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Undercity Tours Sunswick

Date post: 29-Nov-2014
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Sunswick Creek was a wide, fish-filled stream in Queens through the 19th century. Its origin was in Long Island City, and it flowed about two miles north-west until its outlet in the East River. The mouth of the stream—and today the mouth of the combined sewer and storm drain tunnel that it has become—is Hallett’s Cove, a wide inlet just below the Hell Gate channel in the East River. Most of the land through which the Sunswick ran was part of Ravenswood, which was a separate village until the 1870 incorporation of the entire region into Long Island City. Before it was Ravenswood, it had been known as Sunswick, from the Algonquin “Sunkisq.” The word connotes a powerful or wise woman, and one possible etymology is that such women came to the area to look for herbs or medicinal plants in the marshes and swamps that extended in a broad swath around much of the creek. The entire creek still remained visible aboveground as late as the 1880s, and its disappearance was a slow process because rather than the actual enclosure of the stream itself in a tunnel, it was instead the construction of more sewage and drainage tunnels throughout its watershed that eventually led to the stream’s disappearance above-ground. The biggest step in this process came in 1893, when a combined sewer tunnel was built along the route of the Sunswick’s outlet into the East River. This was a brick tunnel running underneath Broadway, in the shape of an arch with a rounded floor, eight feet high in the center and nearly fifteen feet wide. Further inland, this tunnel narrows to a seven-foot diameter tunnel, before branching out to the south and north. Serving as both sewer and storm drain, it was the first major sewer tunnel in the region. As more sewers were built in the following decades—especially after the 1909 opening of the Queensboro Bridge and resultant growth in population in Queens—they fed into this channel like branches connecting to a trunk. As drains and sewers ere built, the water that had once been the visible Sunswick Creek disappeared into these networks and flowed underground instead. The old bed of the creek itself remained visible aboveground well into the 20 th century, but without water flowing in it few people knew what it had once been. New York City: Sunswick Creek “the past is never dead… it’s not even past.” Sunswick Creek Queens, NYC Left: the region in 1873. Below: a map of the same area today; arrow points to the mouth of Sunswick Creek (now the site of the Combined Sewer Outfall for the sewer that replaced it)
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Page 1: Undercity Tours Sunswick

Sunswick Creek was a wide, fish-filled stream in Queens through the 19th century. Its origin was in Long Island City, and it flowed about two miles north-west until its outlet in the East River. The mouth of the stream—and today the mouth of the combined sewer and storm drain tunnel that it has become—is Hallett’s Cove, a wide inlet just below the Hell Gate channel in the East River. Most of the land through which the Sunswick ran was part of Ravenswood, which was a separate village until the 1870 incorporation of the entire region into Long Island City. Before it was Ravenswood, it had been known as Sunswick, from the Algonquin “Sunkisq.” The word connotes a powerful or wise woman, and one possible etymology is that such women came to the area to look for herbs or medicinal plants in the marshes and swamps that extended in a broad swath around much of the creek. The entire creek still remained visible aboveground as late as the 1880s, and its disappearance was a slow process because rather than the actual enclosure of the stream itself in a tunnel, it was instead the construction of more sewage and drainage tunnels throughout its watershed that eventually led to the stream’s disappearance above-ground. The biggest step in this process came in 1893, when a combined sewer tunnel was built along the route of the Sunswick’s outlet into the East River. This was a brick tunnel running underneath Broadway, in the shape of an arch with a rounded floor, eight feet high in the center and nearly fifteen feet wide. Further inland, this tunnel narrows to a seven-foot diameter tunnel, before branching out to the south and north. Serving as both sewer and storm drain, it was the first major sewer tunnel in the region. As more sewers were built in the following decades—especially after the 1909 opening of the Queensboro Bridge and resultant growth in population in Queens—they fed into this channel like branches connecting to a trunk. As drains and sewers ere built, the water that had once been the visible Sunswick Creek disappeared into these networks and flowed underground instead. The old bed of the creek itself remained visible aboveground well into the 20th century, but without water flowing in it few people knew what it had once been.

New York City: Sunswick Creek “the past is never dead… it’s not even past.”

Sunswick CreekQueens, NYC

Left: the region in 1873. Below: a map of the same area today; arrow points to the mouth of Sunswick Creek (now the site of the

Combined Sewer Outfall for the sewer that replaced it)

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