COGGINSS

Forum Replies Created

Viewing 25 posts - 176 through 200 (of 278 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • in reply to: HUDSON GARDENS, Edward J. Flynn #4074
    COGGINSS
    Participant

      in reply to: HUDSON GARDENS, Edward J. Flynn #4073
      COGGINSS
      Participant

        in reply to: HUDSON GARDENS, Edward J. Flynn #4072
        COGGINSS
        Participant

          in reply to: HUDSON GARDENS, Edward J. Flynn #4071
          COGGINSS
          Participant

            in reply to: Uncas Base Ball Club of 1865 #3995
            COGGINSS
            Participant

              Weathervane in Henry Hudson Park

              in reply to: Uncas Base Ball Club of 1865 #3982
              COGGINSS
              Participant

                And who knew there was so much early “Base Ball” played in our area? Thanks so much Thomas Casey, you’re way ahead of me!

                in reply to: Uncas Base Ball Club of 1865 #3981
                COGGINSS
                Participant

                  I’d love to locate the field where the “Uncas” played. BTW: the inspiration for this “poking around” was Nick’s presentation on Thursday in which the “Uncas River” was referenced.

                  The Presentation was a rousing success, as d very inspiring!

                   

                  in reply to: Vanderbilts in Riverdale / Campagna Estate #3864
                  COGGINSS
                  Participant

                    Here are some resources from a website created by extended  family member Carla Paterno-Cappiello Golden: https://marabella.family/anthony-campagna-architecture/

                    Some of the links were dead, I included the ones that  were not.

                    Anthony Campagna architecture outside of Manhattan:

                    Anthony Campagna – residence/estate
                    – 640 West 249th Street designed by Dwight James Baum 1929-30 Bronx
                    – Riverdale-on-Hudson, New York City
                    For his Riverdale residence, Mr. Campagna chose the Aeolian Company to furnish a pipe organ. As was standard for Aeolian residence organs, the instrument could be played three ways: in the traditional manner from a three-manual console; entirely automatically by the Duo-Art Player; or semi-automatically by the Solo Player. The Aeolian Company Specification (Aug. 30, 1929) and Contract states that the organ would be built for a consideration of $21,000, and installed on or about March 15, 1930. The fate of this organ is unknown. Anthony Campagna Residence 640 249th Street Riverdale (The Bronx), N.Y. 10471 The New York City Chapter of the American Guild of Organists (photos of home and organ: https://www.nycago.org/Organs/Brx/html/ResCampagnaA.html

                    Campagna and his wife lived in the Riverdale section of the Bronx, where Campagna purchased land from Percy Rivington Pyne and built the now landmark palatial residence at 640 West 249th Street. The home, modeled after an Italian villa, was built in 1929 to 1930 and was designed by architect Dwight James Baum and landscape architect Ferruccio Vitale and his partner, Alfred Geiffert, Jr., who won the 1934 gold medal in landscape architecture from the Architectural League of New York for the property. As of 2011, the building was owned by Yeshiva of Telshe Alumni.

                    some believe the estate to have been featured in the motion picture The Godfather. Today, it is a dormitory for the Yeshiva of Telshe Alumni.

                    This building has been designated a landmark:

                    640 West 249th Street

                    Construction Date: 1929 – 1930 Architect / Builder: Dwight James Baum Owner / Developer: Anthony Campagna Major Alteration(s): None Alteration Architect(s): None Style(s): Italian Renaissance Revival Material(s): Rusticated Limestone, Stucco, Stone, Spanish Tiles, Iron Building Type: Freestanding House Original Use: Residential, single family Tax Block: 5914 Tax Lot: 315 , Iron The formal landscape was designed by Ferruccio Vitale and Alfred Geiffert, Jr. and based on Italian prototypes All building data and notes from the Anthony Campagna Estate designation report and in some cases supplemented by the LPC’s Guide to New York City Landmarks (2009).

                    New York Times June 14, 1929, Section B, Page 46
                    W H(D) [**]Campagna House (Fig. 24), 640 West 249th Street 21(192925; Dwight James Baum, Architect) Originally constructed as a residence for Count Anthony Campagna, a wealthy Manhattan builder of the 1920s, this imposing building is situated on a rise overlooking the Wave Hill estate, at the corner of West 249th Street and Independence Avenue. A cobblestone drive from the entry gate forms a main axis perpendicular with the front facade, opening at the front entrance into a forecourt with a central fountain. The main entry is framed by a portico of three round arches.

                    600 West 249th Street. Located just to the east of the Campagna House , this residence appears to be of approximately the same period as that designated landmark. The rear portion of this residence and two residences located just behind it appear to be former outbuildings, including a pool house and garage, of the Campagna House.

                    Home appliance manufacturer Monitor Equipment Company had bought the Campagna mansion in the Riverdale section of the Bronx as its research headquarters. The 35-room Italian Renaissance style building stood on a two-acre hilltop estate overlooking the Hudson River, across from Wave Hill, now a public park. It had been built between 1928 and 1930 by Anthony Campagna for his own use. The Italian-born builder was an in law of the Paterno family and like them had made a fortune constructing high-rise apartments in Manhattan during the 1920s. The Times noted that his former home was one of many great residences “deemed to have outlived usefulness as a private home because of its size and the consequent expense of upkeep.” Throughout the metropolitan area, particularly in the nearby suburbs, similar residences were being converted to house research facilities, institutes and foundations. Riverdale had become an enclave of the city’s elite, between the wars, a suburban neighborhood within the city limits. Other Real Estate News in the Sunday Times: https://nyapril1946.blogspot.com/search?q=paterno

                    “In the last 50 years, there has been a growing Jewish community in the neighborhood. Its three Jewish schools, the Kinneret Day School, the Yeshiva of Telshe Alumni High School (across from Wave Hill in the former Campagna estate) and the SAR Academy are among the top Jewish schools in the country, according to Rabbi Jonathan Rosenblatt of the Riverdale Jewish Center.” If You’re Thinking of Living In/Riverdale, the Bronx; A Community Jealous of Its Open Space By Margaret Garb March 1, 1998

                    The Campagna Estate remains the home for the Yeshiva of Telshe Alumni High School to this day.

                    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_Campagna

                    Here is an article on the landmarking of this gem: https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1994/01/16/859796.html?pageNumber=218

                    in reply to: Vanderbilts in Riverdale / Campagna Estate #3863
                    COGGINSS
                    Participant

                      https://marabella.family/anthony-campagna-architecture/

                      in reply to: Vanderbilts in Riverdale / Campagna Estate #3862
                      COGGINSS
                      Participant

                        Thanks Julie.  Appreciate your contribution

                         

                         

                        COGGINSS
                        Participant

                          For more information a d to register:

                          Researching Your Family House

                           

                          Date: Sun, Jan 28 2024 • 2:00 PM EST

                           

                          Location: 1500 Central Park Avenue, Yonkers, NY 10708

                           

                          https://www.eventbrite.com/e/researching-your-family-house-tickets-776588516157?aff=ebdsshother

                           

                          in reply to: Tweed House – Spuyten Duyvil #3823
                          COGGINSS
                          Participant

                            Staircase leading down to where the house used to be

                            in reply to: Tweed House – Spuyten Duyvil #3818
                            COGGINSS
                            Participant

                              Very few residents of Spuyten Duyvil know that Boss Tweed was a resident of Spuyten Duyvil, and that the ashes of his home are located right below this scenic view. Here’s a Riverdale Press article. Unfortunately I couldn’t find the second page on fultonhistory.com.  So many fires occur around holidays (like that sad one that happened today on W. 231st Street); this one on Dec. 17, 1959

                              in reply to: Tweed House – Spuyten Duyvil #3817
                              COGGINSS
                              Participant

                                Tweed Residence Goes Up  in Flames

                                in reply to: Tweed House – Spuyten Duyvil #3816
                                COGGINSS
                                Participant

                                  Many of you may remember Tom Bird bringing up this topic at the First Member Meeting. I’ve been doing some research on Spuyten Duyvil Shorefront Park, and its early “people power” origins and I came up with a whole slew of articles on Tween Hill which could have been a high rise apartment building instead of a Forever Wild Park Sanctuary, as part of Shorefront Park. I believe that this may be the location of the Half Moon Overlook.

                                  in reply to: Mystery Marker #3778
                                  COGGINSS
                                  Participant

                                    It might be a lot marker for the Douglas Estate, as it not far from the Raoul Wallenberg Forest where the Douglas House once stood.

                                    COGGINSS
                                    Participant

                                      COGGINSS
                                      Participant

                                        The link above does not seem to want to work so I created two screenshots of the article 

                                        COGGINSS
                                        Participant
                                          COGGINSS
                                          Participant

                                            One of our newest members, Virginia Arnold, is a naturalist. She clued me into the fact that Indian Pokeweed, which grows all over our community, and in the South and East, was used by Revolutionary and Civil War soldiers to write letters home to their loved ones.

                                            in reply to: Erosion in Riverdale Park #3708
                                            COGGINSS
                                            Participant

                                              I think the shell I show here is a clam shell, as is the one I found in Henry Hudson Park, if that’s at all important.

                                              in reply to: Erosion in Riverdale Park #3700
                                              COGGINSS
                                              Participant

                                                Oyster and Clam Shells

                                                in reply to: Erosion in Riverdale Park #3699
                                                COGGINSS
                                                Participant

                                                  in reply to: Erosion in Riverdale Park #3698
                                                  COGGINSS
                                                  Participant

                                                    COGGINSS
                                                    Participant

                                                      No Anita, you are not wrong. It was definitely a tone deaf response from the Board. Bob Fanuzzi was not there, which was unfortunate. He is the Chair of the Environment and Sanitation Committee
                                                      <p style=”text-align: right;”>https://cbbronx.cityofnewyork.us/cb8/committees/environment-sanitation/</p&gt;

                                                    Viewing 25 posts - 176 through 200 (of 278 total)