Tag Archives: continental iron works

Continental Iron Works site

Image of the launch of the USS Monitor

Image of the launch of the USS Monitor, published in Harper’s Weekly, 1862

Shipbuilding was one of the largest industries along New York’s waterfront throughout the 19th century. Established in 1859, the Continental Iron Works built the first Ironclad battleship, the USS Monitor, famous for fighting in the Battle of Hampton Roads. Assembled at this site and launched nearby, the remains of the ship are on display at the Mariners’ Museum in Newport News, VA. The Continental Iron Works received several contracts to build more ironclad battleships. After the decline of the shipbuilding industry, the Continental Iron Works specialized in other metalwork for marine and military uses.

The 2005 rezoning called for a continuous waterfront esplanade and several parks; the Greenpoint Monitor Museum site is in the path of the planned open space. Advocates for the museum were awarded a parcel of land for the museum, yet the land is in the footprint of the planned park.

Historic maps of Greenpoint and Williamsburg

Fire insurance and other maps from the 19th and early 20th centuries offer great detail about industries and land use in this area. This 1904 map shows the extent of the American Manufacturing Company’s facilities, as well as the location of the Continental Iron Works.
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from NYPL Digital Gallery
 

The 1899 map of Greenpoint below shows how the northwest Greenpoint waterfront was dominated by timber-related industries at that time. It has been georectified upon the contemporary street grid.


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From NYPL Digital Gallery

This map, published in 1876 but based on surveys completed in 1777, shows “the original high and low grounds, salt marsh and shore lines in the city of Brooklyn.


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From NYPL Digital Gallery