 |
|
Photo taken
from the Bushwick Inlet, where the Monitor was launched
in 1862, shows the Consolidated Freightway Trucking Terminal,
where it was built, in the background. (Janice Lauletta-Weinmann)
|
UPDATE: In December
2003, Motiva Enterprises donated almost an acre of its property
at the USS Monitor's launch site to The Greenpoint Monitor
Museum.
Dear Preservation 911,
Please help save the USS Monitor's launch and construction
sites in Brooklyn, N.Y. We are facing an opportunity that cannot
be lost: an opportunity to establish a home for the Greenpoint
Monitor Museum on the location where the USS Monitor was
built by Continental Iron Works and launched in 1862.
This opportunity involves two adjacent sites. The first site,
where Continental Iron Works was located, is owned by Consolidated
Freightways. This September, the company went bankrupt and laid
off 15,000 people. The Consolidated Freightways terminal site
is located on the East River at Quay and West Streets in Greenpoint,
Brooklyn and is adjacent to the Bushwick Inlet. On Nov. 12, this
site can be lost, as it will be sold under bankruptcy proceedings.
The cost of the entire site would be approximately $12 million
to $15 million.
The second site, where the USS Monitor was launched, is
owned by Motiva Enterprises. In 1997, the Greenpoint Monitor Museum
convinced Motiva Enterprises that the site has historic significance
and would be appropriate for a park, museum, and education center.
The museum put a deposit on it from 1997 to 2001 to protect the
property while the company underwent a series of mergers. To protect
the site, the museum did not advertise or commence fundraising
during this period. The full cost of this site would be approximately
$700,000.
Our museum is attempting to rescue both sites, as the USS
Monitor was launched along the border of both and built on
the Consolidated Freightways site. If we cannot rescue the entire
Consolidated Freightways site, we at least hope to obtain the
portion of the historic site along the East River and Quay Street,
where it can hopefully join this site with the Bushwick Inlet
site. That would provide enough space for the museum and education
center, the USS Monitor Park, and safe docking facilities
for boats.
The Greenpoint Monitor Museum, chartered by New York State on
April 24, 1996, is an education corporation. The museum is an
official member of the University of the State of New York. On
December 16, 1998 the museum received its Federal 501(c)(3) not-for-profit
status.
The museum is working with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA), which oversees the USS Monitor Sanctuary
and recently recovered the USS Monitor's turret. Members
of the museum were invited by NOAA to participate in its Expedition
2001 to recover the engine and Expedition 2002 to recover the
turret. Artifacts from the USS Monitor will be given to
us for display when we establish the museum on the site where
the USS Monitor was built in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. NOAA
is on the museum's advisory panel and has asked the Greenpoint
Monitor Museum to attempt to save these sites. They would like
the museum to tell the story of John Ericsson and the construction
of the USS Monitor from the historic sites in Greenpoint
where it was built and launched.
The museum is presently operating without a home, visiting New
York City school children through its traveling "road show." We
also sponsor annual water parades in honor of the USS Monitor
and its crew to commemorate the departure of the ship from New
York Harbor on its way to the famous Civil War Battle of the Ironclads
on March 9, 1862. It is our goal to someday connect the New York
City waterfront museums by ferry.
Please learn more about the museum by visiting
our Web site.
Sincerely,
Janice Lauletta-Weinmann, President
The Greenpoint Monitor Museum
(718) 383-2637
E-mail the writer
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