Chelsea Park
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Chelsea Park is a park in the
Chelsea Chelsea or Chelsey may refer to: Places Australia * Chelsea, Victoria Canada * Chelsea, Nova Scotia * Chelsea, Quebec United Kingdom * Chelsea, London, an area of London, bounded to the south by the River Thames ** Chelsea (UK Parliament consti ...
neighborhood of
Manhattan Manhattan (), known regionally as the City, is the most densely populated and geographically smallest of the five boroughs of New York City. The borough is also coextensive with New York County, one of the original counties of the U.S. state ...
,
New York City New York, often called New York City or NYC, is the most populous city in the United States. With a 2020 population of 8,804,190 distributed over , New York City is also the most densely populated major city in the Un ...
, that dates back to 1910. The park has sports fields, basketball and handball courts, a children's playground and space for sitting. The surface is mostly tarmac or artificial turf, with pits for the plane trees and some plots with annual flower plantings. There is a statue to a World War I soldier, the "Doughboy Statue", erected in 1921. The process of approval, funding and clearing the tenements that occupied the site was protracted. The park has since been upgraded several times by the
Works Progress Administration The Works Progress Administration (WPA; renamed in 1939 as the Work Projects Administration) was an American New Deal agency that employed millions of jobseekers (mostly men who were not formally educated) to carry out public works projects, i ...
and the
New York City Department of Parks and Recreation The New York City Department of Parks and Recreation, also called the Parks Department or NYC Parks, is the department of the government of New York City responsible for maintaining the city's parks system, preserving and maintaining the ecolog ...
.


Location

Chelsea Park is located between Ninth and Tenth Avenues, and between West 27th and West 28th Streets in Manhattan. The park covers almost . There is fencing around the park to contain the active play areas, with gates at various points. The soccer pitch is surrounded by taller fencing while the rest of the park is surrounded by shorter fences. The area between West 26th and West 28th Streets and 9th and 10th Avenues is a superblock, comprising two normal-sized blocks. West 27th Drive is a driveway used only for service access, with the park occupying most of the block to the north of the drive. To the south along 26th Street are three 12-to-14-story brick towers run by the
New York City Housing Authority The New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) is a public development corporation which provides public housing in New York City, and is the largest public housing authority in North America. Created in 1934 as the first agency of its kind in the U ...
in the southern part of the superblock, as well as a public school (PS 33 Chelsea Prep) and the Hudson Guild Settlement House. The annex to the Morgan General Mail Facility occupies the block directly to the north of the park. The
Church of the Holy Apostles The Church of the Holy Apostles ( el, , ''Agioi Apostoloi''; tr, Havariyyun Kilisesi), also known as the ''Imperial Polyándreion'' (imperial cemetery), was a Byzantine Eastern Orthodox church in Constantinople, capital of the Eastern Roman E ...
, built in 1848, is located on the east side of 9th Avenue across from the park. It is located within the
Penn South Penn South, officially known as Mutual Redevelopment Houses and formerly Penn Station South, is a limited-equity
on the ...
housing complex.


Physical


Infrastructure

Chelsea Park has spaces for both passive and active recreation. It is one of the busier parks in the neighborhood. It contains baseball diamonds, basketball courts and six handball courts. The artificial turf sports field covers about one third of the area. The P.O. David Willis Basketball Court is named after the
New York City Police Department The New York City Police Department (NYPD), officially the City of New York Police Department, established on May 23, 1845, is the primary municipal law enforcement agency within the City of New York, the largest and one of the oldest in ...
officer David Willis (1964–95), who used to patrol the park. There are public washrooms at West 27th Street and 9th Avenue, open year-round. The park contains a District Health Center, a low-rise red brick building in the eastern part of the park.


Ecology

There are no artificial or natural ponds. As of 2008 there were 27 mature London plane trees (''
Platanus × acerifolia ''Platanus'' × ''acerifolia'', ''Platanus'' × ''hispanica'', or hybrid plane, is a tree in the genus ''Platanus''. It is often known by the synonym London plane, or London planetree. It is usually thought to be a hybrid of ''Platanus orient ...
'') with heights of around the perimeter of the park, and another 28 similar trees scattered through the interior. Most of the trees are in pits, because most of the ground surface is impermeable. The beds of annual plants around the monument and the health center are the only vegetated and permeable areas of the park other than the tree pits. The northwest section of the park has less vegetation than the southeast section. The six-story Morgan Mail Building along the northern perimeter is a high-collision site for birds, with collisions peaking in mid May. The first two stories of the building have featureless concrete walls, while the upper four stories are 75% covered with reflective glass panels installed over the concrete wall to give the appearance of windows. A study in the spring and autumn of 2005 and 2006 collected the corpses of many migratory birds that had collided with the windows of the six-story USPS building, deceived by the reflections of the greenery in the park. It seemed that the birds generally had adequate stores of fat (energy), and it was not clear whether they were stopping in Chelsea Park to replenish their energy or as a reaction to the inhospitable and unfamiliar city landscape. About 80% of collisions are fatal, with most collisions occurring during the day. Most are found along the southeast perimeter, where there are most trees, while relatively few are found along the playing field perimeter. This suggests that the reflections of trees in the glass panels are a major factor.


Doughboy Statue

The park is one of nine New York City parks with monuments to local heroes of
World War I World War I (28 July 1914 11 November 1918), often abbreviated as WWI, was one of the deadliest global conflicts in history. Belligerents included much of Europe, the Russian Empire, the United States, and the Ottoman Empire, with fightin ...
(1914–18). The Chelsea Park Memorial, also known as the Doughboy Statue, is a granite stele tall fronted by a plinth supporting a bronze statue of an American soldier. ("
Doughboy Doughboy was a popular nickname for the American infantryman during World War I. Though the origins of the term are not certain, the nickname was still in use as of the early 1940s. Examples include the 1942 song "Johnny Doughboy Found a Rose in ...
" is a slang term for an infantryman that was widely used in World War I.) The plinth bears the inscription: "To the Soldiers and Sailors of Chelsea World War 1914–1918". The monument is surrounded by cobblestone. It stands in front of the more recently built Health Center. The memorial was designed by the architect Charles Rollinson Lamb (1860–1942). The statue was created by the French-born sculptor
Philip Martiny Philip H. Martiny (May 19, 1858 – June 26, 1927) was a French-American sculptor who worked in the Paris atelier of Eugene Dock, where he became foreman before emigrating to New York in 1878—to avoid conscription in the French army, he later ...
(1858–1927) and cast by the Roman Bronze Works foundry of New York. The soldier holds a rifle and has a flag draped over his shoulders. He strikes a commanding pose, defying the enemy. The city's Art Commission, chaired by sculptor Robert Aitken, rejected Martiny's first submission in which the doughboy's pose was less dynamic. Martiny used the same model for the doughboy as he did for his next statue of a soldier, in
Greenwich Village Greenwich Village ( , , ) is a neighborhood on the west side of Lower Manhattan in New York City, bounded by 14th Street to the north, Broadway to the east, Houston Street to the south, and the Hudson River to the west. Greenwich Village ...
. The soldier's aggressive pose is exactly the same as in Martiny's poster for the propaganda film ''Under Four Flags'' (1918).


Gateposts

Also in front of the District Health Center there are two pairs of memorial gate posts that were commissioned by the Horatio Seymour Tammany Club and installed in 1926. They commemorate the former borough president Frank L Dowling, the municipal civic court leader Frank J. Goodwin and the New York State Democratic Committee member William L. Kavanagh.


History


Early years (1904–18)

The Chelsea Improvement Society proposed a playground for the park's current location in 1904 due to the paucity of parks along Ninth Avenue, with no parks on the street between
DeWitt Clinton Park DeWitt Clinton Park is a New York City public park in the Hell's Kitchen neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City, between West 52nd and 54th Streets, and Eleventh and Twelfth Avenues. The park, which was one of the first New York City parks ...
at 53rd Street and Hudson Park at Varick Street. At the time, P.S. 33 occupied an adjacent lot. Land had been set aside for a proposed Carnegie library to the east. The rest of the area was full of
tenement A tenement is a type of building shared by multiple dwellings, typically with flats or apartments on each floor and with shared entrance stairway access. They are common on the British Isles, particularly in Scotland. In the medieval Old Town, i ...
s. One reader wrote to ''
The New York Times ''The New York Times'' (''the Times'', ''NYT'', or the Gray Lady) is a daily newspaper based in New York City with a worldwide readership reported in 2020 to comprise a declining 840,000 paid print subscribers, and a growing 6 million paid d ...
'' opposing the park and advocating another park site further north that would be located near a greater number of people. Another reader proposed a larger park. The legislature passed bills authorizing the park twice, but both times the mayor vetoed the bills as an "infringement of home rule". $2.23 million was set aside to acquire the park in summer 1905. The city's parks department finally acquired the titles for all the required properties in 1906. At the time, the acquisition comprised approximately . Demolitions continued at a slow pace: by July 1907, only two cellars had been cleared. Filling started on the excavated properties by the end of that year. A temporary playground was built in 1908. The first permanent playground in the park was opened in June 1910. By that time, a baseball field was planned for the park. The New York City Board of Recreation, which had recently been formed, began to arrange sporting events that drew crowds of spectators.


Interwar period (1919–41)

The Chelsea Doughboy Statue, which cost $10,000, was donated by the Chelsea Memorial Committee and dedicated on April 7, 1921. The decorative gateposts commemorating Dowling, Goodwin, and Kavanagh were installed in 1926. On August 18, 1925, a
water tower A water tower is an elevated structure supporting a water tank constructed at a height sufficient to pressurize a distribution system for potable water, and to provide emergency storage for fire protection. Water towers often operate in conju ...
from a nearby building collapsed on the park, injuring two children. The Department of Parks reconstructed a section of the park from 1934 and 1936, and it reopened on June 25, 1936. In its announcement advertising the park's reopening, the Department of Parks said, "…the reconstructed area will have a large play area with one ball field, handball courts, complete play equipment for small children and a wading pool." A , $175,000 health center for the middle of the park was proposed in 1935. Its cost later grew to $264,000. The Lower West Side Health Center, as it was called, was built as part of the Public Works Administration. The Health Center Building was opened to the public in July 1937. It was in the eastern part of the park and had a public playground on the roof. The Lower West Side Health Center was one of 8 clinics that were opened in the city that year, out of a total of 30 health centers that had been proposed for the city. At the time of its opening, there were 250,000 people living within the health center's service area. A proposal to demolish the P.S. 33 building and replace it with an extension of the park was rejected in 1938. The
Works Progress Administration The Works Progress Administration (WPA; renamed in 1939 as the Work Projects Administration) was an American New Deal agency that employed millions of jobseekers (mostly men who were not formally educated) to carry out public works projects, i ...
(WPA) made further changes to the playground. They added a new area of asphalt in the west of the park, "graded so that it can be flooded for ice-skating when sub-freezing temperatures permit. In season it will be used for roller skating, roller hockey, softball, basketball and other group games." The WPA also built three
basketball Basketball is a team sport in which two teams, most commonly of five players each, opposing one another on a rectangular court, compete with the primary objective of shooting a basketball (approximately in diameter) through the defender's h ...
courts, three handball courts, two courts for pitching
horseshoes Horseshoe is a shoe for horses and by analogy is applied to many things with a similar shape. Horseshoes (game), a tossing game played with a horseshoe Horseshoe(s) or Horse Shoe(s) may also refer to: Places * Horseshoe Valley (disambiguation) ...
, and one for skittles. This replaced the single baseball diamond that had formerly occupied that portion of the park. The 1940 restoration added floodlights to the softball diamonds. The children's playground was fully equipped with a large wading pool and brick washrooms, while the playground on the roof of the Health Center Building was converted to a sitting area. The WPA-restored park was officially opened on June 6, 1940, in a ceremony attended by Mayor
Fiorello H. La Guardia Fiorello Henry LaGuardia (; born Fiorello Enrico LaGuardia, ; December 11, 1882September 20, 1947) was an American attorney and politician who represented New York in the House of Representatives and served as the 99th Mayor of New York City fro ...
and Parks Commissioner Robert Moses. At the time, it was hoped that the existing P.S. 33 structure would be relocated at a future date so the park could be expanded.


Postwar changes (1945–present)

In 1949, the
New York City Planning Commission The Department of City Planning (DCP) is the department of the government of New York City responsible for setting the framework of city's physical and socioeconomic planning. The department is responsible for land use and environmental review, p ...
approved a project to add eight new recreation centers citywide, including a $450,000 indoor swimming pool in Chelsea Park, In November 1953, an extension to the park opened on the grounds of P.S. 33. The new additions included two handball courts, three basketball courts, and exercise equipment. In 1962, plans were announced to build a new post office annex between 28th and 29th Streets, immediately north of the park. The location was occupied by 215 families at the time. A fire in 1967 destroyed the Morgan Post Office Station, one block north of the park between 29th and 30th Streets. As of 1977 the park had recently been converted into an tarmac-based "adventure park" with a variety of playground equipment. That year, an environmental impact assessment for the post office annex was conducted. By 1979, the post office station had not been rebuilt, and the block between 28th and 29th Streets had remained undeveloped for over a decade. A postal truck facility planned for that block, which was canceled due to community opposition, was rebuilt at 11th Avenue between 24th and 26th Streets in 1988. In 1988 the park was well-used from April to November, and the baseball fields were often fully booked. Crime was not a serious problem. The park was being used by homeless people, particularly at the 9th Avenue end, which discouraged the residents of the neighborhood from using that part. An upgrade to the active play equipment in the center portion of the park was planned for the Fall of 1988. In January 1989 a final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) was published for a Manhattan General Mail Facility Complex across West 28th Street. As part of the FEIS, upgrades to the park were proposed. The playground and basketball courts were restored in the mid-1990s. The park was again upgraded in the decade leading up to 2016, but the six handball courts remained dilapidated. The New York City Parks Department, supported by the Fairway Community Foundation, finished refurbishment of the handball courts in 2016. Holes in the walls were patched up and the walls were repainted. The city spent $127,000 on renovations of Chelsea Park as well as at Coffey Park in
Red Hook, Brooklyn Red Hook is a neighborhood in northwestern Brooklyn, New York City, New York, within the area once known as South Brooklyn. It is located on a peninsula projecting into the Upper New York Bay and is bounded by the Gowanus Expressway and the Car ...
. Parks Department Commissioner Mitchell Silver was present at a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the handball courts in August 2016.


Notes


Sources

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