Owl's Head Park | |
---|---|
Type | Urban park |
Location | Brooklyn, New York City, New York, U.S. |
Coordinates | 40°38′26″N74°01′56″W / 40.6406°N 74.0322°W |
Area | 24.22 acres (9.80 ha; 0.03784 sq mi; 0.0980 km2) |
Created | 1928 |
Owned by | NYC Parks |
Open | 6:00 a.m. to 1:00 a.m. |
Public transit access | Bus |
Owl's Head Park is a public park in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, New York.
The land that would become Owl's Head Park was first settled by the Canarsee. [1] In the 17th century, Dutch settlers arrived in the area. [1] The first European to claim ownership of the park's land was Teunis Van Pelt. [2] On April 13, 1680, he sold a section of his land to Swaen Janse Van Lowaanen, whose farm on the water, north of what is now known as Bay Ridge Avenue, eventually became the park. [2] The land passed through several more hands before ending up with Henry C. Murphy, who in 1856 built a large mansion on the property, creating a personal estate. [2] [3] Murphy was a state senator best known for writing the legislation that began construction on the Brooklyn Bridge. The famous bill was signed in his mansion at Owl's Head, which was a name he bestowed on the property. [2] [3] The source of the name has been a subject of debate, ranging from the shape of the land, to speculation that owls once lived in a barn on the property, to the fact that stone owls once graced its entrance gate. [2] [3] [1] It seems likely, however, that the name was simply lifted from another property in the area, that of the Van Brunt family, whose land really was shaped like an owl. [2] [4] [5]
Murphy sold the property to Eliphalet Williams Bliss, founder of the E.W. Bliss Company. [2] The park is known to some as "Bliss Park" for this reason. Bliss expanded the property by buying nearby land and added new structures to the estate. [2] [3] These structures included a long driveway, a keeper's lodge, a stable, and an observatory and tower. [3] [2] As early as 1894, Bliss embraced the idea of his property one day becoming a public park. [3] After his death in 1903, his will stipulated that the property be sold to the city for a reduced price, but only if it was to be used as parkland. [1] For various reasons, the city did not buy the property until 1928. [2] These delays caused parts of the property to be lost to other purchasers, including the portion directly along the water, which has been home to a wastewater treatment plant since 1952. [2] Financial limitations and lack of political will also led to the demolition of the property's mansion and observatory tower in 1932. [2] By 1940, the stables were also demolished. [2]
In the following decades, improvements to the park were made by the Parks Department under Robert Moses, including paths, playing fields, benches and restrooms. [2] In the 1960s and 70s, however, the park suffered from decline during the city's fiscal crisis. [2] In the 1990s, Brooklyn's borough president and the city council dedicated significant funds to revamp the park. [2] The original wrought iron gates from Bliss's estate, with his initials on them, were reinstalled at the park's southeastern entrance in 2004. [1]
Owl's Head Park is located on a glacial moraine and thus has rich soil to support its many trees, including pines, locusts, oaks, maples, corks, beeches, and a tulip poplar. [1] The park's land slopes upward towards the water, providing views across New York harbor to Manhattan, Staten Island, and New Jersey. [1] The sloping terrain of the park also makes it a popular place for sledding in the winter. [6] [2] The park has basketball courts, a playground, spray pool, and dog run, as well as a well-known skate park. [6] The park's basketball courts are named for William D. "Billy" Lake, a local firefighter who lost his life on September 11, 2001. [7] The courts were named in honor of Lake in 2004. [7]
The park often hosts local events, such as Viking Fest, which honors the area's history of Scandinavian immigration, [8] Halloween events, [9] and the city's annual Mulchfest event for Christmas tree disposal. [10] In 2022, Owl's Head Park was the site of the first-ever Gay Ridge Pride, an LGBTQ pride event for all of Southern Brooklyn and the neighborhood's first pride celebration. [11]
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