes and around the play area including the Elms, Oaks, Planes, Hawthornes, Flowering Crab Apples, Beach Plums, Sweet Ferns, Elderberries, Bayberries, Suma<:3and several varieties of bank binding roses. The project which was designed by the Department of Parks and constructed by the Work Projects Administration also included drainage, irrigation and park lighting. * * * DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK For Release August 4, 1941 TEL. REGENT 4-1000 The Department of Parks announces the completion of the f i r s t section of the newly developed Shore Road Park, Brooklyn, extending from Bay Ridge Avenue to 72nd Street, adjacent to the Belt Parkway. This area comprises a short section of the project for the general development of Shore Road Park, 2^ miles in length be- tween Owl's Head Park and Fort Hamilton, a water-front park which borders the tffcll length of the east shore of the Narrows. Consisting of a wide variety of active recreational f a c i l i t i e s including playgrounds, comfort stations, athletic fields and field houses, court games areas, bicycle paths, promenades, e t c . , approaching completion along the upper level of Shore Road and the lower level of the parkway, the entire development will be finished rapidly in successive stages. Preparatory to the new work and to penn.it a coordinated development be- tween the Shore Road promenade and the lower park area, i t was necessary to remove a considerable quantity of old paving, benches and drinking fountains. The new pro- menade along the west side of Shore Road consists of a 12' wide central walk paved with hexagonal t i l e s flanked by two 6* wide concrete block paved panels containing benches and trees. A wrought iron picket fence has been set in the curb along the west side of the promenade. From the benches at the top of the slope fine views of the Narrows and Staten Island may be enjoyed. A large irrigated sand pit has been constructed in an offset of the promenade opposite 70th Street. Entrances to the lower area from the promenade have been made at a point midway between Bay Ridge Avenue and 70th Street and directly opposite 72nd Street. Wide bituminous surfaced ?hitheatre, Flushing Meadow Park, Queens, has been postponed until next Wednesday, August 6, at 8:30 P. M| There will be 7000 seats at 20jf and seats in the reserve section will s e l l for 35#. Tickets will be on sale a t the box office starting August 1st, Phoned: City News - WOrth 2-6200 10:40 A.M. Standard News - BEekman 3-2130 10:45 A.M. Daily Mirror - Murray Hill 2-1000 10:42 A.M. Bronx Home News - Mott Haven 9-4400 10:48 A.M. Brooklyn Citizen - Triangle 5-6700 10:52 A$M. Brooklyn Daily lagle - MAih 4-6200 10:55 A.M. P.M. - STerling 3-2501 10:58 A.M. it.I. DAILY STAR JOURNAL - STillwell 4-6600 UtO2 A.M. L . I . Daily | r e s s - REpublic 9-3200 11:09 A.M. S. I . Advance Gibraltar 2-4200 11:10 A.M. ME 7/30/41 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS For Release Monday, ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK TEL.. REGENT 4-1000 July 28, 1941 The Department of Paries announces the completion and opening of a new play- ground in Queens at the junction of Laurelton Parkway and Southern Parkway sections of the Belt Parkway System. At the same time four sitting areas with sandpits assH a small playground are approaching completion along the laurelton Parkway northward to Southern Parkway. Developed on a narrow strip of park area between the Montauk Division of the Long Island Railroad and North Conduit Avenue, t h e new playground will serve the residents of laurelton north and west of the parkway. The p l o t , 80« x 650*, i s com- pletely enclosed by a high chain link fence with three wide gate entrances provided from North Conduit Avenue. A wide concrete block panel planted with a row of twenty- four pin oaks extends along the entire length of the north fence. Detached units of continuous benches have been set between the t r e e s . The long rectangular playground surfaced with bituminous material i s divided into three main sections by chain link fencing and t r e e planted concrete block sur- faced malls. These units are subdivided into use areas by low fencing and continu- ous rows of benches. The compartment at the east end has a large open free play area bordered by a pipe frame exercise unit, two slides, and a fence protected battery of swings for older children. Westward, separated from t h e play apparatus area by chain link fencing with gates, i s the larger central court games area containing two concrete surfaced hand- ball courts, two combination basketball and volleyball courts and two paddle tennis courts. A flag pole stands near the cross axis of t h i s area adjacent t o the south fence. The west end of the playground contains f a c i l i t i e s f o r pre-school children, including open free play areas, a 30' battery of chair swings, two slides, four see- saws and an irrigated sand-pit with benches on three sides for use of the guardians who accompany the children and a large circular shower basin. The existing planting on the slopes south of the playground adjacent to the railroad right-of-way has been supplemented with 1,500 bank binding honeysuckles and Boston ivy. The narrow triangular park areas flanking the playground to the east and west have been provided with t r e e s , shrubs and grass areas. The project, designed by the Department of Parks and constructed by the Work Projects Administration, also included grading, drainage, irrigation and drinking fountains. In 1934 there were 119 playgrounds in the five boroughs; 58 of which have been reconstructed. At the present time there are 441 playgrounds in the Park system. DEPARTMENT OF PARKS For Relent Saturday ARSENAL., CENTRAL PARK TEL.. REGENT 4-1000 ror release J u l y 26thj 1941 A team of eight from each of the Department of Perks' ten municipal courses will tee off at 8 A.M. on Sunday, July 27th, at Forest Park to play for the Municipal Team Championship and the right to qualify for the "Newbold Morris Tournament." These eighty men represent the top eight men from each course who qualified Ia3t Sun- day in their course championships. The team championship will be 36 holes of medal play, with the four lav/ gross players representing any one course, the City-wide Champions. The thirty-two low gross scorers in the team championships will qualify for the Municipal Championship, starting Saturday and Sunday, August 2 and 3, in 18 holes of match play on the LaTourette course, btaten Islend. The semi-finals will be played on the same course on Saturday, August 9, in 36 holes of match play. On Sunday, August 10, the two fine l i s t s will battle i t out for the t i t l e of the Municipal Champion and the "Kewbold Morris Trophy," in 36 holes of match play. Tom Strafaci, l a s t year's Municipal Champion, i s the favorite to retain his t i t l e . Last Sunday Strafaci shot a 71 to win the Dyker Beach course t i t l e . Beside winning the crown last year, Tom has an enviable record in competition; qualifier for the National itaateurs in 1936, 1937, 1938 and 1939; Staten Island Open Champion in 1938j runner up in the Long Island Championship in 1938} f i n a l i s t in the Metropolitan Championship in 1940; qualifier for the National Public Links Tournament and semi-finalist in the Metropolitan Public Links Tournement this year. Joe Sage, 1940 Mosholu champ, finalist in last year's tournament, moved over t o the Split lock course this year and won the course t i t l e . Sage i s a former N.Y.U. intercollegiate linksman and runner up in the New Jersey Public Links Championship in 1939. The Junior golfers are well represented, lead by Armand Bassi, Senior Course Champion at Pelham, and Junior Champ at Split-Rock; Jack Breakstone, t i t l e i s t at Van Cortlandt; Roger Shepard, Metropolitan Junior Champion in 1940 from Silver Lake; Sven Martinsen, Champion of Silver Lake; Bob Drasser, Flushing High School Ace, Junior Champion in 1940 and 1941 at Kissena and Robert Schlasser, 1940 Junior King at Forest Park. * * #* Department of Parks For Release Friday Arsenal, Central Park July 25,1941 Tel. Regent 4-1000 The Flushing Meadow Amphitheatre, located in Flushing Meadow Park at the junction of Horace Harding Boulevard and Grand Central Parkway, will be opened by Mayor LaGuardia on Saturday evening, Jul3r 2$th at 8:30 P.M. After brief ceremonies the Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra will give a special concert. This is the first time that the Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra has left Lewisohn Symphony where they play nightly during the sunimer season. The conductor will be Efrera Kurtz and Joan Field will be the violin soloist. The program will be VIeber's "Euryanthe" Overture; Lalo: Symphonie Espagnole; Beethoven's Symphony No. 7 in A Major; Wagner's Rienzi Overture. Tickets for the performance are on sale at the Steinway Hall Box Office, 113 West 57th Street and at all Postal Telegraph Offices. The box office at the Amphitheatre will be opened at 10 A.M. , Saturday morning. In case of rain the performance will be held Sunday night. The swimming pool will open to the public on Sunday morning at 10 A.M. VJeek days and Saturday morning,- the pool will be free to children under fourteen years of age* After 1 P.M. on week days, and all day Sunday prices will be 100 for children under fourteen and 200 for all over fourteen. jB^v-*-**-^^ DEPARTMENT OF PARKS Q ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE:* Friday. TEL. RJEMT 4-1000 J u l y 25> 1 9 4 1 The Department of P a r k s announces t h e f o r m a t i o n of a n o t h e r t r a * . v e i l i n g puppet and m a r i o n e t t e t r o u p e . To d a t e , 52,000 c h i l d r e n have e n - joyed t h e puppet and m a r i o n e t t e shows of t h e Park Department travelling theatre. The program i n connection w i t h t h e newly formed troupe w i l l i n - clude t h e m a n i p u l a t i o n of hand p u p p e t s , community singing and magic d e - monstrations. In many of the playgrounds, magic and puppetry clubs have been or- ganized. Children put on their own magic shows, construct and manipulate their own puppets. The newly formed puppet and marionette troupe, which will put i on a show, demonstrate and i n t e r e s t thousands of a d d i t i o n a l children, w i l l v i s i t 26 playgrounds from July 28 t o August 29. Two performances w i l l be given daily at 11 A. M. and 2 P. M, at each of the following l o c a t i o n s : Monday, July 28 Lindsay Playground, Lorimer & Johnson Avenue, Brooklyn Tuesday, July 29 Betsy Head, Hopkinson and Dumont Avenues, Brooklyn Wednesday, July 30 Bedford Avenue and Avenue X, Brooklyn Thursday, July 31 S t i l l w e l l Avenue and Avenue U, Brooklyn Friday, August 1 Neptune Avenue and West 28 S t r e e t , Brooklyn Monday, August 4 Crotona Park, Crotona Park East & Charlotte S t r e e t , Bronx Tuesday, August 5 Lyons Square Playground, Aldus, Bryant & Whitlock Aves.,Bronx Wednesday, August 6-Mullaly Playground, 165 Street and Jerome Avenue, Bronx Thursday, August 7 Williamsbridge Playground, S. 208 S t . & Bainbridge Ave.,BiDiK Friday, August 8 Ciccarone Playground, East 188 Street & Hughes Avenue, Bronx Monday, August 11 S t . Mary's West, East 146 Street & S t . Ann's Avenue, Bronx Tuesday, August 12 S t . James Playground, East 193 Street & Jerome Avenue, Brorx Wednesday,August 13-Riis Park, Rockaway , Queens Thursday, August 14-Flushing Memorial Playground, Bayside Avenue and 25 Avenue, 149-150 S t r e e t s , Queens Friday, August 15 Dry Harbor Playground, 80 S t . & Myrtle Ave., Glendale, Queens Monday, August 18 Von Dohlen Playground, 138 S t . & Archer Place,Jamaica, Queens Tuesday, August 19 0'Connell Playground, 196 Street and 114 Ave.,St.Albans,Queens Wednesday,August 20-0'Connor Playground, 32-33 Aves. & 210 S t r e e t , Bayside,Queens Thursday, August 21-30th Road Playground, 30 Road & 45-46 S t s . , Astoria, Queens Friday, August 22 Mahoney Playground, Beechwood & Crescent Aves.,New Brighton, Staten Island Monday, August 25 De Matti Playground, Tompkins Avenue, Rosebank, S. I . Tuesday, August 26 Clove Lake, Victory Boulevard & Clove Road, West Brighton,S.I,, Wednesday, August 27-Lincoln Avenue Playground, Midland Beach, Staten Island Thursday, August 28-Abraham Levy Playground, Jewett & Cast l e t on Avenues, S. I . Friday, August 29 McDonald Playground, Forest Avenue near Broadway, West Brighton, Staten Island D£>ARTMHOT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE Tuesday TEL. RHJfflU 4-1000 J u l y 2 2 , 1941 The P a r k Department announces t h a t b i d s were opened today on a c o n t r a c t f o r repaving a p o r t i o n of t h e Queens s e c t i o n of t h e Bronx-Whitestone Parkway between approximately 26 S t r e e t and Northern Boulevard, Borough of Queens. The work c o n s i s t s of t h e p l a c i n g of a bituminous macadam t o p course on a broken stone b a s e , i n c l u d i n g r e c o n s t r u c t i o n of curbing and drainage f a c i l i t i e s i n a r e a s where t h e road s u r f a c e has become u n - duly depressed because of t h e g e n e r a l l y poor subsurface conditions e x i s t i n g i n t h e low marsh a r e a s through which a p o r t i o n of t h e parkway traverses. Included in the contract is the grading, topsoiling and seed- ing of lawn areas and transplanting of various trees and shrubs. The three lowest bidders for the work were the following: 1. Frank Mascali & Sons, Inc. |19,437.20 4634 Third Avenue, Bronx, N. Y. 2. William P. McDonald Construction Co. 21,233.50 33-15 Lawrence Street, Flushing, N. Y. 3. J. Leopold & Company 21,721.40 60 East 42 Street, New York City * * * * * 1/ DEPARTMENT OF PARKS -. p j Tuesday, CENTRAL PARK ARSENAL CENTRAL ARSENAL, PARK * *'OT MIKUM OT MIKUM U2 . 1941 July U2 July TEL. REGENT 4-1000 S0323 delivered 7/21/41 1 develop, plan 1 location map Ttle Depart;ment of Parks announces the completion and opening of a new playground and comfort station on the 3/4 acre plot bounded by Avenue nV", East 24 Street, Gravesend Neck Road and Bejlord Avenue, Brooklyn. Lying midway between the William E. Kelly Memorial Playground and the Bill Brown Memorial Playground, which are located l/S mile north and south respectively, t h i s new addition approximates a desirable spacing for these neighborhood recreational units. The large recreational field at the north end of Marine Park i s about one mile to the east. Completely enclosed with a chain link fence, entrance to the new playground i s afforded by two wide double gates leading from Avenue "V" and one double gate from Gravesend Neck Road. New concrete walks have been cen- M tered in the 24' sidewalk area along Avenue T" and Bedford Avenue with a row of pin oaks on each side in panels of concrete blocks. Continuous sec- tions of benches have been placed against t h e Avenue "TP property line fence adjacent to the entrances. A concrete walk extends along East 24 Street and Gravesend Neck Road with a single row of trees spaced in a concrete block strip adjacent to the playground fence. Two groups of benches are placed between the trees along Gravesend Neck Road. The playground is subdivided into three units by two concrete block paved panels with a double row of benches spaced between the shade trees. The surface of the area i s smooth bituminous macadam. A brick comfort station and recreation building has been built in the large central compartment between t h e two entrances from Avenue ffVM. A 32' diameter shower basin i s centered in a large open space north of the building. The subdivision along Bedford Avenue, reserved for pre-school children contains see-saws, slides and chair-swings protected by a chain link fence. A sand pit irrigated to permit the sand to be cleaned i s in the south- east corner bounded by benches. The smallest of the three units, lying a t the tapered end of the plot along Sast 24 Street contains a pipe frame exercise unit, two play slides and swings for older children. The playground was constructed by the Work Projects Administration from plans prepared by the Department of Parks. In 1934 there were 119 play- grounds; 58 of which have been reconstructed. At present there are 440 play- grounds in the Park system, * * * * DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CSOTRAL PARK FOR RELE&SS Monday. TM,. RHJMT 4-1000 July 21, 1941 The Department of Parks announces the completion of construction in connection with the development of certain areas of the Queensbridge Park V ^ 3 v- playground development. This new recreational facility undertaken as an ad- >D junct to the Queensbridge Municipal Housing Project at the east end of the Queensborough Bridge which was opened for occupancy last year £s expected not only to be instrumental in avoiding wear and tear on the landscaped areas around the housing development formerly used for play purposes, but also to meet the recreational needs of this rapidly growing section of the City. The playground is adjacent to the housing project on two sides, facing the south boundary and extending in part under the bridge approaches between 21 Street and Vernon Boulevard, and bordering the west front of the housing in the area between Vernon Boulevard and the Bast River. Three and a half acres of land under the bridge were released for the use of the Park Department by the Commissioner of Public Works. The old State Barge office property was given to the City by the State for park use at the request of the Commissioner of Parks. This plot contained 3 acres. The balance of the 24-J-acre park was acquired by the Housing Authority. The southerly section lying alongside and under the bridge struc- ture has been developed for specialized intensive forms of recreation adapted to the needs of various age groups. Central to this section is a new comfort station located on the line of 10 Street and surrounded by play apparatus for small children: sand pit, wading pool, swings, etc., and extending to the east a series of game areas for older patrons: volleyball, basketball and handball courts. The area westward to Vernon Boulevard has been left open -2- for general play purposes such as softball and group games. Flanking the entire development on the north, as a transition between the park area and the housing grounds, is a thirty-foot wide mall bordered by trees and benches. Trees have also been planted within the playground to furnish shade and to mark the separations between the various use areas. The waterfront development, a plot of thirteen acres on the west side of Vernon Boulevard and north of the Queensborough Bridge, has more the character of a neighborhood park although it too is largely devoted to active forms of recreation. The path system encloses an oval field large enough to accommodate football and four softball diamonds. A smaller oval lawn con- tains an inner paved roadway for use as a bicycle and roller skating area. A small children's playground is tucked into the northeast corner on Vernon Avenue. The river front itself has been provided with a new seawall backed by a broad promenade plentifully supplied with benches overlooking the river and the Manhattan skyline. At the south end of the park, under the north parapet of the bridge is a modern concession building. South of this build- ing and under the bridge structure is space allocated for a future bank of fourteen tennis courts. The various areas outlined by the walk systems have been graded, topsoiled and seeded to lawn or planted with trees and shrubs. Before the area under the bridge can be opened to the public, the Department of Public Works must erect "pans" under the bridge to protect people in the area from objects falling off the structure. Plans for the entire development were prepared by the Design Divi- sion of the Department of Parks, and the work was performed by the Work Pro- jects Administration. In 1934 there were 119 playgrounds in the five boroughs; 58 of which have been reconstructed. At present there are 438 playgrounds in the Park system. ' §J-u^J 4 3 -<-*$ DEPARTMMT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE: " Sunday, T e l . RESENT 4-1OOO , July 20,1941 A d --># v 0 The Department of Parks announced the gift by the Long Island College Hospital to the City of four parcels of land assessed at #46,500. in the block bounded by Hicks Street, Amity Street, Columbia Street and Pacific Street, Brooklyn. Deeds to the property were forwarded to the Park Department by Tracy S. Voorhees, president of the Board of Regents of the Long Island College Hospital, This gift of land for conversion into a park was made by the hospital from a special fund provided from outside sources specifically for this purpose. The new playground r e - places some of the poorest tenements in Brooklyn. The hospital's generous land donation w i l l provide the nucleus of a park to be located in the blocks bounded by Columbia Street, Pacific Street, Hicks Street and Congress Street, an area comprising some 160,000 square feet with a frontage of approximately 470 feet on Hicks Street and a depth of 340 feet on Amity Street. The remaining property to be included in the park will be acquired by condemnation in connection with the Hicks Street widening which was approved by the Board of Estimate on June 26, 1941. The Park Department has been anxious to provide a play area in t h i s neigh- borhood since 1934 but no city-owned land vm.s available and no funds for land acquisition could be obtained. The existing temporary playground at Amity Street and Columbia Street will be abandoned and the two blocks will be combined into one large parcel. The whole area will be developed for park purposes. The part of the park facing the hospital will be a passive recrea- tional area and behind t h i s area, and further from the hospital, playground -2- f a c i l i t i e s will be installed. With the widening of Hicks Street, this will remove the active play area 200 feet from the nearest part of the hospital property and 385 feet from the nearest hospital building. Facilities in the playground will include a wading pool, children's play area, softball field, basketball courts , handball courts, paddle tennis, shuffleboard courts, a roller-skating area and a comfort station. For some time past, the hospital authorities have been desirous . not only of improving the appearance of the neighborhood adjacent to the hospital but also facilities for health through r e s t and recreation for the population of t h i s congested d i s t r i c t . The plan originally was taken up with the late Borough President Raymond V. Ingersoll and Councilman G-enevieve B. Earle who suggested i t to the Park Department in the Fall of 1939. Sub- sequently, Borough President John Cashmore continued to cooperate with the Park Department and the hospital in the park acquisition. The Hospital Board of Regents in t h e i r efforts to obtain this im- provement have also sought to benefit the several important nearby institu- tions, aside from the Long Island College Hospital, doing hospital or medi- cal work, including the long Island College of Medicine, Polhemus Memorial Clinic, the Hoagland laboratory and St. Peter's Hospital, a l l of which are in the immediate neighborhood of the area which w i l l be devoted to the new park. The purchase of the land for park purposes from a special fund i s part of a long-term program of development which is being carried on by the Long Island College Hospital at the present time. The hospital is one of Brooklyn's oldest medical institutions, having been established in 1858. * * * * OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK For Release. Sat TEL. RESENT 4-1000 July 19, 1941 The largest tennis tournament ever held in the metropolitan area, in which over twenty-four hundred men, women and juniors entered the pre- liminary rounds held on a l l the Park tennis courts, will reach the final rounds on Saturday, July 19, on the Department of Parks'courts located on Handall's Island. One hundred and seventy-four players, the quarter-finalists in their respective borough tournaments, will play for the Municipal Tennis Championships, In the Manhattan Borough tournament Bill Lurie, runner up in last year's Municipal Championships and former Metropolitan t i t l e holder won the men's singles; the women's crown went to Virginia Burrell, a former Californian who learned her tennis from the famous Bundy family; Mac Kahn, 1118 1940 Junior Champion, retained his t i t l e ; Barney Diamond and Bernie Levy won the men's doubles and Virginia Burrell made i t a double win by pairing with Betty Grimes, in the women's doubles. Miss Grimes was the finalist in this year's New York State Junior Girls Tournament and is the co-holder of the State doubles t i t l e with Judy Atterbury. Due to two week-ends of rain, the remainder of the borough championships will be sandwiched in between the play for the City t i t l e . The largest draw of the tournament i s the Men's Singles with 36 en- trants. Seeded number one is Bill Lurie, Manhattan Champion and winner of the Metropolitan Crown three time©; Vincent Paul from Queens, who has been playing excellent tennis a l l season in national tournaments, the Long Island and Queens Public Parks Champion, is seeded second; in third place is Al Doyle, also from Queens, finalist with Paul this year in the Queens Public Park Champion- ship, and a former seeded star in the National Public Parks ranks. Don Hume of Brooklyn, former Brooklyn College Tennis Captain and holder of that bor- ough's crown for a number of years, is seeded fourth. Fifth seeding goes to Nat Goldstein, also o f Brooklyn. Nat was the finalist in 1940 for the Metro- politan t i t l e . Allen Lob el, New York University star from the Bronx, and Jerry Norman of Queens, are seeded sixth and seventh. Norman is the co-holder of the National Mixed Doubles Championship in the American Lawn Tennis Asso- ciation. In the women's ranks top seeding goes to the National Public Parks and 1940 winner of the New York Public Parks t i t l e , Eelen Germaine, She was the finalist in the New York State Women's Singles and Doubles Championship, -2- semi-finalist in the New Jersey State Singles Tournament, co-holder of the Doubles crown with Mi H i cent Hirsch Lang, and quarter-finalist in the Eastern States matches held last week. Right in back of Miss Germaine, seeded second is Virginia Burrell, who captured the Manhattan t i t l e t h i s year, replacing Helen Germaine who was forced to default in the quarter-final round because of other tournament engagements. Third and fourth seeded stars are Ann Freeman and Natasha Irwin, Bronx t i t l e holder for a number of years. Brooklyn's representative in the Junior Boys' Division, Paul Rach- walsky, i s seeded f i r s t . He has been undefeated in P.S.A.L. competition while a member of t h i s year's Boys' High Squad. The Men's and Women's Doubles will find many of those who are also performing in the Singles Tournaments. Seeded f i r s t in the Men's Doubles is Vincent Paul and Tom Burke, number one man on the Newtown High School Tennis squad t h i s year. In the women's doubles division, seeded f i r s t is Evelyn Kemptner and Grace Rothberg, f i n a l i s t s in the women's doubles in the National Public Parks Championships in 1939, with Virginia Burrell and Betty Grimes seeded second. Play will s t a r t at 11 A.M. in the Junior Boys' Singles with the Men's and Women's Singles starting at 2 P . M. On Sunday, July 20, the Men's and Women's Doubles will s t a r t at 11 A. M. while the Singles will resume play at 2 P. M. I t i s expected that the f i r s t two rounds will be completed on t h i s weekend. The third and fourth rounds w i l l finish the weekend of July 26 and 27, and the finals will-be held on the Central Park Courts, 93 Street and West Drive, on Sunday, August 3, at 11 A. M. This tournament is part of the Department of Parks Second Annual Sports Tournament in which championship events are held in swimming, tennis and golf. Trophies and medals for the Sports Tournament have been donated by the Park Association of New York City, and will be presented to the winners. Joseph Carleton, President of the New York Public Parks Tennis Association, will be the official referee. * * · * Form 26A-5M-12241 114 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK ror Release Friday TEL. REGENT 4--IOOO July 18 , 1941 Tlle P a r k v (Tv ' Department announces the opening of bids on the contract for construction of bridges and paving of Francis Lewis Boulevard between Union Turnpike and McLaughlin Avenue, Borough of Queens. This is the first contract for the proposed extension of Francis Lewis Bou- levard providing for filling in the gap between Horace Harding Boulevard and Hillside Avenue. At present the road is in use from the Whitestone Bridge to Horace Harding and from Hillside Avenue to Springfield Boulevard* Upon completion of this improvement, mixed traffic will be pro- vided with a continuous north-south route across Queens. The work under this contract provides for the construction of a reinforced concrete bridge carrying Grand Central Parkway over Francis Lewis Boulevard, in- cluding access roads for interchange of traffic. Another bridge under the new roadway will permit park users to get from one section of the park to another. In addition to the bridges and main roadways, there is included all necessary drainage, irrigation, curbing, construction of park roads and walks, bridle paths, lighting facilities and installation of directional signs. Park areas abutting the work will be topsoiled, seeded and planted with trees and shrubs under a separate contract and will be done during the Spring of 1942. During construction of the bridge at the Grand Central Parkway intersection, traffic will be maintained over suitable temporary detour roads. The three lowest bidders for the work were the following: 1. Mill Basin Asphalt Co. #740,275.90 5410 Avenue U, Brooklyn, N.Y. 2. B. Turecamo Contracting Co., Inc. $774,921.79 Ft, 24th Avenue, Brooklyn, N.Y. 3. Garofano Construction Co., Inc. $784,000.00 730 So. Columbus Ave., Mt. Vernon, N.Y. V M DEPARTMSSIT OF PARKS ARSEHAL, CENTRAL PARK FOR Thursday, TIL. REG-EOT 4-1000 J u l y 1 7 l g 4 1 The b e s t amateur g o l f e r s i n t h e M e t r o p o l i t a n area have e n t e r e d t h e Golf Championship Tournament conducted by t h e Department of Parks f o r t h e "Newbold M o r r i s Trophy" which w i l l s t a r t Sunday, J u l y 20, a t 9 A. M. on a l l of t h e t e n Municipal Golf Courses. This t r o p h y , a s t e r l i n g s i l v e r cup donated l a s t year by Newbold M o r r i s , P r e s i d e n t of t h e City Council, w i l l be i n competition f o r s i x t y y e a r s , and t h e name of t h e annual winner of t h e New York City Golf Championship w i l l be i n s c r i b e d upon i t . In addition, t h e annual winner w i l l b e p r e s e n t e d with a r e p l i c a of t h e l a r g e r t r o p h y , also in sterling silver, which he will retain. In last year's tournament, when the Newbold Morris cup was put in competition for the f i r s t time over 2000 public links' players entered from the ten municipal courses. This year's tournament indicates a record entry l i s t . Among those entered are, Tom Strafaci, last year's champion, one of the Strafaci brothers found in every championship tournament in the Metropolitan area. Beside winning the crown last year Tom has an enviable record in competition: qualifier for the National Amateurs in 1936, 1937, 1938, and 1939; Staten Island Open Champion in 1938; runner up in the Long Island Championship in 1938; finalist in the Metropolitan Championship in 1940 and qualifier for the National Public Links Tournament this year. Joe Sage of Pelham, finalist in last year's tournament, a former N. Y. U, intercollegiate linksman and runner up in the New Jersey Public Links Championship in 1939; Andy Timoshuk of Kissena, former Flushing High School inter scholastic ace who was a quarter finalist last year and the team champions of 1940, John Mikrut, Olin Cerroki, Joe Oleska, Dom Strafaci and Frank Strafaci, from Dyker Beach are also entered in the tournament. -2- For the past three months, anyone desiring to qualify for this tournament turned over to the course Supervisor his three lowest gross scores attested by the three other members of his foursome. The t h i r t y - two low gross scorers on each course will compete on Sunday, July 20, at 9 A. M. in eighteen holes of medal play for the course championship and for the right to be included in a team-of-eight which will represent their respective course in the city-wide course championship, Trophies will be awarded by the Department of Parks to the individual course champions. The teams-of-eight which have been selected will compete on Sunday, July 27, at Forest Park Golf Course in 36 holes of medal play for the city-wide course team championship. The four low gross scorers from any one course will decide the team championship. The winning team will receive a team trophy that will remain permanently on display in the clubhouse of the course they represent. On Saturday and Sunday, August 2 and 3, the thirty-two low gross- scorers will begin eighteen holes of match play on the LaTourette Course, Staten Island to determine the trophy winner. The semi-finals will be played on the same course on Saturday, August 9 with thirty-six holes of match play. On Sunday, August 10, the two finalists will battle it out for the t i t l e of the Municipal Champion and the Newbold Morris Trophy, in thirty-six holes of match play. * * * * ikT OF PARKS For Release Wednesday ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK July 16,1941 TEL. REGENT 4-1000 Through the efforts of ex-Governor Smith, fourteen Japanese Saika Deer have been donated to the Depart- ment Parks by Mr. George W. Hill, president of the American Tobacco Company, This type of deer is becoming very scarce because of the present war conditions. The herd consists of six bucks, five does, and three fawns. The deer will be brought to the Central Park Zoo late Wednesday afternoon by truck from Mr. Hill's estate, Irvington on the Hudson. The collection is to be divided between the Central Park and Prospect Park zoos. Because of the lim- ited space, only one buck, two does, and a fawn will be left in Central Park; the remainder will be placed on exhibition in the Prospect Park Zoo. DEPARTMENT OF PARKS Wednesday, ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK B ^Q 1 9 4 1 TEL. REGENT 4-1000 Two of the nation's most outstanding feminine swimmers will attempt to break the existing world's record for the fifty (50) meter backstroke and the one hundred (100) meter medley, in a special race, Wednesday evening, July 16, at the Highbridge Pool, Manhattan. Gloria Gallen of the W. S. A., one of the best women swimmers in competition today, has been breaking records and winning championships for the past four years. At the age of thirteen, she won the Senior Metropolitan Half-Mile Free Style Championship, at the age of fourteen, the National Long Distance Swimming Championship and today at seventeen holds the American record for fifty (50) meters, seventy-five yards and one hundred ten (110) meters backstroke. Over the past weekend she lowered her record for one hundred ten (110) yards backstroke by two- fifths of a second, to 1:18:2 and her fifty (50) meter backstroke three-fifths of a second to 36:2. She will attempt to lower t h i s further to 36 seconds flat as she has been doing at Highbridge Pool, where she has been practicing during the past few weeks. Helene Raines, a team mate of Miss Call en and a member of the National Outdoor three hundred (300) meter medley champion- ship team; the Senior Metropolitan Indoor and Outdoor two hundred twenty (220) yard relay breast stroke team; Senior Metropolitan Individual half mile and Senior Metropolitan Individual Medley Champion, will attempt to lower the existing mark for the one hundred fifty (150) meter Individual Outdoor medley record. Lorainne Fisher, another member of tb&W* S, A. sbt the *$cord Xast September when aha covered the distance in 2:11:5 at Bear Mountain. These races against time will be the feature of a water carnival to be held at the Highbridge Pool, Amsterdam Avenue and 173rd Street, Manhattan. · * * * DEPARTMENT OF PARKS ARSENAL* CMTRAI PARK FOR RELEASE Tuesday \ TEL. RECJENT 4-1000 July 15, 1941 F i x 20243 20244 1 development p l a n 1 l o c a t i o n map The Department of Parks announces t h e completion of work i n connection with t h e construction of an overlook s i t t i n g area on t h e shore of t h e Hudson River adjacent t o t h e promenade in Riverside Park Extension opposite West 149 and West 150 S t r e e t s , A 7 f high reinforced concrete r e t a i n i n g w a l l , 225' i n l e n g t h , has been constructed on an e x i s t i n g concrete s l a b which o v e r l a i d t h e shore r i p rap and adjacent bank. One thousand cubic y a r d s of b a c k f i l l was placed t o c r e a t e a 7 0 ' x 150' r e c t a n g u l a r offset 10' above t h e w a t e r l e v e l and at t h e same e l e v a t i o n as t h e promenade. Six hundred and f i f t y l i n e a l f e e t of 4 ' high wrought iron picket fence has been s e t i n the r e t a i n i n g wall and extends along t h e water front s i d e of t h e promenade t o connect with the existing fence. The sitting area has been paved with bituminous material to match the promenade. A 10' wide concrete block panel, planted with < eleven 3"-4" diameter red oaks extends around three sides of the bay and nine 4-unit sections of benches placed between the trees, facing the water. Six additional oaks and four benches were placed in the paved area to assure shade and adequate seating f a c i l i t i e s from which views of the river and the Palisades might be enjoyed. This project which was built by the Work Projects Administra- tion from plans prepared by the Department of Parks also included drainage and lighting. * * * * \J m DEPARTMENT OF PARKS -p RPlPnu, Monday X V > ARSENAL, CENTRAL PARK ' -tvt^t*JI> J July l 114 1941 TEL. REGENT 4-1000 On Saturday evening, July 26, the Department of Parks will reopen the New York State Amphitheatre, located at the north end of Meadow Lake in Flushing Meadow Park, Queens. This facility was one of the few permanent structures at the Worldfs Fair and was a contribution by the State to the recreation sys- tem of t h e City. Since the close of the Fair, xvorkmen have been busily engaged in dismantling the old temporary Aquacade tank, remod- elling the stage, providing dressing room f a c i l i t i e s and con- structing new permanent, modern outdoor swim ing and diving pools between the amphitheatre and the stage. The new pool will be of concrete faced with t i l e . Roughly semi-circular, following the curve of the amphitheatre, i t will be 300 feet long, 33 feet in width at the ends and 70 feet in the center. At each end there will be diving pools eleven feet deep and diving towers with 3 , 5 and 10 meter platforms. The depth of the pool will be 3 feet 6 inches at the edges to four feet in the center. I t w i l l be floodlighted at night. Besides providing public swimming f a c i l i t i e s for the rapidly increasing population in t h i s section of Queens, i t will also be used, with the stage and 3500 unobstructed, tiered seats which have been retained, to present water carnivals, pageants, concerts, and other spectacles in the evening. Parking f a c i l i t i e s for 1000 cars are immediately ad- jacent to the amphitheatre and may be reached from either the Grand Central Parkway or Horace Harding Boulevard. To inaugurate the official opening, the New York Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra, through Mrs. Charles S. G-uggenheimer, Chairman, and Mrs. Pierpont Morgan Hamilton of the Stadium Concerts I n c . , will leave the Lewisohn Stadium for the f i r s t time in 24 years and play a t t h e New York State Amphitheatre for this one night · # · -2- Under the direction of conductor Efrem Kurtz, the orchestra will play a program including the "Euryanthe" Over- ture of Weber, Lalo's Symphonie Espagnole with violin solo by the young American violinist, Joan Field, Beethoven's Seventh Symphony, and Wagner's "Rienzi" Overture. Regular Stadium tickets, bought at the usual Box- offices will be good for admission to the State Amphitheatre on Saturday, July 26. 3000 seats will be sold at 25??, about 3000 at 50?! and the rest at | l , 0 0 . Tickets for the opening performance are available at the Postal Telegraph-Cable Company offices in Long Island City, Flushing, and Jamaica. Starting 10 A. M., July 27, the pool w i l l be open to the general public, as are a l l the other 16 outdoor park pools. On weekdays and Saturdays from 10 A. M. to 12:30 P. M. there will be a free period for children under 14 years of age in the swimming pools* No adults are admitted to the pool areas during t h i s free period. After 1 P. M. on weekdays and Saturdays and a l l day on Sundays and holidays there will be a ten cent charge for children under 14 years and a twenty cent charge for adults. * * * * Form 26A-5M-12241 114 DEPARTMENT OF PARKS Wednesdayf ARSENAL. CENTRAL. PARK For Release^ TEL.. REGENT 4 IOOO July 9, 1941 The Department of Parks announces the completion and opening of a new 1/2 acre playground just west of Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn, bounded by Flatlands Avenue, Ryder Street, Avenue "M" and East 38 Street. This latest addition is located 1/2 mile south of the 3 1/2 acre Amesford Park, one mile north of Marine Park Play- ground and 3/4 of a mile east of the playground at Kings Highway and Avenue "P". To provide a flat play surface it was necessary to con- struct a concrete retaining wall of variable height along the north property line with a short stairway access provided from Avenue "M". An 8 1 chain link boundary fence has been placed on top of this wall and along the entire property line. A second entrance leads from Flatlands Avenue near the corner of Ryder Street. Seventeen 2-§"-3rt diameter Norway maples have been planted in a 5 f border of concrete blocks between the boundary fence and the new concrete sidewalks and curbs. A 20· square brick comfort station and a flagpole are located on the Ryder Street side near the two entrances. The playground surface of bituminous material is subdivided into several units by tree planted strips of concrete block paving, benches and low fencing. A large open free play area has a central 32' diameter circular shower basin. In four compart- ments along the Flatlands Avenue property line are the following facilities: an irrigated sand pit with tree shaded benches on three sides; 33' of fence enclosed chair swings for pre-school children; 4 see-saws and 2 slides; 30' of protected swings and 2 slides for older children and a pipe frame exercise unit. The project which was built by the Work Projects Adminis- tration from plans prepared by the Department of Parks also included drainage, irrigation, drinking fountains and lighting. In 1934 there were 119 playgrounds in the five boroughs; 58 of these have been reconstructed. At the present time there are 437 playgrounds in the Park system. * ** DEPARTLIEwT OF PARKS FOR HZLSASS Monday ARSSuAL, CENTRAL PARK J u l y 7 , 1941 TEL* aSGSNT 4-1000 The Department of Parks announces t h a t t h e r e w i l l be a d e m o n s t r a t i o n of American Folk Dancing , soraetirn.es r e f e r r e d t o as Square Dancing, a t 105 S t r e e t and R i v e r s i d e P a r k , Manhattan, on Monday, J u l y ? , a t 8:30 P.M. This deraonstration w i l l be under t h e d i r e c t i o n of Ed D u r l a c h e r , one of t h e o u t s t a n d i n g exponents of Square Dancing i n America, w i t h Al MacLeod's Country Dance Band supplying t h e music. Thousands of p e o p l e w i t n e s s e d s i m i l a r e x p o s i t i o n s which he conducted on t h e American Common a t t h e New York World's F a i r , 1940, and a t Jones Beach, d u r i n g t h e same y e a r . The dancing p r o - gram was so w e l l r e c e i v e d a t Jones Beach t h a t he h a s been r e - quested to put i t on again during the current season. Prior to the demonstration of each dance number next Monday evening, there will be a brief explanation of the various steps. Following the demoiwtopatioii , the public will be invited to participate. DEPARTMENT OF PARKS Arsenal, Cent r a l Park T e l . REgent 4-1000 FOR RELEASE Monday, July 7, 1941 The Department of Parks announces that the children of 23 Park Department playgrounds will celebrate the anniversary of their official opening to the public by participating in special programs of recreational activities during the month of July. While handball and snuffleboard tournaments, softball games, track meets, roller skating contests and wading pool games will form part of the activities, the programs will feature a variety of other events, including magic shows, puppet and marionette shows, skits, musical selec- tions by children's bands, folk dancing, community singing of patriotic songs and group games. The July schedule for playground birthday celebrations is as follows: Time of Borough Playground Location Opened Celebration Manhattan Annunciation Playground, Amsterdam July 7, 1940 4:00 P. M, Avenue & West 135 Street Riverside and 74 Street July 1 1 , 1937 3:00 P . M. MeCray Playground, West 138 Street J u l y 15, 1934 2:00 P . M, between 5th & Lenox Avenues Sauer Memorial Playground, E. 12 S t r e e t July 15, 1934 2:30 P . M. between Avenues MAW & MBW Riverside and 148 S t r e e t July 24, 1938 3:00 P . M. East River Park and 11 S t r e e t July 27, 1939 3:00 P . M. S t . G a b r i e l ' s Playground, East 35 July 3 1 , 1936 3:00 P . M. S t r e e t and F i r s t Avenue Brooklyn Sheridan Playground, Grand S t r e e t July 19, 1934 11:00 A.M. near Wythe Avenue Lafayette and Reid Avenues July 25, 1937 11:00 A.M. -2- Time of Borough Playground Location Opened Celebration Brooklyn New Lots Playground, Sackman and July 2 7 , 1940 2-8 P.M. on Riverdale S t r e e t s July 28 Howard, Dean and P a c i f i c S t r e e t s July 3 0 , 1937 3:30 P . M. P i t kin & New Jersey Avenues July 3 0 , 1937 10:00 A.M. McKibben Playground, McKibben July 3 1 , 1936 10:00 A.M. and TShite S t r e e t s Queens 179 P l a c e , North of Jamaica Avenue July 10, 1937 3:00 P.M« Jackson Heights Playground, 25-30 July 15, 1934 10 A.M.- Avenues, 84-85 S t r e e t s 9 P.M. D. M. O'Connell Playground, 113 Ave. July 1 5 , 1934 2:00 P.M. and 196 S t r e e t Von Dohlen Playground, 138 S t r e e t July 15, 1934 10:30 A.M.- and Archer Avenue 8:00 P.M. Windmuller Playground, 52 Street July 3 0 , 1937 11:00 A.M.- and Woodside Avenue 6:00 P.M. Bronx Louis Zimmerman Playground, O l i n v i l l e July 1 5 , 1934 2:00 P.M. Ave., south of B r i t t o n Street Vincent Ciccarone Playground, Hughes July 15, 1934 2:00 P. M. Avenue & East 188 Street East 176 S t r e e t and Bryant Avenue July 10, 1936 2:00 P. M. East 182 S t r e e t and Belmont Avenue July 30, 1937 2:00 P . M. · * * * F0R ^ Tel. REGENT 4-1000 After five years of construction work, the major portion of Crotona Park has been rebuilt. During this period, sections of the park had been redeveloped with a swimming pool and several large play- grounds. The construction program now coming to an end will show the completion of twelve playrrounds, five baseball diamonds, one athletic field, a rebuilt children's fern garden, a new boethouse on the lake, and several miles of new walks end hundreds of new benches. Prior to its reconstruction, the park afforded few facilities for organized active recreation. It is in the center of a congested neighborhood and the children found their recreation in the destruction of what little development was available. 1¥ith the new development nearing completion, many people of the neighborhood have become apprehensive as to what will happen to it. In the hope of securing the greatest benefit from the new facilities and to preserve them for future as well as present en- joyment, the children of the twelve new playgrounds have organized them- selves into the CROTONA PARK BOOSTERS. The "boosters" have organized themselves into sub-groups, one for each playground, and during the present summer starting July 7 the playgrounds will compete with each other, not only in the various customary recreational activities, but in prevention of vandalism, in keeping the park clean, and in educating the members of the public using their section of the park in its proper use. The Park Department is providing the physical facilities to make the competition possible and has put up substantial prizes for group and individual winners. 114 Friday DEPARTMENT OF PARKS For Release^ July 4. 1941 ARSENAL. CENTRAL. PARK TEL. REGENT 4--1OOO The Department of Paries announces the completion and opening of a 5 acre general recreation field and play- ground which has been developed in the rear of the John Adams High School on Rockaway Boulevard between 101st St. and 103rd Street, Borough of Queens. In order to provide adequate facilities it was necessa- ry for the city to acquire additional property to round out the small undeveloped plot held under the jurisdiction of the Board of Education, At the same time title was acquired to all of the boundary street beds which will be developed in the future. Boss Street from Plattwood Avenue to 133rd Avenue,cutting diag- onally through the athletic field, formerly mapped for future opening, was abandoned in favor of the recreational development. Plans for the entire tract which has been placed under "the ijurisdiction of the Board of Education were pre- pared by the Department of Parks and approved by the Board of Education, The area will be operated jointly by the two de- partments. The property, roughly 470 feet square except for the south diagonal property line along 133rd Avenue is completely enclosed by a 12 foot high chain link fence and is sub-divided into several types of use areas segregated from each other by an 8 1 high chain link fence. Access to the. playfield is afforded by four 10' wide double gates two of which lead from the 15 foot walk immediately adjacent and parallel to the south wall of the High School and one each from the northeast and northwest corners. Paralleling the north boundary fence and extending from 101st to 103rd Streets is a rectangular bituminous surfaced court games area 70' wide and 450' long which contains the following* 3 Handball Courts 2 Badminton Courts 7 Practice Basketball Standards 3 Paddle Tennis Courts 6 Shuffle Board Courts 2 Drinking Fountains 31 Bench units in two continuous sections. South of the court games area adjacent to 101st Street are two bituminous paved tennis courts. East of this «·2 -- fence enclosed unit is a grass surfaced area 150' x 300' providing double usage for girl's field hockey and two softball diamonds with backstops. The south end of the area, also grass covered, contains a regulation size football field, a softball and baseball diamond with backstops all of which are bounded by a IS' cinder track and 16' straightaway. A drinking fountain is located adjacent to the track. An irregular shaped offset in the southeast corner of the grounds has been developed as a small bituminous paved playground, enclosed by a 10' high chain link fence. Lying 2-1/2 feet below the surface of the athletic field from which it is separated by a concrete retaining wall and 12' chain link fence, the playground is accessible by a short flight of steps from the corner of the field. A 10' wide double entrance gate has been installed at the southeast corner of the playground which will provide future access from Centreville Street when it is opened and paved. A standard type brick comfort station, 20' x 30', has been built at the south end of the playground near the athletic field entrance. The remainder of the area contains a flagpole, a circular shower basin, a 12' x 16' sand pit, 2 kindergarten slides, a see-saw, and a string of kindergarten swings protected by a 4' chain link fence. The entire playground is bordered with a 6' strip of precast concrete blocks and planted with 12 2-l/2"-3" diameter trees. Detached benches ex- tend along the base of the retaining wall and a U-shaped con- tinuous section extends around three sides of the sand pit. The xvork which was carried out by the Work Projects Administration from plans prepared by the Department of Parks, also included general drainage facilities, park lighting and the demolition of a 1-1/2 story frame house and garage. In 1934 there xvere 119 playgrounds in the five boroughs; 58 of these have been reconstructed. At present there are 436 playgrounds in the Park system. DEPARTMENT OF PARES Arsenal, Central Park For Release THURSDAY, T e l . RE&ent 4-1000 July 3 , 1941 The Department of Parks announces t h a t t h e second of a s e r i e s of four Naumburg Memorial Concerts w i l l be given on the Mall, Central Park, Friday, July 4 , at 8:15 P . M. The two remaining concerts w i l l a l s o be given on the Mall on July 31 and Labor Day, September 1, a t 8:15 P . M. This concert s e r i e s i s contributed by Mr. Walter W. Naumburg and Mr, George W. Naumburg, in memory of t h e i r f a t h e r , Mr. Elkan Naumburg, who donated the bandstand on t h e Mall. The July 4 concert w i l l be given by t h e Naumburg Or- chestra, with Maclin Marrow as conductor, and Gloria La Vey Lora, as soprano s o l o i s t . The program w i l l include s e l e c t i o n s by such famous composers as : Gounod, Victor Herbert, Gershwin and Dvorak. * * * w j DEPAHTMMF OF PARKS / AES^JA,L, CMffiAL PARK FOR RELmSB Wednesday. TEL. RSJBC 4-1000 J u l y 2 , 1941 Through the cooperation of the Junior Davis Cup Com- mittee of the Eastern Ia-vm Tennis Association, the Department of Parks will conduct a series of e-.ght tennis classes starting Wednesday, July 2, from 9 A. M. to 11 A. M. These lessons will be held on the Central Park Courts, 93rd Street and West Drive. They are open to a l l Junior permit holders of either sex. These lessons are intended primarily for instruction in the fundamen- t a l s of the game, particularly stroke production. Last year, George Agutta, coach of the West Side Tennis Club of Forest Hills, conducted these classes. The results were so gratifying, i t was decided t o repeat the series. This year, W. Richard Shubart, former member of Dart- mouth College Tennis Tsam and for a numbr of years professional arc ·'··L.e Ker. Gardens Tennis Club, has been engaged to handle the seiies of lessons. All boys and g i r l s of Junior and Senior High School age are urged to take part in this series of free lessons. * * * DEPARTMENT OF PARES ARSENAL, CEOTRAL PARK FOR RELEASE Tuesday, TEL. REGENT 4-1000 ^ly V 1941 The Department of P a r k s announces t h e completion and opening of seven new m a r g i n a l playgrounds, t h r e e r e c o n s t r u c t e d playgrounds, a c h i l d r e n ' s farm garden and two comfort s t a t i o n s i n Crotona P a r k , The Bronx. These p l a y - grounds r e p r e s e n t p a r t of a l a r g e r program of park r e c o n s t r u c t i o n which w i l l be completed t h i s f a l l . Crotona Park i s one of t h e most h e a v i l y used parks i n t h e C i t y . Prior to the start of rehabilitation work the pressure of a congested neigh- borhood had overflowed play areas onto the park lawns, injuring the vegetation, causing erosion and miniature dust storms thus destroying the usefulness of the area. The f i r s t major effort to provide much needed recreation f a c i l i t i e s and restore the scenic values of the park was the construction of a swimming pool in 1936 together with the rehabilitation of the adjoining unit of park land lying between Fulton and Crotona Avenues. In the following years two new playgrounds were laid out along Crotona Park East and various other minor improvements were made. Plans for the present project, embracing the complete reconstruction of the remaining sections of the park were prepared early in 1940 by the De- partment of Parks and the work was started shortly thereafter by the Work Pro- jects Administration. The main features of this work include the following i t ems; Ten additional marginal playgrounds Reconstruction of the children*s farm gardens Four baseball diamonds with concrete bleachers One softball diamond with concrete bleacher Construction of a wall around the lake A boat house and concession building on the lakeside Thirteen double handball courts Reconstruction of athletic field on Crotona Park North * · -2- Demolition of many outworn paths and roadways and construc- tion of a complete new path system with curbs, asphaltic pavement, steps, ramps, benches, l i g h t s , fencing, etc. General reconstruction of the park storm drainage system landscaping of the entire park including newtopsoil and planting of 2800 new t r e e s , 18,000 shrubs and lawns. Realignment of the south end of Crotona Avenue within the park, for better traffic circulation. The only section of the park which remains untouched by the current operations i s the area along Third Avenue to the north of East 175 Street. This section contains the old Borough Hall which should be demolished. Re- peated requests to the Board of Estimate for assignment of t h i s to the Park Department have been refused. The reconstruction of Crotona Park represents a major effort in in the park improvement field and when completed i t s results will be in- creasingly appreciated as the new plant growth becomes established and the various recreational f a c i l i t i e s attain their full use. All work was performed by the Work Projects Administration from plans prepared by the Department of Parks. In 1934 there were 119 playgrounds in the five boroughs; 33 of these have been reconstructed. At present there are 435 playgrounds in the Park system. * * * *