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December 14, 2013 Stories
Youll Need To Look At These Famous Crime Scenes
Twice. When You See Why, Its Worth It.
Marc Hermann (his site) is a photographer and historian who has a very interesting hobby. He likes to
pull historic crime scene photos from the New York Daily News archive and blend them with photographs
of the same New York City locations today. Combining vintage New York with the modernone.
His project is meant as a tribute to New Yorkers on both sides of the cameras lens who have gone
before, and as a window into the past for those who appreciate it.
Grisly violence is obviously an undeniable part of New Yorks history so some of the phot ographs are
somewhat mature in nature.
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Brooklyn July 1, 1928.Original photographer unknown.
Frankie Yale, a gangster known as the Al Capone of Brooklyn, lostout to rivals as he drove
a Lincoln coupe through the streets of Borough Park. ln what is believed to have been the
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first New York mob hit thatemployed Thompson sub-machine guns, he lost control of his
car and smashed into the front stoop of a house on 44th Street. The block is quiet today, but
the building still stands as does the tree at right, the only living witness to the mayhem of a
past era.
Hicks St. & Summit St., Brooklyn January 11, 1951.Original photo by Paul
Bernius.
The bells in the steeple rang even as flames consumed the Church of the Sacred Hearts of
Jesus and Mary one chilly afternoon. The 90-year-old landmark was practically destroyed
by the five-alarm blaze, but was rebuilt and still stands today.
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Brooklyn July 28, 1957.Original photo by Paul bernius.
A recently released inmate of the Brooklyn House of Detention had forgotten some clothing,
so the obvious solution was to steal a car with two friends to go retrieve it. They didnt get
far, however, coming to a crashing stop against a light pole at Classon Ave. & Pacific St. The
auto body shop visible in the background is still in business, though relocated across the
street.
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66 Court St., Brooklyn January 31, 1961.Original photo by Ed Peters.
A leaky gas pipe was the cause of a massive explosion at this Downtown Brooklyn office
building that shattered storefronts and injured 28 people. The sturdy 30-story building
survived without any lasting scars from this incident.
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497 Dean St., Brooklyn March 19, 1942.Original photo by Charles Payne.
Edna Egbert proudly displayed a blue-star banner in her window, in honor of her son beingin the service. However, after not hearing from him since his enlistment, she became
distraught and climbed out onto her ledge. Cops Ed Murphy and George Munday distracted
her so she could be pushed into a safety net, the precursor of todays standard airbags. A
favonte of many Daily News staffers, this photo is also known to present-day residents of the
building.
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31 grand St., Brooklyn February 16,1946.Original photo by Paul Bernius.
Firefighters fought a blaze at Grand St. and Kent Ave. in Williamsburg from the street as
well as adjoining rooftops. The toll taken on this building is clear today and is now onlytwo stories high.
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Park Row, Manhattan July 22, 1943.Original photographer unknown.
An M-7 Priest, a self-propelled 105mm gun, rolls up Park Row in front of City Hall en route
to the Fifth Ave. library, where it was placed on display as part of a war bonds drive.
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7th Ave, 8. Sterling Pl, Brooklyn December 17, 1960.Original photo by Leonard
Detnck.
A day after what was, at the time, the worst aviation disaster in the U.S., wreckage of United
Airlines flight 826 fills the intersection of Sterling Pl. & 7th Ave. in Park Slope. 134 people
were killed after the jet collided with a smaller TWA plane over Staten Island, killing
everyone aboard both planes and people on the ground in Brooklyn. Many of the buildings,
including the Pillar of Fire Church, were destroyed beyond repair while others still stand.
Veteran cops and firefighters still speak of this incident as one of the most memorable-and
tragic-of their careers.
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Porter Ave. & Harrison Pl., Brooklyn April 4, 1959. original photo by Dan Sforza.
A car crash resulted in the death of Martha Cartagena, 3, who rode her tricycle across fromher home on Porter Ave. her older sister, Sonia, is consoled by Rev. Eugene Emy. The scene
has changed remarkably little in five decades, the bricks of the building at right showing the
scars of impact.
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Prospect Park West & 15th St., Brooklyn July 30, 1959.Original photo by O wen
Milmoe.
Policemen guard Detective Michael Dwyer, a veteran of the Wall Street squad, who
committed suicide near the entrance to Prospect Park. many people were out for a Sunday
stroll in the quiet neighborhood when the tragedy occurred.
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475 1/2 hicks St., Brooklyn January 31, 1957.Original photographer unknown.
Black Hawk gangster Salvatore (Sammy) Santoro met his end in the vestibule of this
building. he was shot four times in the head, and the murder weapon left at the scene. once
part of the powerful force that was the longshoremen of the Brooklyn waterfront, Santoros
brother said he had lately been running a pet shop.
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Fulton Fish Market, Manhattan February 26, 1961.Original photo by Jerry
Kinstler.
34 years before News photographers once again converged on the South Street Seaport,
another fire did damage to the older portion of the Fulton Fish Market on the west side of
South St. This two-alarmer sent a fire lieutenant to the hospital to be treated for smoke
inhalation. These buildings still stand, in various states of occupancy, and minus a few floors
here and there.
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East River & Jackson St, Manhattan March 16, 19591.Original photo by Judd
Mehlman.
Pablo Melendez and Arcadia Santos met at a dance on the night of March 15, 1959, after
which Melendez offered to take his date, whose name he reportedly didnt know, back to
where she lived in Brooklyn. She would never make it home. After stopping at the foot of
Jackson St. for a few minutes, Melendez lost control of the car and plunged into the East
River. He managed to swim to safety; the 20-year-old Santos did not. The Con Edison plant
can be seen across the river with more smokestacks than remain today.
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137 Wooster St., Manhattan February 16. 1958. Original photo by Charles Payne.
A massive fire in the Elkins Paper & Twine Co. on Wooster St. claimed the lives of two
firefighters and four members of the New York Fire Patrol. The building was a total loss,
and was demolished shortly after the last of the victims bodies was recovered. Eight yearslater, the carnage would be eclipsed by a fire on 23rd St. in which 12 firefighters were killed,
leaving the tragedy on Wooster St. to fade into a distant memory.
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Source: marchermann.com
992 Southern Blvd., Bronx September 25, 1961. Original photo by Alan Aaronson.
Josephine Dexidor holds James Linares, who had just been shot by her jealous boyfriend on
the stairs of this Bronx apartment building. News photographer Al Aaronson was likely
tipped off by a cop about the scene playing out inside the building, down a long corridor and
around the corner from the buildings front door. One could imagine Dexidors reaction an
instant after the flashun went off, and a quick exit would have been necessary by the
lensman. A doorway on the landing has been covered over since the original picture was
made.
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