As one crosses over the Van Wyck Expressway, visits the flea
market at Aqueduct or hurries through bustling terminals at Kennedy Airport, it
is hard to fathom that this thriving community of more than 45,000 people was
only a century ago farm land, inhabited by fewer than 150 families.
The original inhabitants of South Ozone Park were Native
Americans of the Jameco and Rockaway tribes. English and Dutch settlers took
possession of the land in the 1660s, as part of a land grant by the Dutch West
India Company. Up until the early 1900s, the area of South Ozone Park was used
to farm everything except potatoes “because the soil was too salty”.
The winds of change began blowing as early as the 1880s when
music publisher Benjamin Hitchcock, the developer of Ozone Park began marketing
the area to the south of Ozone Park for its “invigorating and healthful” breezes
sweeping in from Jamaica Bay and the Atlantic Ocean.
Real estate developer David Leahy, who could arguably be
called “The Father of South Ozone Park” began in 1907 building small homes in
former farm fields by promising potential home owners that for $9.00 down, $6.00
per month, they could purchase a four room cottage in the country. Leahy knew
that the former Pennsylvania Railroad, purchased by the Long Island Railroad in
1900, was expanding its routes into the Jamaica area and that more and more
people would be eager to move to South Ozone Park.
Initially, the only church that existed was Union Chapel on
Three Mile Mill Road. As the community grew, Leahy gave gifts of land for
church sites as a means of further stabilizing the community. St. Clement Pope
Roman Catholic Church, at 141st Street near Rockaway Boulevard; the
Reformed Episcopal Church, at 134th Street and Sutter Avenue, and the
Lutheran Church of the Good Shepherd, at 140th Street and
120th Avenue were each erected on plots given for that purpose by
Leahy.
There was other evidence of growth in the early years. A
public library was established in 1912. It was located in part of a drug store.
In 1913, the city made funds available for the construction of an addition to
the eight original classrooms of P.S. 45 located at 150th Street off
of Rockaway Boulevard. Shortly thereafter, P.S. 96 was built at Rockaway
Boulevard and Lincoln Avenue. Soon thereafter John Adams high School at
107th Street and Rockaway Boulevard and Edgar D. Shimer Junior High
School at 142nd Street and 114th Avenue were built. The
first movie theater was opened in 1921 at Rockaway Boulevard and
135th Street. By 1921 the Rockaway Boulevard trolley system had been
replaced by a bus system. Banking institutions began making their presence felt
when the Bank of Manhattan Company and Ozone Park National Bank established
branches in the area in 1925. In 1929, Rockaway Boulevard was widened. Other
roadways, like the Van Wyck Expressway, further heightened the accessibility of
South Ozone Park to other comunities.
Over the years South Ozone Park has retained its character as
a community of single-family or two-family homeowners. Like the borough of
Queens itself, South Ozone Park has seen a change in its racial demographics as
neighbors from many shores now call this community their home. 20% of its
residents are white, more than one-third are Black or African-American, nearly
13% are Asian and nearly 23% are Hispanic. Through the years Rockaway Boulevard
lost its luster as the main commercial strip of South Ozone Park as many of its
benchmark stores have been lost to larger shopping malls. However, the
boulevard still resonates with the life of smaller stores and restaurants, many
of them owned by newly arrived or first generation immigrants.
The South Ozone Park Library has served and grown as a site
of educational and recreational activity from the early years of South Ozone
Park’s development until today. Dating back to 1912, the first sites of the
library were in a hardware store, a paint store, a millinery store and an auto
repair shop. In 1928 the library was moved to 132-09 120th Avenue.
Eventually the collection was moved to 130-16 Rockaway Boulevard where it was
housed in a rented store-front. In 1974, the South Ozone Park branch opened at
its present address, 128-16 Rockaway Boulevard as a one-story, 7,500 ft.
facility.
Throughout the year, the branch provides programming to meet
the informational, educational, recreational and cultural needs of its customers
from the youngest pre-schoolers through senior citizens.
Sources:
“Get to Know
South Ozone Park – Your Community” - Queens Borough
Public Library
"The History of South
Ozone Park” – The Forum Newspaper, August 4, 1979
“The History of South
Ozone Park Demonstrates Development Since Its Inception in 1907” – The
Silver Jubilee Souvenir Program 1907 – 1932
Jamaica and Ozone Park Officials Hail JFK Rail Link
http://gothamgazette.com/community/32/news/1023
"South Ozone
Park – ‘The Sport of Kings in their Backyard” http://www.newsday.com/extras/lihistory/spectown/hist0011.htm
Á Walk Through Queens With David Hartman
http://www.thirteen.org/queens/history3.html