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Doughboy Park

Coordinates: 40°44′46.58″N 73°54′31.52″W / 40.7462722°N 73.9087556°W / 40.7462722; -73.9087556 (Doughboy Park)
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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ser Amantio di Nicolao (talk | contribs) at 05:41, 8 October 2015 (Cat-a-lot: Moving from Category:Parks in Queens to Category:Parks in Queens, New York). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Doughboy Park
Doughboy statue at entrance to park
Map
TypeUrban park
LocationWoodside, Queens, New York City
Coordinates40°44′46.58″N 73°54′31.52″W / 40.7462722°N 73.9087556°W / 40.7462722; -73.9087556 (Doughboy Park)
Area1.71 acres (0.69 ha)
Created1957
Operated byNew York City
OpenAll year
File:Doughboy Park.jpg
This image shows part of Woodside Avenue and Doughboy Park. The image reveals the Doughboy statue and some of the apartment buildings that surround both parks. From sloping terrain shown in this and the other images in the set, one can see why the Windmuller Estate, which antedated the park, was called Hillside Manor.

Doughboy Park is a 1.71-acre (6,900 m2) New York City public park in the Woodside neighborhood of Queens. It is located on a hilly parcel of land between Skillman Avenue and Woodside Avenue, and between 54th Street and 56th Street.

The park land was originally obtained by the city as a play area for local school P.S. 11 in 1893.[1] During the first World War, local soldiers met here before shipping off to the front in Europe. A memorial was commissioned by the Woodside Community Council for these soldiers, including ten who were killed during the war. The memorial was dedicated on Memorial Day, 30 May 1923. It features a statue of a somber, wounded American infantryman, colloquially called a doughboy. The bronze statue was created by Flushing, Queens based sculptor Burt Johnson, who also designed another doughboy statue in DeWitt Clinton Park in Manhattan. The statue was selected as the best memorial of its kind in 1928 by the American Federation of Artists.[2]

The terrain of the park was considered too steep for children to play on, and in 1957 the land was turned over to the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation. In 1959, the section of 54th Street between 39th Drive and Woodside Avenue was removed and converted to parkland, connecting the park to the adjacent Windmuller Park.[3] Seating, paths, and trees were later installed in the park, and in 1971 the park was given its current name. A conservation project in 1990 restored the statue, and multiple upgrades to the park have maintained the park.[1]

Since the installation of the statue in 1923, the park has been the location of local Memorial Day observances and other patriotic events.

In 2006, on the fifth anniversary of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks upon the United States, a memorial plaque in the park was dedicated which reads:

On September 11, 2001, the following who lived or worked in Woodside died in the World Trade Center attack. Their lives touched our hearts, their sacrifice changed us forever.
We remember them with love and honor.
(34 names follow)

References