- Willowbrook, Staten Island
Willowbrook is a neighborhood in
Staten Island , one of the five boroughs of the U.S.'s largest city, New York. It is located in the region of the island usually referred to as Mid-Island, immediately to the south of Port Richmond, to the west of Meiers Corners and Westerleigh, to the north of New Springville, and to the east of Bulls Head.Named for a brook that flowed through the area's farmland, Willowbrook once lay at the heart of the island's agricultural zone, and first saw other significant development when a military hospital opened there during
World War II . After the war ended the property became the site ofWillowbrook State School , a state-run institution formentally retarded children that became the scene of a national scandal in the 1970s when it was revealed that the children housed there were the victims of widespread abuse and neglect. The facility was forced to close by 1987, and six years later a campus of theCollege of Staten Island opened at the site.Willowbrook Park , a large city park, borders the college on the west.The neighborhood was also drastically transformed with the opening of the
Verrazano-Narrows Bridge in November 1964. Soon after this, the farms were sold and broken up, and residential housing was built on the property. Many of the owners of the newly built homes wereJewish families from the boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens, and as a result, Willowbrook became the center of the island's Orthodox Jewish community, which from the turn of the century until the late 1960s and early 1970s was primarily centered in Staten Island's North Shore neighborhood ofTompkinsville . Young Israel of Staten Island — an Orthodoxsynagogue that is the island's largest Jewish house of worship — is located in Willowbrook, as are a number of smaller Orthodox congregations, includingHassidic andSephardic congregations. Although Willowbrook is home to non-Orthodox Jews as well, there are no non-Orthodox synagogues in the community, and the Orthodox Jews of Willowbrook set the tone for the neighborhood as a whole. There are also many non-Jewish residents (primarilyItalian-Americans as well asEast Asian andSouth Asian immigrants). Willowbrook is also the location of P.S. 54, anelementary school administered by theNew York City Board of Education .External links
* [http://www.wjcd.org Willowbrook Jewish Community Development] - Willowbrook Jewish Community Development
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