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Michael Weinberg | all galleries >> Galleries >> Focus on People - PA Photographer, Michael Weinberg > Homeless Under the L on Brighton Beach Avenue
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12-JUN-2004 michlob

Homeless Under the L on Brighton Beach Avenue

Brooklyn, New York

A little irony here as a sun burnt homeless person, of Oriental or Russian descent,
sorely in need of shoes and other clothes and necessities as well,
tentatively relaxes by the window of a Russian shoe store on Brighton Beach Avenue.
The real tragedy of this story is that this person is but one of thousands in this
city and one of millions in this country and around the world who find themselves
in a horribly similar situation.

A little Brooklyn History

The Dutch and English settled the area (previously home to the Canarsie) in 1636 and 1637; about nine years later Dutch farmers established the hamlet of Brueckelen, near the present Borough Hall. By 1664, six towns had been established: Breuckelen (later anglicized to Brooklyn), Bushwick, Flatbush, Nieuw Amersfoort (Flatlands), Gravesend, and New Utrecht. Kings county was established in 1683; the Brooklyn Ferry area was incorporated as the village of Brooklyn in 1816, and the entire town was chartered as a city in 1834. In the 1830s Brooklyn Heights became perhaps the first modern suburb, accessible to New York City by ferry.

Brooklyn steadily absorbed neighboring settlements. After annexing Williamsburg and Bushwick in 1854, it became the third largest city in the United States, and continued to absorb other towns, including Flatbush, New Utrecht, and Gravesend, until it became coextensive with Kings County in 1896. In 1898, when it became a New York City borough, its population was 830,000. Immigration doubled its population in the next twenty years.

The New York Naval Shipyard (popularly, the Brooklyn Navy Yard) was located on the East River from 1801 until its closing in the late 1960s, when Brooklyn was declining as a port. The Daily Eagle, published in Brooklyn from 1841 until 1955, had Walt Whitman as one of its early editors. The borough is also famed as home to the Brooklyn Dodgers (at Ebbets Field), until the baseball team moved to Los Angeles in 1957.

Photo by Michael Weinberg Photography of Scranton and Clarks Summit, PA, Pennsylvania


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Buba Jafarli04-Jun-2009 16:01
Impressive candid! V.
Michael Weinberg03-May-2009 01:26
Thank you Guest. Next time I will be more sensitive. Michael.
Guest 03-May-2009 00:58
"Oriental" isn't what we're called. We are Asian or Asian American.
a new yorker 20-Jul-2008 14:58
did it occur to you that maybe this 'russian or oriental' looking man might actually not be a 'homeless' (or at least in the way you intend it)? He could be a hippie, or a random traveler resting under a typical 100F summer day in New York, or whoever else who does not wash his feet!! If you actually lived in NYC for a while you'd know that your feet can become like that after a whole day walking around... and if it's the hair that led you to think he was an actual homeless, well, I guess you might just be too old to be aware of fashion...
Tomasz Dziubinski - Photography04-Apr-2005 17:52
Excellent photo and very interesting story.