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Brooklyn Waterfront

New York Tobacco Warehouse – No Smoking – Fulton Ferry Landing – Brooklyn

© Frank H. Jump

Don’t – DUMBO – Brooklyn

© Frank H. Jump

C.A. Friberg Iron Foundry – 2608 Driggs Street – Brooklyn, NY – Eminent Domain

Taken on scoutwalk with Miss Heather for Fading Ads of Greenpoint Walking Tour. © Frank H. Jump

Driggs Street is now Driggs Avenue and C.A. Friberg is no more. The address of 2608 Driggs would have put this business on the corner of North 14th Street, within what is now McCarren Park.

NY Daily Tribune - December 15, 1901 - Courtesy of Tom Tryniski's Old Fulton NY Postcards - CLICK FOR PDF

NY Daily Tribune December 15, 1901 - CLICK FOR PDF

NY Daily Tribune December 15, 1901 - CLICK FOR PDF

Castings, Iron Work for Buildings, etc.
corner North Thirteenth and Driggs Streets, Brooklyn, E. D.-

Cast iron is rapidly taking the place of granite or marble in the construction of buildings. It possesses unrivaled advantages of strength and durability. Unlike wrought iron and steel, it is not subject to oxidation or decay by exposure to the atmosphere, and whatever tendency it may have in that direction can easily be prevented by a proper coating of paint. Of those engaged in the city of Brooklyn in the manufacture of iron work of every description for buildings is Mr. C. A. Friberg, whose works are eligibly located at the corner of North Thirteenth and Driggs streets.

This business was established by the present proprietor four years ago, since which date he has built up a liberal and influential patronage from builders and contractors, and has furnished the iron work for a number of prominent builders in Brooklyn, New York, and the adjacent cities. His yard and works cover seven lots, and contain a total area of seventeen thousand five hundred square feet. The mechanical equipment of the foundry, etc., embraces a superior steam engine, and all the latest improved machinery and appliances known to the trade, and the policy of Mr. Friberg has ever been to adopt every improvement or invention that gives promise of perfecting the product, Mr. Friberg is fully prepared with all necessary facilities to turn out castings of every description to order, which are unsurpassed anywhere in the country for smoothness, softness, and quality of iron. He likewise makes all kinds of architectural iron work, such as iron fronts for buildings, columns, girders, lintels, stairs, railings, crestings, and ornamental castings of every description.

Fifty experienced workmen are employed, and the work produced is finished in that superior manner for which Mr. Friberg’s establishment has always been noted.

Mr. Friberg was born in Sweden, has been engaged in the iron trade for the last twenty-one years, and justly merits the signal success achieved in this important
industry.

With Special Thanks to: Cathy Harrison Speciale
Transcribed exclusively for the Brooklyn Genealogical Information Pages: Nancy E. Lutz

Fading Ads of Greenpoint Walking Tour | WORD | Sunday, March 18th @ 2PM

Fading Ads of Greenpoint Walking Tour
Start: 03/18/2012 2:00 pm
Timezone: America/New York

Location:
126 Franklin St.
Brooklyn, New York
11222-2002
United States

Get a glimpse into Greenpoint’s history with a walking tour, led by author and photographer Frank Jump. For nearly 20 years, Jump has been documenting the fading ads that are visible, but less often seen, all over New York. Disappearing from the sides of buildings or hidden by new construction, these signs tell the stories of the businesses, places and people whose lives transpired among them.

New York City is eternally evolving. From its iconic skyline to its side alleys, the new is perpetually being built on the debris of the past. But a movement to preserve the city’s vanishing landscapes has emerged. They weave together the city’s unique history, culture, environment and society and tell the stories of the businesses, places and people–the story of New York itself. This photo-documentary is also a study of time and space, of mortality and living, as Jump’s campaign to capture the ads mirrors his own struggle with HIV. Experience the ads–shot with vintage Kodachrome film–and the meaning they carry through acclaimed photographer and urban documentarian Frank Jump’s lens.

During the walking tour and book-signing, Jump will offer a glimpse into Greenpoint’s commercial advertising history through remnant fading ads. Don’t let the tour leave without you! We’ll be meeting at the store at 2 p.m., where Frank will introduce the book and give us an overview for the walk, and then we’ll head out at 2:30 p.m. Rain or shine! (If it rains, we’ll have a virtual slideshow tour at WORD instead.) Facebook RSVP appreciated!

Looka, Looka, Looka – Daytime Coney Island Neons – 2003–2005

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

Souveniers – Coney Island Boardwalk – July 2003

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

Golten Marine – Old Fulton Street Ferry Landing – Brooklyn

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

160 Van Brunt Street - Red Hook © Frank H. Jump

 

I Feel So…. Sensual – Wheatpaste Art & Graffiti – Fulton Ferry Landing, Brooklyn Waterfront

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

Grand Ferry Park – 1997 – Williamsburg, Brooklyn

2006 © Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

Grand Ferry Park 1997

Between 1800 and 1918, ferries crossed the East River from this location. The Nassau Ferry Co. ran service between Grand Street and Houston Street and the Williamsburg Ferry ran between Grand Street in Brooklyn and Grand Street in Manhattan with boats leaving every five minutes. The completion of the Williamsburg Bridge in 1903 shrank the need for ferry service. On this former ferry terminal site, the Parks Council, community groups and neighbors created a park from the recycled materials in 1974. This 20 foot smokestack is a relic of the Pfizer Company’s molasses processing plant on the property to the north, saved to be part of the Grand Ferry Park.

Rudolph W. Giuliani, Mayor
Howard Golden, Borough President
Kenneth K. Fisher, Council Member

Henry J. Stern Commissioner
Philip N. Winslow, ASLA 1974 Designer
M. Johnson & R. Franko 1997 Designers

Parks & Recreation

Google Books

Edwin B. Stimpson Co – Eyelet & Grommet Factory – Wallabout, Brooklyn Waterfront

© Vincenzo Aiosa

© Vincenzo Aiosa

© Vincenzo Aiosa

In 1852, the Edwin B. Stimpson Company opened a 1,500 square foot factory in Lower Manhattan at what would be, 31 years hence, the foot of the Brooklyn Bridge.

Now, more than 150 years later, Stimpson produces the largest variety of standard and special eyelets of any single company in the world from two facilities totaling over 550,000 square feet. Our Bayport, New York and Pompano Beach, Florida plants are furnished with the most advanced, state-of-the-art, high-speed automated equipment available.Stimpson Co Facilities

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