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Roosevelt Island, Manhattan's Other
Island
A
Brief
History

The Beginning
Roosevelt Island, located between
Manhattan and Queens in the East
River, has undergone numerous
changes both in name and use and
been passed to numerous owners in
its recent history. Originally it
was called Minnahanonck or "nice
island" by the Native Americans of
the Hudson Channel. In 1633, the
Dutch Governor of the Hudson
convinced the Canarsie Indians to
sell him lands that included
Roosevelt Island. The island was
then used for farming foods such as
hogs; hence they called it Varckens
Eylandt or "Hog Island." Eventually
the British defeated the Dutch,
seizing control of lands in America.
King James II gave his sheriff of
New York, Captain John Manning,
Varckens Island.
The island was subsequently passed
down within Manning's family and in
1796 his grandson James Blackwell
had a clapboard cottage built on his
island. Now the home is landmarked
and known as Blackwell House.
First Development
By 1823 New York City had become a
bustling trade hub and the country's
largest city. To combat the rising
rates of crime, poverty, and general
threats to public health, the city
began purchasing the islands
surrounding Manhattan for the
construction of institutions for
rehabilitation. The theory,
according to city leaders, was that
institutions on quiet islands would
be healthy and placid and conducive
to caring for the sick or allowing
criminals to reconsider their
actions. In 1828, Blackwell's Island
was purchased by the City of New
York from the Blackwell family.
Later that year Blackwell's
Penitentiary was built by inmates
transported from Newgate
Penitentiary in Manhattan with stone
they quarried from the Blackwell's
Island. Because of its proximity to
Manhattan, inmates at the island's
prisons included celebrities like
Broadway performer Mae West, singer
Billie Holliday, and notoriously
corrupt New York City politician
"Boss" Tweed. The prison opened in
1832, and a little further up the
island the New York Lunatic Asylum
was opened in 1841. The New York
Lunatic Asylum was also built with
the island's distinctively mottled
granite. The central octagonal tower
from the Asylum's original structure
remains as part of the Octagon
Apartments. Two more hospitals
followed soon after: Penitentiary
Hospital in 1849 and Charity (City)
Hospital in 1857. In 1850, the first
New York almshouses opened on the
island to care for the city's
destitute. To serve the spiritual
needs of those destitute, the Chapel
of the Good Shepherd arose in the
middle of the system of almshouses.
Several more chapels followed to
accommodate the growing population.
Also in 1850, a minimum security
workhouse was built for petty crime
offenders. The nation's first
hospital to treat patients with
smallpox was built here in 1856.
Smallpox Hospital thus became
mandated by city law as the
quarantine area for all smallpox
sufferers. It then closed subsequent
to the success of the smallpox
vaccine.
In 1921, Blackwell's Island became
Welfare Island to reflect the focus
of the islands establishments.
Decline and Revitalization
As the island's institutions became
abandoned toward the end of the 19th
century, the population declined.
Goldwater and Coler Hospitals were
established and shortly thereafter
became the only entities remaining
on the island. It was desolate to
the point that the New York City
Fire Department was using the empty
structures as training sites.
In 1968, Mayor John Lindsay
appointed a committee for
redevelopment of Welfare Island. The
committee published a plan which was
later incorporated into the General
Development Plan produced by
Governor Nelson Rockefeller's New
York State Urban Development
Corporation (UDC), which he formed
in 1969. The UDC then commissioned a
development design for the island
which was completed by Philip
Johnson and John Burgee and
exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum
of Art. In a ceremony in 1973,
Governor Rockefeller and Mayor
Lindsay were present for the
renaming of Welfare Island in honor
of President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
At the ceremony, architect Louis
Kahn revealed his design for the
memorial park to be constructed on
the island's Southpoint.
Redevelopment
The redevelopment of Roosevelt
Island was then underway according
to the designs of Johnson and Burgee
and the first residential complex,
Island House, opened in 1975. The
following year saw the addition of
three more housing complexes:
Eastwood, Westview, and Rivercross.
These four first phase buildings are
collectively known as the WIRE
buildings. The aerial Tramway then
opened in 1976 as installation of a
subway station on the island was
delayed and the elevator from the
Queensboro Bridge required
servicing. The uniqueness of the
Tram/s image, a cable car to
Manhattan, quickly made it an iconic
structure and the symbol of
Roosevelt Island. It currently
carries over 2 million passengers a
year high over the East River. A
subway station was finally opened
for Roosevelt Island in 1990,
serving the additional residents of
Manhattan Park, an apartment complex
built the previous year. Manhattan
Park, like its predecessors the WIRE
buildings, included hundreds of
apartments for low income Section
Eight housing in addition to its
market rate offerings. Once the
United Nations Development
Corporation released a study calling
the original residential capacity
estimate for the island of 20,000
too high, the development plan was
amended accordingly. The Octagon and
Riverwalk Apartment complexes have
since been completed, adding 2,500
rental and condominium units to the
island.
Status and Jurisdiction
Roosevelt Island, according to
courts, election boards, and the
post office, is within the
jurisdiction of Manhattan. The
island does provide its own public
safety department as well as a waste
disposal system in the form of AVAC
(Automated Vacuum Collection), a
garbage suctioning series of
underground pneumatic tubes. This
system was constructed in 1975 and
is one of only two functioning
city-scale systems in the US; the
other serves Disneyworld.
The Roosevelt Island Operating
Corporation (RIOC) was established
by the New York State Legislature in
1984 as a public benefit corporation
appointed with control over the
operation, maintenance, and
development of the island. The State
of New York's lease on the island
expires in 2068, at which point
control will revert to New York
City. |