2018年12月25日火曜日

カトリックの神父@ウィンザー・テラスが自殺


Priest kills himself in Holy Name of Jesus Roman Catholic Church
https://nypost.com/.../patrick-burns-brooklyn-priest-kills-himself-in-holy-name-of-jes...
16 hours ago - 14 in the living room of the rectory at Holy Name of Jesus Roman Catholic Church in Windsor Terrace, according to sources. He had slash ...




Before the coming of Europeans to the New World, the area which is now Windsor Terrace was inhabited by the Canarsee Indians.[3][4][5] Specifically, the Gowanus and Werpos tribes inhabited the surrounding area.[3][4][6]:2 The land, which was then in the far northwestern corner of the Town of Flatbush,[6]:2 was purchased as a farm by John Vanderbilt.[4][7][8] Some parts of the land were also maintained by the Martense family, who owned land in the area through 1895.[6] This area was desirable due to its proximity to downtown Brooklyn, as well as the recent construction of the Coney Island Plank Road through the area and of the serene Green-Wood Cemetery to the southwest.[9]
Following Vanderbilt's death, his land was divided in two.[4][7][8] Vanderbilt's land were sold to William Bell, a real estate developer, in 1849.[3][7] Bell subdivided the land into 47 building lots,[5] and, unlike some other developers in the general area, was able to sell them rather quickly.[8] Bell then renamed the area after one of the multiple places named Windsor in England.[10] Bell sold part of the land to Edward Belknap in 1851, and Belknap subsequently built four streets on which he marked 49 lots for future "Pleasant Cottages."[6] The development was incorporated as the Village of Windsor Terrace, which was bounded by Church Avenue on the south, McDonald Avenue on the west, the Brooklyn–Flatbush town line on the north, and Prospect Park Southwest and Coney Island Avenue on the east.[3][11] The Brooklyn Daily Eagle first referred to the area as "Windsor Terrace" in March 1854.[3][10][12] By 1856, Belknap had lost his land due to foreclosure.[13]


汚乱田派 Has Fallen - 匿名党
tokumei10.blogspot.com/2018/12/has-fallen.html
2018/12/10 - Devastating fire rips through one of New York's last Gilded Age mansions overlooking Central Park that's on the market for $50MILLION and once was home to the storied Vanderbilt dynasty. A fire broke out on the third floor of 854 Fifth Avenue ...


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