- Port Richmond, Staten Island
Port Richmond is a neighborhood situated on the North Shore of Staten Island, one of the five boroughs of
New York City , USA. It is along the waterfront of theKill Van Kull , with the southern terminus of theBayonne Bridge serving as the boundary between it and Mariners Harbor, the neighborhood which borders it on the west. Formerly an independent village, it is one oldest neighborhoods on the island. In the 19th century it was an important transportation and industrial center of the island, but this role has vanished nearly completely, leaving a largelyblue collar residential area bypassed by the shift of development of the island to its interior after the 1960s. The formerly bustling commercial center along Richmond Avenue (now Port Richmond Avenue) had been largely abandoned at the time, But in recent years many small businesses have opened in the area with the commercial activity shifting inland to Forest Avenue (or leaving the neighborhood altogether and relocating to theStaten Island Mall when the latter opened in the summer of 1973).History
In 1700 the area was known as the "burial place" from a cemetery of the
Dutch Reformed Church near the present location of Richmond Avenue along the waterfront. It later became a transfer point between ferries from New York City toNew Brunswick, New Jersey . A ferry landing (called variously as including "Ryer's Landing", "Mercereau's Landing", and "Decker's Landing") was later constructed for a route linking Staten Island across the Kill Van Kull toBergen Point (present-dayBayonne, New Jersey ). The Bayonne Bridge was constructed in 1931 yet ferry service continued until 1962.Cornelius "Commodore" Vanderbilt, railway tycoon and patriarch of the
Vanderbilt family , was born in the area in 1797. In 1836, former Vice PresidentAaron Burr died in Port Richmond at the St. James Hotel, a prominent hotel which once stood on Richmond Terrace until it was demolished.In the early 19th century, the area was an overnight coach stop between New York City and Philadelphia. In 1836, a public park was built. In the middle 19th century, the area began to attract immigrants from Ireland and Germany. Among the industries established in the area was the only whale oil processing plant on Staten Island. It was later replaced by a
linseed oil processing plant that operated until the 20th century. Other industries included lumber andcoal yards, as a dye processing plant.In 1866 the neighborhood was incorporated as Port Richmond. In the 1880s, the
Staten Island Railway constructed a North Shore branch with a stop in the village on Richmond Avenue, which had become a main shopping area of the island. In the 1890s, anAfrican-American church was established. At the beginning of the 20th century, it attracted large numbers of Italian, Polish, Norwegian, and Swedish immigrants. A public library was built with funds fromAndrew Carnegie in 1902.When
telephone service was upgraded inNew York City in December 1930, atelephone exchange bearing the designation "Port Richmond 7" was created, its territory including the neighborhood itself along with many other communities on the western and central North Shore plus the island's then-sparsely-populated, rural interior. This exchange was disconnected in 1948 when a "Port Washington 7" exchange was established to serve the town by that name in Nassau County, onLong Island ; the Port Richmond exchange's customers were then moved to exchanges that heretofore had been found to the east, such as "Saint George 7."The neighborhood suffered a severe economic decline in the latter half of the 20th century, largely as a result of the shift of development and commercial activity to the center of the island, following the construction of the
Verrazano-Narrows Bridge . The North Shore Branch of theStaten Island Railway that ran through the neighborhood connecting it to St. George was closed in 1953, leaving behind a dilapidated track and station along Richmond (now Port Richmond) Avenue (plans for reopening this line were studied at various times during the 1990s and early 2000s, but it is seen as unlikely that this will actually occur prior to the mid-2010s).70% White (mostly concentrated in the community's interior), 12%
African-American , 15%Latin American and 3% Asian. The housing consists primarily of older one-family homes and many very small apartments with several families per house. and unlike many other North Shore neighborhoods, there are nopublic housing developments in Port Richmond.ee also
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List of Staten Island neighborhoods External links
* [http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/03/realestate/03livi.html New York Times: Port Richmond, Lots of Arrivals, and No One Wants to Leave ]
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