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Home > History and Archaeology > History > History of the Americas > Flushing: (Then & Now)
Flushing: (Then & Now)

Flushing: (Then & Now)


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About the Book

In the 1890s, electric lighting and improved roads were just the beginning of the changes about to take place in Flushing, New York. Once a rural village of wide-open farms and magnificent estates, Flushing transformed into a community of more than 200,000 people and quickly became one of the busiest neighborhoods in Queens. Flushing explores these dramatic changes with many never-before-seen images.

About the Author :
Jason D. Antos is the author of three other local history books: Whitestone, Shea Stadium, and Queens.

Review :
Title: ' Flushing' Is Latest Addition To 'Then & Now' Series Author: Linda J Wilson Publisher: Queens Gazette Date: 07/28/10 Arcadia Publishing's Then & Now series makes such local comparisons available. Books in this series offer a special view of American life by placing historical images side by side with contemporary photographs. Flushing, Jason D. Antos' latest work published by Arcadia, a notable addition to this list, transcends time, providing readers with a unique opportunity to view a particular municipality as it once was and now is. It is best described in the Foreword by Nicholas Hirschorn, as the compilation of a wide-ranging array of streetscapes [that] document how the area has transformed so remarkably with time. Antos' Introduction begins by noting the perils that those who would become the custodians of their town's records occasionally face and moves on to the ecumenism officially conferred by the Dutch governor of the colony of Flushing, William Keift. That ecumenism was later threatened by Keift's successor, Peter Stuyvesant, and led to the spirit showed by early settlers who gave their names to the document known as the Flushing Remonstrance of 1657. The Quaker Meeting House and the John Bowne House are two of the Then structures that date from the Remonstrance era and still stand in present-day Flushing and Antos gives the episodes and their physical manifestations their full due in Chapter 1, Flushing In Olden Times. Four chapters follow Flushing In Olden Times: Flushing and Its Environs, The Railroad Comes to Town, Flushing Meadows and Flushing in the Modern Age. In each, an old photograph and a current one of the same, or nearly the same, streetscape are paired on single pages while Antos' narrative does double duty as caption as well as text. Many of the vintage photographs are having their first airing outside private archives; many of the contemporary shots were taken by the author. In all cases, Antos has tried to replicate the older photo with a modern picture taken from the same angle and notes where out of necessity the modern photo could not be taken from the same angle as the original. Throughout the book, the contrast between old and new is striking. Even where monuments to time gone by such as the Bowne House and the Quaker Meeting House still stand, their urban surroundings provide sharp contrast to structures erected when Flushing consisted far more of farmland than any vestige of urban living. Flushing is a remarkable compilation of the study in contrasts that comes about when a modern-day landscape is compared to one of the same region of a century earlier. Antos is quoted by his publishers as saying he hopes future generations ...will want to learn about the history of Flushing and discover their roots. He has provided a fascinating glimpse into the past and accorded readers a look at the present and possibly the future of one of the most complex civic entities on the North American continent. Flushing is an invaluable addition to the library of anyone who seeks to learn about the history and development of what was once a rural landscape dotted with farms and small villages that is now one of the most industrialized, vital, burgeoning communities in the tri-state area and possibly the United States. It also allows readers to move backward and forward in time without resorting to the sometimes overly elaborate machinations of science fiction. Flushing is a necessary addition to the library of every serious student of history and for other readers an entertaining diversion and painless, pleasant and wellremembered history lesson. Antos is also a staff reporter-photographer for the Queens Gazette. Title: Books Give Glimpse Into Boro History Author: Barbara Arnstein Publisher: Queens Tribune Date: 7/28/2011 Reading any one of the series of historical captioned photo books from Arcadia Publishing is like traveling through time. Queens resident Jason Antos, a Queens newspaper editor, is the author of Images of America: Whitestone, Then & Now: Queens and Then & Now: Flushing. Each book features interesting photos, postcards, drawings and documents that trace the progress of Queens from 1645 to the present, and depict a wide variety of scenes and structures, including roads, restaurants, railroad stations, banks, bridges, libraries, churches, trolley cars, stores, and so on. One page of Flushing quotes part of an 1886 letter, in which a woman wrote to her husband, There is a rumor of a horse railroad to College Point and also talk of electric lights too. Oh! Flushing is changing, dear, and includes a 1926 photo, which depicts the dramatic differences in size and style between a huge furniture factory and the old-fashioned mansion beside it. Another page includes an undated photo of the King Neptune Fountain, decorated with statues of Neptune and four mermaids, and bedecked with flower urns, that stood at the intersection of Northern Boulevard and Main Street from 1874 to 1946. Sadly, there is no photo of the RKO Keith's theatre in its cinematic heyday, or any mention of its older history of hosting vaudeville acts. Among other fascinating facts, Queens reveals that Bayside boasts America's oldest hamburger fast-food restaurant (open since 1932). Although it mentions that Congress closed Fort Totten in September 1995, it should also have mentioned that it is now used as a training area for the police and fire departments. The mention of Astoria Park says nothing about the popular pool there, the oldest and largest in the city, but Flushing does include the intriguing fact that the Roosevelt Avenue Subway Bridge over Flushing Creek was built as a lift bridge that was the largest of its kind at the time. Strangely, there is no photo in Flushing of the 1964-1965 World's Fair at Flushing Meadows, and the only photo of the 1939-1940 World's Fair in it disappointingly shows only the Trylon and Perisphere (its symbols) from a distance. More strangely, although many long- vanished mansions are mentioned in all three books, there is no mention of Flushing's Voelker-Orth Museum, the beautifully restored mansion (with a beautiful Victorian Garden), at 149-19 38th Ave., where tours are regularly conducted, and events held. Most strangely of all, in Whitestone, Antos states that developers created beautiful beach clubs but their time was short-lived, ignoring the fact that private beach clubs still exist there, and have for decades. There is so much interesting history in Beechhurst that I am now gathering material for an Arcadia Publishing book about that area. If you have any photos, postcards, maps, letters or other materials relating to its development, or even interesting family stories involving Beechhurst to share, please allow me to consider them for the book. Write to me in care of the Queens Tribune, 150-50 14th Road, Whitestone, NY, 11357.


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Product Details
  • ISBN-13: 9780738572574
  • Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
  • Publisher Imprint: Arcadia Publishing
  • Height: 235 mm
  • No of Pages: 95
  • Series Title: Then & Now
  • Weight: 295 gr
  • ISBN-10: 0738572578
  • Publisher Date: 31 Jul 2010
  • Binding: Paperback
  • Language: English
  • Returnable: Y
  • Spine Width: 6 mm
  • Width: 165 mm


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