Alhambra Theatre

783 Knickerbocker Avenue,
Brooklyn, NY 11207

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Showing 76 - 100 of 110 comments

groundstar
groundstar on October 2, 2004 at 8:26 am

Hello Audrey – Sorry I don’t know when the theater closed – We moved onto Knickerbocker when I was about 5 years old (1952) and the building was “Old” and Dilipated then (Or so my brohter and sister tell me) – Do you remember “Morello’s Grocery” that I think was on the corner of Central and Cornelia? My best friends grand parents and then parents owned that store – and I spent many a summer painting (and re-painting) the walls – which they felt had to be done everyear – and my pay for this job was the best ham and swiss sandwhichs on Italian bread and a large (bottled) creame soda – and I thought that was just about the best pay yuou could get (lol)

BushwickJAK
BushwickJAK on October 1, 2004 at 7:57 pm

Pete, I lived on Central Ave. between Cornelia and Jefferson, attended PS 106, JHS 85, BHS and then moved to L.I. where I worked for Grumman. Moved to VA in ‘79 and have a son that lives in Burlington, NC, where you say your Aunt & Uncle moved to. About the food here, you can’t get a hard roll anyplace unless you take what they consider a roll and overheat it in a microwave until it turns hard. Miss a lot of the food from Brooklyn. We are having a discussion about the year the Alhambra closed and wondered if anyone with reliable information really knows when as the dates in this site seem to be in conflict with what others have told me.

groundstar
groundstar on September 28, 2004 at 7:05 am

YES – The candy store was “Hamms” – when I was small there were two
grocery stores on Kniockerbocker and Eldert – Across the street on the corner was “Costa’s” so I guess “Siegel’s” was the one on my side of the street (805 Knickerbocker?) – Coster’s closed and Paul’s cleanears who had been located in the middle of the blcok (799 Knick) moved into the corner store – Siegel’s became a butcher shop.
Sorry I don’t remember the dates – but somewhere there is a picture of me in front of Pauls Cleaners before it moved and I look like I’m around 10 years old, which would put the year at 1958. I didn’t remember the name of the school – we were just told to stay away from the kids tahat attened it.

wdhvnjhn
wdhvnjhn on September 27, 2004 at 8:20 pm

Eleanor has been away on a Bushwick reunion
I’m sure she will be glad to give you information on the web site.
If you don’t hear from her in about a week, email her again

wdhvnjhn
wdhvnjhn on September 27, 2004 at 8:09 pm

the deli on Eldert and Knickerbocker was Siegel’s during the 40;s and early 50's
Hamm’s was the candy store then
The school across from the park was once Franklin K Lane and later ps85(where it got the name Halsey Junior High)and the East New York Vocational Annex a continuation school.(you had to go there if you quit school art 16)

wdhvnjhn
wdhvnjhn on September 27, 2004 at 7:54 pm

Peter K was surprised that Knickerbocker was one way at that point. As long as I remember(early 40s) it was one way down to Myrtle Ave/Knickerbocker Ave

groundstar
groundstar on September 26, 2004 at 3:56 pm

Bway – Nope Thats a new name for me -
but in my limited knowledge – the “Alhambra” building is the only
one ever at that location – so if the Knickerbovker Airdrome was
anyplace – I’m gonna guess it was the precurser to the Alhambra

Bway
Bway on September 26, 2004 at 3:43 pm

Has anyone ever heard of the Knickerbocker Airdrome which was supposedly was at Halsey St and Knickerbocker Ave? Lostmemory has suggested that the Alhambra probably replaced the Knickerbocker Airdrome, since the Alhambra was also at the corner of Knickerbocker and Halsey.

PeterKoch
PeterKoch on September 24, 2004 at 12:54 pm

I remember those hamburgers well, and greatly enjoyed them, piled high with fried onions, on a Kaiser roll, with a big dill pickle spear on the side !

PeterKoch
PeterKoch on September 24, 2004 at 12:35 pm

lostmemory and groundstar :

I remember a bar called the Eagle’s Nest at the corner of Woodward and Stanhope, across the street from the south corner of the cemetery. A sign over the bar read :

COME IN HERE AND TAKE A SEAT. IT’S BETTER HERE THAN ACROSS THE STREET !

The sign over the back room entrance read : CREEDMOOR ANNEX and summer 1970 they had a poster of a pregnant Lucy yelling, “Goddamn you, Charlie Brown !”

groundstar
groundstar on September 24, 2004 at 12:32 pm

Lost – YES! I do remember that car dealership – BUT (Sorry) can’t remember the name either – The bar was an “Old Mans Bar” when my dad lived above it – smae people day in, day out. My dads apartment was right above the bar with the front windows facing Metropolitan. I think that this was the only place in the city where the tenants who lived above a bar where told to keep the noise down because we where bothering the patrons of the bar.

groundstar
groundstar on September 24, 2004 at 12:09 pm

Pete – It was during the Viet Nam era that I served and I went over for some specific work (I was in communications) I never “SERVED” in Viet Nam or did a tour of duty I guess would be the proper terminology.
I did send an e-mail to Eleanor yesterday (Thursday) after you gave me here address but have not heard back yet.

PeterKoch
PeterKoch on September 24, 2004 at 11:55 am

Thanks, groundstar. Did you serve in Vietnam in the army ? I saw “The Green Berets” at the RKO Madison with my dad on August 2, 1968. I had wanted to attend a Doors concert at the Singer Bowl in Flushing Meadow Park but in retrospect it’s better that I missed it.
It was more a riot than a concert.

I know what you mean about NYC food west of the Hudson. When my aunt and uncle moved from Bethpage, L.I. to Burlington, N.C. in 1976, my parents regularly mailed them packages of NYC food : veal cutlets, kosher dill pickles.

A college classmate of mine went into a bagel business with his brother down South, rather than engineering, because of how rare good bagels were there.

German potato salad “to kill for” at 850 Knickerbocker ! I can’t urge you strongly enough to e-mail Eleanor and get into “Brooklyn friends” !

I have an e-pal, about a dozen years older than you, who grew up in Cypress Hills, Bklyn, but who, like yourself, ended up relocated to Pennsylvania due to military service.

groundstar
groundstar on September 24, 2004 at 11:39 am

Pete (Continued) – I sort of kind of remember that geman deli – but on Knickerbocker Ave probably around the 850 block we had a FANTASTIC German Deli – and there Potaoto Salad was to kill for!
PLEASE NOTE: All of you still living in NYC – If you grew up on “City” food – you can not find anything close anyware west of of the Hudson – I think (no kidding) it the water – Just try to kfind a “Hard Roll” and a good cup of coffee – Forget it! and a few years ago a guy opened a bagel shop in Lansdale, and he was from New York – they tasted just like all of the other local’s bagels.

groundstar
groundstar on September 24, 2004 at 11:34 am

Pete – I moved to Rene Court about a block – west of Grover Cleveland HS between Meropolitan Ave. and Grandview then when I went in the army in 1968 – my sister had gotten married and my Mom had passed a few years earlier, so my Dad moved to a small apartment above a bar on the cornor of Metropolitan and Nurdge about one block up from Rene Court.( When I got out of the army I lived there for about a year and then got married – moved first to Philadelphia then to Lansdale, Pa. and there you have the story of my life in capsulated form.

PeterKoch
PeterKoch on September 24, 2004 at 10:19 am

Groundstar Pete, where in Ridgewood did you move to, and live, after you moved out of 800 Knickerbocker Avenue in 1965 ?

My family’s doctor moved in 1965 or 1966 from Palmetto between Bushwick and Bway to 70th Avenue between Forest and Fresh Pond : he went from a parlor floor (sidewalk level) in a Bushwick brownstone to one in one of those beautiful, three story bay window front brick houses with the high brownstone stoops, that are so numerous in upper Ridgewood !

My family and I shopped most often at the German deli a few doors east of the Ridgewood Theater. I remember the fancy German Tobler candy bars and the Dr. Oetker pudding and pastry glaze mixes. Ja Wohl ! Gemutlichet ! Prost ! Half my ancestry is German, the other half, Polish.

Please e-mail me privately if you want to indulge in some more Bushwick and Ritch Woot (Ridgewood) nostalgia.

I have a friend at work about your age who graduated Grover Cleveland High School in 1965.

I live in a near north suburb of NYC where I can still walk to the store in ten minutes.

“A whole community within walking distance” : well-put ! It gives a new meaning to one of my favorite Twilight Zone episodes, “Walking Distance”, whose bittersweet nostalgic music I can hear in my mind as I write this !

Yes, “Neighborhood” is returning : have you noticed it in the subtitle of the suburban Applebee’s ? “Eatin' good in the neighborhood” ?

Speaking of malls : Jay Leno once quipped that a movie theater’s not a movie theater any more. It’s a concrete bunker at the end of the shopping mall !!!

groundstar
groundstar on September 24, 2004 at 7:34 am

Bway – I think that the neighborhod is coming back is wonderful – I’m not THAT old, but I can’t remeber a day that doesn’t bring a thought of all the good friends and good times I had on those streets – the smells the excitement the thrills of a whole community withing walking distance – here in Lansdale, Pa you use your car to go the the food store about a block away – and everything is gotten at the “Mall” – My current neighbors could never understand Myrtle Ave and corner Deli’s – I’m so glad that “Neighborhood” is returning.
The comments here want me to “come back” all the more – Thanks

Bway
Bway on September 23, 2004 at 6:52 pm

Wow Pete, your old neighborhood “fell” and is now rising from the ashes in all that time you were gone. That sure is a long time. My life in Ridgewood was only just beginning just as you were leaving in 1971! I left around 10 years ago.

There’s still work to be done, but there is so much construction and reconstruction going on in Bushwick right now. Amazing how it’s turning around.

groundstar
groundstar on September 23, 2004 at 3:58 pm

Pete – Practcally neighbors – except that I’m a bit older then you
Those address sound right to me.
I was born in 1948 at Brookly Maternaty – or so I’m told – I walked your block many times as a kid – coming and going to the “Avenue” – Myrtle that is – my friends and I would walk up Halsey street to Wyckoff and then turn left (Halsey ended at Wykoff) and then take any number of the next rights – Cornelia included to get Myrtle always a different route to avoid boredom you know. By the way – my name is Pete also – and I now live in Pennsylvania and haven’t been “home” since about 1971.

PeterKoch
PeterKoch on September 23, 2004 at 3:37 pm

groundstar, you’re welcome. I see PS 106 on the northeast side of Wilson Ave. between Putnam Avenue and Cornelia Street, and JHS 296 on Central between Eldert and Covert Sts. on my USGS Brooklyn wuad sheet.

My father lived at many addresses in Bushwick as a boy and young man.

As for me, I was born in Evangelical Deaconess Hospital, at the north corner of Bway and Chauncey, mid-November 1955. I lived at 1668 Cornelia Street (between Wyckoff and Cypress Avenues) from then until my marriage in September 1991. I still visit Ridgewood once a month, and hope to visit and photograph my dad’s Bushwick addresses and haunts before the bitter cold weather starts this year.

groundstar
groundstar on September 23, 2004 at 3:22 pm

Bway – I keep going back to look at that second photo you the took. That fire hydrant in the picture was my summer swimming pool – the wall to the very right of the photo was the side of apartment buildings on Eldert Street – but between that wall and the back of the now gone house was a court yard with the cloths lines from all of the knickerboker Ave apartments streatched across – and many a scaped knee or elbow was had my playing some type of ball in that courtyard – and just a quick note – in the Halsey street picture – the building on the extreme right was a Pharmacy on the bottom with entrance on Knickerbocker and that window was my dentist – entrance on JHalsey Street.

groundstar
groundstar on September 23, 2004 at 3:06 pm

Pete – Thanks for the e-mail address
The school in the picture was a Junior High School for troubled youths when I lived there (and no I didn’t attend, lol) and then a grammer school sometime in 1964 until ? I attended PS 106 on Putnam St and Wilson Ave. and JHS 296 on Central AVe between Covert and Eldert Sts before moving to attend Grover Cleveland HS in Queens – but still went to the RKO Madison and Ridgewood theaters, thank-you.

PeterKoch
PeterKoch on September 23, 2004 at 11:54 am

Thanks, Bway, for the second shot, looking north at the northern corner of Knickerbocker and Eldert St. It shows that Knickerbocker is now one way northwest, which confirms my understanding of the orientation of your first shot.

The school just beyond the former Alhambra was the original East New York Vocational High School. My dad attended it at its later location in the Bway Junction – East New York area. The school beyond it was St. Martin of Tours Catholic School. My oldest first cousin, born Sept. 3, 1955, was baptized at St. Martin of Tours Catholic Church, at Knickerbocker and Jefferson Avenues.

groundstar, here is the e-mail contact for Brooklyn Friends :

groundstar
groundstar on September 23, 2004 at 10:54 am

Bway – hi again – there were four builds with a small alley seperating them from the theate/supermarket – there were two stores to each building with the entrance to the apartments between the stores – and each building had two apartments on each of its three floors (total 6 apartments) they had very large apartments with very large hallways and on rainy and snowy days these were our play areas. I’m so very very happy the neighborhood is making a resurgence – and after reading about the other theaters in the area I want so badly to make a pilgramidge to my old stomping ground…

Bway
Bway on September 23, 2004 at 10:53 am

The drop ceiling in the “supermarket” must have been a “fake” ceiling covering up the high ceiling of the theater. It appears that the current “doorway” at the corner is in the same spot as it was when it was a supermarket. Obviously, the entire building was refaced on the exterior, at least on the Knickerbocker side. The Halsey St side looks to have the original bricks of the theater. They must have built a floor through the whole building giving it two stories, and cut windows into it. I assume the Knickerbocker side was resurfaced when they converted it from supermarket to whatever it became when they built a floor for the second level in the building.