Castle Garden (ca.1853)

Castle Garden (ca.1853)
Site for Louis Jullien's Concerts and Jenny Lind

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Castle Garden History

Castle Clinton or Fort Clinton was once a circular sandstone fort now located in Battery Park at the southern tip of New York City. It went from a beer garden, to an exhibition hall, to a theater, to the first immigration station before Ellis Island, to a popular public aquarium, and then finally to a museum.

Construction began in 1808 and was completed in 1811. The fort, known as West Battery (sometimes South-west Battery), was designed by architects John McComb Jr. and Jonathan Williams. It was built on a small artificial island just off shore.
West Battery was intended to complement the three-tiered Castle Williams (still extant) on Governors Island, which was East Battery, to defend New York City from British forces in the tensions that marked the run-up to the War of 1812, but never saw action in that or any war. Subsequent landfill expanded Battery Park, and incorporated the fort into the mainland of Manhattan Island.
As with all historic areas administered by the National Park Service, Castle Clinton National Monument was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on October 15, 1966.

  • Castle Clinton today is approximately two blocks west of where Fort Amsterdam stood almost 400 years ago, when New York City was still known by the Dutch name New Amsterdam.
  • West Battery was renamed Castle Clinton in 1815, its current official name, in honor of New York City mayor Dewitt Clinton.
  • The US Army stopped using the fort in 1821 and it was leased to New York City as a place of public entertainment and it opened as Castle Garden on July 3, 1824, a name by which it was popularly known for most of its existence, even to the present time. It served in turn as a promenade, beer garden/restaurant, exhibition hall, opera house, and theater. Designed as an open-air structure it was eventually roofed over to accommodate these uses.
  • In 1850, the castle was the site of two extraordinarily successful concerts given for charity by the Swedish soprano Jenny Lind to initiate her American tour, managed by P. T. Barnum.
  • In 1851, European dancing star Lola Montez performed her notorious "tarantula dance" in Castle Garden.
  • In 1853 and 1854, the famous and very eccentric French conductor and composer of light music Louis-Antoine Jullien (1812-1860) gave dozens of very successful concerts mixing classical and light music.
  • French conductor Louis Jullien (1812-1860) was a musician-showman of enormous proportions. From his thirty-seven names, to his reputation, to his popularity, and most of all in the size of his concerts, he was a colossus. Born as the son of a bandmaster, he toured America in 1853-54, performing in New York, Boston, and several other American cities.

    Jullien, who received thirty-six Christian names from the thirty-six members of the Philharmonic Society who were his godfathers, developed the promenade concert in England into a highly popular form of entertainment.

    These concerts generally had an orchestra, multiple bands, choirs, and soloists. They also had novel effects designed to amuse and intrigue those attending such as cannon fire and performance on enormous, one-of-a-kind instruments. This type of concert, including large number of instrumentalists and vocalists, eventually became known as a "monster" concert. When Jullien toured America, he brought with him a cadre of fine musicians.

    When Jullien gave a number of concerts hosted by P.T. Barnum at Castle Garden  located in downtown New York in 1853, he received the following anonymous letter suggesting that he write a Katy-did Polka.

  • In 1855, it became the Emigrant Landing Depot as the New York State immigrant processing facility (the nation's first such entity) until 1890, when the Federal Government took over control of immigration processing, and opened the larger and more isolated Ellis Island facility for that purpose in 1892. Most of the immigration records burned in a pier fire during the transition to Ellis Island,[2] but it is generally accepted that over 8 million immigrants (and as many as 12 million) were processed through Castle Garden. Styled Kesselgarden by Yiddish-speaking Eastern European Jews, a "Kesselgarden" became a generic term for any situation that was noisy, confusing or chaotic. Prominent persons that were associated with the administration of the immigrant station included Gulian Crommelin Verplanck, Friedrich Kapp, and John Alexander Kennedy.

South entrance

The New York City Aquarium used to be housed in the castle (image before 1923)
  • In 1896, Castle Garden became the site of the New York City Aquarium until 1941. For many years it was the city's most popular attraction, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors a year. The structure was extensively altered and roofed over to a height of several stories, though the original masonry fort remained.
  • In 1941 the politically powerful Park Commissioner Robert Moses wanted to tear the structure down completely, claiming that this was necessary to build a crossing from the Battery to Brooklyn. The public outcry at the loss of a popular recreation site and landmark stymied his effort at demolition, but the aquarium was closed and not replaced until Moses opened a new facility on Coney Island in 1957. See Brooklyn-Battery bridge.[3]

[edit] Castle Clinton National Monument

Although Castle Garden was designated a national monument on August 12, 1946, the law did not take effect until July 18, 1950, when the legislature and the governor of New York (Thomas Dewey) formally ceded ownership of the property to the Federal Government. A major rehabilitation took place in the 1970s. Today it is administered by the National Park Service and is a departure point for visitors to the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island. It appears much as it did in its earliest days, contains a museum, and is again called Castle Clinton.

[edit] Noted Castle Garden immigrants


Registering immigrants at Castle Garden in 1866
This list is an incomplete sampling

Castle Garden bibliography

  • Castle Garden as an Immigrant Depot, 1855-1890, by George J Svejda (1968)
  • Castle Garden and Battery Park by Barry Moreno (2007)
  • Guide to the New York Aquarium by Charles H. Townsend (1919)
  • The Public Aquarium by Charles H. Townsend (1928)

Castle Garden/Castle Clinton in fiction

  • Castle Garden by Bill Albert (novel)
  • The Penguin Pool Murder by Stuart Palmer (1931 novel)
  • The Penguin Pool Murder (1932 motion picture)
  • The Alienist by Caleb Carr (novel)
  • Castle Clinton appears in the video game Deus Ex as a terrorist stronghold the player must infiltrate.
  • An American Tail (animated film)

[edit] Castle Garden/Castle Clinton in Music

  • The Irish music group Wolfe Tones' 1993 album Across the Broad Atlantic contains a tune called "Goodbye Mick" with the farcical line "For the ship will play with pitch and toss--for half a dozen farthings, I'll roll me bundle on me back, and walk to Castle Gardens."

 References

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 2009-03-13. http://www.nr.nps.gov/. 
  2. ^ The New York Times, 15 June 1897, Fire on Ellis Island
  3. ^ Author: Caro, Robert A. The power broker: Robert Moses and the fall of New York. New York, Knopf, 1974. ISBN 0-394-72024-5

 

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