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===The beach===
===The beach===
[[Image:Coneylsland1.jpg|thumb|220px|right|Lifeguard at Coney Island Beach]]
Coney Island still maintains a broad [[sand]]y [[beach]] from West 37th Street at Sea Gate through the Coney Island and Brighton Beach to the beginning of the community of Manhattan Beach, a distance of approximately two-and-a-half miles (~4.0 km). The beach is continuous and is served for its entire length by the broad [[Riegelmann]] [[boardwalk]], reputed to be the world's longest, and the subject of the famous song "Under the Boardwalk," first popularized in [[1964]]. A number of amusements are directly accessible from the north side of the boardwalk, as is the [[New York Aquarium]] and a variety of food shops and arcades.
Coney Island still maintains a broad [[sand]]y [[beach]] from West 37th Street at Sea Gate through the Coney Island and Brighton Beach to the beginning of the community of Manhattan Beach, a distance of approximately two-and-a-half miles (~4.0 km). The beach is continuous and is served for its entire length by the broad [[Riegelmann]] [[boardwalk]], reputed to be the world's longest, and the subject of the famous song "Under the Boardwalk," first popularized in [[1964]]. A number of amusements are directly accessible from the north side of the boardwalk, as is the [[New York Aquarium]] and a variety of food shops and arcades.



Revision as of 18:00, 8 September 2006

Image of Coney Island, located in the middle left of the picture, taken by NASA. The peninsula to the right is Rockaway, Queens.

Coney Island is a peninsula (and formerly an island) located in southernmost Brooklyn, New York City, USA, with a famous beach lying on the Atlantic Ocean. The eponymous neighborhood is a community of 60,000 people in the western part of the peninsula, with Seagate to its west, and Brighton Beach and Manhattan Beach to its east. To the north is Gravesend.

The area was formerly a major resort and home of amusement parks, reaching its peak in popularity in the early 20th century but declining after World War II. In recent years, the area has been revitalized by the opening of KeySpan Park, home to the successful Brooklyn Cyclones minor league baseball team.

The island

Geographically, Coney Island is the westernmost of the barrier islands of Long Island, about four miles long and one-half mile wide. It was formerly an actual island, separated from the main part of Brooklyn by Coney Island Creek, part of which was little more than tidal flats. There were plans into the 20th century to dredge and straighten the creek as a ship canal, but these plans were abandoned and the center portion of the creek was filled in for construction of the Belt Parkway before World War II. The western and eastern ends are now peninsulas.

History

The Name

The Native American inhabitants of the area called the island Narrioch, "land without shadows", because, in common with other south shore Long Island beaches, its compass orientation keeps the beach area in sunlight all day.

The Dutch name for the island was Conyne Eylandt [1], or Konijn Eiland (Rabbit Island) using modern Dutch spelling. This name is found on the New Netherland map of 1639 by Johannes Vingboon. (New York State and New York City were originally Dutch Settlements, referred to as New Netherland and New Amsterdam respectively.). As with other Long Island barrier islands, Coney Island was virtually overrun with rabbits, and rabbit hunting was common until the resorts were developed and most open space eliminated.

It is generally accepted that Coney Island is the English adaptation of the Dutch name, Konijn Eiland. Coney is an obsolete and dialectical English word for rabbit. Coney came into the English language through Old French (Conil), which derives from the Latin word for rabbit, cuniculus. The English name "Conney Isle" was used on maps as early as 1690[2] and by 1733 the modern spelling "Coney Island" was used[3]. The John Eddy map of 1811 also uses the modern "Coney Island" spelling [4].

Even though the history of Coney Island's name and its Anglicization can be traced through historical maps spanning the 17th century to the present[5] and that all the names translate to "Rabbit Island" in modern English, there are still those who contend that the name derives from other sources. Some say that early English settlers named it Coney Island after its cone-like hills. Others claim that an Irish captain named Peter O'Connor had named Coney Island after an island in Ireland in the 1700's. Yet another purported origin is from the name of the Indian tribe (the Konoh tribe) who supposedly once inhabited it. A further claim is that the island is named after Henry Hudson's "right-hand-man" John Coleman, who was killed there by Indians. Most of these claims can be found in a posting on the PBS website.

The resort

The Wonder Wheel and Astroland Park as seen from the Coney Island Beach.

Beginning with the period after the Civil War, Coney Island became a resort, as excursion railroads and the Coney Island & Brooklyn Railroad streetcar line reached the area in the 1860s and 1870s. With the rail lines, steamship lines and access to the beach came major hotels and public and private beaches, followed by horse racing, amusement parks, and less reputable entertainments, including Three-card Monte and other gambling entrepreneurs, and prostitution.

When the steam railroads were electrified and connected to Manhattan via the Brooklyn Bridge by the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company at the beginning of the 20th century, Coney Island began to turn more rapidly from a resort to an accessible location for day-trippers seeking to escape the summer heat in New York City's tenements.

The first carousel at Coney Island was built in 1876 by Charles I. D. Looff, a Danish woodcarver. It was installed at Vandeveer's bath-house complex at West 6th Street and Surf Avenue. The complex was later called Balmer's Pavilion. The carousel consisted of hand-carved horses and animals standing two abreast. A small coach was mounted on the platform for people to sit in who didn't want to ride the horses. The ride was illuminated with kerosene lanterns (Thomas Edison did not announce his first light bulb until three years later, in 1879). Music was provided by two musicians, a drummer and a flute player. A metal ring-arm hung on a pole outside the ride feeding small, iron rings for eager riders to grab. A tent-top protected the riders from the weather. The fare was five cents.

Nathan's Famous' original hot dog stand opened on Coney Island in 1916, and quickly became a landmark there. An annual hot dog eating contest has been held there since its opening, but has only attracted broad attention as well as international television coverage during the last decade. Since 2001 the contest has been won every year by Takeru Kobayashi of Japan who downed 53 3/4 hot dogs (with buns) in the allotted 12 minutes on July 4, 2006. The world record of 53 1/2 hot dogs in 12 minutes was earlier set by Kobayashi, who weighed only 144 pounds (~65 kg) at contest time.

In 1915 the Sea Beach Line was upgraded to a subway line, followed by the other former excursion roads, and the opening of the New West End Terminal for all the subway lines in 1919 ushering in Coney Island's busiest era.

After World War II contraction began seriously from a series of pressures. Air conditioning in movie theaters and then in homes, along with the advent of automobile access to the less crowded and more appealing Long Island state parks, especially Jones Beach, lessened the attractions of Coney's beaches. Luna Park closed in 1946 after a series of fires and the street gang problems of the 1950s spilled over into Coney Island. Though there was not a real danger as would be understood today, the menacing appearance of some of the youths, and their often harassing behavior made parents less willing to bring their young children to Coney or allow their teenaged children to go there.

The presence of threatening youths did not impact the beachgoing so much as it discouraged visitors to the rides and concessions - the staples of the Coney Island economy. A major blow was struck in 1964 when Steeplechase Park, the last of the major parks, was closed.

The builder and New York City Parks Commissioner Robert Moses actively opposed the "tawdry" entertainment at Coney and discouraged the building of new amusements. Housing projects, both for low and moderate incomes, were built and used up space of what had been amusement areas, and the aquarium project, where Dreamland once stood, reduced the available area for more traditional amusements.

In Coney Island's lowest years there was some incremental improvement in relatively small areas, notably the preservation and later the expansion of what had been the rides area at the back of the Feltman's property as Astroland. The general improvement in New York City's infrastructure, commercial prospects and image after the 1970s fiscal crisis under the mayoral administration of Edward I. Koch helped Coney Island, and many improvements were made under the recent mayoralty of Rudolph Giuliani, continuing with current mayor Michael Bloomberg, all helped by the Wall Street booms of the 1980s and 1990s.

While all of the original amusement parks have long since closed down, Steeplechase being the last in 1964, one since revived, Astroland, has gradually expanded, and there are now also several more or less organized amusement areas along with a number of independent rides and concessions.

The Coney Island amusements

Between about 1880 and World War II, Coney Island was the largest amusement area in the United States, attracting several million visitors per year. At its height it contained three competing major amusement parks, Luna Park, Dreamland, and Steeplechase Park, as well as many independent amusements. It was finally eclipsed by Disneyland in California.

Rides

Dante's Inferno, part of Astroland
World-famous Cyclone roller coaster.

The amusement area contains various rides, games such as skeeball, and a sideshow, games of shooting and throwing and tossing skills. Record setting Coney Island rides (as the first of their kind or largest) and notable rides include:

  • Wonder Wheel (1920), a huge ferris wheel with stationary cars and moving cars that run on tracks, now part of Deno's Wonder Wheel Amusement Park;
  • The Cyclone roller coaster (1927), which some claim is still the world's best wooden roller coaster;
  • The Parachute Jump, originally the Life Savers Parachute Jump at the 1939 New York World's Fair, which was the first ride of its kind. Patrons were hoisted some 190 feet in the air before being allowed to drop using guy-wired parachutes. This landmark ride, closed for years, was completely dismantled, cleaned, painted and restored, but there are varying opinions on whether it should reopen as a ride, or stand as a symbolic structure (it is often referred to as Brooklyn's Eiffel Tower);
  • The B&B Carousell. In addition to its unusual spelling, this is Coney Island's last traditional carousel, now surrounded by furniture stores, near the old entrance to Luna Park. The carousel is an especially fast one, with a traditional roll-operated band organ. When the long-term operator died unexpectedly the carousel was put up for auction and it was feared the ride would leave Coney Island or, worse, that it would be broken up for sale to collectors, being one of the last intact traditional carousels in the U.S. still in private hands. In an act of brinksmanship with the owners, the City of New York bought the B&B Carousell a few days before the auction.
  • Bumper cars, which are small vehicles with rubber bumpers all the way around, which ride on a flat metal surface, and are powered by electricity conducted by a pole standing upright from the back of the car and touching an electrified ceiling. The electrical ground is provided by the metal flooring. The object is to ride in a loop and bump other cars, especially if you are a young male and there are rival young males in another car, or better, pretty young girls. The idea for the Demolition Derby is said to have originated from bumper cars.

Rides of the Past

  • Thunderbolt, a roller coaster in Steeplechase Park that was constructed in 1925. The ride closed in 1983. It was torn down in 2000 when Keyspan Park was being constructed.
  • Tornado, a roller coaster constructed in 1926. It burned down in a fire in 1977.

Other parks and venues

Coney Island is also the location of the New York Aquarium since June 6th, 1957, on the former site of the Dreamland amusement park. In 2001, KeySpan Park opened on the former site of Steeplechase Park to host the Brooklyn Cyclones minor-league baseball team.

Since the early 80's Coney Island has been the home of Coney Island, USA - a non-profit arts organization "dedicated to preserving the dignity of American Popular Culture." Coney Island, USA produces the last 10-in-1 Sideshow in America at their theater on Coney Island. The organization also produces the annual Mermaid Parade, the Coney Island Film Festival, and houses the Coney Island Museum.

An annual (and revealing) amateur mermaid parade takes place on Surf Avenue, featuring floats, acts, and various entertainments, some rivaling the more famous Halloween parade in Greenwich Village.

In August 2006 Coney Island will host a major national volleyball tournament by the Association of Volleyball Professionals. The tournament, usually held on the West Coast, is to be televised live on NBC. The league will build a 4,000-seat stadium and 12 outer courts next to the Boardwalk for the event. Its promotional partner is Brooklyn Sports and Entertainment.

The beach

Lifeguard at Coney Island Beach

Coney Island still maintains a broad sandy beach from West 37th Street at Sea Gate through the Coney Island and Brighton Beach to the beginning of the community of Manhattan Beach, a distance of approximately two-and-a-half miles (~4.0 km). The beach is continuous and is served for its entire length by the broad Riegelmann boardwalk, reputed to be the world's longest, and the subject of the famous song "Under the Boardwalk," first popularized in 1964. A number of amusements are directly accessible from the north side of the boardwalk, as is the New York Aquarium and a variety of food shops and arcades.

The beach is groomed and replenished on a regular basis by the city. The position of the beach and lack of significant obstructions means virtually the entire beach is in sunlight all day. The beach is open to all without restriction and there is no charge for use. The beach area is divided into "bays," areas of beach delineated by rock jetties, which moderate erosion and the force of ocean waves.

The Coney Island Polar Bear Club is the oldest winter bathing club in the US. Members swim every Sunday at Coney Island from October through April, and many additional participants from New York City and beyond make an annual pilgrimage in the dead of winter to swim in the icy ocean waters, accompanied by bundled up television reporters.

The communities

In front of the Parachute Jump, walkers stroll along the Coney Island boardwalk, including some older Russian-Americans.

The neighborhoods on Coney Island, running eastward are Sea Gate (a private community), Coney Island proper (called West Brighton until the 20th century), Brighton Beach, Manhattan Beach and Oriental Beach.

Sea Gate is one of a handful of neighborhoods in New York City where the streets are owned by the residents and not the city; it and the Breezy Point Cooperative are the only city neighborhoods cordoned off by a fence and gate houses.

Its main subway station is called Coney Island-Stillwell Avenue and is reached by the Template:NYCS D, Template:NYCS F, Template:NYCS N and Template:NYCS Q train lines of the New York City Subway. The three main avenues in the Coney Island community (as opposed to the island itself), are (north to south) Neptune, which crosses to the mainland to become Emmons Avenue, Mermaid, and Surf, which becomes Ocean Parkway and then runs north towards Brooklyn's Prospect Park.

The cross streets in the Coney Island neighborhood proper are numbered with "West" prepended to their numbers, running from West 1st Street to West 37th Street at the border of Sea Gate.

The majority of the population of Coney Island resides in approximately thirty 18- to 24-story towers, mostly comprised of various forms of public housing. In between the towers are many blocks that were filled with burned out and vacant buildings. Since the 1990's, however, there has been steady revitalization of the area. Many townhouses were built on empty lots, popular franchises have set up shop, and Keyspan Park was built to serve as the home for the Cyclones, a minor league baseball team in the New York Mets' farm system. Once home to many Jewish and Italian-American residents, most of those living on Coney Island today are African American or Hispanic. In recent years an influx of Russian immigrants from the former Soviet Union, many of them Jewish, have also established a community on the island and neighboring Brighton Beach, with many shop signs now in both Russian and English, earning the nickname "Little Odessa". Furthermore, there is also a growing Chinese population in the area.

Education

Coney Island, like other parts of New York City, is served by the New York City Department of Education.

The Coney Island neighborhood is zoned to PS 100 The Coney Island School (K-5) and IS 303 Herbert S. Eisenberg (6-8). There are no zoned high schools.

Nearby high schools include:

  • Perhaps the most famous, fictional, residents of Coney Island come from Walter Hill's 1979 cult film "The Warriors". Based on Sol Yurick's novel, the film charts the progress of a street gang called "The Warriors" as they travel from their Coney Island turf up to a meeting in the Bronx and return home to Coney Island. In 2005 "The Warriors" movie was also adapted as a video game for the Playstation 2 and Xbox home entertainment systems.
  • In the 2001 Stephen Spielberg movie A.I.: Artificial Intelligence, David the boy robot and Teddy the mechanized bear travel to the flooded ruins of Coney Island in a submersible (Coney Island, as well as the entire Manhattan area, is now at the bottom of the ocean because of global warming). Just when David finds a sculpture of the Blue Fairy from Pinocchio and starts praying to it to turn him into a real boy, the Wonder Wheel collapses on top of them, trapping them for the next two-thousand years. Coney Island also features prominently in the film version of IB Singer's novel "Enemies, A Love Story".
  • Coney Island has a reputation both locally and nationally for producing outstanding basketball players. A number of accomplished basketball players hail from Coney Island, including Stephon Marbury, currently playing for the New York Knicks and Sebastian Telfair of the Boston Celtics. Telfair was one of the top high school players in the country and one of the last to make the jump directly to the NBA. His life in Coney Island is the subject of the upcoming documentary "Through the Fire". Additionally, Spike Lee's 1998 film "He Got Game", a fictional story about the stuggles of a top high school basketball player was set in Coney Island, further cementing the neighborhood in basketball lore.
  • "Coney Island Whitefish" is a song by Joan Jett.
  • Coney Island is mentioned in the Ramones song "Oh Oh I Love Her So" from the 1977 album "Leave Home"
  • Coney Island is mentioned in a song by Fountains Of Wayne on their 1999 album Utopia Parkway called 'Red Dragon Tatoo' about a boy going to Coney Island to get a tattoo to impress a girl.
  • Tom Waits has a song called "Coney Island Baby" on his 2002 album "Blood Money."
  • Van Morrison performed a song titled "Coney Island", but that's dedicated to coney island County Down in Ireland, where he spent some time on holiday.
  • In Futurama, Fry claims he went to Coney Island College, where he successfully dropped out. The college's team is apparently called the 'Whitefish'.
  • Coney Island is often shown in episodes of Spider-Man: The Animated Series as a famous New York landmark and as a background for some scenes, like the first of kiss of a main character.

Phish marked the beginning of its last tour with two shows on Coney Island. The first night, June 17,2004 has been turned into a DVD box set entitled, "Phish: Live in Brooklyn." The following is the setlist:

A Song I Heard the Ocean Sing Dinner and a Movie Curtain With Sample in a Jar Moma Dance Free Nothing Maze Frankenstein 46 Days [Disc 2] Possum [Disc 2] Oh Kee Pa Ceremony [Disc 2] Suzy Greenburg [Disc 2] Axilla I [Disc 2] 2001 [Disc 2] Birds of a Feather [Disc 2] Kung [Disc 2] Mike's Song [Disc 2] I Am Hydrogen [Disc 2] Weekapaug Groove [Disc 2] Divided Sky [Disc 2]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Joan Vinckeboons (Johannes Vingboon), "Manatvs gelegen op de Noot Riuier", 1639. Coney Island is labelled "Conyne Eylandt". Image of Vinckeboons map at Library of Congress.
  2. ^ Robert Morden, "A Map of ye English Empire in the Continent of America", 1690. Coney Island is labelled "Conney Isle". Image of Morden map at SUNY Stony Brook.
  3. ^ Henry Popple, "A Map of the British Empire in America", Sheet 12, 1733. Coney Island is labelled "Coney Island". Image of Popple Map can be found at David Rumsey Map Collection
  4. ^ John H. Eddy, "Map Of The Country Thirty Miles Round the City of New York", 1811. Coney Island is labelled "Coney I." Image of Eddy Map can be found at David Rumsey Map Collection.
  5. ^ Refer to maps given above.

40°35′N 74°00′W / 40.583°N 74.000°W / 40.583; -74.000