2007-04-13

1911 New York Dock Company Lithograph

Greetings, visitors from Maritime NY Cultural Resources. If you find this post interesting, you may also want to check out my other posts about Red Hook.

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[Updated 2007.04.14 22:40 EDT: Mystery building identified!]

1911 Lithograph of the New York Dock Company holdings on the Brooklyn Waterfront
New York Dock Company lithograph, full frame, Circa 1911

This is one of the items we found in the basement of our house after we bought it. I'm calling it a "lithograph" just because I don't know what else to call it. It's in poor condition, as you can see from the closeups. I wanted to photograph it and share it in case others know more about what this is. Here's a contemporary view from roughly the same perspective using Google Earth.

New York Dock Company, Red Hook

It provides an interesting snapshot of the working Brooklyn waterfront owned and operated by the New York Dock Company early in the 20th Century. It ranged from East Red Hook, Atlantic Basin and Columbia Waterfront, North to Brooklyn Heights and Fulton Ferry.

Downtown Manhattan.
Detail, Downtown Manhattan, New York Dock Company lithograph, Circa 1911

Mystery: I don't recognize the tallest tower here. My first thought was that it was the Woolworth Building. However, the details and colors of this tower are nothing like the Woolworth.

Update: Josh Jackson of Built Environment Blog identified it as the Singer Building, which was the tallest building in the world for a few years, from 1906 to 1908. It looks like it was a magnificent building. It was demolished in 1968 for One Liberty Plaza.

The Woolworth Building opened in 1913 and was the tallest building in the world until 1930. If this view was of that time, it should be visible here. It's not, so that places this image before 1913, consistent with the copyright notice of 1911 in the applied label at the lower right.

Copyright 1911, by New York Dock Company
Label

The label reads:
Bird's Eye View
of Property of
New York Dock Company
"“The Premier Warehouses and Terminal”"
New York, U.S.A.

Copyright 1911, by
New York Dock Company
Some details of the waterfront from South to North.

East Red Hook
Detail, East Red Hook

Atlantic Basin
Atlantic Basin

Columbia Waterfront
Detail, Columbia Waterfront, New York Dock Company lithrograph, Circa 1911
Columbia Waterfront, New York Dock Company lithograph, Circa 1911

Columbia Waterfront to Brooklyn Heights
Columbia Waterfront to Brooklyn Heights, New York Dock Company lithograph, 1911

There are some nice details of New York harbor as well.

Statue of Liberty. You can really see the condition problems here.
Statue of Liberty, New York Dock Company lithograph, Circa 1911

Ellis Island
Ellis Island and New York Harbor, New York Dock Company lithograph, Circa 1911

Governor's Island
Detail, Governor's Island, New York Dock Company lithograph, Circa 1911

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6 comments:

jackson said...

Great image, thanks for sharing! The tall building is the Singer Building (http://www.nyc-architecture.com/GON/GON003.htm). It was the tallest building in the world for a time, though it was demolished in 1968 to make way for 1 Liberty Plaza.

Wish I found stuff like that in my basement...

Chris Kreussling (Flatbush Gardener) said...

J: Thanks for the id. I just updated the post with that info.

Fred said...

Wow! What a great piece. Before we moved to Ditmas, my wife and I lived in Redhook. That picture really captures the feeling of the place.

Anonymous said...

PortSide NewYork is working on a maritime heritage trail in Red Hook. I'd be interested to see this litho in person. I dont see a CONTACT link on your blog, so could you email me at carolinas@earthlink.net please. more about us at www.portsidenewyork.org. Thanks!

Dave F said...

Thank you very much for submitting this informative lithograph. My family - from my grandmother though my great great grandparents - lived in the Red Hook neighborhood of Brooklyn and I have wanted to get an idea of what the neighborhood looked like back then for some time now. Google Street View is limited because I suspect that much of the neighborhood has changed since then. For example, today there seems to be a lot of empty spaces between buildings, but the 1911 lithograph shows blocks of apartment houses packed together behind the piers. That is what the neighborhood looked like when my grandmother grew up on Verona Street between 1900 and 1928. Thanks again!

Ebenezer Howard, Jr. said...

Hi. Saw this for sale at the flea market on W. 25th St. a few weeks ago. Looked very good, but very pricey.