tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6753505534756028908.post3789235407312662294..comments2023-06-30T06:04:58.461-04:00Comments on Big Sky Brooklyn: Sheepshead Bay/Manhattan Beach (Brooklyn by the Sea: Part 1)Adam E.http://www.blogger.com/profile/07372469830607363522noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6753505534756028908.post-10846303100546089472010-03-17T19:00:02.009-04:002010-03-17T19:00:02.009-04:00Dear BiWils
I also grew up in Manhattan Beach on E...Dear BiWils<br />I also grew up in Manhattan Beach on Exeter Street. I never appreciated how special it was to have the ocean at the corner and the bay two blocks away. And of course McGinnis was the best! Lundys was pretty great then too. <br />Coney Island with my dad on the bumper cars were the Sundays of my dreams. Haven't found anything better.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6753505534756028908.post-91843482543818714532008-07-13T12:53:00.000-04:002008-07-13T12:53:00.000-04:00Hello. Came across your website and decided to vis...Hello. Came across your website and decided to visit. I grew up in Bklyn...Manhattan Beach (the projects on Oriental Blvd's Maritim Base) in the 40's and early fifties. I attended PS 195. I remember my Dad taking me to Brighton Beach to see diverse cultures and, of course, a kids dream: Coney Island..It was there I first rode a horse! A skinny old piebald that took me safely in a few circles and let me feed him a handful of hay. I was 6 or 7.<BR/>My dad managed the housing project at the maritime base and it was not at all as luxurious as the homes directly across Oriental Blvd, but it was fun for a kid. The nuns in a small Catholic church on the street next to my apartment would laugh and smile as my friends and I played cowboy and indians in their churchyard.<BR/><BR/>Ever fish on a headboat called 'The Chief'? or eat roast beef sandwiches at McGinnis?<BR/><BR/>Thanks for letting me share!!<BR/><BR/>BiWils3@aol.comAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6753505534756028908.post-71354441191629073032008-05-04T22:46:00.000-04:002008-05-04T22:46:00.000-04:00Bigskybrooklyn.blogspot.com is a labor of consider...Bigskybrooklyn.blogspot.com is a labor of considerable love that adumbrates the incredible diversity of what would be the fourth largest city in the U.S. (if it were a city). This is a beautiful work of art. The aesthetics of the parks, the shores, and often many of the buildings are something of a reverie. I’m embarrassed to discover that as someone who was raised in the borough that I have never been to the Brooklyn Riviera, an omission I will rectify in the coming months. Your photographs rise to the poetic in a way that creates a certain ruminative, almost romantic mood. <BR/><BR/>DWAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6753505534756028908.post-54832620901791847322008-04-16T12:59:00.000-04:002008-04-16T12:59:00.000-04:00Hello from another Brooklyn blogger! I scanned you...Hello from another Brooklyn blogger! I scanned your blog and thought your photos were wonderful! <BR/><BR/>I found your site when I did a google search for Green-Wood Cemetery. You wouldn't happen to have any photos of Samuel H Sim's gravestone in Green-Wood that I could use? I would like to do a blog about him.<BR/><BR/>Thanks!Pat @ Mille Fiori Favoritihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08922525910685129822noreply@blogger.com