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Ocean Hill, Brooklyn

Coordinates:40°40′48″N73°54′29″W/ 40.680°N 73.908°W/40.680; -73.908
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Houses in Ocean Hill
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Location in New York City

Ocean Hillis a subsection ofBedford–Stuyvesantin theNew York CityboroughofBrooklyn.The neighborhood is part ofBrooklyn Community Board 16and was founded in 1890.[1]TheZIP codefor the neighborhood is 11233. Ocean Hill's boundaries start fromBroadwayand the neighborhood ofBushwickin the north, Ralph Avenue and the neighborhoods of Bedford–Stuyvesant proper andCrown Heightsto the west,East New York Avenueand the neighborhood ofBrownsvilleto the south, and Van Sinderen Avenue and the neighborhood ofEast New Yorkto the east.

History

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Ocean Hill was named because it was slightly hilly.[2]Ocean Hill wassubdividedfrom the larger community ofStuyvesant Heights.From the beginning of the 20th century to the 1960s Ocean Hill was an Italian enclave. By the late 1960s Ocean Hill and Bedford-Stuyvesant proper together formed the largestAfrican Americancommunity in the United States.

In 1968, the Ocean Hill–Brownsville school district experienced a major teachers' strike. At that time, theNew York City Board of Educationexercised centralized control of the entire school system, assigning teachers and administrators to local schools. In response to complaints from parents in poor minority neighborhoods that schools were failing their students, theFord Foundationhelped fund an experimental program in the district that gave control to local educators and families. The program started off smoothly, but it ended as a fiery chapter in city history. Charging that Board of Education employees were seeking to sabotage the decentralization effort, black district leaders exiled 13 teachers and six administrators—most of them Jewish—to other districts. As theUnited Federation of Teachersprotested the transfers, the two sides traded harsh accusations of racism and anti-Semitism. Teachers declared amonths' long strikethat shuttered most of the city’s schools. The conflict finally ended when the Board of Education agreed to set up local school boards throughout the city.[3]

TheJuly 1977 blackout in New York Cityled to widespread looting and arson. A fire set in a looted warehouse spread to several nearby structures and severely damaged tenement buildings in the area.[4]Many heavily damaged buildings were abandoned for many years like the ones in theSouth Bronx.Finally in the 1990s Ocean Hill experienced a revitalization as many abandoned buildings and lots were renovated.

Gentrification

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Ocean Hill is in the process ofgentrification.An increasing number of people of various ethnicities are moving into the area due to slightly lower rent prices in Brownsville[5]and eastern Crown Heights.[6]Many abandoned buildings andbrownstoneshave been rehabilitated.Prospect Plaza Houses,once a notorious housing project unit, has been closed by theNew York City Housing Authorityand is in the process of being rebuilt under the federally fundedHOPE VIprogram.[7]There are attempts to overhaul the area to resembleFort Greene-Clinton Hilldue to the low rents and massive retail space.[8]

Many residents of Ocean Hill consider themselves residents of Bedford-Stuyvesant. Due togentrification,many real estate developers and the community board use the name Bedford-Stuyvesant/Ocean Hill or just Bedford-Stuyvesant, to avoid the neighborhood being confused with neighboringBrownsvilleto the southeast.

Broadway Junction

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Ocean Hill, itself a sub-neighborhood of Bedford–Stuyvesant, also contains the sub-sub-neighborhood of Broadway Junction, defined byBroadwayto the north,Atlantic Avenueto the south, Rockaway Avenue to the west, and Van Sinderen Avenue to the east.[9]The area is mostly zoned for light commercial and industrial use, but there is some residential development in the area which consists of two- to three-story residences.[10]Broadway Junction is split roughly in half by the Atlantic Avenue/LIRR viaduct, with few connections between the two parts of the neighborhood. This disconnect, combined with small blocks and relatively underused streets, parcels, and public spaces, has led to the subsection's characterization as a blighted area, and as such, it is largely ignored by neighboring communities.[10]There are plans to add mixed-use areas in Broadway Junction, as well as rezone the area for residential, commercial, and industrial developments, as well as improve transit connectivity in the area. A plan put forth by theNew York City Department of Transportationwould make Broadway Junction into a transportation hub, with residential integration with Ocean Hill on the west and mixed-use industrial and commercial properties on the east.[10]

Broadway Junction was originally known asJamaica Pass,a name that became famous in 1776 as the route the British Army marched from southern Kings County to attack Brooklyn during theBattle of Long Island.[9][11]The current name refers to the currentBroadway Junctionsubway station, which once connected to the LIRR and theFulton Street Elas well.[10]Nearby is theCemetery of the Evergreens,andHighland Park.[9]

Demographics

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Based on data from the2020 United States census,the population for the neighborhood was 37,952, an increase of 18.8% from the 31,935 counted in the2010 census.The 2020 population for the neighborhood was 24,567 (64.7%) Black non-Hispanic, 7,714 (20.3%) Hispanic/Latino (of any race), 2,597 (6.8%) White non-Hispanic, 1,879 (5.0%) Non-Hispanic of two or more races, 741 (2.0%) Asian non-Hispanic and 454 (1.2%) Some other race, non-Hispanic.[12]

Based on data from the 2010 census, the population of Ocean Hill was 31,935, an increase of 1,868 (6.2%) from the 30,067 counted in2000.Covering an area of 460.85 acres (186.50 ha), the neighborhood had a population density of 69.3 inhabitants per acre (44,400/sq mi; 17,100/km2).[13]The racial makeup of the neighborhood was 1.4% (439)White,77.7% (24,825)African American,0.4% (132)Native American,0.6% (199)Asian,0.0% (2)Pacific Islander,0.3% (111) fromother races,and 1.6% (511) from two or more races.HispanicorLatinoof any race were 17.9% (5,716) of the population.[14]

Safety

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The 73rd Precinct of theNew York City Police Departmentcovers the area. From the 1960s to early 2000s, Ocean Hill and neighboring Brownsville experienced a high crime rate, but by 2019, the crime rates reached an all-time low.[15]

Transportation

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Ocean Hill is served by theB7,B12,B15,B20,B25,B47,B60andQ24of theNew York City Bus.[16]TheA,​C​,J​,L​, andZtrains of theNew York City Subway,on theBMT Canarsie Line,BMT Jamaica Line,andIND Fulton Street Line,which all meet atBroadway Junction.[17]There is alsoLong Island Rail Road(LIRR) service at nearbyEast New York.

Notable residents

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See also

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References

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  1. ^"Brooklyn Community Boards".RetrievedDecember 31,2007.
  2. ^"Ocean Hill area".streeteasy.Retrieved27 December2018.
  3. ^Weisman, Steven R."A City at War",The New York Times,March 1, 1997. Accessed July 6, 2016.
  4. ^Raab, Selwyn."Ravage Continues Far Into Day; Gunfire and Bottles Beset Police",The New York Times,July 15, 1977. Accessed December 18, 2023. "ln the Ocean Hill section of Brooklyn a fire that started in a looted factory warehouse leaped across the street and destroyed four tenements, then spread to two other houses behind the warehouse."
  5. ^Stephen Jacob Smith (14 May 2013)."Closing in on Brownsville: Brooklyn Gentrification Nears the Final Frontier".Observer.
  6. ^Sharp, Sonja (May 10, 2013)."Bigger Spaces, Smaller Rents Lure New Faces Eastward in Crown Heights".DNAinfo New York.Archived fromthe originalon 2015-06-26.
  7. ^"See New York City Planning Commission report C 030474 HAK"(PDF).Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 2010-05-28.Retrieved2010-01-14.
  8. ^Bleyer, Jennifer (2007-06-17)."At Long Last, Developers Show an Interest".The New York Times.ISSN0362-4331.Retrieved2024-02-26.
  9. ^abcJackson, Kenneth T.,ed. (1995).The Encyclopedia of New York City.New Haven:Yale University Press.ISBN0300055366.,p. 141.
  10. ^abcd"Sustainable Communities East New York; Chapter V: Broadway Junction Subarea"(PDF).nyc.gov.New York City Department of City Planning.June 2014. pp. 86–113.Retrieved16 July2016.
  11. ^Schecter, Barnet.The Battle for New York - The City at the Heart of the American Revolution.Walker & Company. New York. 2002.ISBN0-8027-1374-2
  12. ^New York City Decennial Census Data,New York City Department of City Planning.Accessed March 20, 2023.
  13. ^Table PL-P5 NTA: Total Population and Persons Per Acre - New York City Neighborhood Tabulation Areas*, 2010,Population Division -New York CityDepartment of City Planning, February 2012. Accessed June 16, 2016.
  14. ^Table PL-P3A NTA: Total Population by Mutually Exclusive Race and Hispanic Origin - New York City Neighborhood Tabulation Areas*, 2010,Population Division -New York CityDepartment of City Planning, March 29, 2011. Accessed June 14, 2016.
  15. ^"Newsday".nycpba.org.
  16. ^"Brooklyn Bus Map"(PDF).Metropolitan Transportation Authority.October 2020.RetrievedDecember 1,2020.
  17. ^"Subway Map"(PDF).Metropolitan Transportation Authority.September 2021.RetrievedSeptember 17,2021.
  18. ^Wakin, Daniel J."Anton Coppola, Opera Conductor in Filmmaking Clan, Dies at 102",The New York Times,March 9, 2020. Accessed December 18, 2023. "Antonio Coppola was born on March 21, 1917, in Ocean Hill, Brooklyn, but grew up mostly in East Harlem."
  19. ^Chambers, Marcia."An Embattled Esposito Stands Firm in Brooklyn",The New York Times,February 17, 1979. Accessed December 18, 2023. "Amedeo Henry Esposito was born in the Ocean Hill section of Brooklyn, then a Jewish‐Italian‐Irish neighborhood."
  20. ^"Justice Walter Hart, 7'5, Dies; Former Councilman, Alderman; Brooklyn Lawyer Appointed in 1949 Fought Racial Bias by City's Colleges",The New York Times,June 18, 1969. Accessed December 18, 2023. "Justice Hart was born Feb. 27, 1894, in the Ocean Hill section of Brooklyn at Atlantic Avenue and Russell Place,"
  21. ^Berkow, Ira."Red Holzman, Hall of Fame Coach, Dies at 78",The New York Times,November 15, 1998. Accessed February 7, 2022. "William Holzman was born on Aug. 10, 1920, on the Lower East Side of Manhattan and moved with his family to a tenement in the Ocean Hill-Brownsville section of Brooklyn when he was 4 years old."
  22. ^Cipollini, Christian."Dealing Death In Drag; Eighty Years Ago, Murder Inc. Gunman Harry ‘Happy’ Maione Donned A Dress And Makeup To Take Out Two Disobedient Union Men",Mob Museum,March 8, 2019. Accessed February 7, 2022. "Harry 'Happy' Maione, a temperamental and undeniably menacing man from Ocean Hill, Brooklyn, maintained an elite spot on this killer roll call."
  23. ^Williams, Monte."Samuel D. Wright, 73, Former Assemblyman",The New York Times,February 1, 1998. Accessed December 18, 2023. "A native of Ocean Hill, Mr. Wright was a 1960 graduate of Brooklyn Law School."
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40°40′48″N73°54′29″W/ 40.680°N 73.908°W/40.680; -73.908