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Queens directories and history books
Map of Queens
Flag of Queens, New York
Design
Dutch heritage
Azure (the three horizontal stripes – azure top and bottom and argent middle – were drawn from the coat of arms of the Dutch director of the New Netherlands, Willem Kieft.
Argent (argent stripe)
Gold (gold for the crown of Catherine of Braganza and lettering)
Native people
Gray (gray wampum, encircling the Queens seal, of the Lenape people who lived in Sewanacky, a bygone name for the shores of Long Island)
Early settlers (symbols from nature)
Yellow (yellow for the tulip, representing the Dutch settlers)
Red (Tudor rose rose, representing the English settlers)
Green (green flower stems)

Queens Directories were – before, the 30% of the western part of the old Queens County was absorbed into New York City in 1898 – an assortment of (i) village directories, (i) Queens County directories, and (iii) Long Island Directories. Nassau County, before 1898, covered the eastern 70% of the old Queens County. The older, larger Queens County was mostly agricultural, and within it were several towns, villages, and hamlets. A hamlet is a legal designation, specific to New York. The Industrial Revolution in old Queens County ... ?[1] Cemeteries constituted one of the larger industries in Queens, Kings (Brooklyn), and Westchester Counties.

Decline of city directories

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[2]



Timeline and highlights

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To understand the directories, before and after 1898, one needs to understand the communities and their connectivity with one another.

Pre-consolidation (before 1898) towns, villages, and communities

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Notes

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All of Flushing, Jamaica, Long Island City, and Newtown, as well as the Rockaway Peninsula portion of Hempstead, consolidated into Greater New York in 1898. The rest of Hempstead and the Towns of North Hempstead and Oyster Bay split from Queens County to form Nassau County in 1899. Prior to consolidation, Lloyd Neck, which was then part of the Town of Oyster Bay and had earlier been known as Queens Village, seceded from Queens County and became part of the Town of Huntington in Suffolk County in 1885.[3][4]

  • Town of Flushing, chartered 1645 as Vlissingen[5]
    • Village of College Point, incorporated within Flushing in 1880[6]
    • Village of Flushing, incorporated within the Town of Flushing in 1837[7]
    • Village of Whitestone, incorporated within Flushing in 1868
  • Town of Hempstead (part)
    • Village of Far Rockaway, incorporated within the Rockaway Peninsula portion of Hempstead in 1888[8]
    • Village of Rockaway Beach, incorporated within the Rockaway Peninsula portion of Hempstead in 1897[8]
  • Town of Jamaica[9]
    • Village of Jamaica, incorporated within the Town of Jamaica in 1814
    • Village of Richmond Hill, incorporated within the Town of Jamaica in 1894[8]
  • City of Long Island City (separated from Newtown in 1870)
  • Done → Town of Newtown, chartered as Middelburgh in 1652,[10]: 26  renamed Hastings in 1663[10]: 59  and then New Towne in 1665.[10]: 66 

Pre-consolidation (before 1898) towns, villages, and communities
Year Topic Notes
Long Island Long Island was known as "Nassau Island" during the Colonial Dutch era,[11] and later, the "Island of Stirling" after Earl of Stirling (c. 1567–1640) acquired it, with other lands in North America exceeding ten million acres in 1621 and 1625 from Charles I. However, The Duke of York (who became James II), bought back the land for seven thousand pounds, but failed to pay the debt to Charles I. Ownership, namely for Long Island, reverted back to the Earl of Stirling, although, the Plymouth Colony claimed it. King Charles, on April 22, 1636, instructed the Plymough Colony to give Long Island to the Earl of Stirling. On April 20, 1637, the Earl of Stiles gave James Farret power of attorney to sell his land on Long Island. In 1641, James Farret, on behalf of the Stiles Estate, sold most of the eastern portion to the New Haven and Connecticut Colonies.[12] (see Robins Island) Farret was allowed to choose 12,000 acres (49 km2) for his personal use. He chose Shelter Island.[13]


Grantees on behalf of the New Haven and Connecticut Colonies:


  1. George Fenwick (1603–1657) of Seabrook Port, Esquire
  2. John Haynes (1594–1653)
  3. Samuel Wyllys
  4. Edward Hopkins (1600–1657) of Hartford
  5. Theopolis Eaton (1591–1658)
  6. Stephen Goodyeare (1598–1658)
  7. Thomas Gregson (1611–1647) of New Haven


1645: Flushing The original Flushing patent was signed October 10, 1645.[14][15][16] The grantees of the original 1645 Flushing patent conveyed by Willem Kieft were:[17]
  1. Thomas Farrington (c. 1614 – c. 1646)[17]
  2. John Townsend (1608–1668),
  3. Thomas Applegate (c. 1604 – c. 1662)[17]
  4. Thomas Beddard[17]
  5. Lawrence Dutch (Laurens Duyts; c. 1612 – c. 1667–68)[17]
  6. John Lawrence (1618–1699)[17]
  7. William Lawrence (1622–1680)[17]
  8. William Thorne (1606–1670)[18]
  9. Henry Sautell
  10. William Pigeon
  11. Michael Milliard
  12. Robert Firman[17]
  13. John Hicks (c. 1614–1672)[17]
  14. Edward Hart
  15. Thomas Stiles[17]
  16. Thomas Saull[17]
  17. John Marston
  18. Robert Field (1605–1672)[19]
1652: Elmhurst Elmhurst, Queens, chartered in 1652 as Middelburgh (aka Middelburg) by settlers, English Puritans, from nearby Maspat (today's Maspeth). The name changed to Hastings when the British took over New Netherland in 1664, then New Towne (Newtown) in 1665.[20] In 1896, two years before Queens County was incorporated in the Greater City of New York, the town was renamed Elmhurst. The namechange was influenced by Cord J. Meyer (1854–1910), who owned and developed real estate in the village.[21][22]
1683: Province of New York On November 1, 1683, the British colony of New York – aka Province of New York – was organized as twelve counties. Queens, one of the twelve, included current Nassau County.
1683: New York City wards New York City was divided into wards between 1683 and 1938. These were used for the election of various municipal offices, and would later be used to construct the boundaries of larger electoral districts. Prior to the formation of the so-called City of Greater New York in 1898, what is now New York City comprised multiple municipalities that had different histories with wards. (see Wards of New York City)
1836: College Point In 1836, about 33 years before being incorporated as College Point, Rev. William Augustus Muhlenberg (1796–1877), an Episcopal Priest, began working to establish St. Paul's College and Grammar School to train priests. The college opened in 1839 and closed in 1847. Before 1836, William Lawrence (1622–1680), a slave owner, had owned nearly 900 acres – all of Tew's Neck – as grantee of a patent from the Dutch in 1645.[23] Tew's Neck had been named for Michael Tew, the first settler.[24] Eliphalet Stratton (1745–1831), in 1789, purchased three 320 acres from the descendents of William Lawrence and established the village of Strattonport. In 1851, one of Stratton's daughters, as trustee, sold 141 acres – south of 15th Avenue – to real estate developers John A. Flammer (related to John G. Flammer; Johann Gottlieb Flammer; 1807–1886) and Peter W. Longley, who established Flammersburg. Stratton's daughter retained the balance of one hundred and eighty acres for the Stratton family. Flammer and Longley subdivided the property into 80 building lots. By 1856, the three subdivisions – Strattonport, Flammersburg, and College Point – were commonly referred to as College Point.[25] College Point was incorporated in 1867 or 1870. At the time, because many residents had immigrated from Germany, College Point was sometimes referred to as the "Little Heidelberg". Flammer was one of the original directors of the Third Avenue Railway and, in 1869, one of the original incorporators of The West Side Bank at 464 Eighth Avenue in Manhattan.[26][27]
1837: Panic of 1837
1865: Blissville Blissville was named for Neziah Bliss (1790–1876), who, with Eliphalet Nott (1773–1866), in 1837, purchased what then was the Hunter farm, which included Hunters Point.[28] Blissville also included Francis Duryea's farm.[29][30] One of Neziah Bliss' sons, Archibald Meserole Bliss (1836–1923), became a U.S. Congressman.
1870: Long Island City Captain Levy Hayden, superintendent of a marine railway formerly at Hunters Point, predicted, as early as 1853, that the area around Hunters Point would become a city. He even proposed that it be named "Long Island City." Thomas H. Todd (1835–1901), who, on October 20, 1865, published the first issue a newspaper bearing the name The Long Island City Star.[31] Long Island City, on May 4, 1870, incorporated as a city from the merger of the Village of Astoria and the hamlets of Ravenswood, Hunters Point, Blissville, Sunnyside, Dutch Kills, Steinway, Bowery Bay, and Middleton – all seperating from the Town of Newtown. At the time of its incorporation, Long Island City had between 12,000 and 15,000 residents. When it consolidated with New York City in 1898, it was 27 years, 7 months, and 28 days old.
1882: Ozone Park As in "fresh air," not "ozone layer." Benjamin W. Hitchcock and Charles C. Denton, who bought farmland and created building lots after a railroad opened in 1880 from Long Island City to Howard Beach. They decided to call their development Ozone Park to promote the idea of cool, clean breezes blowing in from the Atlantic Ocean. Fresh air is one of the meanings of ozone[32]
1886: Bowery Bay Beach Bowery Bay Beach, later named North Beach, opened in 1886 on the shores of Bowery and Flushing Bays. It was known as the "Coney Island of Queens."
1889: Murray Hill Murray Hill in Queens has no hill. Albeit, its namesake is of the same family for whom Murray Hill of Manhattan is named – Robert Murray (1721–1786) and family.[32] Before the Queens area was developed for residential housing in 1889, Murray Hill was the location of several large nurseries owned by the King, Murray, and Parsons families.



  • William King Murray (1839–1918),[33] a nurseryman, and his two brothers, Joseph King Murray (1837–1916), a Manhattan lawyer, and Edward L. Murray (1842–1864), who died while a prisoner during the Civil War, were great grandchildren of Robert Murray.[34]


  • James Bloodgood founded his nursery, James Bloodgood & Co. in 1798.[35] It covered 12 acres until 1829, then 70 acres.[36] His daughter, Caroline, married Joseph Harris King (born abt 1811).


  • Around 1838, John Wilcomb and Joseph Harris King, both of whom had managed Bloodgood & Co. from 1926 until Bloodgood's death in 1936, purchased an interest in the nursery under the Estate of James Bloodgood and henceforce continued as it as Wilcomb & King.


  • At Bloodgood's death By 1945, King and Ripley were the proprietors. James was a descendant of early Flushing settler Captain Frans Jansen Bloetgoet (c. 1632 - 29 December 1676).


  • Bloodgood sold a controlling interest in his nursery to his son-in-law, Joseph Harris King, who, in turn, turn on his nephew, William King Murray, who became his partner. The copartnership of King & Murray dissolved in March 1876 due to the retirement of King. Murray, henceforth, continued the business as sole proprietor until his retirment around 1898.


  • Samuel Bowne Parsons (1819–1906), a botanists and, with one of his sons, Samuel Bowne Parsons, Jr. (1844–1923), a nurseryman.[34] He founded Commercial Garden and Nursery of Parsons & Co. in 1838.[37]
1890: Trow Settlement John Libby was, in 1890, one of the four buyers of the block between 28th and 29th Streets and 14th and 15th Avenues in Beechhurst. This block was originally settled by employees of the Trow City Directory Company (see Jonathan Leavitt and John Fowler Trow) and was called for many years the "Trow Settlement." The house which was originally the Libby home, on the corner of 14th Avenue and 28thy Street, was later owned by Mrs. Charlotte Phayre.[38][39]
1893: Panic of 1893
1897: Consolidation authorized The New York City borough of Queens was authorized May 4, 1897, by a vote of the New York State Legislature after an 1894 referendum on consolidation.[40] The eastern 280 square miles (730 km2) of Queens that became Nassau County was partitioned January 1, 1899.[41] Queens Borough was established on January 1, 1898.[42][43][44]
1898: Consolidation occurred On January 1, 1898, New York City absorbed East Bronx, Brooklyn, western Queens County, and Staten Island.[45][46]


Selected name origins

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Selected name origins
Year Neighborhood Origin of name
1925 Rego Park Rego Park and Middle Village was settled by Dutch farmers in 1653 as Whitepot, then part of Newtown. "Rego" is a portmanteau of "Real Good Construction Company" that began developing the area in 1925.[32]
Hunters Point Dominie's Hoek – named after Everardus Bogardus, dominie of the New Netherlands – was divided into Hunters Point and Ravenswood. Jacob Bennett (died 1817), a descendant of Jan Bogardus and of one of the settlers of Dominie's Hoek, acquired sole ownership of the tract in 1767. The land, an extensive farm, upon Bogardus' death, passed to his daughter and son-in-law, Anne and George Hunter.[47][48]
Jamaica The "Jameco" tribe – or "Yam-may-ko"[49] or "Yamecah"[50] – in the Algonquin language, translates to "place of beaver,"[32] whence, as chronicled by some, Jamaica derived its name. The Jameco natives lived on the northern shore of what became known as Jamaica Bay and along Beaver Stream and Beaver Pond, which was filled in 1906.[51][52]

(Google Map aerial view of site of the former Beaver Pond)

Astoria Named for John Jacob Astor.[32]
1901 Auburndale Auburndale, east of Flushing, was originally 90 of a 117-acre farm of Thomas Seaman Willets (1853–1909), whose family had owned it since 1745. Willets, in 1901, sold it to the New England Development Company (New England Development & Improvement Company), a syndicate of East Coast investors that developed several residental projects in the Eastern U.S. The company subdivided Willets' farm into lots and streets and renamed it Auburndale. The LIRR opened a station there in May 1901 and named it Auburndale Station. The original Auburndale station was moved and converted into a church that survived until 1973. The name comes from Auburndale, Massachusetts, a suburb of Boston, and home of Lewis Henry Green (1868–1941), who then was President of the company.[53]

Post-consolidation (after 1898) neighborhoods

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Post-consolidation (after 1898) neighborhoods
1970: Flushing is host to one of three large Asian American communities in the New York City. The other two are Chinatown on the Lower East Side of Manhattan and Sunset Park in Brooklyn.[54] Outside of New York City, but within its metropolitan area, Bergen County, New Jersey – on the other side of Manhattan, just across the Hudson River – has the largest concentration, per capita, of Asian Americans in a county in America. Manhattan's Chinatown, the city's oldest Asian American neighborhood, began to flourish around 1870.[55] Flushing, the second oldest, began to flourish in the 1970s, with the first wave of immigrants from Taiwan. Sunset Park, the newest in Queens, began to flourish as an Asian community in 1990.

The city is home to about twelve so-called Chinatowns,[56] including one in Corona, one in Whitestone, and one in Eastern Queens.[57] Other city neighborhoods with emerging Asian communities include East Harlem, Manhattan. Outside of New York City, but within the city's metropolitan area, Edison, New Jersey, has a sizable Asian community.

Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, is reputed to have the largest China-born population in New York City, but the neighborhood is not so densely populated as the Asian neighborhoods of those of Manhattan, Flushing, and Sunset Park.

Printers, publishers, and compilers of Queens directories

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Printers, publishers, and compilers of Queens directories
1873: Frederick William Beers (1839–1933), the cartographer who supervised the work of Atlas of Long Island, was one of several Beers family publishers who, after the Civil War, published state and county atlases. Frederick's father, James Botsford Beers (1811–1901), and uncle, Daniel Glover Beers (1841–1913), had their own publishing companies. Distinctive features of the Atlas of Long Island include notations of property owners, buildings, businesses, and statistical information.[58]
1876: Edward Augustus Whitney (1843–1917), surveyor of the Map of Long Island City. He was a cousin of Josiah Dwight Whitney, Jr. (1819–1896).
1878: The first Queens telephone directory was issued 1878, by Bell Telephone Company of New York. It was printed on cardboard and could fit in a vest pocket. It listed 271 names.[59]
1888: Hugh A. Curtin (1843–1911) – no direct relationship to Dennis Curtin – was accused by Trow's of plagiarism, and tried in U.S. District Court before Judge Emile Henry Lacombe (1846–1924) just prior to publishing a 1888 edition of a Business Directory of New York, Brooklyn, and Newark.[60][61]

The evolution of Queens innerconnectivity through transit

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The evolution of Queens innerconnectivity, and its consolidation with New York City, through transit ...

Bridges and tunnels

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Dutch Kills

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Dutch Kills bridges
1893: Dutch Kills Swing Bridge, in Long Island City, is a single freight track of the Long Island Railroad. Designed as a swing bridge, it is now fixed into place. It opened in 1893. It crosses the Dutch Kills. It originally carried three tracks, but now only one.[62]
1908: Borden Avenue Bridge – a retractable bridge in the Long Island City carrying vehicular and pedestrian traffic across Dutch Kills, a tidal waterway that is a tributary of Newtown Creek – opened March 25, 1908. The main span is 84 feet (26 metres) long, and retracts by sliding on rail.
1910: Hunters Point Avenue Bridge, 500 feet (150 metres) long, carries Hunters Point Avenue. It opened in 1910.
1910: Cabin M Bridge – 1 track of the Montauk Cutoff – is a deck plate girder bridge (bascule design) over Dutch Kills Creek on the Long Island Railroad. Scherzer Rolling Lift Bridge Company of Chicago built it in 1910. Today, there is another abandoned track on the bridge. "Cabin M" was the name of a bygone train control tower. (Google Map aerial view of Hunters Point) (see Montauk Cutoff photos at Wikimedia Commons)
DB Cabin Bridge – 1 track of the Montauk Branch – originally built to carry three tracks. "DB Cabin" was the name of a bygone tower that operated the bridge, south of the tracks on the west side of Dutch Kills.

East River bridges

[edit]
  • see this article.
East River bridges
1883: The Brooklyn Bridge opened May 24, 1883, spanning the East River between Brooklyn and Lower Manhattan. It was the first bridge that connected Brooklyn to Manhattan – in a neighborhood that eventually became known as Two Bridges.
1909: The Queensboro Bridge (aka 59th Street Bridge) – a Cantilever bridge – connecting Long Island City with the Upper East Side (passing over Roosevelt Island) – opened March 30, 1909. The bridge's upper level originally had two pedestrian walkways and two elevated railway tracks, which connected a spur of the IRT Second Avenue Elevated Line in Manhattan with the Queensboro Plaza station (opened November 16, 1916), and continued on to the Astoria–Ditmars Boulevard station (opened February 1, 1917).
1909: The Manhattan Bridge opened December 31, 1909, spanning the East River between Brooklyn and Lower Manhattan. It is the second bridge that belongs to the neighborhood name, "Two Bridges".
1917: The Hell Gate Bridge, for rail transit, opened March 9, 1917. The bridge, originally four tracks, now two, one for Amtrak's Northeast Corridor and one for freight across the Hell Gate, a strait of the East River, between Astoria in Queens, and Randalls and Wards Islands in Manhattan, connecting Manhattan, Bronx, and Queens.
1936: The Triboro Bridge, connecting Manhattan, Bronx, and Queens, opened July 11, 1936.
1939: The Bronx–Whitestone Bridge opened April 29, 1939.
1955: The Roosevelt Island Bridge – connecting Roosevelt Island with Long Island City – opened May 18, 1955.
1961: The Throgs Neck Bridge – carrying six lanes of Interstate 295 (I-295) over the East River where it meets the Long Island Sound, connecting Throggs Neck in the Bronx with Bay Terrace, Queens – opened January 11, 1961.

East River tunnels

[edit]
East River tunnels
1910: The East River Tunnels, which opened September 8, 1910 – four single-track railroad tunnels that extend from the eastern end of Penn Station under 32nd and 33rd Streets in Manhattan, crossing the East River to Long Island City. The tracks carry Long Island Rail Road and Amtrak, to and from Penn Station and points to the north and east. The tracks also carry New Jersey Transit trains deadheading to Sunnyside Yard. They are part of Amtrak's Northeast Corridor, used by trains traveling between New York City and New England via the Hell Gate Bridge.
1915: The Steinway Tunnel, which opened June 13, 1915, is a pair of tunnels carrying the IRT Flushing Line (7 and <7>​ trains) of the New York City Subway under the East River between 42nd Street in Manhattan and 51st Avenue in Long Island City, Queens. It was originally designed and built as an interurban trolley tunnel (with a narrow loading gauge and height), with stations near the current Hunters Point Avenue and Grand Central stations.
1940: The Queens–Midtown Tunnel – under the East River, connecting the East Side of Midtown Manhattan to Long Island City – opened November 15, 1940.
In de­vel­op­ment: East Side Access

Newtown Creek bridges

[edit]
Newtown Creek bridges
1902: Grand Street Bridge – a through-truss swing bridge over Newtown Creek, that links Grand Street and Grand Avenue via a two-lane, height-restricted roadway, connecting Brooklyn and Queens – opened 1902.
1933: The Metropolitan Avenue Bridge – a drawbridge crossing English Kills (a tribuary of Newtown Creek), connecting Manhattan, Bronx, and Queens – opened March 27, 1933.
1939: The Pulaski Bridge – crossing Newtown Creek and connecting Long Island City to Greenpoint, Brooklyn – opened September 10, 1954.
1987: The Greenpoint Avenue Bridge (aka J. J. Byrne Memorial Bridge) – carries Greenpoint Avenue across Newtown Creek, connecting Blissville, Queens, with Greenpoint – opened 1987. The bridge was named after James J. Byrne (1865–1930), who, from September 1926 until his death March 14, 1930, served as the Brooklyn Borough President. He had previously been Brooklyn Commissioner of Public Works.
2017: The Kosciuszko Bridge – connecting Greenpoint in Brooklyn to Maspeth in Queens – opened April 2017.

Flushing River bridges, causeways, and trestles

[edit]
Flushing River bridges and causeways
1938 Long Island Rail Road's Port Washington Branch trestle
1938 Porpoise Bridge – a closed-spandrel arch bridge for vehicles crossing Flushing Creek on Meridian Road – was built as a tidal gate for Flushing Creek. (Google Map aerial view of the Porpoise Bridge in Flushing Meadows).

Jamaica Bay bridges

[edit]
Jamaica Bay bridges
1970 Cross Bay Veterans Memorial Bridge – a toll bridge that carries Cross Bay Boulevard across Jamaica Bay in Queens, between Broad Channel and the Rockaway Peninsula – opened May 28, 1970.
1988 Joseph P. Addabbo Memorial Bridge – a six-lane bride that carries Cross Bay Boulevard across Jamaica Bay in Queens, New York City, between Howard Beach and Broad Channel – opened October 25, 1988.
1956 North Channel Swing Bridge (not actually a movable bridge – carrying the A train – opened 1956–1958.

Howard Beach to Broad Channel.

1956 Beach Channel Drawbridge – a rapid transit line of the IND Division of the New York City Subway, operating in Queens, branches from the IND Fulton Street Line at Rockaway Boulevard, extending over the Jamaica Bay, into the Rockaways. It opened 1956–1958.
102nd Street Bridge – connecting Hamilton Beach at Russell Street with Howard Beach, also known as "Lenihan's Bridge".
Hawtree Creek Bridge – 163rd Avenue and 99th Street in Howard Beach across to Hamilton Beach at Rau Court and Davenport Court.

Rockaway Inlet Bridge

[edit]
Rockaway Inlet bridge
1937: The Marine Parkway–Gil Hodges Memorial Bridge – a vertical-lift bridge, crossing the Rockaway Inlet, connecting the Rockaway Peninsula in Queens, with Flatbush Avenue to Floyd Bennett Field, Belt Parkway, and the Marine Park neighborhood in Brooklyn – opened July 3, 1937.

Long Island directories that include Queens communities

[edit]
Long Island directories that include Queens communities
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
Archive
Other
1878–1879
Lain's Directory of Long Island – Including a Business Directory of Brooklyn, Long Island City, and the Towns of Kings County, Bath, Bay Ridge, Canarsie, Coney Island, East New York, Flatbush, Flatlands, Fort Hamilton, Gravesend, Guntherville, New Utrecht, Parkville, Sheepshead Bay, and Unionville;
Lain & Company
(publisher)
George Theodore Lain (1844–1893)
(compiler)
Part 1. Allen County]
Part 2. Allen County
Part 2. Allen County

Astoria directories

[edit]
Astoria directories
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
Archive
Other
1864
Boyd's Directory of Astoria, East New York, Flatbush, Flushing, Glen Cove, Greenport, Hempstead, Huntington, Jamaica, Newtown, Patchogue, Port Jefferson, Riverhead, Sag Harbor, and Setuaket, Long Island – With a Business Directory of Patrons to the Work – And An Appendix of Much General Information, 1864–5
William Andrew Boyd (1850–1918)
(publisher)
J.F. Morris & Co.
(Joseph F. Morris; born Nov 1853 Rhode Island)
(printer)
William Andrew Boyd (1850–1918)
(compiler)
Patty Fagan
(transcriber)[63]

Flushing directories

[edit]
Flushing directories
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
Archive
Other
1885–1886
Boyd's Flushing Directory, 1885–6 – Containing a General Directory of Flushing, Together With a Complete Business and Farmers' Directory of the North Side Division L.I.R.R. for the Years 1885–6
William Andrew Boyd (1850–1918)
(publisher)
J.F. Morris & Co.
(Joseph F. Morris; born Nov 1853 Rhode Island)
(printer)
William Andrew Boyd (1850–1918)
(compiler)
Allen County
1890–1891
Flushing Village Directory, 1890–91 – Containing a Correct Compilation of the Residents of Flushing, N.Y., Together With a Business and Official Directory, Corporations Societies, Lodges, Etc.
The Flushing Journal
(Charles W. Smith; 1845–1913)
(publisher)
Allen County
1891–1892
Flushing Directory, Containing a General Directory of Flushing – Together With a Complete Business Directory for the Years 1891–92
Boyd's Directory Company
(William Andrew Boyd; 1850–1918)
(publisher)
Boyd's Directory Company
(William Andrew Boyd; 1880–1918)
(compiler)
Allen County

Queens business directories

[edit]
Queens business directories
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
Archive
Other
1898
Trow's Business and Residential Directory of the Borough of Queens, City of New York – Classified Under Business Headings and Fully Indexed – Also Arranged in Alphabetical Order of Names. Also a Register of the Borough Government (Vol. 1)
The Trow Directory, Printing & Bookbinding Co.
(publisher)
Allen County FamilySearch.[64]
FamilySearch.[65]
1899
Trow Business Directory of the Borough of Queens, City of New York – Classified Under Business Headings and Fully Indexed – Also a Register of the Borough Government
The Trow Directory, Printing & Bookbinding Co.
(publisher)
Harvard Harvard
1904
Trow Business Directory of the Borough of Queens, City of New York – Classified Under Business Headings and Fully Indexed. Also Residential Directory of Flushing, Jamaica, Long Island City, and Richmond Hill (Vol. 6)
The Trow Directory, Printing & Bookbinding Co.
(publisher)
Allen County
1909–1910
Trow Business Directory of the Borough of Queens, City of New York – Classified Under Business Headings and Fully Indexed. Also Red Residential Directory of Flushing, Jamaica, Long Island City and Richmond Hill, 1909–1910 (Vol. 9)
The Trow Directory, Printing & Bookbinding Co.
(publisher)
FamilySearch.[66]
(image 206)
FamilySearch.[67]
(image 198)
(NYPL)
1912
Trow Business Directory of the Borough of Queens, City of New York – Also Residential Directory of Flushing, Jamaica, Long Island City, and Richmond Hill (Vol. 10)
The Trow Directory, Printing & Bookbinding Co.
(publisher)
Ancestry.com.[68]
(Newark Public Library)
Family Search.[69]
(image 322)
Family Search.[70]
(image 314)
(NYPL)
OCLC 1226742505

Trow's Brookln and Queens business directories

[edit]
Trow's Brooklyn and Queens business directories
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
Archive
Other
1903
Trow Business Directory of the Boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens, City of New York – Arranged Under Business Classifications by Boroughs and Fully Indexed – Also Contains a Brooklyn Street Directory (Vol. 6)
The Trow Directory, Printing & Bookbinding Co.
(publisher)
Allen County
1904
Trow Business Directory of the Boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens, City of New York – Arranged Under Business Classifications by Boroughs and Fully Indexed – Also Contains a Brooklyn Street Directory (Vol. 7)
The Trow Directory, Printing & Bookbinding Co.
(publisher)
Allen County
1907
Trow Business Directory of the Boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens, City of New York – Arranged Under Business Classifications by Boroughs and Fully Indexed – Also Contains a Brooklyn Street Directory (Vol. 10)
The Trow Directory, Printing & Bookbinding Co.
(publisher)
Allen County
1908
Trow Business Directory of the Boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens, City of New York – Arranged Under Business Classifications by Boroughs and Fully Indexed – Also Contains a Brooklyn Street Directory (Vol. 11)
The Trow Directory, Printing & Bookbinding Co.
(publisher)
Allen County

Brooklyn business directories that include some Queens addresses

[edit]
Brooklyn business directories that include some Queens addresses
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
Archive
Other
1872–1873
Curtin's Brooklyn Business Directory – Together With General Directory of Amityville, Babylon, Breslau, College Point, East New York, Flatbush, Flushing, Glen Cove, Gravesend, Greenpoint, Hempstead, Huntington, Islip, Jamaica, Long Island City, Newtown, New Utrecht, Oyster Bay, Patchogue, Port Jefferson, Riverhead, Rockaway, Roslyn, Sag Harbor, Sayville, Southold, Stonybrook, Whitestone and Woodhaven, Long Island, 1872–3
Dennis P. Curtin
(publisher)
Long Island Historical Society
1873–1874
Curtin's Brooklyn Business Directory – Together With General Directory of Amityville, Babylon, Breslau, College Point, East New York, Flatbush, Flushing, Glen Cove, Gravesend, Greenpoint, Hempstead, Huntington, Islip, Jamaica, Long Island City, Newtown, New Utrecht, Oyster Bay, Patchogue, Port Jefferson, Riverhead, Rockaway, Roslyn, Sag Harbor, Sayville, Southold, Stonybrook, Whitestone and Woodhaven, Long Island, 1873–4
Dennis P. Curtin
(publisher)
Long Island Historical Society

Brooklyn business directories that include Queens communities

[edit]
Brooklyn business directories that include Queens communities
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
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Other
1890–1891
Lain's Business Directory of Brooklyn, Kings County, Long Island City, Jamaica, Far Rockaway, Flushing, College Point, Hempstead, Newtown and Whitestone, for 1890–91
Lain & Company
(publisher)
George Theodore Lain (1844–1893)
(compiler)
University of Wisconsin University of Wisconsin

Queens business registers

[edit]
Queens business registers
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
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1899
Register of the Borough of Queens – Containing Asylums and Homes, Banks, Benefit Societies, Churches, Clubs, Day Nurseries, Dispensaries, Hospitals, Ferries, Fraternal Societies, Libraries, Medical Colleges, Institutions, and Societies, Societies, Trade Associations
The Trow Directory, Printing & Bookbinding Co.
(publisher)
Google Books

Copartnership directories: Brooklyn and Queens

[edit]
Copartnership directories: Brooklyn and Queens
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
Archive
Other
1913–1914
Corporation and Copartnership Directory of the Boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens, City of New York
Brooklyn Directory Co. (publisher) Brooklyn Directory Co. (compiler) Allen County Public Library
1922
Polk's 1922 Copartnership and Corporation Directory – Boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens
R.L. Polk & Co. (publisher) R.L. Polk & Co. (compiler) Allen County Public Library
(part 1)
Allen County Public Library
(part 2)

Polk's directories: Queens and Richmond

[edit]
Polk's directories: Queens and Richmond
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
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Other
1933–1934
Polk's New York City Directory (Boroughs of Queens and Richmond) – Containing an Alphabetical Directory of Business Concerns and Private Citizens, With Wives' First Names Shown and Street and Avenue Guide and Much Information of Miscellaneous Character; Also a Buyers' Guide and Complete Classified Business Directory, 1933–4 (Vol. 1)
R.L. Polk & Co., Inc. (publisher) Brooklyn Directory Co. (compiler) NYPL
NYPL

Telephone directories

[edit]
Telephone directories
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
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Other
1895
National Telephone Directory (October 1895)
"New York". pp. 184–354.
"Astoria". pp. 187–188.
"Far Rockaway". pp. 243–244.
"Flushing". pp. 245–246.
"Jamaica". p. 248.
"Long Island City". pp. 250–251.
American Telephone and Telegraph Company
(publisher)
H.D. Winton Printing & Publishing Co.
(Henry D. Winton; 1848–1917)
(printer)
NYPL
1909
New York City (Including All Boroughs) Telephone Directory (October 14, 1909)
New York Telephone Company
(publisher)
Brooklyn Public Library
1910
New York City (Including All Boroughs) Telephone Directory → "Brooklyn and Queens" p. 437 (February 3, 1910)
New York Telephone Company
(publisher)
Brooklyn Public Library
1914
New York City (Including All Boroughs) Telephone Directory (October 15, 1914)
New York Telephone Company
(publisher)
Brooklyn Public Library
1915
New York City (Including All Boroughs) Telephone Directory (May 6, 1915)
New York Telephone Company
(publisher)
Brooklyn Public Library
1917
New York City (Including All Boroughs) Telephone Directory (February 1, 1917)
New York Telephone Company
(publisher)
Brooklyn Public Library
1917
New York City (Including All Boroughs) Telephone Directory (October 11, 1917)
New York Telephone Company
(publisher)
Brooklyn Public Library
1920
New York City (Including All Boroughs) Telephone Directory (February 4, 1920)
New York Telephone Company
(publisher)
Brooklyn Public Library
1924
Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island – New York City Telephone Directory (October 3, 1924)
New York Telephone Company
(publisher)
Brooklyn Public Library
1925
Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island – New York City Telephone Directory (May 6, 1925)
New York Telephone Company
(publisher)
Brooklyn Public Library
1925
Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island – New York City Telephone Directory (October 7, 1925)
New York Telephone Company
(publisher)
Brooklyn Public Library
1926
Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island – New York City Telephone Directory (May 5, 1926)
New York Telephone Company
(publisher)
Brooklyn Public Library
1927
Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island – New York City Telephone Directory (May 5, 1927)
New York Telephone Company
(publisher)
Brooklyn Public Library
1927–1928
Donnelley's Red Book Classified Telephone Directory – Queens (Winter, December–June, 1927–1928)
The Reuben H. Donnelley Corporation
(publisher)
Brooklyn Public Library
1928
Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island – New York City Telephone Directory (May 5, 1928)
New York Telephone Company
(publisher)
Brooklyn Public Library
1928
Donnelley's Red Book Classified Telephone Directory – Queens (Summer, June–December, 1928)
The Reuben H. Donnelley Corporation
(publisher)
Brooklyn Public Library
1939
Queens – New York City – Telephone Directory (Winter 1939–40)
New York Telephone Company
(publisher)
NYPL

Social welfare agencies

[edit]
Social welfare agencies
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
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Other
1934
Directory of Social Agencies and Resources in the Borough of Queens
Queensboro Council for Social Welfare
(publisher)
OCLC 921147971, 1102180731

Early censuses

[edit]
Early Censuses
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
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Other
1790
Heads of Families at the First Census of the United States Taken Taken in the Year 1790 – "New York" – "Queens County" (pp. 149–158)
Department of Commerce and Labor, Bureau of the Census
(publisher)
Government Printing Office
(printed 1908)
Stanford Cornell LCCN 07-35273
OCLC 2080540 (all editions)
census.gov

Churches

[edit]
Churches
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
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Other
1880
Antiquities of the Parish Church, Jamaica (Including Newtown and Flushing) Illustrated From Letters of the Missionaries, and Other Authentic Documents, With a Continuation of the History of Grace Church to the Present Time
Charles Welling
(publisher)
Henry Onderdonk, Jr. (1804–1886) Allen County Public Library
1897
History of St. George's Parish, Flushing, Long Island
Saint George's Sword and Shield
(publisher)
Flushing Evening Journal
(printer)
J. Carpenter Smith, S.T.D. (1847–1897) Harvard
Harvard
Harvard
Harvard
Allen County Public Library
Harvard
1958 Stanley Charles Rayfield (1901–1983) Allen County Public Library

Cemeteries

[edit]
Cemeteries
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
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Other
1881
The Cemeteries of New York, and How to Reach Them
G.H. Burton
(George H. Burton; 1847–1915)
(printer)
Selden C. Judson
(Selden C. Judson; 1842–1920)
Library of Congress Library of Congress
1895
The Leonard Manual of the Cemeteries of New York and Vicinity
J.H. Leonard
(John Henry Leonard)
(publisher)
J.H. Leonard
(John Henry Leonard)
(compiler)
Library of Congress Library of Congress
1901
The Leonard Manual of the Cemeteries of New York and Vicinity
J.H. Leonard
(John Henry Leonard)
(publisher)
J.H. Leonard
(John Henry Leonard)
(compiler)
Library of Congress Library of Congress
1987
Permanent New Yorkers – A Biographical Guide to the Cemeteries of New York
Chelsea Green Publishing Company
(publisher)
Judi Culbertson
(née Charlotte Judi Chaffee; born 1941) &
Tom Randall
(Thomas Joseph Randall; born 1945)
Sausalito Public Library.

Maps

[edit]
Maps
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
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Other
1852
Map of Newtown, Long Island – Designed to Exhibit the Localities Referred to in the 'Annals of Newtown', compiled by J. Riker, Jr., 1852
James Riker, Jr.
(publisher)
NYPL
1872
Map of Kings County, With Parts of Westchester, Queens, New York & Richmond Counties – Showing Farm Lines, Soundings, &c.
M. Dripps
(Matthew Dripps; 1812–1896)
(publisher)
Library of Congress
1874
Map of Long Island City, Queens Co. N.Y., Showing Farm Lines, &c., &c. – Reduced From the Commissioners New City Map
M. Dripps
(publisher)
Library of Congress
Brooklyn Public Library
1876
Map of Long Island City, Queens Co., N.Y (includes changes in street names)
E. Whitney
(publisher)
E. Whitney
(surveyor)
Library of Congress
1886
New Nap of Kings and Queens Counties, New York – From Actual Surveys
J.B. Beers & Co.
(James Botsford Beers; 1811–1901)
(publisher)
NYPL
1894
Map of the Village of Flushing, Queens County, New York
G.A. Roullier
(Gustave Augustus Roullier; 1849–1910)
(publisher)
G.A. Roullier &
Robert A. Welcke
(Robert Alexander Welcke; 1848–1936)
(surveyors)
Library of Congress

Atlases

[edit]
Atlases
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
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Other
1901
Atlas of the Borough of Queens, City of New York – Complete in Three Volumes
  • Vol. 1. "Fourth and Fifth Wards. Jamaica and Rockaway"
  • Vol. 2. "Third Ward. Flushing"
  • Vol. 3. "First and Second Wards. Long Island City and Newtown"
E. Belcher Hyde
(publisher)
NYPL
1909
Atlas of the City of New York, Borough of Queens, Long Island City, Newtown, Flushing, Jamaica, Far Rockaway
G.W. Bromley & Co.
(George W. Bromley)
(publisher)
NYPL

Birth, death, marriage records

[edit]
Birth, death, marriage records
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
Archive
Other
1913
Baptismal Record of the Reformed Dutch Church at Newtown, Long Island, New York, 1736 to 1846. Marriages by Rev. Garretson at Newtown from 1835 to 1846
Josephine C. Frost
(Mrs. Samuel Knapp Frost)
(transcriber)
Library of Congress Library of Congress LCCN 14-12730

History

[edit]
History
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
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Other
1845
A History of Long Island, From Its First Settlement by Europeans, to the Year 1845, With Special Reference to Its Ecclesiastical Concerns
Robert Carter
(publisher)
Henry Ludwig
(Heinrich Ludwig; 1805–1877)
(printer)
Nathaniel Scudder Prime (1785–1856) Harvard
Stanford
Harvard Library of Congress
1846
Documents and Letters Intended to Illustrate the Revolutionary Incidents of Queens County; With Connecting Narratives, Explanatory Notes, and Additions
Leavitt, Trow and Company
(printer)
Henry Onderdonk, Jr. (1804–1886) Harvard
Indiana University
British Library
NYPL
NYPL
Harvard
Harvard
Columbia
NYPL
NYPL
Library of Congress
Harvard
Columbia
NYPL
Library of Congress
1847
A Sketch of the History of the Presbyterian Church, in Jamaica, L.I. (see First Presbyterian Church in Jamaica)
Leavitt, Trow and Company
(printer)
James Madison MacDonald (1812–1876) NYPL NYPL Library of Congress
1852
The Annals of Newtown, in Queens County, New-York: Containing Its History From Its First Settlement, Together With Many Interesting Facts Concerning the Adjacent Towns; Also, a Particular Account of Numerous Long Island Families Now Spread Over This and Various Other States of the Union
D. Fanshaw
(Daniel Fanshaw; 1788–1860)
(publisher)
James Riker, Jr. (1822–1889) Princeton Library of Congress
Columbia
Princeton
Princeton
1882
History of Queens County, New York: With Illustrations, Portraits, and Sketches of Prominent Families and Individuals
W.W. Munsell & Co.
(William Watkins Munsell; 1850–1919)
(publisher)
George Macnamara (1845–1931)
(printer)
Columbia University Columbia University
1882
New York by Sunlight and Gaslight – A Work Descriptive of the Great American Metropolis ; Its High and Low Life; Its Splendors and Miseries; Its Virtues and Vices; Its Gorgeous Places and Dark Homes of Poverty and Crime; Its Public Men, Politicians, Adventurers; Its Charities, Frauds, Mysteries, Etc. Etc.
Union Publishing House
(publisher)
Charles L. Snyder
(president)
James Dabney McCabe (1842–1883) University of Chicago Columbia University
1896
History of Long Island City, New York. A Record of Its Early Settlement and Corporate Progress. Sketches of the Villages That Were Absorbed in the Growth of the Present Municipality. Its Business, Finance, Manufactures, and Form of Government, With Some Notice of the Men Who Built the City
Long Island Star Publishing Company
(publisher)
Joel Smith Kelsey (1848–1924)[71] Library of Congress Library of Congress
Allen County Public Library
1897
Prominent Families of New York – Being An Account In Biographical Form of Individuals and Families Distinguished as Representatives of Social, Professional and Civic Life of New York City
The Historical Company Nicoll & Roy Company
(printer & binder)
Library of Congress Library of Congress
1898
Prominent Families of New York, Index
The Historical Company Nicoll & Roy Company
(printer & binder)
Harvard Allen County Public Library
1898
Prominent Families of New York – Being An Account In Biographical Form of Individuals and Families Distinguished as Representatives of Social, Professional and Civic Life of New York City (Revised ed.)
The Historical Company Nicoll & Roy Company
(printer & binder)
University of Iowa Cornell
1899
History of the Town of Flushing, Long Island, New York
J. H. Ridenour
(John Henry Ridenour; 1858–1928)
(publisher)
Rev. Henry Davey Waller (1852–1925) Cornell
Library of Congress
Allen County Public Library
Library of Congress
1908
Illustrated History of the Borough of Queens, New York City[72]
F. T. Smiley Publishing Co.
(publisher)
(Frederick Thomas Smiley; 1857–1910)
(Jerome Chester Smiley; 1882–1968)
(George W. Flaacke)
George Hugo August Eugen von Skal (1854–1924)
For the Flushing Journal
Library of Congress Library of Congress Library of Congress
1909
Historical Guide to the City of New York. Part 4: "Borough of Queens"
Frederick A. Stokes Company
(publisher)
City History Club of New York
Frank Bergen Kelley (1867–1934)
(compiler)
New York Public Library Library of Congress
1913
Historical Guide to the City of New York. "Part 4: "Borough of Queens" (rev. ed.)
Frederick A. Stokes Company
(publisher)
City History Club of New York
Frank Bergen Kelley (1867–1934)
(compiler)
Edward Hagaman Hall (1858–1936)
(editor)
Library of Congress
1913
Queens Borough – Being a descriptive and illustrated book of the Borough of Queens setting forth its many advantages and possibilities as a section wherein to live, to work and to succeed
The Manufacturing and Industrial Committee of the Chamber of Commerce of the Borough of New York
(publisher)
Brooklyn Eagle Press
(printer)
Walter Irving Willis (1882–1937)
(compiler & editor)
Library of Commerce
1913
The Refugees of 1776 From Long Island to Connecticut
J.B. Lyon & Co.
(James B. Lyon; 1858–1924)
(printer)
Frederic Gregory Mather (1844–1925) UC Berkeley
University of Michigan
1914
The Origin and History of Grace Church, Jamaica, New York[73]
The Shakespeare Press
Registered trade name of Charles H. Cochrane
(publisher)
Horatio Oliver Ladd (1839–1832) University of Wisconsin – Madison Library of Congress Princeton Seminary
1915
Memorandum With Respect to Proposed Legislation Which Would Sever and Disjoin the Fifth Ward, Borough of Queens From the City of New York : And Erect Said Fifth Ward Into a New City, to Be Known as Rockaway City
University of California
1915
Queens Borough – The Borough of Homes and Industry – A descriptive and illustrated book setting forth its wonderful growth and development in commerce, industry and homes during the past few years; and its many attractions, advantages and possibilities as a section wherein to live, to work and to succeed
The Manufacturing and Industrial Committee of the Chamber of Commerce of the Borough of New York
(publisher)
Long Island Star Publishing Company
(printer)
Walter Irving Willis (1882–1937)
(compiler & editor)
Library of Commerce
1917
History of the Rockaways, From the Year 1885 to 1917 – Being a complete record and review of events of historical importance during that period in the Rockaway peninsula, comprising the villages of Hewlett, Woodmere, Cedarhurst, Lawrence, Inwood, Far Rockaway, Arverne, Rockaway Beach, Belle Harbor, Neponsit and Rockaway Point
Bellot's Histories, Inc.
(publisher)
Alfred Henry Bellot (1882–1965) Wisconsin Historic Society
Dalcassian Publishing
(limited preview)
Brooklyn Public Library
Cornell University
1918
History of the Rockaways, From the Year 1885 to 1917 – Being a complete record and review of events of historical importance during that period in the Rockaway peninsula, comprising the villages of Hewlett, Woodmere, Cedarhurst, Lawrence, Inwood, Far Rockaway, Arverne, Rockaway Beach, Belle Harbor, Neponsit and Rockaway Point (2nd ed.)
Bellot's Histories, Inc.
(publisher)
Alfred Henry Bellot (1882–1965) Wisconsin Historic Society Library of Congress
1920
Queens Borough, New York City, 1910–1920 – The Borough of Homes and Industry – A descriptive and illustrated book setting forth its wonderful growth and development in commerce, industry and homes during the past ten years, 1910 to 1920; a prediction of even greater growth during the next ten years, 1920 to 1930; and a statement of its many advantages, attractions and possibilities as a section wherein to live, to work and to succeed
Chamber of Commerce of the Borough of New York
(publisher)
Long Island Star Publishing Company
(printer)
Walter Irving Willis (1882–1937)
(compiler & editor)
Harvard Harvard
Library of Congress
Prelinger Library
1923
Landmarks of New York – An Historical Guide to the Metropolis
City History Club of New York
(publisher)
Arthur Everett Peterson, PhD (1871–1943)
(editor)
UC Berkeley UC Berkeley
1924
Keskachauge – Or the First White Settlement on Long Island''
G.P. Putnam's Sons
(publisher)
Frederick Van Wyck (1853–1936) Wisconsin Historical Society
1924
Landmarks of New York – An Historical Guide to the Metropolis
City History Club of New York
(publisher)
Arthur Everett Peterson, PhD (1871–1943)
(editor)
New York Public Library New York Public Library
1925
Guide Book to the Noted Places on Long Island, Historical and Otherwise (No. 1) Landmarks on the Montauk Highway – and Long Island Directory With Map
Eugene Louis Armbruster (1865–1943) New York Heritage
LCCN 26-11518
OCLC 987917756 (all editions)
1925
The Boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens Counties of Nassau and Suffolk Long Island, New York, 1609–1924
Lewis Historical Publishing Company, Inc.
(publisher)
Henry "Harry" Isham Hazelton (1867–1938) Vol. 1. Columbia
Vol. 2. Wisconsin
Vol. 3. Columbia
Vol. 4. Wisconsin
Vol. 6. Wisconsin
Vol. 7. Columbia
1950
New York and Queens County Railway and the Steinway Lines, 1867–1939.
Vincent Francis Seyfried (1918–2012)
William Asadorian
Columbia University
1952
The History of Little Neck
Little Neck Community Association
(publisher)
William James & Co.
(printer)
Allen County Public Library
1960
Indian Affairs in Colonial New York: The Seventeenth Century
Cornell University Press
(1st ed.; 1960)
University of Nebraska Press
(1997 re-print)
Allen W. Trelease (1928–2011) Google Books
(1997 re-print)
(limited preview)
1991
Old Queens, N.Y. – In Early Photographs
Dover Publications Vincent Francis Seyfried (1918–2012)
William Asadorian
Google Books
(limited preview)
1995
Elmhurst – From Town Seat to Mega-Suburb
Vincent Francis Seyfried (1918–2012)
(publisher)
Vincent Francis Seyfried (1918–2012) Internet Archive
2004
Long Island City – Images of America
Arcadia Publishing Greater Astoria Historical Society
Thomas Jackson
Richard Melnick
Google Books (2004)
(limited preview)

Google Books (2007)
(limited preview)
Google Books (2010)
(limited preview)

2006
Forgotten New York – Views of a Lost Metropolis; "Queens"
Collins Kevin Walsh
(founder of Forgotten NY)
Boston Public Library.
2007
The Rockaways – Postcard History Series
Arcadia Publishing Emil Robert Lucev, Jr. (1933–2018) Google Books
(limited preview)
2011
Fresh Meadows – Images of America
Arcadia Publishing Fred Cantor
Debra Davidson
Google Books (2011)
(limited preview)
2011
Jamaica Station – Images of Rail
Arcadia Publishing David D. Morrison Google Books
(limited preview)
2013
Forgotten Queens – Images of America
Arcadia Publishing Kevin Walsh
(founder of Forgotten NY)
Google Books
(limited preview)
2015
Jewish Communities of the Five Towns and The Rockaways – Images of America
Arcadia Publishing Google Books
(limited preview)
2018
Flushing Story (in Chinese)
I Wing Press Paul Xinye Qiu (born 1962)&
SinoVision
(Chinese: 晔, )
Google Books
(limited preview)
OCLC 1066256353
2020
The Queens Nobody Knows – An Urban Walking Guide
Princeton University Press William Benno Helmreich (1945–2020) Google Books
(limited preview)
Google Books
(limited preview)
2021
Douglaston–Little Neck – Images of America
Arcadia Publishing Jason D. Antos Google Books
(limited preview)

Slavery in New York

[edit]
Slavery in New York
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
Archive
Other
Current
New York Slavery Records Index – Records of Enslaved Persons and Slave Holders in New York from 1525 though the Civil War
John Jay College of Criminal Justice
(publisher)
John Jay College

Families and genealogy

[edit]
Families and genealogy
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
Archive
Other
1895
Long Island Genealogies – Families of Albertson, Andrews, Bedell, Birdsall, Bowne, Carman, Carr, Clowes, Cock, Cornelius, Covert, Dean, Doughty, Duryea, Feke, Frost, Haff, Hallock, Haydock, Hicks, Hopkins, Jackson, Jones, Keese, Ketcham, Kirby, Liones, Marvin, Merritt, Moore, Mott, Oakley, Onderdonck, Pearsall, Post, Powell, Prior, Robbins, Rodman, Rowland, Rushmore, Sands, Scudder, Seaman, Searing, Smith, Strickland, Titus, Townsend, Underhill, Valentine, Vanderdonk, Weeks, Whitman, Whitson, Willets, Williams, Willis, Wright, and Other Families – Being Kindred Descendants of Thomas Powell, of Bethpage, L.I., 1688 → re: "Last Will and Testament of Thomas Powell Sen Late of Bethpage"
Joel Munsell's Sons
(publisher)
Mary Powell Bunker
(née Mary Powell Seaman; 1820–1906)
(compiler & editor)
Harvard Cornell Marygrove College LCCN 03-13311
OCLC 841579522 (all editions)
1906
Thomas Jones – Fort Neck, Queens County, Long Island, 1695 – and His Descendants – The Floyd-Jones Family – With Connections From the Year 1066
J. Grant Senia Press
(John Grant Senia; 1865–1943)
(printer)
Thomas Floyd-Jones (1841–1919)
(compiler & editor)
Library of Congress Library of Congress LCCN 31-33664
OCLC 16290471 (all editions)
OCLC 21177711 (all editions)
1907
The Jones Family of Long Island – Descendants of Major Thomas Jones (1665–1726) and Allied Families
Tobias A. Wright
(publisher)
John Henry Jones (1851–1905)
(compiler & editor)
Library of Congress Library of Congress LCCN 07-29105
OCLC 14640340 (all editions)
1912
"Long Island Cemetery Inscriptions" (Vol. 4). "Dutch Reformed Church Yard, Newtown" (pp. 1–24)
Josephine C. Frost
(Mrs. Samuel Knapp Frost)
(née Josephine Crossette Mayou; 1864–1942)
NYPL
OCLC 39094908
LCCN 12-23351
1912
"Long Island Cemetery Inscriptions" (Vol. 4). "St. James Episcopal Church Yard at Newtown" (pp. 26–43)
Josephine C. Frost NYPL
OCLC 39094908
LCCN 12-23351
1912
"Long Island Cemetery Inscriptions" (Vol. 4). "Presbyterian Church Yard at Newtown" (pp. 44–75)
Josephine C. Frost NYPL
OCLC 39094908
LCCN 12-23351
1912
"Long Island Cemetery Inscriptions" (Vol. 4). "Cornell Burying Ground at Rockaway" (pp. 76–77)
Josephine C. Frost NYPL
OCLC 39094908
LCCN 12-23351
1912
"Long Island Cemetery Inscriptions" (Vol. 4). "St. George's Episcopal Church Yard at Flushing" (pp. 78–95)[74]
Josephine C. Frost NYPL
OCLC 39094908
LCCN 12-23351
1914
Genealogical and Family History of Southern New York and the Hudson River Valley – A Record of the Achievements of Her People in the Making of a Commonwealth and the Building of a Nation
Lewis Historical Publishing Company
(publisher)
Cuyler Reynolds (1866–1934)
(compiler & editor)
(brother of Marcus T. Reynolds)
Vol. 3 – Harvard Vol. 3 – Library of Congress
1919
Genealogies of Long Island Families – a collection of genealogies relating to the following Long Island families: Dickerson, Mitchill, Wickham, Carman, Raynor, Rushmore, Satterly, Hawkins, Arthur Smith, Mills, Howard, Lush, Greene
Charles J. Werner
(publisher)
Charles Jolly Werner (1887–1951)
Benjamin Franklin Thompson (1784–1849)
(compilers)
Wisconsin Historical Society Wisconsin Historical Society
Cornell University
Library of Congress
Library of Congress
Cornell University
Allen County Public Library
1934
Early Settlers of New York State – Their Ancestors and Descendants (monthly magazine) (Vol. 4; No. 1. July 1934
Thomas James Foley (1893–1949)
(publisher)
Janet Wethy Foley
(née Lutie L. Wethy; 1887–1962)
(wife of publisher)
Heritage Books
(limited preview)
Allen County Public Library
1939
Colonial Families of Long Island and Connecticut – Being the Ancestry and Kindred of Herbert Seversmith (Vol. 2; "Bushnell to Fordham")
Herbert Furman Seversmith, PhD, F.A.S.G. (1904–1967)
Kenn Stryker–Rodda, Litt.D., F.A.S.G. (1903–1990)
Boston Public Library.
1948
Bowne Family of Flushing, Long Island
William Byrd Press, Inc.
(printer)
Edith King Wilson
(née Edith R. King; 1876–1967)
(compiler)
Wisconsin Historical Society Boston Public Library
1962
Long Island Genealogical Source Material
National Genealogical Society
(publisher)
Herbert Furman Seversmith, PhD (1904–1967)
(compiler)
Allen County Public Library
1987
Long Island Source Records – From the New York Genealogical and Biographical Record
Clearfield Company, Inc.
(2001 re-print)
Henry B. Hoff
(compiler)
Google Books
(2001 re-print)
(limited preview)
Archive.org.

Real estate

[edit]
Real estate
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
Archive
Other
1919
Real Estate Record and Builders Guide (Vol. 104, no. 4, whole no. 2680; July 26, 1919). "Predicts Population of 3,000,000 for Queens Borough – Greatest Building Development of Homes, Industrual Buildings and Stores Ever Known in the City, Says Walter I. Willis."
The Record and Guide Company
Franklin T. Miller, President
(publisher)
University of Illlinois
1923
Mortgage Investments in Queens
Chamber of Commerce of the Borough of Queens
(publisher)
Walter Irving Willis (1882–1937)
(compiler & editor)
Columbia University

State directories that include Queens

[edit]
State directories that include Queens
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
Archive
Other
1850
The New York Mercantile Union Business Directory, Containing a New Map of New York City and State, and a Business Directory, Showing the Name, Location and Business of Mercantile Firms, Manufacturing Establishments, Professional Men, Artists, Corporations, Banking, Moneyed and Literary Institutions, Courts, Public Officers, and All the Various Miscellaneous Departments, Which Contribute to the Business, Wealth and Prosperity of the State to Which Is Appended, a Short Advertising Register Many of the Principal Mercantile Houses and Manufacturing Establishments of New York and Other Cities. Carefully Collected and Arranged for 1850–51. To Be Revised and Continued
S.W. Benedict
(Seth Williston Benedict; 1803–1869)
(stereotyper & printer)
Samuel French, L. C. & H. L. Pratt, 293 Broadway (New York)
J. B. Henshaw, 161 William Street (New York)
J. C. Jones (Albany)
Geo. M. Howell (Binghamton)
Harvard
Stanford
Columbia Harvard
Columbia
1912
First Annual Industrial Directory of New York State, 1912
John Williams (1865–1944)
(Commissioner of Labor)
New York State Department of Labor
(publisher)
John Williams
(compiler)
UC Berkeley
Michigan
Stanford
  • Pratt in Doggett's 1845 directory: Pratt & Co., daguerreotypes, 293 Broadway

National directories that include Queens

[edit]
National directories that include Queens
Year Title Printer Compiler(s) Google
Books
HathiTrust Internet
Archive
Other
1878
Sadliers' Catholic Directory, Almanac and Ordo – For the Year of our Lord 1878: With a Full Report of the Various Dioceses in the United States, British America, Ireland, and Australia; "Diocese of Brooklyn"; pp. 187–193
B. & J. Sadlier & Co.
(publisher)
Penn State
[edit]
(1873)[75]
1959 Map of Kings and Queens Counties, pre-consolidation, when the City of Brooklyn had already annexed Williamsburg and Bushwick, and Long Island City had not yet incorporated
[edit]

Neighborhoods, neighborhood microcosms, including ethnic enclaves

[edit]

Because neighborhoods are unincorporated communities, the boundaries and gradations of recognizability vary.

Northwestern Queens
  1. Astoria
    1. Astoria Heights
    2. Ditmars
      1. Steinway
    3. Little Egypt
    4. Norwood Gardens
    5. Ravenswood
  2. Jackson Heights
    1. Jackson Heights Historic District
    2. Jackson Heights Business District
  3. Long Island City
    1. Blissville
    2. Hunters Point
      1. MoMA PS1
      2. Gantry Plaza State Park
    3. Dutch Kills
    4. Queensbridge
    5. Queensview
    6. Queens West
      1. Hunter's Point South
    7. Queens Plaza
      1. Queens Plaza Park
  4. Sunnyside
    1. Sunnyside Gardens
      1. Phipps Gardens
    2. Sunnyside Yard
Northeastern Queens
  1. Bayside
    1. Bayside Gables
    2. Bay Terrace
    3. Bayside Hills
    4. Fort Totten
    5. Oakland Gardens
    6. Lawrence Cemetery
  2. Bellerose
  3. College Point
  4. Douglaston–Little Neck
    1. Douglaston
      1. Douglas Bay
      2. Douglas Manor
      3. Douglaston Hill
      4. Douglaston Park
      5. Winchester Estates
      6. Douglaston Historic District
      7. Douglaston Hill Historic District
    2. Little Neck
      1. Pines
      2. Little Neck Hills
      3. Westmorland
  5. Flushing
    1. Flushing Chinatown
    2. Auburndale
      1. Bowne Park
    3. Chinatown
    4. Downtown Flushing
    5. Kew Gardens Hills
    6. Linden Hill
    7. Murray Hill (aka East Flushing)
      1. Koreatown
      2. Kissena Corridor Park (on the south border of Murray Hill)
    8. Willets Point (aka The Iron Triangle)
  6. Flushing Meadows–Corona Park
    1. Shea Stadium
    2. Citi Field
    3. New York Hall of Science
    4. Flushing Meadows Natatorium
    5. Corona Ash Dumps (1920s)
  7. Pomonok
    1. Electchester
    2. Queensboro Hill
  8. Floral Park, Queens
    1. Queens County Farm Museum
  9. Fresh Meadows
    1. Hillcrest
    2. Utopia
  10. Glen Oaks
    1. North Shore Towers
  11. Whitestone
    1. Beechhurst
    2. Clearview
    3. Malba
Central Queens
  1. Briarwood
  2. Corona
    1. LeFrak City
    2. North Corona
    3. Willets Point
  3. East Elmhurst
    1. Lent Homestead and Cemetery
    2. LaGuardia Airport
  4. Elmhurst
    1. Chinese enclave
    2. Elmhurst Park
  5. Forest Hills
    1. Forest Hills Gardens (housing development)
      1. West Side Tennis Club
    2. Forest Hills Co-op
  6. Glendale
  7. Kew Gardens
    1. Kew Bolmer
  8. Maspeth
    1. Mount Olivet Cemetery
  9. Middle Village
    1. Juniper Park
      1. Juniper Valley Park
    2. Remsen Cemetery
  10. Rego Park
  11. Ridgewood
    1. Wyckoff Heights
    2. Fresh Pond
    3. Fresh Pond–Traffic Historic District
  12. Woodside
    1. Little Manila
    2. Boulevard Gardens
    3. Moore-Jackson Cemetery
Southeastern Queens
  1. Brookville (aka Springfield Gardens)
  2. Cambria Heights
  3. Hollis
    1. Holliswood
  4. Jamaica
    1. Jamiaca Estates
    2. Jamaica Hills
    3. Rochdale Village
    4. John F. Kennedy International Airport
    5. Prospect Cemetery
  5. Laurelton
  6. Meadowmere
  7. Queens Village
    1. Bellaire
    2. Hollis Hills
  8. Rosedale
    1. Warnerville
  9. St. Albans
  10. South Jamaica
    1. Baislely Park
    2. South Jamaica Houses
Southwestern Queens
  1. The Hole
  2. Howard Beach
    1. Hamilton Beach
    2. Howard Park
    3. Lindenwood
    4. Old Howard Beach
    5. Ramblersville
    6. Rockwood Park
    7. Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge (south of Howard Beach)
  3. Ozone Park
    1. Centreville
    2. South Ozone Park
      1. Aqueduct Racetrack
    3. Tudor Village
  4. Richmond Hill
    1. Little Pubjab
  5. Woodhaven
The Rockaways
  1. Rockaway Peninsula
    1. Far Rockaway
    2. Wavecrest
    3. Bayswater
    4. Edgemere
      1. Edgemere Landfill
    5. Arverne
    6. Somerville
    7. Hammels
    8. Rockaway Beach
    9. Seaside
    10. Rockaway Park
    11. Belle Harbor
    12. Neponsit
    13. Breezy Point
    14. Roxbury
    15. Broad Channel (adjacent to the Rockaways)

Bygone Queens communities, community names, and pieces of land

[edit]
Northwestern Queens
  1. Astoria
    1. Hallet's Cove ★ (also spelled Hallett's Cove) (Astoria, Queens § Early settlement)
  2. Jackson Heights
  3. Long Island City
    1. Arleigh Gardens ★
    2. Norwood Gardens ★
    3. The German Settlement ★ (beginning 1870s)
Northeastern Queens
  1. College Point
    1. Tew's Neck ★
    2. Lawrence's Neck ★
    3. Flammersburg ★
    4. Strattonport ★
  2. Flushing
    1. Waldheim
    2. Hinsdale ★
  3. Flushing Highlands neighborhoods
    1. Bowne Park ★
    2. Murray Hill
    3. Ingleside ★
    4. Flushing Park ★
  4. Whitestone
    1. Beechhurst
      1. Trow Settlement ★
Central Queens
  1. Elmhurst
    1. Middelburgh ★ (1652–1664)
    2. New Towne ★ (1665–1896)
    3. Steinway ★ (hamlet) (merged in 1870 with Long Island City)
    4. Bowery Bay ★ (hamlet) (merged in 1870 with Long Island City)
    5. Middleton ★ (hamlet) (merged in 1870 with Long Island City)
  2. West Maspeth
    1. Melvina ★ (hamlet)[76]
  3. Laurel Hill / West Maspeth
    1. Berlinville ★ (established 1870s)
  4. Woodside
    1. Winfield
  5. Ridgewood
    1. Linden Hill
  6. Middle Village
    1. Whitepot ★
Southeastern Queens
  1. Holliswood
    1. Terrace Heights ★
  2. Queens Village
    1. Creedmoor ★
Southwestern Queens
  1. Howard Beach
    1. Ramblersville ★ (1916 became Howard Beach)
The Rockaways
  1. Rockaway, Queens
    1. Somerville ★ (now called Arverne)
  2. Far Rockaway
    1. Wave Crest[77]

––––––––––––––––––––

Village of Creedmoor (now part of Queens Village → see Creedmoor Psychiatric Center) – In July 1872, the National Rifle Association (NRA), for $26,250 (equivalent to $667,625 in 2023), purchased 70 acres, and, on June 21, 1873, opened an outdoor firing range. The name was selected by newspaper man, Col. Henry G. Shaw ( Henry Glenville Shaw; 1843–1907). He initially named it Creed's Moor, then eventually Creedmoor Rifle Range. The 70 acres was a portion of what once had been B.W. Creed's farm.
The Village of Creedmoor was named for the Creeds, a family that previously farmed the site. The local Central Railroad of Long Island station – on a line that ran from Long Island City to Bethpage – took the name Creedmoor, apparently from the phrase "Creed's Moor," describing the local geography. In the early 1870s, New York State purchased land from the Creeds for use by the New York Army National Guard and by the NRA as a firing range. The Creedmoor Rifle Range hosted prestigious international shooting competitions, which became the forerunner of the Palma trophy competition. In 1892, as a result of declining public interest and mounting noise complaints from the growing neighborhood, the NRA deeded its land back to the state. In 1912, the property became the Farm Colony of Brooklyn State Hospital, which eventually became the Creedmoor Psychiatric Center. After 1960, parts of the property – the Cornell Farmhouse or the Creedmoor Farmhouse Complex or the Jacob Adriance Farmhouse – became part of the Queens County Farm Museum.
Mussel Island, no occupants, ever, was a small and marshy piece of land at the junction of Maspeth Creek and Newtown Creek. (Google Map aerial view the location of the former Mussel Island, at the confluence of Newtown and Maspeth Creeks)

Garden cities

[edit]

References for bygone communities and former names of communities

[edit]
  1. Via Google Books (limited preview). p. 326. doi:10.5749/j.ctttv9ds; OCLC 8182936923.
  2. Via Google Books (limited preview). p. 326. doi:10.5749/j.ctttv9ds; OCLC 8182936923.


  • "Creedmoor". Harper's Weekly. 21 (1082): 740 (illustration), 741, 743 (article), 745 (team portraits). August 1876. Retrieved September 29, 2021.



References for bygone Queens communities

[edit]

von Skal, G. (1908). Illustrated History of the Borough of Queens, New York City. F.T. Smiley Publishing Company. Retrieved March 10, 2020.: 84 

Selected Queens directories not found online

[edit]


Astoria directories

[edit]
  • 1864-1871 5 city directories on one reel. [FHC 1930448]


  • Boyd, William Andrew (1850–1918) (compiler) (1865). Boyd's Directory of Astoria, East New York, Flatbush, Flushing, Glen Cove, Greenport, Hempstead, Huntington, Jamaica, Newtown, Patchogue, Port Jefferson, Riverhead, Sag Harbor, and Setauket, Long Island – With a Business Directory of Patrons to the Work – And An Appendix of Much General Information, 1864–5. William Andrew Boyd (1850–1818) (publisher) → J.F. Morris & Co. (Joseph F. Morris; born Nov 1853 Rhode Island) (printer).{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) OCLC 475459351 (all editions).
    1. Fagan, Patty (née Patricia Eileen Fagan; born 1948) (transcriber and online poster). Transcribed and posted online (see Fagan's website → "City Directories for Queens"). Retrieved September 30, 2021. {{cite book}}: External link in |type= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
    2. Accessible via Family History Center – FHC 1930448.
    3. Queens Central Library, Jamaica.

Curtin's Directories

[edit]
    1. 1865–66. Curtin's Directory of Astoria, East New York, Flatbush, Flushing, Glen Cove, Greenport, Hempstead, Huntington, Jamaica, Newtown, Patchogue, Port Jefferson, Riverhead, Sag Harbor, and Setauket, Long Island – With a Business Directory of Patrons of the Work, and an Appendix Containing Important Information, 1865–66. {{cite book}}: |last1= has numeric name (help) OCLC 80672825, 820330043, 123496599, 83859702, 475935412.
    2. 1867–68. Curtin's Directory of Astoria, East New York, Flatbush, Flushing, Glen Cove, Greenport, Hempstead, Huntington, Jamaica, Newtown, Patchogue, Port Jefferson, Riverhead, Rockaway, Roslyn, Sag Harbor, and Setauket, Long Island – With a Business Directory of Patrons of the Work, 1867–8. {{cite book}}: |last1= has numeric name (help) OCLC 79464867.
    3. 1868–69. Curtin's Directory of Astoria, Babylon, Bath, Canarsie, Coldspring, College Point, Cypress Hill, East New York, Farmingdale, Flatbush, Flushing, Glen Cove, Greenpoint, Greenport, Hempstead, Huntington, Islip, Jamaica, Long Island City, Newtown, New Lotts, New Utrecht, Orient, Oyster Bay, Patchogue, Port Jefferson, River Head, Rockaway, Roslyn, Sag Harbor, Southhold, Stonybrook and Woodhaven, Long Island. With a Business Directory of Patrons of the Work. 1868–9. {{cite book}}: |last1= has numeric name (help)
    4. 1870. Curtin's Directory of Astoria, East New York, Flatbush, Flushing, Glen Cove, Greenport, Hempstead, Huntington, Jamaica, Newtown, Patchogue, Port Jefferson, Riverhead, Sag Harbor & Setauket, Long Island – With a Business Directory of Patrons of ... . {{cite book}}: |last1= has numeric name (help)
    5. 1871–72. Curtin's Directory of Amityville, Babylon ... Long Island, 1871–72. {{cite book}}: |last1= has numeric name (help)
    6. n.d.: n.d. Curtin's Directory of Astoria, East New York, Flatbush, Flushing, Glen Cove, Greenport, Hempstead, Huntington, Jamaica, Newtown, Patchogue, Port Jefferson, Riverhead, Sag Harbor, and Setauket, Long Island – With a Business Directory of Patrons of the Work, and an Appendix Containing Important Information. Dennis P. Curtin. OCLC 475935412.
    7. 1877–78: Vol. 13. Curtin's Brooklyn and Long Island Business Directory for 1877–8 – Includes Brooklyn, and the residents of Amityville, Babylon, Breslan, College Point, East New York, Flatbush, Flushing, Freeport, Glen Cove, Gravesend, Greenport, Hempstead, Huntington, Islip, Jamaica, Long Island City, Northport, Newtown, Oyster Bay, Patchogue, Pearsalls, Port Jefferson, Riverhead, Rockaway, Rockville Centre, Roslyn, Sayville, Southhold, Stonybrook, Whitestone, Woodhaven and Woodsburgh.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)

Forest Hills

[edit]
  • Metropolitan Directory Co.'s Directory of Richmond Hill & Woodhaven, N.Y. – Including Kew Gardens, Forest Hills & Ozone Park – Containing an Alphabetical List of the Residents, Their Occupations & Residences Together With a Classified Business. Metropolitan Directory Co. (publisher). 1922. OCLC 1066636940.

Lain's

[edit]
1893-1894: The reel for Lain's Directory of Brooklyn 1893/4 (for yr ending May 1, 1894) contains a bonus title: Brooklyn and Long Island Business Directory, 1892. Beginning on page 303 are directories of businesses and government officials for many (if not all) towns and villages on Long Island (Brooklyn and Queens included).
I mention this because it's easier to find than a Queens city directory, and it fills a gap between Queens residential directories.
It is segment 3, reel 7 in a widely available library package of (Lain's mostly) Brooklyn directories.

Polk's

[edit]

Robinson

[edit]
  • Robinson's Little Neck–Douglaston Red Book Resident Directory for the Year Beginning November, 1940–41 (Vol. 2). Hempstead: Resident Directory Service, Inc. – Charles Herbert Robinson (1899–1969), President. 1940.
  • Robinson's Little Neck–Douglaston Red Book Resident Directory, 1941–1942 (Vol. 3). Mineola: Resident Directory Service, Inc. – Charles Herbert Robinson (1899–1969), President. 1941.

Long Island Star

[edit]
  • Todd, Thomas H. (1834–1901) (compiler). Long Island Star Directory – The Star directory of Long Island City, Embracing Hunter's Point, Blissville, Dutch Kills, Ravenswood, Astoria, Steinway and the German Settlement – Containing Also a Business Directory of the City (Vol. 2). Long Island City: Daily and Weekly Star – Thomas H. Todd & Co. (publisher).{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link) LCCN 24-30843; OCLC 480682129 (all editions).


  • Todd, Thomas H. (1934–1901) (compiler) (1894). The Star Directory of Long Island City – Embracing a General Directory of the Residents of Hunter's Point, Blissville, Dutch Kills, Ravenswood, Astoria, Steinway and the German Settlement, and North Beach – Also a Classified Business Directory of the Entire City, 1894–1895 (Vol. 3) (476 pages; 12,480 names). Long Island City: Daily and Weekly Star – Thomas H. Todd & Co. (publisher).{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link) OCLC 4327124.


Queensborough Library has 1888 and Brooklyn Public has 1886.

Wikimedia Commons

[edit]

Bibliography

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Anderson, 2002.
  2. ^ Sutton, December 14, 2010.
  3. ^ "Beers' Atlas of Long Island". 1873. Archived from the original on 2011-11-20. Retrieved 2011-11-26.
  4. ^ "LLOYD HARBOR – A BRIEF HISTORY". Incorporated Village of Lloyd Harbor, Suffolk County, NY. Archived from the original on 2009-04-27. Retrieved 2011-11-26.
  5. ^ "Pluralism Commentary". Religion and Ethic Newsweekly. PBS. 22 June 2001. Retrieved 17 January 2013.
  6. ^ Roberts IV, William I.; Adams, Mark E. "Phase 1A Historical/Archaeological Sensitivity Evaluation of the MEBCO Development, College Point, Queens, New York". Greenhouse Consultants Inc. July 1989.
  7. ^ "History of Queens County". bklyn-genealogy-info.stevemorse.org.
  8. ^ a b c "History". Flushing–Willets Point–Corona LDC. Archived from the original on April 14, 2012.
  9. ^ 1891 Map of Queens County, New York
  10. ^ a b c Riker, James Jr. (1852). The annals of Newtown, in Queens County, New York. New York: Fanshaw. OL 22847611M.
  11. ^ Bunker, Google (Harvard), 1895, p. 7.
  12. ^ Thompson. Vol. 2 (Harvard), 1843, pp. 311–312.
  13. ^ Macoskey, HathiTrust (California), 1939, pp. 71–84.
  14. ^ Trébor, FamilySearch, 1945, p. 7.
  15. ^ Ross, Vol. 1. Google Books (Michigan), 1902, p. 528.
  16. ^ O'Callaghan, 1868, p. 48.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Robertson, 1974.
  18. ^ Middleton & Taylor, 1913.
  19. ^ Trébor, FamilySearch, 1945, p. 8.
  20. ^ Williams, October 20, 2015.
  21. ^ "Meyer, Cord", Internet Archive (NYPL), 1918.
  22. ^ Riker, Google Books (Princeton), 1852, pp. 41, 42, 54.
  23. ^ Lawrence, Google (Wisconsin), 1858, p. 23.
  24. ^ History of Queens County, Internet Archive (Columbia), 1882, p. 51.
  25. ^ The Flushing Journal, April 21, 1855.
  26. ^ Armbruster, 1914, p. 30.
  27. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, May 13, 1935.
  28. ^ Hazelton, Vol. 2, 1925, p. 1107.
  29. ^ Kelsey, Internet Archive (Library of Congress), 1896, p. 19.
  30. ^ History of Queens County, Internet Archive (Columbia), 1882, pp. 272–273.
  31. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, November 9, 1916.
  32. ^ a b c d e New York Times, March 6, 2020.
  33. ^ American Florist, November 23, 1918, p. 839.
  34. ^ a b Brooklyn Daily Eagle, October 1, 1899, p. 33.
  35. ^ Mandeville, Internet Archive (Allen County), 1914, p. 134.
  36. ^ Thomas, John Jacobs, 1858, p. 209.
  37. ^ Mandeville, Internet Archive (Allen County), 1914, pp. 134–135.
  38. ^ New-York Times, March 2, 1877, p. 3.
  39. ^ New-York Daily Tribune, March 2, 1877, p. 8.
  40. ^ Laws of New York, Google Books (New York State), 1897.
  41. ^ New York Laws, Vol. 2. Google Books, 1898.
  42. ^ "Inventing Gotham".
  43. ^ New-York Times, December 15, 1894.
  44. ^ Sullivan, US Genenet.org, 1927, pp. 340–341.
  45. ^ Laws of New York, 1897.
  46. ^ Laws of New York, 1898.
  47. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, November 26, 1916.
  48. ^ Hazelton, Vol. 2, 1925, p. 1105.
  49. ^ Pritchard, Google; c. 1. 2019, p. 443.
  50. ^ Bolton, Google (Penn State), 1920, p. 271.
  51. ^ New York Times, May 13, 1906, p. 5.
  52. ^ Spring Creek Survey, 2012, p. 2.
  53. ^ Brooklyn Daily Eagle, February 15, 1901.
  54. ^ Võ & Bonus, 2002, p. 27.
  55. ^ Waxman, January 2000.
  56. ^ New York Times, June 23, 2011.
  57. ^ McGlinn, 2002.
  58. ^ a b Beers, 1873.
  59. ^ New York Daily News, April 28, 1978.
  60. ^ New York Tribune, June 6, 1888, p. 4.
  61. ^ Curtin, 1888.
  62. ^ AECOM, January 2018, p. 2–66.
  63. ^ Astoria Directory (Fagan), 1864.
  64. ^ DGS Film No. 8285471, 1898.
  65. ^ DGS Film No. 8285472, 1898.
  66. ^ DGS Film No. 8285471, 1909.
  67. ^ DGS Film No. 8285472, 1909.
  68. ^ Trow – via Ancestry.com, Trow, 1912.
  69. ^ DGS Film No. 8285471, 1912.
  70. ^ DGS Film No. 8285472, 1912.
  71. ^ "Joel Smith Kelsey", June 1887, p. 37.
  72. ^ Skal, 1908.
  73. ^ Ladd, 1914.
  74. ^ Brooklyn Daily Times, November 9, 1904, p. 7.
  75. ^ Beers: "Map of Long Island", 1873.
  76. ^ Seyfried, 2010, pp. 826–827.
  77. ^ Brooklyn Daily Times, January 18, 1888, p. 1.

References linked to notes

[edit]

Books, journals, magazines, papers, websites

[edit]

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx


  • Macoskey, Arthur Robert (1897–1971) (compiler & editor) (1939). Long Island Gazetteer – A Guide to Historic Places. Eagle Library No. 342. Vol. Vol. 54. Brooklyn: The Eagle Library, Inc. Retrieved November 8, 2021. {{cite book}}: |first1= has generic name (help); |volume= has extra text (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link) LCCN 39-7071; OCLC 5057401 (all editions).


  • Lain & Healy's Brooklyn and Long Island Business Directory – Containing Each Business, Trade and Profession Classified Under Appropriate Headings, a Street Directory of Brooklyn and a Map of Long Island. OCLC 475947920.


  • Laws of the State of New York. Retrieved October 27, 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
    1. 1897: Vol. 3: Chapter 378; Section 2: "Division Into Boroughs" (120th Session: January 6 – April 17, 1852 → Became Law May 4, 1897). New York and Albany: Banks & Brothers (A. Bleecker Banks). p. 2 – via Google Books (New York State Legislature).
      OCLC 61190319.
    2. 1898: Vol. 2. Chapter 588. Section 1 (121st Session: January 6 – April 17, 1852 → Became Law April 27, 1898). Albany: James B. Lyon (printer). pp. 1336–1337 – via Google Books (NYPL).


===================
  • Laws of the State of New York. Retrieved October 27, 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  1. 1866: Vol. 2. "Chapter 748" (89th Session: January 2 – April 20, 1866 → Passed April 21, 1866). Albany, New York: Lewis & Goodwin. pp. 1597–1621 (pp. 1607) – via Google Books (University of Iowa).
  2. 1867: Vol. 1. "Chapter 481" (89th Session: January 1 – April 20, 1867 → Passed April 22, 1867). Albany, New York: Banks & Brothers. pp. 1232–1260 – via Google Books (NYPL).
  3. 1869: Vol. 2. "Chapter 822" (92nd Session: January 5 – May 10, 1869 → May 10, 1869). Albany: C. Van Benthuysen & Sons (Charles Henry Van Benthuysen; 1842–1895). pp. 1907–1946 – via Google Books (NYPL).
  4. 1872: "Chapter 699" (95th Session: January 2 – May 14, 1872 → Passed May 14, 1872). Albany: V.W.M. Brown (publisher) (Vincent William M. Brown; 1833–1883). pp. 1657–1660 – via Google Books (University of California).
  5. 1874: "Chapter 268" (97th Session: January 6 – April 30, 1874 → Passed April 27, 1874). Albany: Hugh J. Hastings (publisher). pp. 323–326 – via Google Books (University of Iowa).
  6. 1889: "Chapter 540" (112th Session; January 1, 1889 – May 16, 1889 → approved by the Governor June 15, 1889). Albany: Banks & Brothers (publisher). pp. 736–737 – via Google Books (University of Iowa).
  7. 1903: Vol. 2. "Chapter 633" (126th Session; January 1, 1903 – April 23, 1889 → became law May 15, 1903). Albany: J.B. Lyon Company (publisher) → James B. Lyon (1858–1924). p. 1434 – via Google Books (University of Iowa).
  8. 1908: Vol. 2. "Chapter 473". Section 1 (131st Session; Regular Session: January 1, 1908 – April 3, 1908; Extraordinary Session: May 11, 1908 – June 11, 1908 → passed May 22, 1908). Albany: J.B. Lyon Company (publisher). p. 1679 – via Google Books (University of Iowa).
======================
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain.



    1. Via Google Books ().
    2. Via HathiTrust ().
    3. [?ref=ol&view=theater Via Internet Archive ()]. {{cite book}}: Check |url= value (help)


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    1. Hartford Courant (February 26, 1931). "A.A. Baker Dies at Home in Colchester". Vol. 94. p. 4. Retrieved November 1, 2021 – via Newspapers.com {{cite news}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
    2. Hartford Courant (May 21, 1980). "Official Seeks Restoration of Map – Colchester". Vol. 143, no. 81. p. 28 (section W). Retrieved November 1, 2021 – via Newspapers.com " ... A.A. Baker, a local insurance agent and map salesman of the period." (re: 1854 Map of New London County, published by Beers).{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)




  • "Last will and testament of Thomas Powell Sen late of Bethpage now of Westbury in the limits of Hempstead in Queens County on Nassau Island in the Colony of New York". 1719–1720. Archived from the original on May 15, 2013. Retrieved October 15, 2012.





    1. Vol. 1. "Town Minutes of Newtown, 1656–1688" – via Google Books.


  • Portrait and Biological Record of Suffolk County (Long Island) New York – Containing Portraits and Biographical Sketches of Prominent and Representative Citizens of the County – Together With Biographies and Portraits of All the Presidents of the United States. Chapman Publishing Company. 1896. Retrieved October 10, 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link) LCCN 01-14266; OCLC 35905707 (all editions).
    1. Via Google Books (New York Public Library). p. 396.


  • Seaman, Mary Thomas (maiden;1873–1931); Assisted by James Haviland Seaman, Jr. (1928). The Seaman Family in America as Descended from Captain John Seaman of Hempstead, Long Island. Tobias A. Wright, Inc. (printer). Retrieved October 10, 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link) LCCN 30-13140; OCLC 45383808 (all editions).
    1. Via Internet Archive.


  • Felter, William Landon, PhD (1862–1933) (1918). Historic Green Point – A Brief Account of the Beginning and Development of the Northerly Section of the Borough of Brooklyn, City of New York, Locally Known as Green Point. Issued in Connection With the Semicentennial of the Green Point Savings Bank and by That Institution. The author was principal of Girls' High School, Brooklyn.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link) LCCN 19-10156; OCLC 3744636 (all editions).






      https://archive.org/details/longislanditsear297armb/page/30/mode/2up?q=%22college+point%22?ref=ol&view=theater
    1. Internet Archive (New York Public Library).
    2. Internet Archive (Library of Congress. 1st copy).
    3. Internet Archive (Library of Congress. 2nd copy).



  • Bunker, Mary Powell (née Seaman; 1820–1906) (compiler) (1895). Long Island Genealogies – Families of Albertson, Andrews, Bedell, Birdsall, Bowne, Carman, Carr, Clowes, Cock, Cornelius, Covert, Dean, Doughty, Duryea, Feke, Frost, Haff, Hallock, Haydock, Hicks, Hopkins, Jackson, Jones, Keese, Ketcham, Kirby, Liones, Marvin, Merritt, Moore, Mott, Oakley, Onderdonck, Pearsall, Post, Powell, Prior, Robbins, Rodman, Rowland, Rushmore, Sands, Scudder, Seaman, Searing, Smith, Strickland, Titus, Townsend, Underhill, Valentine, Vanderdonk, Weeks, Whitman, Whitson, Willets, Williams, Willis, Wright, and Other Families – Being Kindred Descendants of Thomas Powell, of Bethpage, L.I., 1688 (descendants of Thomas Powell; 1641–1722). Albany: Joel Munsell's Sons (publisher).{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) LCCN 03-13311; OCLC 841579522 (all editions).



    1. Via Google Books (limited preview).



    1. Via Google Books ().




    1. Illustration & editorial: Brooklyn Daily Eagle, The (November 5, 1894). "The Lady or the Tiger?" (anti-consolidation editorial – illustration by Orrin Welch Simons; 1867–1930). Vol. 54, no. 307. p. 19. Retrieved September 8, 2021 – via Newspapers.com (criticized by The New-York Times).{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
    2. Document A: 1834: General Jeremiah Johnson (1766–1852)
    3. Document B: 1834: Consolidation Committee of the State legislature


    4. Document C: 1849: New-York Daily Tribune (a Republican newspaper)
      1. New-York Daily Tribune (December 1, 1848). "Union of New-York and Brooklyn". Vol. 8, no. 202. p. 2 (column 6; bottom) Retrieved November 9, 2021{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
      1. New-York Daily Tribune (January 30, 1849). "Board of Assistant Aldermen" ... "Monday, Jan. 29" – "Communication". Vol. 8, no. 252. p. 2 (column 7; top) Retrieved November 9, 2021{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)





    5. Document D: Andrew Haswell Green (1820–1903)
    6. Document E: Popular joke
    7. Document F: 1894: Puck magazine

    8. Document F: 1894: Puck magazine; Opper, Frederick Burr (1857–1937) (artist) (January 18, 1893). "Selfish Objections to a Good Match" (political cartoon). Free access icon. Vol. 32 (828). p. 358. Retrieved November 9, 2021 – via Google Books (Harvard). (see c:File:Selfish objections to a good match.jpg).{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link)
    9. Document G: 1896: Richard Salter Storrs (1821–1900). "Remarks At An Anti-Consolidation Mass Meeting, January 13, 1896". Vol. Pamphlet No. 6. Brooklyn: League of Loyal Citizens Pamphlet (publisher). p. 10.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) OCLC 155450275, 34313996.
    10. Document H: 1893: St. Clair McKelway (1905–1980), editor of the Brooklyn Eagle
      1. New-York Times, The (February 3, 1893). "Real Estate Men's Dinner". Vol. 42, no. 12932. p. 5 (column 1). Retrieved November 9, 2021.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
      "We have no streets analogous to your Fifth Avenue, but neither have we any resembling those of your tenderloin district. With us are as yet no extremes of wealth or poverty, but the families of moderate means are becoming fewer with you."


    11. Document I: Consolidation League
    12. Document J: League of Loyal Citizens
    13. Document K: New-York Times, The (May 1, 1888). "The Annual Report of the Chamber of Commerce ... ". Vol. 37, no. 11441. p. 4 (column 1). Retrieved November 9, 2021.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
      [Consolidation is] "a question which often arises in the minds of citizens of New-York who have faith in its future growth and in what Mayor Hewitt has called its 'imperial destiny.'"



    14. Document L: 1894: Results of the Consolidation Referendum



  • Kelsey, Joel Smith (1848–1924) (1896). History of Long Island City, New York. A Record of Its Early Settlement and Corporate Progress. Sketches of the Villages That Were Absorbed in the Growth of the Present Municipality. Its Business, Finance, Manufactures, and Form of Government, With Some Notice of the Men Who Built the City. Long Island Star Publishing Company. Retrieved October 5, 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link) LCCN 11-25202; OCLC 5917590 (all editions).


  • Ladd, Horatio Oliver (1839–1832) (Rev.) (1914). The Origin and History of Grace Church, Jamaica, New York. New York: The Shakespeare Press, registered trade name of Charles H. Cochrane. Retrieved September 7, 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link) LCCN 14-12549; OCLC 1631479 (all editions).
    1. Via Google Books (University of Wisconsin - Madison).


  • Lawrence, Thomas (1858). Historical Genealogy of the Lawrence Family: From Their First Landing in This Country, A.D., 1635, to the Present Date, A.D., 1858. Edward O. Jenkins (printer). Retrieved October 11, 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link) LCCN 09-11635; OCLC 10819647 (all editions).


    1. Via Internet Archive (Allen County Public Library).
    2. Via Internet Archive (Library of Congress).




  • Pritchard, Evan T., PhD (born 1955) (2019) [2002; 2007]. Native New Yorkers – The Legacy of the Algonquin People of New York. Council Oak Books. Retrieved October 18, 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link) LCCN 2001-32389; OCLC 1055427021 (all editions).
    1. Via Google Books; c. 1. (limited preview). p. 443; Note 29 (Chapter 5).
    2. Via Google Books; c. 2. (limited preview). p. 443; Note 29 (Chapter 5).


  • Riker, James, Jr. (1822–1889) (1852). The Annals of Newtown, in Queens County, New-York: Containing Its History From Its First Settlement, Together With Many Interesting Facts Concerning the Adjacent Towns; Also, a Particular Account of Numerous Long Island Families Now Spread Over This and Various Other States of the Union. New York: D. Fanshaw. Retrieved September 4, 2021{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link) LCCN 01-14941; OCLC 1264039133 (all editions), 58788151.
    1. Via Internet Archive (Columbia University).
    2. Google Books (Princeton University).



    1. Part I – "A History of the Borough of Queens". pp. 7–30.
    2. Part II – "Queens Borough of the Present Day". pp. 31–38.
    3. Part III – "Noteworth Buildings and Places". pp. 39–70.
    4. Part IV – "Men of Mark". pp. 71–90.
    5. Part V – "A Glance to the Past and the Future". pp. 91–104.
    6. Part VI – "The Flushing Journal". pp. 105–112.
    7. "Biographical Sketches". pp. 113–167.




    1. The following is on one film (Digital Genealogical Society Film No. 8285471):
      1. Vol. 1.  1898: FHC No. 1710435 ← link (accessible online).; (images 12–192).
      2. Vol. 9.  1909–1910: FHC No. 1710435 ← link (accessible online).; (images 206–318).
      3. Vol. 10. 1912: FHC No. 1710435 ← link (accessible online).; (images 332–??).
    2. The following is on one film (DGS Film No. 8285469):
      1. Vol. 2.  1899: FHC No. 1705173 (Item 1) ← link (onsite access only).
      2. Vol. 4.  1901: FHC No. 1705173 (Item 2) ← link (onsite access only).
      3. Vol. 6.  1904: FHC No. 1705173 (Item 3) ← link (onsite access only).
    3. The following is on one film (DGS Film No. 8285470):
      1. Vol. 7.  1906–1907: FHC No. 1705174 (Item 1) ← link (onsite access only).
      2. Vol. 8.  1908–1909: FHC No. 1705174 (Item 2) ← link (onsite access only).
    4. The following is on one film (DGS Film No. 8285472):
      1. Vol. 1.  1898: FHC No. 1758643 (Item 1) ← link (accessible online) (images 5–185).{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
      2. Vol. 9.  1909–1910: FHC No. 1758643 (Item 2) ← link (accessible online) (images 198–310).{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
      3. Vol. 10. 1912: FHC No. 1758643 (Item 3) ← link (accessible online) (images 314–503).{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)


    1. Vol. 10. 1912: Ancestry.com ← link (accessible online) → Note: Under the former Myfamily.com website, database ID 8773. Under the current Ancestry.com, database ID 2469 (beginning at image 1622334).{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)



    Citations from the article:
    1. Seyfried, Vincent Francis (1918–2012) (2010) [1995]. Jackson, Kenneth Terry, PhD (born 1939) (ed.). Encyclopedia of New York City (2nd ed.). Yale University Press & New-York Historical Society (publisher). Retrieved September 22, 2021 – via Internet Archive.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) LCCN 2010-31294; ISBN 0-3001-1465-6, 978-0-300-11465-2; OCLC 1088488960 (all editions).
    2. Kwong, Peter, PhD (1941–2017) (1991) [1987]. The New Chinatown (American Century Series) (3rd printing; 1st ed.). Hill and Wang (1987); Noonday Press (1991; third printing, 1st ed.). Retrieved October 18, 2021 – via Internet Archive.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) LCCN 87-14068 (1987), LCCN 0809-15854 (1996); ISBN 0-3745-2121-2, 978-0-3745-2121-9; OCLC 867454589 (all editions).
    3. Kinkead, Gwen Edith (born 1951) (1992). Chinatown: A Portrait of a Closed Society. HarperCollins. Retrieved October 18, 2021 – via Internet Archive.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) LCCN 91-59931; ISBN 0-0601-6776-9; OCLC 936054701 (all editions).


    1. Via Internet Archive (NYPL). Vol. Vol. 16. {{cite book}}: |volume= has extra text (help)


  • Waller, Rev. Henry Davey (1852–1925) (1899). History of the Town of Flushing, Long Island, New York. J. H. Ridenour → John Henry Ridenour (1858–1928). Retrieved September 7, 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link) LCCN 99-1006; OCLC 1189684220 (all editions); 1048538780.
    1. Via Internet Archive (Library of Congress).


    1. Vol. 1. "History of Springfield, Town of Jamaica, Long Island, New York". January 1914 – via Internet Archive (Library of Congress).
    2. Vol. 1. "Cemeteries in Kings and Queens Counties, Long Island, New York, 1753–1913". March 1916 – via Internet Archive (Library of Congress).
    3. Vol. 1. "Flushing, Queens County, Long Island, New York – Intentions of Marriage, 1704–1776". April 1916 – via Internet Archive (Library of Congress).


  • Trébor, Haynes (pseudonym of Robert Haynes Trébor-MacConnell; née Robert Haines MacConnell; 1904–1991) of Flushing → "Trébor is "Robert" spelled backwards (1945). Colonial Flushing: A Brief History of the Town of Flushing, Called by the Dutch Vlissingen, founded in 1645, on Long Island in the Province of New Netherland, Afterward the Orovince and State of New York. Flushing Federal Savings and Loan Association {{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link) LCCN 45-5847; OCLC 6328913 (all editions).
    1. Via Google Books ().
    2. Via HathiTrust ().
    3. Via Internet Archive ().


  • History of Queens County, New York: With Illustrations, Portraits, and Sketches of Prominent Families and Individuals. New York: W.W. Munsell & Co. → William Watkins Munsell; 1850–1919. 1882. Retrieved September 7, 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link) LCCN 01-14233; OCLC 4819282 (all editions).
    1. Via HathiTrust (Columbia University).
    2. Via Internet Archive (Columbia University).


  • Nicholson, John (2005). "Chapter 4: Jackson Heights, New York". In Maly, Michael T., PhD (born 1968) (ed.). Beyond Segregation: Multiracial and Multiethnic Neighborhoods in the United States. Temple University Press. pp. 100–160. Retrieved September 7, 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: editors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link) LCCN 2004-51696; .
    1. Maly – via Google Books (preview only).
    2. Maly – via Internet Archive.


League of Loyal Citizens (Brooklyn, New York, N.Y.) (Series): OCLC 80373853 (all editions), OCLC 34289324 (all editions).


  • Sullivan, James (1873–1931) (editor-in-chief); Williams, Edwin Melvin (1880–1966); Fitzpatrick, James Benedict (1881–1964); Conklin, Edwin Pierson (1874–1957) (associate editors) (1927). History of New York State, 1523–1927 (6 volumes – biographies in volume 6). New York, Chicago: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, Inc. Retrieved December 28, 20007. {{cite book}}: |first1= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link) LCCN 27-24237; OCLC 5122461 (all editions).


  • Colonial Laws of New York From the Year 1664 to the Revolution, Including the Charters of the Duke of York, the Commissions and Instructions to Colonial Governors, the Duke's Laws, the Laws of the Dongan and Leisler Assemblies, the Charters of Albany and New York, and the Acts of the Colonial Legislatures From 1691 to 1775, Inclusive (5 volumes). Albany: James B. Lyon (1858–1924). 1894–1896. Retrieved September 8, 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link) LCCN 35-25349; OCLC 4602284 (all editions).
    1. Vol. 1. Chapter 4 – Section 1. pp. 121–122 – via Google Books (New York State Legislature).


News Media

[edit]





    1. I. "Flushing" (Last ed.). Vol. 70. November 7, 1916. p. 4 (column 3; top) – via Newspapers.com (Brooklyn Public Library).
    2. II. "Long Island City" (Morning ed.). Vol. 76. November 9, 1916. p. 2 (column 2; top) – via Newspapers.com (Brooklyn Public Library).
    3. II. "Long Island City" (Four O'Clock ed.). Vol. 76. November 9, 1916. p. 10 (column 5; middle) – via Newspapers.com (Brooklyn Public Library).
    4. II. "Long Island City" (Four O'Clock ed.) (PDF). Vol. 76. November 9, 1916. p. 10 (column 5; middle) – via Fultonhistory.com.
    5. III. "College Point" (Morning ed.). Vol. 76. November 10, 1916. p. 3 (column 4) – via Newspapers.com (Brooklyn Public Library).
    6. III. "College Point" (Four O'Clock ed.). Vol. 76. November 10, 1916. p. 12 (column 5) – via Newspapers.com (Brooklyn Public Library).
    7. "Ravenswood" (Morning ed.). Vol. 76. November 19, 1916. p. 8 (section 7; column 6) – via Newspapers.com (Brooklyn Public Library).
    8. "Hunters Point" (Morning ed.). Vol. 76. November 26, 1916. p. 9 (section 7; "Local News"; column 2; bottom) – via Newspapers.com (Brooklyn Public Library).
    9. "Hunters Point" (Morning ed.). Vol. 70. November 26, 1916. p. 9 (section 7; "Local News"; column 2; bottom) – via Newspapers.com (Brooklyn Public Library).














Census data

[edit]

New York laws

[edit]
  • Laws of the State of New York, Passed at the One Hundred Twentieth Session of the Legislature. New York and Albany: Banks & Brothers (A. Bleecker Banks). 1897. Retrieved September 8, 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link) OCLC 61190319.
    1. Vol. 3: Chapter 378; Section 2: "Division Into Boroughs". p. 2 – via Google Books (New York State Legislature).


  • Laws of the State of New York Passed at the One Hundred and Twenty-First Session of the Legislature (begun January 5, 1898, and ended March 31, 1898; 2 volumes). Albany: James B. Lyon (printer). 1898. Retrieved September 9, 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
    1. Vol. 2. Chapter 588. Section 1. pp. 1336–1337 – via Google Books (NYPL).


Category:History of New York City
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Category:Publications established in 1786
Category:18th century in New York (state)
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Category:History of Queens, New York
Category:Queens, New York-related lists
Category:Genealogy publications