Designated: August 18, 1970
Four wooden houses remain along the old Hunterfly Road, within the boundaries of what was once Weeksville, a nineteenth-century free black community that is now known as Bedford-Stuyvesant. The road, documented as early as 1622, was an avenue of communication under British rule; it fell into disuse with the installation of the grid system in 1838. The houses at 1698 and 1700 Bergen Street are two-and-one-half stories tall and three bays wide. The pitched roof of 1700 Bergen Street is covered with shingles on the north side and by clapboard on the south side.
STATUS Designated Individual Landmark
The Neighborhood
Bedford-Stuyvesant
The Bedford-Stuyvesant community in northwest Brooklyn is a residential area, home to ornate rows of brownstones, early middle-class apartment buildings and several institutional structures. Bedford-Stuyvesant is characterized by its wide, tree-covered avenues and low-scale residences; generally only church spires and school towers rise taller than...
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