Crown Heights and Weeksville
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About this ebook
Wilhelmena Rhodes Kelly
Wilhelmena Rhodes Kelly, author of Bedford-Stuyvesant, is a decades-long resident of Crown Heights. Her memberships with the Society for the Preservation of Weeksville and Bedford Stuyvesant History, African Atlantic Genealogical Society of Long Island, Brooklyn Historical Society, Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society, and National Society Daughters of the American Revolution contributed to the successful collection of these rare and remarkable historic photographs.
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Crown Heights and Weeksville - Wilhelmena Rhodes Kelly
author.
INTRODUCTION
The neighborhood of Crown Heights, and the smaller microcommunity of Weeksville contained within it, are today part of the densely populated metropolis of Brooklyn, New York. Housing more then 300,000 residents in its four-square-mile boundaries, or over 10 percent of the borough’s population of two and a half million, the history of the founding, development, and expansion of this urban location has been largely influenced by a single factor: its once formidable and challenging topography.
Ensconced in some of the highest elevations in New York City, the Crown Heights that one sees today has been shaped by the huge terminal moraine that is its base. Even from its earliest founding, this rough and primeval foundation arrested the early economic growth and agricultural worth of its budding hamlets.
Bordering on Peter Stuyvesant’s 1660s acquisition of 395 acres from the Lenape Indians, Crown Heights remained a dense and heavily wooded location held as common property by local residents. In fact, years later, the British would need a scout to lead them through the dense brush during the Battle of Long Island in August 1776.
From the earliest years, the flat and fertile terrain of the townships of Bedford to the north and Flatbush to the south grew abundant produce, which enriched both towns significantly. Meanwhile the rock-ridden precipice that was the future spine of Crown Heights remained a wilderness.
These common woods, largely unsuited for farming, were consequently parceled out over the years, with the wooded hills becoming home to squatters. Even as the construction of neighborhood housing grew, it was not until the 1850s that institutions serving the sick, orphaned, imprisoned, and poor would realize the affordability of the hilly outpost.
Weeksville, an independent black community founded shortly after New York’s 1827 emancipation of its enslaved population, established a presence in the 1830s and prospered over time in the area’s remote environs. The land was initially purchased by Henry C. Thompson from the Leffert Lefferts estate in the 1830s.
In 1838, James Weeks, an African American freedman from North Carolina who worked as a stevedore on the New York docks, purchased land from Thompson. Weeks soon made his home near the location of Atlantic and Buffalo Avenues, which became the center of Weeksville, a black township comprised primarily of local freedmen and transplanted African Americans with a population of more than 500 residents by the 1850s.
In time, the hamlet grew, creating its own colored school, Citizens Union Cemetery, Torchlight newspaper, African Civilization Society, Howard Colored Orphanage, and Methodist, Episcopal, and Baptist churches. Bethel Tabernacle Church, founded in 1847 and still an icon in the neighborhood, is recognized as the first church in Weeksville. The historic Berean Missionary Baptist Church, also a local religious institution, dates back to that early era as well with its 1850 founding. St. Phillips Episcopal Church too (with its edifice on McDonough Street in nearby Bedford-Stuyvesant) had its beginnings in the early town.
Growth in Weeksville continued steadily, with a large jump in population realized at the outbreak of the Manhattan Civil War draft riots in July 1863. The burning of the New York Colored Orphanage at Forty-second Street and Fifth Avenue, random lynchings, and aggressive home invasions forced many blacks to seek refuge in Brooklyn.
Eventually the glacial moraine, created approximately 17,000 years ago by the receding Wisconsin glacier, was tamed by leveling the mountains and filling the hollows. Construction of local roadways soon followed, along with improved transportation, increased moderate frame housing, fine brownstone properties, and the ultimate destruction of a once rural lifestyle.
In time, the smaller townships of Carsville and Pigtown also emerged as separate identifiable communities, with many named after the communities’ local hills, such as Ocean Hill, Crow Hill, and Prospect Hill (becoming Prospect Heights), or as in the case of Brownsville and Malboneville, after local founders.
The Catholic Church also exerted a large influence on the settlement of what would become the Crown Heights neighborhood. A growing parish in the late 1800s brought about the founding and construction of not only magnificent local churches but also church elementary schools, high schools, a college, hospitals, and orphanages.
These included the churches of St. Matthew, St. Ignatius, St. Gregory the Great, and nearby St. Teresa, as well as the Brooklyn Preparatory School and College, St. Mary’s Hospital, St. Joseph’s School for the Deaf, St. John’s Home for Boys, the Bishop McDonnell Catholic High School for Girls, and the nearby Bishop Loughlin High School for Boys.
Advances in easy accessibility to expanded surface and later local subway transportation, along with the 1883 completion of the Brooklyn Bridge and Brooklyn’s ultimate 1888 merger with Manhattan, also brought change to the neighborhood. The early 20th century saw Crown Heights evolve into a melting pot of races, religions, and cultures from Irish, German, Italian, African American, Caribbean, Protestant, Jewish, and Catholic backgrounds.
That evolution continues today, and with those ongoing changes, clear evidence of the early, rural foundations of Crown Heights and Weeksville is also disappearing. It is only the challenging hill, rare 19th-century frame house, fragment of cobblestoned road peering through asphalt, or unexplained alley ending abruptly that now hint at the neighborhood’s past.
This is a look at that past and does not pretend to be a deep, comprehensive history. It is simply an effort to provide an overview of what came before, and in doing so, recognize the lives that were lived and the life stories that were played out, often anonymously. In remembering the local residents who once struggled with the challenges of life in the evolving communities of central Brooklyn, it also helps document some