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Researched
and authored by David Rougé
Until the
colonial era, the site was a salt marsh, an arm of the East River.
These coastal wetlands provided cover for waterfowl. These marshes
were later filled in, and by 1845 the first buildings had appeared
on the site, providing housing for tradesmen and artisans. By
the 1890's, the lower East Side had become the home to hundreds
of thousands of immigrants, densely concentrated into dank, airless
tenements, lacking adequate light, air, or green space.
(C)JoaneeF-Sept982
In
the 1960's the outward movement of families began to change the
neighborhood into the home of students, low-income working people,
and a growing Latino population. In the late 70's and early 80's,
the energy crisis caused landlords to abandon their buildings,
and the corner of Sixth Street and Avenue
B was occupied by deteriorating, vacant buildings used as shooting
galleries by drug addicts. As the City removed the buildings from
six of the lots for safety reasons, the ugliness and uselessness
of the debris-filled terrain galvanized the community into action.
Seeing the vacant lots as an important opportunity to restore
some green to an overbuilt community, in 1982 a committee of the
6th Street A-B Block Association petitioned the City's Operation
Green Thumb for a lease and began the arduous task of hauling
rubble and trash from the 17,000 square foot site.
Before the City could issue a lease, a local waste hauler petitioned
the City to use the lots as a parking lot. Residents of Sixth
Street marched into the Community Board to voice support for the
Garden and opposition to the parking lot. Throughout 1983, garden
members surveyed the site, drew up the plans for its optimal use,
built 125 4' x 8' plots, laid pathways, prepared for the installation
of a fence, and laid out ornamental borders. By April of 1984,
Green Thumb had issued a one-year lease. Garden members were busy
planting ornamental shrubs and trees. The Garden established partnerships
with the Green Guerrillas and the Trust for Public Land in order
to allow the Garden to raise funds to buy supplies and gardening
equipment. In 1985, a new, more serious challenge threatened the
garden. The garden lies on City land taken from former owners
in lieu of back taxes. The City maintained that the land should
be sold at auction to the highest bidder. Arguing that housing
was the highest and best use of the land, the City administration
hatched a scheme to sell the site to high-end housing developers.
The plan was officially adopted by the Community Board, backed
by some housing advocates who took the short-sighted view that
the environment was secondary to bricks and mortar. An aroused
garden membership drew up an outreach program to counter the housing
lobby.
They threw open the gates of the garden, holding their first annual
Corn Roast and Harvest Festival, invited members of the local
clergy and an Onondaga Chieftain to come bless the land, and unveiled
a stunning garden trellis by a local sculptor. Alliances were
made with a local garden coalition and community planners. An
events committee was formed to tap the skills of the many artist
members, who staged programs of crafts, horticultural/science
workshops, slide shows, multicultural festivals, and performances
from around the world. The events program
, now in its thirteenth year, runs all summer, featuring over
75 events annually, drawing thousands of visitors. In addition,
three preschool centers joined the garden; garden members developed
an environmental curriculum to teach the children gardening and
nature principles and skills.
By 1986, the Community Board was forced to take a more flexible
stance. Although the Sixth and B Garden was easily the most valuable
site, the extraordinary size of its membership and the growing
awareness of its vitality among lower East Siders and greening
organizations kept it off the auction block for 10 years. In 1996,
a deal was worked out by the Trust for Public Land to give the
garden permanent site status. Our garden was transferred to the
NYC Parks Department as part of the City Spaces program. In keeping
with the goals of the program, the garden constructed and maintains
a children's adventure playground and children's garden. The children's
activity area was designed by the Children's Environments Research
Group of the Graduate School and University Center of The City
University of New York. Now two hundred children utilize the garden
weekly.
The
Garden is incorporated as the 6th Street and Avenue B Garden,
Inc. and is a 501(c)3 corporation. At the City's request, we are
changing our name to the 6th and B Garden. We have a board of
directors comprised of 15 gardeners and community representatives.
Everyday decisions are made by the general membership at monthly
meetings. Each member, who must live between Delancey and 14th
Street and Broadway and the East River, pays annual dues for a
4x8 foot plot and must contribute 4 hours each month in service
to the Garden.
Today the garden serves as an anchor of local community gardening
groups and as a working model of preservation for an energetic
greening movement. We have over 15 fruiting trees, more than 50
flowering shrubs and innumerable herbs, flowers and vegetables.
Our fence, also designed by garden members, represents the members'
"hands-on" contributions in creating the garden. And we have a
37-foot internationally-famous and always-controversial sculpture
of NYC street treasures created by a garden member and lifelong
neighborhood resident. We are one of a network of community gardens
which have transformed the environment of the Lower East Side.
Most of the other gardens are threatened by development, and we
plan to assist other gardens to win permanent status.
The 6th Street and Avenue B Garden has produced a thorough and detailed history of the community and the garden itself. You can download the first part of it here:
6
& B Garden History part 1
free
adobe reader7.0 - If you don't have this on your computer
The
rest of this document is available to members & supporters
of the garden.
We would like to thank
our supporters: the Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust and European
American Bank and the Fund for Creative Communities/NYS Council
on the Arts Decentralization Program, administered by the Lower
Manhattan Cultural Council and from the Rockefeller Flow Fund.
. We would also like to thank The Trust For Public Land for ongoing
assistance.
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