(Redirected from Gravesend Bay)
'Gravesend' (pronounced "GRAVES end", not "grave SEND") is a neighborhood in the
New York City borough of
Brooklyn, USA. It is bordered by
Bensonhurst,
Sheepshead Bay, and
Coney Island. It was named after the English seaport of Gravesend Gravesham, Kent.
[1] However, many speculate that the namesake of Gravesend comes from many roads that intersect the Washington Cemetery located in the area, between 65th Street,
Bay Parkway and
Ocean Parkway. Shoreline parks include Drier Offerman Park.
Gravesend was one of the original
towns in the Dutch colony of
New Netherland and became one of the six original towns of
Kings County in colonial
New York. It was the only English chartered town in what became Kings County and was designated the "Shire Town" when the English assumed control, as it was the only one where records could be kept in English. Courts were removed to
Flatbush in 1685. The former name survives, and is now associated with a neighborhood in Brooklyn. Gravesend is notable for being founded by a woman,
Lady Deborah Moody; a patent was granted to the English settlers by Governor
Willem Kieft,
December 19,
1645.
Gravesend Town encompassed 7,000 acres (28 km²) in southern Kings County, including the entire
island of
Coney Island, which was originally the town's common lands on the
Atlantic Ocean, divided up, as was the town itself, into 41 parcels for the original patentees. When the town was first laid out, almost half were saltmarsh wetlands and sandhill dunes along the shore of 'Gravesend Bay'. An independent town up until the late nineteenth century, Gravesend was annexed to Brooklyn on
May 4,
1894 as its 31st Ward.
The current community of Gravesend is centered on the former village square centered at the intersection of [Gravesend] Neck Road and McDonald (formerly Gravesend) Avenue. The center of the square is dominated and served by the
Avenue U station of the
IND Culver Line of the
New York City Subway system.
Gravesend Race Track
In 1886, the
Dwyer Brothers formed the Brooklyn Jockey Club and rebuilt the
horse racing track at the
Prospect Park fairgrounds. Opened in 1887, they called their new facilty
Gravesend Race Track. Among the major
graded stakes races launched at the track were the
Brooklyn Handicap,
Brooklyn Derby,
Tremont Stakes, and the
Gazelle Handicap. The facility closed in 1910 and the land was eventually sold to
real estate developers.
Sources
★ J. H. French, ''Gazetteer Of the State of New York'' (1860)
[1]
★ (
May 4,
1894). "
A New Chapter in History"
The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Page 4
★ (
May 4,
1894). "
Becoming Wards One By One"
The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Page 12
Gallery