1939
The World's Fair opened in Flushing Meadows Corona Park in 1939. Planning for the Fair had begun in 1936 and drew heavily on the Parks Department's expert design and construction staff. The former swamp and ash dump was filled in and converted into a 1,200-acre fair site, which in turn became Flushing Meadows (later Flushing Meadows-Corona) Park.
1940
The Parks Department completed the Belt Parkway from Owl's Head Park in Brooklyn to the Bronx-Whitestone Bridge in Queens, a distance of almost 35 miles. The Belt Parkway, the most ambitious of all the pre-war parkway projects, was composed of the Shore, Southern and Cross Island Parkways which ran through or adjacent to Owl's Head, Dyker Beach, Marine, and Canarsie Beach Parks in Brooklyn and Spring Creek, Baisley Pond, Brookville, Alley Pond, Crocheron and Clearview Parks in Queens.
1942
Gracie Mansion in Carl Schurz Park became the official residence of Mayor La Guardia in 1942. The Mansion was built in 1799 by Archibald Gracie, who until his bankruptcy shortly before the War of 1812, was a prosperous merchant and host to such distinguished guests as Louis Philippe (later King of France) and Washington Irving. The city purchased the mansion in 1887.
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(McLaughlin Air Service/City of New York-Parks & Recreation Photo Archive)
In order to host the 1939 World's Fair, the Parks Department drained, filled and landscaped a 1,200-acre site around Flushing Meadows, Queens. After the Fair, the site became a park.
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