Timeline of Brooklyn

This is a timeline and chronology of the history of Brooklyn, New York. Brooklyn is the most populous of New York City's boroughs, and was settled in 1646.

17th century

18th century

Wykoff-Bennet House, built c. 1744
Erasmus Hall High School on Flatbush Avenue seen in 2008

19th century

1800s

The screw sloop-of-war USS Enterprise docked at the shipyard, ca. 1890.
Quarters 'A', Brooklyn Navy Yard

1810s

1820s

  • 1820 – Ohio (1820) is launched from the Brooklyn Navy Yard. Missions include suppressing the slave trade off the coast of west Africa.
  • 1823 – Brooklyn Apprentices' Library Association formed.[22] ** After the occupying British evacuation, Fort Brooklyn was leveled between 1823 and 1825 for development.
  • 1827 – James Street Market built.[23]
  • 1828 – New Utrecht Reformed Church established and is the fourth oldest church in Brooklyn. In 1828, The present church was built in 1828 of stones taken from the original church, built in 1700.
  • 1829 – Coney Island House opens.[24]

1830s

John Rankin House at 440 Clinton Street, constructed in 1840

1840s

Brooklyn Borough Hall

1850s

Philharmonic Society of Brooklyn

1860s

Brooklyn Sanitary Fair, Knickerbocker Hall, 1864
Soldiers' and Sailors' Arch at Grand Army Plaza

1870s

Repaving Clinton Street, ca. 1872–1887

1880s

Brooklyn Bridge
City of Brooklyn as mapped in 1897, before consolidation with Greater New York

1890s

The Brooklyn Museum (exterior shown) was founded in 1895
Claude Monet, The Church at Vernon, (1894), The Brooklyn Museum.
Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Les Vignes à Cagnes, (1908), The Brooklyn Museum
John Singer Sargent, Paul César Helleu Sketching with His Wife, (1889), at The Brooklyn Museum.

20th century

1900s

The former Rusell Benedict House (1902) at 104 Buckingham Road in Prospect Park South
Logo of the Brooklyn Dodgers/Superbas from 1910 through 1913
Coney Island "Cyclone" roller-coaster

1910s

1920s

1930s

Louis Gossett Jr, Born: May 27, 1936

1940s

Lou Reed performing at the Hop Farm Music Festival (2011)

1950s

D'Onofrio in 2011.

1960s

Brooklyn Heights Historic District
Map of (part of) Brooklyn in 1967

1970s

1980s

1990s

21st century

2000s

Brooklyn Navy Yard, Building 92 museum
  • 2000 – DUMBO Industrial District was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[21] The district includes the earliest large-scale reinforced concrete factory buildings in America.[200]
  • 2001 – Brooklyn Cyclones – The team's new park, which was then called KeySpan Park, was completed in time for the 2001 season. Brooklyn had been without professional baseball since 1958.[201]
  • 2002
  • 2003
    • Gun court of law established.[203]
    • Williamsburg Houses were designated a New York City Landmark.
  • 2004
    • Renovation of the 80 Arts – James E. Davis Arts Building, completed in Summer 2004, becoming the Downtown Brooklyn Cultural District's first completed project.
    • Steiner Studios Opens at the site of the Brooklyn Navy Yard. The 310,000-square-foot facility is the largest and most sophisticated studio complex outside of Hollywood, offering five soundstages and state-of-the-art film and television production facilities. Steiner Studios
  • 2006
  • 2007
    • East River State Park opens on May 26[210]
    • Construction starts at Northside Piers, a 29-story – 180-unit building of luxury condominium tower in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.
    • Opening of a 400-foot-long recreation pier with the city's finest waterfront sculpture, a dramatic, stainless-steel, curving canopy designed by Brooklyn artist, Mark Gibian and located in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.
    • Steiner Studios was the location of the 17th annual Gotham Awards held on November 27, 2007.[211]
    • We Own the Night is filmed in Brooklyn, American crime drama film written and directed by James Gray.
    • Brooklyn Ink in publication.[212]
  • 2008
    • One Brooklyn Bridge Park, a building that converted 1,000,000+ square foot warehouse building located along Furman Street just south of Joralemon Street with over 400 residential units with 80,000 square feet of ground floor retail, and over 500 parking spaces.
    • April 2008, Brooklyn Flea opens.
  • 2009

2010s

  • 2010
  • 2011
    • In October, it was announced that Douglaston Development, which built the Edge, the adjoining property just to the north of Northside Piers, would build a 40-story rental tower on a site within the Northside Pier complex with construction scheduled to bring in March 2012.
    • The Brooklyn Flea opened the Williamsburg location.
    • Brooklyn Academy of Music celebrates ¡Sí Cuba!, a citywide festival of Cuban culture, with the BAM presentations of Creole Choir and Ballet Nacional de Cuba.
  • 2012
    • The Brooklyn Flea opened the DUMBO location at the historic Tobacco Warehouse.
    • In March 2012, Mayor Michael Bloomberg unveiled five new sound stages (a total of 30,500 square feet (2,830 m2)) at Steiner Studios.[219] The new sound stages all feature two or three wall cycloramas.[220]
    • On February 2, 2012, the Weir Greenhouse was purchased by the neighboring Green-Wood Cemetery, which plans to preserve the greenhouse and restore elements which have decayed in recent years.[221]
    • In December 2012, the city approved 50,000 square feet of new creative, cultural, and community space at the "South Site" located at Flatbush Avenue and Lafayette Street.
    • In October, the $637 million Barclays Center, where the Brooklyn Nets play, opened.[222][223][224]
  • 2013
  • 2014
  • 2015
    • In January the movie Brooklyn, filmed in part in Coney Island.
    • Hillary Clinton presidential campaign, 2016 headquartered in Brooklyn.
    • The landmarks commission designated a 16-block area bounded by Gates Avenue, Fulton Street, Bedford Avenue and Tompkins Avenue as the Bedford Historic District.[234] The 800 largely intact residential buildings represent various styles.
  • 2017
    • The first of two replacement spans for the Kosciuszko Bridge open.[235]

2020s

See also

other NYC boroughs

References

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Bibliography

Published in the 19th century
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  • Harrington Putnam (1899). "Brooklyn". In Lyman P. Powell (ed.). Historic towns of the middle states. New York: G. P. Putnam's sons. OCLC 248109.
Published in the 20th century
  • Ernest Ingersoll (1906). "Greater New York: Brooklyn". Rand, McNally & Co.'s handy guide to New York City, Brooklyn, Staten Island, and other districts included in the enlarged city (20th ed.). Chicago: Rand, McNally. OCLC 29277709.
  • "Brooklyn" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 4 (11th ed.). 1910. pp. 647–649.
  • Edward Hungerford (1913). "Across the East River". The Personality of American Cities. New York: McBride, Nast & Company.
  • Federal Writers' Project (1940). "New York City: Brooklyn". New York: a Guide to the Empire State. American Guide Series. New York: Oxford University Press. hdl:2027/mdp.39015008915889.

External links

40°41′35″N 73°59′24″W / 40.693°N 73.990°W / 40.693; -73.990

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