The neighborhoods of Victorian Flatbush were developed in the early twentieth century from farmland in the former village of Flatbush, in response to the construction of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit line to Coney Island, and are some of the earliest suburbs.[1] Developers including Dean Alvord, Lewis Pounds and particularly Thomas Benton Ackerson sold the new developments as country living, under the name "The Village in the City".[citation needed] Utilities and the subway were buried underground,[2] and the area was carefully laid out with tree-lined avenues, including the Flatbush Malls, and country clubs. The detached houses, many of them large and all distinct, were designed in fashionable styles including "Victorian, Queen Anne, shingle style, colonial revival, neo-Tudor, Spanish Mission and Georgian",[3] with porches and columns,[1] and in many cases bay windows, turrets, and stained glass,[4] and the area resembles other parts of the US more than it does the rest of New York. It is one of the largest collections of Victorian houses in the country.[3] There has been rezoning to guard against oversize buildings near Coney Island Avenue.[5]
Victorian Flatbush is in the western part of Flatbush, bounded approximately by Prospect Park (Brooklyn) or Church Avenue in the north and Avenue H in the south, and by Flatbush Avenue in the east and Coney Island Avenue in the west.[6] It includes a dozen neighborhoods or enclaves:[7]
The earliest development in Victorian Flatbush was the Tennis Court development, planned by Richard Ficken in the 1880s.[10] These homes were bought and razed to build apartment buildings in the 1920s. The only remnants left of it are the eponymous street, and the Knickerbocker Field Club.
Many parts of Victorian Flatbush, particularly those centered on Cortelyou Road—Ditmas Park West and the Beverley Squares—are now considered part of Ditmas Park.[5][11][12][13] It has also been identified with Midwood.[14]
The Flatbush-Tompkins Congregational Church on 19th Street in the Ditmas Park Historic District, at which Conrad Tillard is since 2018 the Senior Minister, is often used for community meetings.[3][15][16] Victorian Flatbush now includes five New York City historic districts,[6] and residents of the sections that have not yet been designated city historic districts are working with the Flatbush Development Corporation and the Historic Districts Council to win designation.[17]
^Sherri Eisenberg, Food Lovers' Guide to Brooklyn: The Best Restaurants, Markets & Local Culinary Offerings, 2nd ed. Guilford, Connecticut: Globe Pequot, 2012, ISBN9780762780747, p. 227.
^Maurita Baldock, "Ditmas Park", in: The Encyclopedia of New York City, ed. Kenneth T. Jackson, Lisa Keller and Nancy V. Flood, rev. ed. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University, 2011, ISBN9780300114652.
^Allison van Diepen, Snitch, New York: Simon Pulse, 2007, ISBN9781416950301, p. 20: "Now I lived on the border between the projects of Flatbush and the leafy neighborhood of Midwood (or Victorian Flatbush as white people call it.)"