"Staten Island: The Forgotten Borough" on New York Illustrated, late 1960s

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  • čas přidán 18. 05. 2015
  • A documentary about the rapid, uncontrolled overdevelopment of Staten Island after the opening of the Verrazano Bridge in 1964, and the fight by local activists to preserve the Island's unspoiled Greenbelt from the planned Richmond Parkway.

Komentáře • 346

  • @Triangulove
    @Triangulove Před 7 lety +133

    They thought it was over developed then? Wow, I can only imagine what they would think of it NOW.

    • @deniseg812
      @deniseg812 Před 4 lety +4

      Saturated.

    • @driccio2
      @driccio2 Před 4 lety +9

      They slowly eased is down your throat. When Gov talks about plans for beauty, help and improvement, you should know then, you’re done!

    • @johndavis9321
      @johndavis9321 Před 3 lety

      @@driccio2 yup

    • @grasmereguy5116
      @grasmereguy5116 Před 3 lety +4

      The craziness is that I talk to even more recent transplants/visitors who are coming over from Brooklyn in the past decade and they talk like Staten Island is so bucolic and has so much open space and little congestion. I'm like, "Whadd'ya talking about, we're overpopulated, traffic jams on Hylan!" It's all relative. My family came over in 1970, definitely after-bridge people, when I was an infant, but my late father bought an old 1920s-era house, into a "before the-bridge" neighborhood (and after living in Brooklyn and also places like Mexico, Uruguay and Israel, I'm back in my childhood home in my 50s). Our neighbors were all before-bridge veterans so we almost kind of got grandfathered in as "B4 Bridge" Islanders, or at least our B4 Bridge neighbors eventually accepted us. Now we are the old-timers. I talk to these recent transplants, many of them Russian-speaking Jews who moved here from Brighton Beach in the 2000s-2010s, and moved into these even tinier houses that are popping up all over, and they say things like "Staten Island, so wonderful, so much space, it's like country!" They have no idea.

    • @tony8490
      @tony8490 Před 2 lety +1

      I said the same thing

  • @mascara1777
    @mascara1777 Před 7 lety +47

    My grandparents lived on Chesterton Avenue. My grandfather was a hardworking man from Central Italy. I miss Caggiano's bakery store, best Italian bread.

    • @dddlll2471
      @dddlll2471 Před 7 lety +4

      mascara1980....I'm still in Oakwood hts....we all miss that bread...used to bye 3 and only get home with 2

    • @j.denino5732
      @j.denino5732 Před 7 lety +4

      Cangiano's went out of business? I moved away from Staten Island in 1999. We moved there from Brooklyn in 1966. Unbelievable!

    • @MrLarryDallas45
      @MrLarryDallas45 Před 4 lety +6

      Unfortunately, yes, they went out of business some years ago. They were also in Brooklyn. I worked for them at their 11th Avenue location, as a kid.

    • @firstnamelastname-dm6go
      @firstnamelastname-dm6go Před 4 lety +2

      I think it's a dollar store now . I never went in there .
      They replaced the goethals bridge too.

    • @theguy6199
      @theguy6199 Před 4 lety +2

      @@j.denino5732 Are you related to the Denino family (it's still there in 2019) that has been in business selling the best pizza on Staten Island since the 1930's? Denino's Tavern on Port Richmond Avenue!

  • @MicrosoftHQ500
    @MicrosoftHQ500 Před 7 lety +22

    Thank god they never built that parkway. Today the greenbelt still exists and is accessible for those who want peace and quiet away from the three core problems the island faces today: pollution, overcrowding, and traffic.

    • @onelgalagedara4472
      @onelgalagedara4472 Před 8 měsíci

      For real man. As a teenager that green belt has given me so much relief from a stressful home. I’m so glad the NYC parks has protected that land.

  • @reginalddorsey6190
    @reginalddorsey6190 Před rokem +3

    I was born in staten island Dec 67.❤

  • @joem2916
    @joem2916 Před 2 lety +5

    Born and raised on Staten Island. Enjoyed this documentary. 50cents for the bridge, which should have been paid off long ago. $19 now. I'm retiring and moving to North Carolina. Island definitely not the same anymore

  • @mredwards3000
    @mredwards3000 Před 8 lety +45

    Great. These old documentaries are fascinating. .

    • @toshiojohnston3732
      @toshiojohnston3732 Před měsícem +1

      Yes yah right they are fascinating because although nostalgia is great these films remind us that life the good,bad,ugly always happens in real time.just reme.ber all the things that were a big deal as a teen now you look back at laugh at it all.

  • @jensaccenti7306
    @jensaccenti7306 Před 7 lety +50

    I was born here in 1948. My family is italian. They came to ellis island. Worked their asses off in new york hard every day then came to the island. I am proud of my parents and grandparents. They all learned english. Italian people are hard workers. Salud to the italians of Staten Island.

    • @brandyquick5581
      @brandyquick5581 Před 6 lety +6

      Jen Saccenti No body worked harder than the Hebrew israelites (The real Jews are black people) that built america and never got paid! You italians and" Jew-ish" claim you built your selves up..but you had help from the government, they looked out for their own.

    • @matthewcircosta7353
      @matthewcircosta7353 Před 6 lety +3

      I agree Jen

    • @basitk12
      @basitk12 Před 4 lety +4

      Brandy Quick you're a dumbbell

    • @Its303AcidBass
      @Its303AcidBass Před 4 lety +6

      @@brandyquick5581 your culture is in decay. You have 75% children born to single mothers. Check yourself.

    • @alllivesmatter3561
      @alllivesmatter3561 Před 3 lety +1

      @@brandyquick5581 shut yo clown self up 🤡.

  • @pope414
    @pope414 Před 2 lety +6

    I loved growing up on Staten Island during the 60`s-70`s ..it was pure heaven

  • @adm712
    @adm712 Před 3 lety +6

    Keep in mind, in April 1963 a huge brush fire charred and destroyed significant amount of land on the south shore. As most of the public utilities at the time were antiquated, modernization as well as development was a good thing for Staten Island during the 1964-1980 time period. By 1980 there was a very good mixture of modern development, land saved for conservation as well as historical preservation. However post 1981 is what I call the "obnoxious development" period. This was where you destroyed any tree standing, or any past cultural remnent on the island in favor of an ugly condo or a strip mall.
    Kudos for this upload. This is truly an awesome obscure gem!

    • @Janotes
      @Janotes Před rokem

      They are still doing it now. Nothing has really changed.

  • @MrBGB2012
    @MrBGB2012 Před 8 lety +14

    I just saw this old documentary on "STATEN ISLAND:THE FORGOTTEN BOROUGH" (NBC,1968)....It's a great history lesson,and it makes you realize the more things stay the same! Development in S.I.,parts of Brooklyn & of course,
    NYC...you realize,people,it's all about money! Then,as well as NOW!!!

  • @susiearviso3032
    @susiearviso3032 Před 4 lety +7

    Its hard to believe that builders just care about the money, and not the people they are building for.

  • @anthonysosio
    @anthonysosio Před 8 lety +52

    Growing up on Staten Island in the late sixties early seventies was awesome being part of New York City but yet feeling like a small town, the biggest problem was when they started development in the late sixties early seventies they should have stuck with single-family detached homes only no semi's no town houses, that would have cut the population down and things would have been far better then they are now

    • @j.denino5732
      @j.denino5732 Před 7 lety +16

      The worst was when they started knocking down stately old homes on larger pieces of property and building 6-12 townhouses on the property. We were glad to leave but still have some relatives living there.

    • @dustywaxhead
      @dustywaxhead Před 5 lety +3

      Lord forbid too many people live in an area

    • @grasmereguy5116
      @grasmereguy5116 Před 3 lety +1

      @@j.denino5732 And they're still doing it. Look at Mt Manresa.

    • @deniseg812
      @deniseg812 Před rokem

      Friendly foreign and near.

    • @s.chuang4469
      @s.chuang4469 Před rokem

      They’re still second wealthiest in average compared to other boroughs

  • @RELIC3862
    @RELIC3862 Před 6 lety +48

    If they had only known what S.I. would become: an overcrowded borough filled with potholes.

    • @driccio2
      @driccio2 Před 4 lety +3

      They knew exactly what was coming!

    • @mustang2005
      @mustang2005 Před 2 lety +2

      @@driccio2 yup they laughed all the way to the bank

    • @robcop993
      @robcop993 Před rokem +2

      Potholes? Try craters. I live in Midland Beach and it's like driving on the surface of the moon. The city has not repaved any of the streets (around me) since we were hit by Superstorm Sandy. But they have no problems spending money on speed traps/cameras.

  • @rapman5791
    @rapman5791 Před rokem +3

    Even Big Ang wouldn’t recognize Staten Island today.

  • @nickk5263
    @nickk5263 Před 7 lety +13

    Haha, we didn't get sewers in Huguenot until the 1990's, so they were 30 years away :) Nice documentary, I was born and raised on Staten Island, it's turned into Brooklyn now though, they should have never put up the bridge. Moved out of there and never looked back, and do not miss the smell of the dump

    • @j.denino5732
      @j.denino5732 Před 6 lety +4

      The dump closed in 2000, right after we moved from Bull's Head to NJ. And the smell was totally horrendous by the mall and when the wind blew from the south you could smell it in my neighborhood. We had to keep our windows shut at all times and run the air conditioning in the early spring until the fall when heating season began. And we also had constant air traffic from Newark airport flying over my neighborhood, 24 hours a day. It was a total nightmare! My mother is still living in Eltingville, thank God she never really was affected by the smell from the garbage dump where she is. She lives near the train station. I asked my husband would he ever consider moving back to Staten Island and he said no way, he would never want to move back there, it's too overcrowded now. And he is a native Islander.

  • @Clau-xm4mt
    @Clau-xm4mt Před 2 lety +3

    my family currently lives in staten island victory blvrd ... a beautiful place

  • @kidfromstatenisland
    @kidfromstatenisland Před 6 lety +10

    This makes me very sad. Very sad, indeed.

  • @sandraa2971
    @sandraa2971 Před rokem +7

    It’s amazing that Generation after generation nothing ever changes. Staten Island was beautiful also in the 80,s and 90,s. around late 90,s Developers were knocking down beautiful older homes and putting up cookie cutters houses. One home on a nice size Property only to put four new big homes on the same lot the single house was on. Now in 2022 every thing that was said in this video never changed. Our elected official that do not live on the island think they know what’s best for the island. How about listening to the people who live here.

    • @michaelpauw6186
      @michaelpauw6186  Před rokem +1

      Nicole Malliotakis feasts with the Savo Brothers and Max Rose wants more and more Section 8 and public housing. All the rest are bought off and sold out; they always have been. We are mere prey for the politicians and the builders to exploit.

    • @deniseg812
      @deniseg812 Před rokem

      McMansions.

  • @kctyphoon
    @kctyphoon Před 3 lety +6

    Its funny to hear them mention the lack of sewers in SI back then. My fathers house in Annandale just had city sewers installed within the last few years. I think they said it was one of last areas/ blocks to get them. Its eye opening to see how far the “standards” of what people expected for their money have slid backwards.. Shown in the film - With only Dad working, Mom was at home in a brand new house, with 4 kids, a newer car probably, and the idea of paying 50 cents to cross into Brooklyn was unacceptable. These days most young couples would kill to live like that.. Life WAS better without all the technology. People lived in as a society, talking to neighbors, seeking to be around each other. Now we have a bunch of individuals at each other’s throats, living in homes they will never pay off, stressed by the boots of the politicians who’ve designed an environment to keep people from climbing higher.

    • @18thAveGR
      @18thAveGR Před 2 lety

      Such an accurate statement.

  • @stevelamb4684
    @stevelamb4684 Před rokem +1

    Amazing !! Thanks for sharing. Wonderful history brings back very fond memories !! 👍🏻🐑

  • @Paperbacknovel
    @Paperbacknovel Před 7 lety +19

    A big Thank You to the Green Belt people, who were ridiculed by local press (Staten Island Advance, etc) as heretics back in the 1970's, but actually saved the borough. See 20:20 mark -- Robert Moses wanted to put a highway thru the center of the island which would have destroyed the island.

    • @j.denino5732
      @j.denino5732 Před 7 lety +7

      I don't live on Staten Island anymore, but the thought of a highway through the Greenbelt is horrible. It would have totally destroyed any tranquility. I used to enjoy going to Wolf's Pond Park in my high school days in the late 1970's, I attended Tottenville H.S. from 1975-1979.

    • @TheMikerandazzo
      @TheMikerandazzo Před 5 lety +2

      Would’ve alleviated so much traffic. Fuck the trees

    • @tommcconville4270
      @tommcconville4270 Před 2 lety

      Robert Moses was the biggest creep that ever walked the planet. He ruined both the outer boroughs of Staten Island and Queens, where we came from, with grotesque highways and housing projects. And he destroyed the Bronx too.

    • @edforeman6401
      @edforeman6401 Před 2 lety +1

      @@j.denino5732 Wolfe's Pond Park hasn't changed. Ir's in the South Shore, not the Greenbelt.

    • @onelgalagedara4472
      @onelgalagedara4472 Před rokem

      God I’m so glad that didn’t happen SI is already a hell scape of stroads

  • @nate9213
    @nate9213 Před 3 lety +2

    Damn im 20 and im learning everday and love reading about things i live in staten island now and i love the history

  • @edforeman6401
    @edforeman6401 Před 2 lety +3

    I grew up in Annadale (1949- 1967), and moved back to SI in 1994. There's pros and cons then and now. I'm glad the dump closed (now it's a park) and the beaches have a better boardwalk. The Greenbelt is great, but expressway traffic is bad. It's still much more livable than the other boros.

  • @gregorypizzini
    @gregorypizzini Před 9 lety +41

    it is weird to see the house I grew up in this video! @ 14:36 , that A frame house is the one my dad designed in 1964and still is there!

    • @michaelpauw6186
      @michaelpauw6186  Před 9 lety +1

      Gregory Pizzini Wow- where is it located?

    • @gregorypizzini
      @gregorypizzini Před 9 lety +2

      It is in Annadale off of Barclay age

    • @takethisl629
      @takethisl629 Před 7 lety

      Gregory Pizzini haha thanks, now i know where you live

    • @marko11kram
      @marko11kram Před 7 lety +1

      I grew up at 415 Edgegrove Ave. Once the Bridge was opened, The entire character of the Island was fundementally changed. We moved 'upstate' to Dutchess Co. Now I lice in Putnam Co, and the threats to the area echo those from staten Island

    • @michaelpauw6186
      @michaelpauw6186  Před 7 lety +3

      Even in Putnam County, huh? Incredible. We've got to figure out some tactic that will stop the necessity to keep running.

  • @missyallthat6207
    @missyallthat6207 Před 6 lety +7

    Last time I took the bridge it was $18 from Brooklyn to Staten Island and free the other way. I remember taking my car on the ferry before 9/11 when they stopped allowing cars on ferry and it was $4 then went up to $6

  • @albertangeloro5832
    @albertangeloro5832 Před rokem +9

    not forgotten by republicans, bigots, racists and now Trump voters. this has always been the definition of Staten Island.

    • @crabstick250
      @crabstick250 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Thats why I moved 35 yrs ago. But my family is still there. There are people who are not right wing, racist nutwings lol.

  • @tfarr8138
    @tfarr8138 Před 2 lety +12

    My great uncle who was part of "the greatest generation" lived on Staten Island before the bridge. He told me if you were driving down Hylan Blvd and you hit Richmond Ave, Hylan was a dirtroad to Tottenville. My grandmother who was born in 1921 and grew up in Brooklyn called Staten Island "the country" because when compared to Bklyn it was so under developed as opposed to now.
    Any way this is a great video looking back into the past.

    • @mmi4745
      @mmi4745 Před rokem

      Staten still underdeveloped fuck is you talking bout

    • @tfarr8138
      @tfarr8138 Před rokem

      @@mmi4745 What are you talking about? Every bit of land that isnt Parks department as a townhouse or duplex plopped on it.

  • @stealth423
    @stealth423 Před 6 lety +29

    ruined by poor planning and corrupt politicians

    • @riley6863
      @riley6863 Před 5 lety +3

      You speak the truth I'm sure so please educate me. I was an 80s SI child and would like to hear from those before me plz.

  • @frankmarcia5956
    @frankmarcia5956 Před 5 lety +11

    i was stationed at base St George while i was in the United States Coast Guard. i loved the island and at the time 1965 to 1966 i thought about moving to the island. i now live in Tampa Florida and let me tell you something the builders here are doing just what they have done on the lsland with what we call mac mansions that all look the same and that are all overpriced. these new homes sit on property that used to be double lots with one house one story and lots of grass to cut and nice big back yards. it's a shame people don't care about having property with grass and trees and a nice back yard to enjoy.

    • @michaelpauw6186
      @michaelpauw6186  Před 5 lety

      Who can tolerate living in these disgusting buildings? Brooklynites I guess.

    • @MrLarryDallas45
      @MrLarryDallas45 Před 4 lety +1

      Not ALL us Brooklynites now. I've lived on the Island for a total of 13 years, & appreciate the peace & quiet I didn't have back in Brooklyn.

  • @johngallo4159
    @johngallo4159 Před 5 lety +1

    Watching this video brings back so many memories, I move to si in 1970 ,eltingville, Augusta ave,we had septic problems as well,I remember telling my dad there was poop in the basement slop sink, he was so mad..the woman sitting on the steps I'm eltingville I bet were on Willson and Pompey ..I remember my neighbor hood

  • @mariannelynnlatjow5641
    @mariannelynnlatjow5641 Před 5 lety +4

    5:02 Every block has that one house that all the kids play at, that one favorite yard....

    • @michaelpauw6186
      @michaelpauw6186  Před 5 lety +4

      Yes, that's how it was. Now the developers have built endless attached houses with no yards. What do kids do?

  • @vlauren22
    @vlauren22 Před rokem

    I grew up on Staten Island in West Brighton. We had woods at the end of our dead end street , all gone gone now with Brooklyn style houses. The bridge was the progress of the growth that brought on so much of the changes. Much of that neighborhood has change along with the south side of the island. However there is alway some beauty in change along with to the growth. I have good memories of the island and that is a saving grace

  • @mariannelynnlatjow5641
    @mariannelynnlatjow5641 Před 5 lety +5

    12:45 Huguenot!! Man, I never thought I would say this, but I miss this place!

  • @johnvalentino1698
    @johnvalentino1698 Před 5 lety +10

    That's me nailing sofit and talking to Larry Simmons !!!

    • @Fony_turgeson
      @Fony_turgeson Před 4 lety +1

      Really. Wow. That's kool

    • @Denis-rz7qn
      @Denis-rz7qn Před 4 lety +1

      thats so strange to think about. The people, the concepts in this video is so alien and distant to me in the 21st century. And here I am (supposedly) replying to one of the gentleman in the video. It might be my strong anti-development bias, but after the few times I have watched this video, I absolutely despise that Simmons fellow. His tone and attitude tells me that he is arrogant, and unpleasant. Did you know him well enough to get a guess at his personality?

  • @mechanicalpirate664
    @mechanicalpirate664 Před 6 lety +3

    Wow crazy watching this seeing our house at around 25 min mark on shirley and Arden ave what a different place today

  • @pingadol1555
    @pingadol1555 Před 6 lety +4

    When I was 16 my piece of crap car couldn't make it up the ramp of the Verrazano bridge and they ended up pushing it from the Brooklyn side over to the tolls.Plus the curve at the end of the bridge used to scare the shit out of me as a kid.

  • @smilingskull7827
    @smilingskull7827 Před 4 lety +12

    Moved off Staten Island 3 years ago, I was tired of communicating with my middle finger.

    • @rainbowskies5796
      @rainbowskies5796 Před 3 lety

      where did you go? I'm sick of staten island already. 5 years here now

    • @mmi4745
      @mmi4745 Před rokem

      Staten Island is horrible

    • @Seek147.
      @Seek147. Před rokem

      ​@@mmi4745 go to Brooklyn then have fun

  • @kraken138
    @kraken138 Před 4 lety +4

    Sadly, the developers and politicians finally did destroy Staten Island. Now, old-0time residents are fleeing as fast as they can, crime is up, and the quality of life has plummeted.

  • @FSTOPMAFIA
    @FSTOPMAFIA Před 8 lety +7

    awesome. Love the history. very cool vid

  • @jamesscarano7843
    @jamesscarano7843 Před 10 měsíci

    Was born on Staten Island in '71, lived there until 1998. Can't tell you how many times I heard the expression "This borough was nice until that bridge went up and all the shit came over from Brooklyn." :) Ah, good times . . .

  • @superblue2983
    @superblue2983 Před 8 lety +20

    It's 2016 now and the S.I. ferry looks the same as it did back in the late 1960s.

    • @superblue2983
      @superblue2983 Před 7 lety

      Salvatore Lanzieri no, her husband is.

    • @superblue2983
      @superblue2983 Před 7 lety

      Salvatore Lanzieri LOL! That's funny pally, :-)

    • @zipthepinhead
      @zipthepinhead Před 7 lety +5

      That's because the ferry builders construct them to look as they did during the first half of the 20th century and paint them all the same color they've used for decades, called "Municipal Orange". While a couple of the ferries actually are quite old by now (the John F. Kennedy being the oldest, built in the mid 60's) many of them are quite new, built in the 2000's. The old style design is largely for historic and nostalgic reasons.

    • @grasmereguy5116
      @grasmereguy5116 Před 3 lety +1

      @@zipthepinhead The JFK will be retired soon. I will miss its wooden seats.
      :(

  • @ratrod426
    @ratrod426 Před 9 lety +13

    Great job on making Staten Island all it is today ! LoL should of left it a forgotten borough ...

  • @davidjames666
    @davidjames666 Před 5 lety +6

    My heart is in Staten Island, but I couldn’t raise my own family there, as it got too dangerous with all the cars

    • @TrishB-kn3ps
      @TrishB-kn3ps Před 3 lety +1

      So you live in a place where there aren’t any cars?? 🤨

    • @davidjames666
      @davidjames666 Před 3 lety +3

      @@TrishB-kn3ps key words were “all the cars”. there are much fewer cars, much fewer people. I am up in the mountains where the only people who come near my home are my few neighbors. My street on Staten Island had people speeding thru as a shortcut to avoid Hylan blvd. my wife would guide me out of the driveway, as cars would be doing 50 in a 25 regularly. Trucks and busses would be stopped or parked blocking my view. too many cars and activity around there. the streets were not designed for it.

    • @TrishB-kn3ps
      @TrishB-kn3ps Před 3 lety +2

      @@davidjames666 true, people race down my block too.. si just is what it is now

  • @jameshughes6049
    @jameshughes6049 Před 5 lety +3

    I moved to the island in '74 when i was 5 years old & I'm still here. Wish it was like the 70's still & not so crowded. Too many people & way too many cars, but i love it.

    • @michaelpauw6186
      @michaelpauw6186  Před 5 lety

      Do you live on the North Shore or South Shore? North Shore at least hasn't changed since the 70s, although with this St. George nonsense even that is changing.

    • @jameshughes6049
      @jameshughes6049 Před 5 lety

      @@michaelpauw6186 South shore. Grew up in Oakwood now in Great Kills.

  • @TDTam11
    @TDTam11 Před 7 lety +7

    8:50 Ladies & Gentleman.....The 2 most Staten Island Ladies Ever!!!

    • @scarsinizm
      @scarsinizm Před 5 lety +1

      TDTam11 the one on the right had me cracking up

    • @iadorenewyork1
      @iadorenewyork1 Před 4 lety +4

      “Numbah one ... no more septic tanks. It should be down the drain. .... Every time you turn around, there’s something back in’ up.” A vivid personality!

    • @sleepingwithcats5121
      @sleepingwithcats5121 Před 3 lety +1

      Brooklyn ladies!

  • @crabstick250
    @crabstick250 Před 4 měsíci

    I grew up in Concord. I love all the New Yawk accents bahaha. It makes me cry to see what's happened on the Island.

  • @louis-vd3ur
    @louis-vd3ur Před 5 lety +7

    As a native Brooklynite who always saw SI as a far-off-mythical place and who has grown bitter at NY State politics, I can only say that NY is a hotel, not a home. We have to leave for elsewhere if we really want an American life. What we don't want to let go of is our immigrant status and sentiment, landscape and social memories, and other very rich aspects of life. Our very accent breathes life into us.

    • @michaelpauw6186
      @michaelpauw6186  Před 5 lety +4

      We thought we found a home when our ancestors came here from across the sea. And now we're being dispossessed again, most to sterile and souless suburbs.

    • @ramencurry6672
      @ramencurry6672 Před rokem +1

      If I was a New Yorker, I would stay in the area. Most other parts of America are bland. But it also depends on what your interests are. If the population density is too much, you could possibly move to Pennsylvania and drive back 2 hours to New York for visits

  • @reginalddorsey6190
    @reginalddorsey6190 Před rokem +2

    Who grew up in the 70's remember jersey street.

  • @Denis-rz7qn
    @Denis-rz7qn Před 6 lety +8

    Where did you find this video? Wanted to find some more footage of rural staten island.

  • @denisesimpson591
    @denisesimpson591 Před 6 lety +1

    I had a friend who lived in New Dorp for about a year back in the early '90s. She detested it.

  • @andreahart9237
    @andreahart9237 Před 7 lety +17

    I was born and brought up on Staten Island AND it was a grreat place to live until they built that bridge!!!!! I changed everything. We were no longer a suburb we became part of Brooklyn and were invaded by Brooklynites......

    • @j.denino5732
      @j.denino5732 Před 6 lety +5

      Sorry, I was one of those Brooklynites who moved to S.I. in the early 60's but we moved out of Staten Island in 2000. We couldn't take the overdevelopment anymore, the crowded roads, the lack of parking, etc. You really can't blame my parents for moving there, they couldn't afford a house in Brooklyn so they moved to Eltingville. It was so nice in the 60's through the 70's but when the 80's rolled around the builders started knocking down the older homes and building really ugly townhouses. I grew up in a detached house. I would never want to live in one of those ugly townhouses. We moved to NJ and bought a house on an acre of property. Love the privacy, my driveway which can fit 4 cars, etc. The problem is the city allowed the developers to overbuild homes so close together. They allowed S.I. to be ruined forever. At least there are some neighborhoods which are still nice there imo. Also my husband is a native Staten Islander, he was born in St. Vincent's hospital before the VZ bridge was built!

    • @sunfishdana
      @sunfishdana Před 4 lety

      Was that the Verrazano?

  • @SalCarola
    @SalCarola Před 8 lety +8

    Great video.... As a realtor on Staten Island for many years I really enjoyed watching this documentary

    • @michaelpauw6186
      @michaelpauw6186  Před 8 lety +4

      +Sal Carola Thank you. As a realtor, did you enjoy seeing all those forests replaced with connected boxes for Brooklynites?

    • @michaelpauw6186
      @michaelpauw6186  Před 7 lety

      No. We SI-ers before the bridge sprung up out of the ground.

  • @bkborn4256
    @bkborn4256 Před 7 lety +8

    The bridge was 50 cents and the ferry was a nickel lol.

  • @emanueleiosue2885
    @emanueleiosue2885 Před 4 lety

    It is so interesting to see how people thought before the bridge think the same way people think now! People hated the bridge because of how it changed the island. People who moved in after the bridge feel that it is so different today!

  • @Sonicfalcon16
    @Sonicfalcon16 Před rokem +2

    Sometimes being forgotten is a good thing. means the wont ruin what you like.

  • @dorothysewing9997
    @dorothysewing9997 Před 2 lety +1

    I could see the north tower being built when they showed the Manhattan skyline.

  • @ZeacorZeppelin
    @ZeacorZeppelin Před měsícem

    Wow my house was built in the 80s, but damn they're exactly the same level of production value.

  • @Denis-rz7qn
    @Denis-rz7qn Před 7 lety +6

    wish I lived during the rural era of the island

    • @kidfromstatenisland
      @kidfromstatenisland Před 6 lety

      I grew up in the 40s. You wouldn't believe how wonderful and safe it was.

    • @theguy6199
      @theguy6199 Před 4 lety

      @@kidfromstatenisland -what neighborhood did you come out of?

  • @deniseg812
    @deniseg812 Před rokem +1

    It was the beginning of the end. I moved to Staten Island in 79, because of love and the love for an Island that was still very rural. I moved to Tottenville. It's been ruined not only by over building, but ignorant people, 8 times out of 10.

  • @JVCPhotography
    @JVCPhotography Před 3 lety +3

    "Staten Nylan" The Verrazano bridge was 50 cents. Imagine to think the same bridge is close to $20 to cross in 2020.

  • @mattchirico
    @mattchirico Před 7 lety

    would using audio clips from this be considered copyright infringement?

  • @rosetorres8441
    @rosetorres8441 Před 8 lety +9

    I used to live on Staten Island, for about 9 years, until I moved away to East Brunswick with my family, I hate East Brunswick! I wish I could move back

    • @Michelle-jz8vl
      @Michelle-jz8vl Před 6 lety +3

      Izzy Why?
      Staten Island is a disgrace now!
      It ain’t what it use to be!
      I left the first chance I got.

    • @j.denino5732
      @j.denino5732 Před 5 lety +1

      Izzy East Brunswick is a really dull area. I live in Monmouth County it's much nicer. I also like south Jersey such as the Brick town area.

  • @sammiesamsung37
    @sammiesamsung37 Před 6 lety +7

    $20,000- $30,000 for a house?! Wow.

    • @j.denino5732
      @j.denino5732 Před 6 lety

      My mom paid about $30,000 back in the mid sixties. That is totally accurate.

    • @sunfishdana
      @sunfishdana Před 4 lety

      40,000 for a house on Long island on the water in 1966 !!!

  • @jeffbrown1518
    @jeffbrown1518 Před 8 lety +5

    got a kick out of the ladies my grandmother always worried about the cesspool i remember the honey wagon and the sewage in the yard

  • @michaeloshea3090
    @michaeloshea3090 Před 3 lety +4

    I lived here all my life I'm 60.My parents and grandparents also were native staten islanders. This island has hit rock bottom!

    • @sleepingwithcats5121
      @sleepingwithcats5121 Před 3 lety +4

      All of NYC has, and the world now.

    • @JRAHIT
      @JRAHIT Před 2 lety +1

      Wow, that’s so sad to hear, l used to live there in the early 90’s,, and I loved it.

    • @CB545A
      @CB545A Před rokem

      I live in NJ now but I'm originally from Bennsonhurst Bklyn and moved to Great kills in 1999 .I miss SI alot now. I dont like Barnegat NJ and had I not inherited my home I would've never left St George ((by the ferry )) 😢

    • @michaeloshea3090
      @michaeloshea3090 Před rokem

      @@CB545A That's the problem , no native Staten Islanders. This Island was ruined by the Ginny gang plank. Staten island was never Italian, it was German, Irish, Hungarian and in sandy ground freed blacks. All hard working people.

    • @jamesscarano7843
      @jamesscarano7843 Před 10 měsíci

      @@michaeloshea3090 Um, sir, it's spelled "Guinea" gang plank. If you are going to insult us, at least get the spelling correct. Thank you.

  • @TisEyerish1
    @TisEyerish1 Před 9 lety +22

    What happened to Staten Island was an absolute disgrace. I grew up on the North Shore, which was already very developed already, but still a great place to live. My old neighborhood still looks pretty much the same...but it is also very different. That bridge was the worst thing that ever happened to SI.

    • @Amidat
      @Amidat Před 8 lety +2

      +TisEyerish1 Which bridge? One of the ones to New Jersey?

    • @michaelpauw6186
      @michaelpauw6186  Před 8 lety +4

      +Amidat What do you think? It was the Verrazano that changed SI.

    • @stealth423
      @stealth423 Před 6 lety

      true

    • @j.denino5732
      @j.denino5732 Před 5 lety

      TisEyerish1 Paul Zindel wrote books which were set on the North Shore of Staten Island such as "The Pigman."

    • @TheMikerandazzo
      @TheMikerandazzo Před 5 lety +3

      Putting up the projects in Stapleton, Jersey Street, West Brighton, and Park Hill ruined Staten Island. Would be a much better place without them.

  • @519forestmonk9
    @519forestmonk9 Před 3 lety +7

    I grew up in Bayonne. Staten Island should’ve always been part of New Jersey. They would have been better off

    • @1enaan
      @1enaan Před 3 lety +1

      I disagree.

    • @grasmereguy5116
      @grasmereguy5116 Před 3 lety +1

      @@1enaan I agree with your disagreement. I hate it when people from the other boroughs say SI isn't legitimately part of NYC. Many of the people who I've heard this from are themselves transplants from other parts of the USA who have never been to SI, but settled in Manhattan or Park Slope, and they say "Staten Island?! That's in NJ, hah hah! I'm a real New Yorker I would never go there." Meanwhile they are originally from Ohio, Oregon or Wisconsin.

    • @tfarr8138
      @tfarr8138 Před 2 lety +1

      @@grasmereguy5116 I agree with you 110%

    • @peskypigeonx
      @peskypigeonx Před rokem +1

      @@grasmereguy5116 I mean, I consider the East Coast of the Island under the influence of SIRR to have that NYC style, just a bit quiet. I only consider the western parts more Jersey-like.

    • @grasmereguy5116
      @grasmereguy5116 Před rokem

      @@peskypigeonx Well, I am an East Shore guy (we refer to "shores" not "coasts" of Staten Island), half a mile from the Verrazzano, so I see what you are saying, I feel more under the influence of Bay Ridge here, and yes, we have a the SIRT (now called "SIR") trains here, almost like a subway (I am three blocks from the Grasmere train station, whisking me to the ferry terminal in just about 10 minutes). Other neiighborhoods that feel more Brooklyn-like here are Rosebank, Stapleton, Tompkinsville.

  • @missyallthat6207
    @missyallthat6207 Před 6 lety +10

    I knew this guy about 20 years ago from Brooklyn who used to sell crack to rich white people on SI. He used to make a few thousand a day and some of the customers were doctors & lawyers. For someone who grew up in the Midwest I found it entertaining at the time. Some of my family lived there and to this day I can still remember that smell from the dump especially by the mall- its distinct

  • @mallew32
    @mallew32 Před 8 lety +2

    Oh wow!

  • @reginalddorsey6190
    @reginalddorsey6190 Před rokem +1

    Child hood memories Stapleton west Brighton p.s.18r

  • @wmbrown6
    @wmbrown6 Před 2 lety +1

    I suppose Doug Downs who was credited with photography in the end credits is one and the same as who lensed the first several episodes of "The Honeymooners" in 1955?

  • @judyholiday1794
    @judyholiday1794 Před 3 lety +1

    We are experiencing this same situation here in Charleston,SC..It is just crazy how many people are moving down here which has caused this huge building boom..I mean it is awful because everywhere you look there is another condo or townhouse community going up..We seriously do not have enough room here for all of the people relocating to our beautiful city..

    • @Bababui69
      @Bababui69 Před rokem

      I was married at the Magnolia Plantation Gardens in Charleston. It was strange to see so many people from Ohio there. North Carolina is becoming a new Metropolitan hub.

    • @ramencurry6672
      @ramencurry6672 Před rokem

      While there are good things about the Carolinas, if I had the choice, I’d rather live up north in the New York area. Despite the annoying NYC/Jersey crowds, It’s still more interesting with more things to do and the public transportation is horrendously lacking in the southern states

    • @rapman5791
      @rapman5791 Před rokem

      The sad part is that they are bringing their liberal voting ways with them when they relocate. They will ruin your city just like the shitholes they are escaping from. 🤷‍♂️

    • @chelseabrown2144
      @chelseabrown2144 Před 11 měsíci

      @@Bababui69my family has been on the North Carolina Outerbanks since the 1700s. It’s changing so fast and it’s so sad. Overdevelopment & gentrification-destroying North Carolina communities along the coast and suburbs of the Triangle 😢

  • @Danuta628
    @Danuta628 Před 18 dny

    Wagner HS - I use to have my recitals - Miss Maryann’s dancing studio

  • @reginalddorsey6190
    @reginalddorsey6190 Před rokem +1

    West Brighton project's 1075 calseton yeah boy

  • @PRG013
    @PRG013 Před 8 lety +5

    I would love to see some of the uncut footage that was taken. What a shame. My family lived there since the 1900's. They were butchers, Ice and coal delivery and furniture movers. By the year 2000, none of my family remains there. We all fled to greener pastures.

    • @michaelpauw6186
      @michaelpauw6186  Před 8 lety

      +Kolby V. What pastures would those be?

    • @PRG013
      @PRG013 Před 8 lety +2

      +Michael Pauw New Jersey, Washington State, Long Island

    • @michaelpauw6186
      @michaelpauw6186  Před 8 lety

      +Kolby V. Well, Washington State might be greener, but NJ and LI? Ug.

    • @Amidat
      @Amidat Před 8 lety +2

      +Michael Pauw - Actually NY state is more forested than Washington State.

    • @michaelpauw6186
      @michaelpauw6186  Před 8 lety

      +Amidat Yes, upstate NY is quite beautiful, but that's not what you said. You said your family fled to greener pastures in NJ and LI. From my experience with those places, I would hardly describe them as greener pastures, at least not anymore.

  • @nickpatterson492
    @nickpatterson492 Před 3 lety +1

    I MOVED AWAY FROM STATEN ISLAND WHEN I WAS 12 IN 2007 SO MUCH HAS CHANGED SINCE THEN BEEN BACK TO SI A FEW TIMES THE PAST COUPLE OF YEARS AND THERE STILL BUILDING AWAY 👷‍♂️ WITH THE
    COLONIAL
    STYLE HOMES 🏡

    • @michaelpauw6186
      @michaelpauw6186  Před 3 lety

      I guess it's appropriate, since we have been colonized by Brooklyn guidos, Russians and Third Worlders of all stripes. I see nothing "colonial" about the style though. Just ugly boxes.

  • @reginalddorsey6190
    @reginalddorsey6190 Před rokem

    Is seaview morgue still there my dad worked there over 40plus years. Picking up bodies all over the 5 burrows

  • @frankesposito2182
    @frankesposito2182 Před 4 lety +2

    Look....its a Great Place to Live! But People think Development means....Building New Homes and that is Not Development when it is OVER-DONE! We still have Parks enough to Fill 5 Central Parks! That should be left alone.

  • @Lolabelle59
    @Lolabelle59 Před rokem

    I haven't watched this in a while. Sorry to complain, but I don't remember the volume being so low.

  • @fgjfdgjf
    @fgjfdgjf Před 8 lety +3

    Interesting..

  • @thethomasj1795
    @thethomasj1795 Před 4 lety +1

    The worst thing that could have happened to this Island was not finishing the Greenbelt. You can't stop progress without repercussions and Staten Island has been suffering because of the opposition to progress by those stuck in time.

    • @michaelpauw6186
      @michaelpauw6186  Před 4 lety

      You must be from Brooklyn.

    • @thethomasj1795
      @thethomasj1795 Před 4 lety +1

      @@michaelpauw6186 Nope born in the castle, raised here and still reside.

    • @michaelpauw6186
      @michaelpauw6186  Před 4 lety +1

      @@thethomasj1795 Interesting. I've never met a native Islander who wanted our Greenbelt destroyed and our island overrun.

    • @thethomasj1795
      @thethomasj1795 Před 4 lety +4

      @@michaelpauw6186 listen, the Island was already overrun when the VZ was completed. We may as well be able to get from point A to B without sitting in traffic that causes more pollution that does more damage to the overall environment than cutting down a bunch of trees. NJ built the Parkway through their version of the greenbelt and things turned out just fine. Staten Island is stuck on the mid 1900's due to people lacking vision and fear of the unknown. Robert Moses saw the future. He knew this was going to happen. People didn't listen to him. Had he lived longer perhaps he would have been able to push the project through. Staten Island today is the perfect example of what happens when you let a small minority dictate terms to the majority. History has shown time and time again it never works long term for anyone.

    • @mariawelsh3190
      @mariawelsh3190 Před rokem

      @Joyce B 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏

  • @Zanybandz123
    @Zanybandz123 Před 6 lety +8

    Then it turned to garbage island, now its drug island. But its home

    • @yankees29
      @yankees29 Před 3 lety +1

      NYC’s garbage dump! 🤣

  • @queenanacaona8531
    @queenanacaona8531 Před 6 lety +1

    Little boxes on the hillside

  • @sleepingwithcats5121
    @sleepingwithcats5121 Před 3 lety

    I live near, really within, the Greenbelt

  • @rapman5791
    @rapman5791 Před rokem

    “They’re puttin’ houses up like boxes”!!
    Aahhhh…… I hate to break it to you but a house is a box with windows. 🤷‍♂️

  • @JAB-bc9uv
    @JAB-bc9uv Před 12 dny

    Now they are allowing 3 story buildings to eother side of the SIRT.....one mile each way.....we really are Brooklyn.

  • @micjakes1
    @micjakes1 Před 3 lety

    Love the way they twuak. They twuak so funny.

    • @brass427
      @brass427 Před 3 lety

      They aren't the 'original' Islanders. Those are the Brooklyn 'immigrants'.

  • @moedub1023
    @moedub1023 Před 3 lety

    Market listing went up since the 60s way up

  • @Clau-xm4mt
    @Clau-xm4mt Před 2 lety

    Berazano bridge 👌👌🙏

  • @GerriDKlein
    @GerriDKlein Před 3 lety +1

    I was born there.

  • @matthewcircosta7353
    @matthewcircosta7353 Před 6 lety +1

    Well look at it now

  • @kaywhygg6980
    @kaywhygg6980 Před 3 lety +1

    55 seconds in imagine if she saw the island now it’s disgusting!

  • @goofusmaximusII
    @goofusmaximusII Před 7 lety

    no sound

  • @Snoopy60722
    @Snoopy60722 Před rokem

    👐🏽

  • @evanobrien2429
    @evanobrien2429 Před 2 lety

    Do you have the episode of NY Illustrated where they documented the Center for Sexual and Reproductive Health? I would like to see that, a family member is in it. Thanks!

  • @frankkelly2245
    @frankkelly2245 Před 3 lety

    Just getting sewer myself, lol. It’s days from 2021.

  • @estherhernandez4103
    @estherhernandez4103 Před rokem

    Me parece que antes a la gente muy poco le gustaba andar figurando por camara epocas memorables

  • @turkrane12
    @turkrane12 Před 5 lety

    North Shore rules, wait until the water comes.

  • @genebigs1749
    @genebigs1749 Před 7 lety

    60s Demi Moore at 3:22

  • @Thelivingwordthesword
    @Thelivingwordthesword Před 5 lety

    You all will be literally scared straight when it all over you will be walking as straight as a toothpick