Morrisania, Bronx
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Morrisania is a neighborhood in the southwestern section of the borough of the Bronx in New York City. Its boundaries, starting from the north and moving clockwise, are: the Cross Bronx Expressway, Crotona Park North, Crotona-Prospect Avenues, 161st Street, and the Grand Concourse. The neighborhood's name is of somewhat low currency, possibly due to the difficult pronunciation, as well as the preference among many to simply refer to the area as the South Bronx. The neighborhood is part of Bronx Community Board 3.
From 1670, the land of the neighborhood was the estate of the Morris family in Westchester County.
In 1790, Lewis Morris, owner of the estate and signer of the Declaration of Independence, proposed the land as the site of the federal capital.
Morrisania was sparsely populated until 1840, when Gouverneur Morris Jr., son of the famous congressional delegate and grandson of Lewis, allowed a railroad to be built across the property. In 1848, he sold the land next to the line for the development of a new town called Morrisania Village. In 1855, additional settlements along the rail line became the town of Morrisania, with its political center in the original 1840 village. At first the village was an early forerunner of today's bedroom communities, populated by people who worked in Manhattan, but it quickly developed their own local industries and craftsmen as it developed into a full-fledged town (Jackson, 1995).
In 1874, the area was annexed to New York City (then consisting only of Manhattan) as part of the Twenty-Third Ward. In 1887, the Third Avenue Elevated was extended to area and provided easy and quick access to and from Manhattan. By the time the New York City Subway was extended to the area in 1904, a large influx of immigrants had given the neighborhood an urban character, with tenements replacing houses as the dominant form of dwelling (Jackson, 1995).
Morrisania is the site of the infamous Charlotte Street, which then-President Jimmy Carter visited, declaring the South Bronx to be the worst neighborhood in the United States. While the South Bronx, and Morrisania in particular, were once a symbol of urban decay in the 1970s, the neighborhood has largely cleaned up in recent years as new public housing units have been built, in addition to suburban ranch-style homes on Charlotte Street.
In 2003, the City rezoned several blocks along Third and Washington Avenues, allowing for residential development in a manufacturing area. As a result, several formerly vacant parcels of land have been redeveloped with affordable housing and retail projects.
This area's main intersection is 163rd Street and 3rd Avenue. The 2 and 5 trains serve this neighborhood at Prospect Avenue. Also, several buses, including the Bx6, 15, 17, 21, 35, 41, and 55 take Morrisanians to several subways as well as Manhattan's Washington Heights, and Harlem.
Former New York mayor Ed Koch was raised in Morrisania.
[edit] References
- Kenneth T. Jackson (editor); The Encyclopedia of New York City; (Yale University)