A couple of years ago, I wrote about a little boarded up storefront at the corner of North 5th & Berry in Williamsburg:
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Today, Pfizer is the largest pharmaceutical company in the world, with dozens of factories and research labs across the country, over 100,000 employees, and hundreds of billions in revenue. Amazing to think it all got started in a now-empty factory on the border between South Williamsburg and Bed-Stuy. Pfizer was founded as a fine chemicals business in 1849 by German-American cousins Charles Pfizer and Charles Erhardt at the corner of Harrison Ave and Bartlett Street. Their first success was an anti-parasitic called santonin, though citric acid production was the real early moneymaker. As the company grew, the cousins bought up land around their property, eventually occupying an entire block bordered by Tompkins, Ellery, Marcy, and Flushing. Despite a lack of space, significant downturns in the neighborhood, and the high costs of operating in New York City, Pfizer maintained its operations here for over 150 years in what seems almost to have been a loyalty to its birthplace. You can find a lot of great remnants from older Pfizer days, like this sign above one of the entrances: Another entrance, with a cool art-deco motif: >>>Continue reading “Exploring The Abandoned Pfizer Chemical Plant in Brooklyn” This past Memorial Day, we set out to find a treasure hidden in the New Jersey woods. We drove an hour west of the city to a pleasant area of New Jersey, then turned off into an unassuming residential neighborhood and parked at the end of a cul-de-sac. Just off the street, we found a trail into the woods and began our hike, following a GPS coordinate that quickly took us far off the beaten path… As we bushwhacked through the thick foliage, we could practically feel each poison ivy leaf brushing against our bare legs… …while many a shoe were nearly lost to the swampy mud, freshly soaked from a night of heavy rains (good thing we came so well-prepared for this!). And then, we saw it up ahead, nestled in the fertile overgrowth: the wreckage of a crashed jet plane. >>>Continue reading “My Memorial Day: Searching For A Crashed Jet in the NJ Woods” For the past couple weeks, I’ve been scouting the Rockland County area, and every time I drive the Palisades north… …I notice this strange castle-like structure whiz past out my window: Clearly the ruins of something, it kept bugging me each time I drove by until finally, I had to stop and figure out what it was. I found a place to park near the highway and came across a trail that seemed to be leading to the structure… It took about 15 minutes of walking, and then I saw it through the trees… A fascinating two story stone castle-like structure set into the hillside overlooking the Hudson… But what was it? An old fort? I had to get to my first scouting appointment of the day, so I couldn’t stay long. But I snapped a few pictures, and planned to look up more info when I got home. I’m not sure what I was expecting…But later on, when I found out that this… …used to be this (line up those four windows for orientation)… I was blown away. And yeah, I had to go back to explore further. >>>Continue reading “Abandoned on the Palisades: The Ruins of Cliffdale Manor” This is Hempstead House today:
In comparison, the below picture was taken in 1940, shortly after Hempstead became a home for refugee children from England, who had been sent to the US because of World World II. The caption reads: “Huntsmen three play safari in the jungle that once composed the formal . . . When you own an enormous castle like the one pictured below, and it’s only used to house your servants and horses…
…you’re living in a world few of us can imagine.
Castle Gould, based on Kilkenny Castle in Ireland, is located in . . . |
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