[BOOKS] This Photo Book Explores the History of Corona, Queens in Detail

Corona: The Early Years
Corona: The Early Years
Photo: Arcadia

Corona: The Early Years is a photobook from author and historian Jason D. Antos and Arcadia Publishing that details the varied history of the Queens neighborhood of Corona.

Nestled between old Newtown (today's Elmhurst) and the village of Flushing in the borough of Queens lies Corona. Blessed with an enchanting landscape, the area attracted development as early as 1854, when the West Flushing Land Company sought to create a suburban residential neighborhood in its midst. For Corona's cherished way of life, represented by Colonial-era farms, dirt roads, and gaslight streetlamps, this marked a distinct break from the past. Developer Benjamin Hitchcock's novel installment-plan system had helped place Corona on the map for good by 1870, laying down a historical precedent for later communities like Forest Hills and Jackson Heights to take shape. Before Mets baseball and the US Open were fixtures on the local scene, New Yorkers flocked to the National Race Course, one of the first such complexes in the entire country, for an exciting day at the races. Meanwhile, in its Corona-based factory, the Tiffany Glass Company forged distinctive lamps and glassware that in time would become world famous.

You can purchase the book for just $28 on Amazon and other retailers.

[VIDEO] New York City's Lost Tunnel Police Railcar

In this video from YouTube channel It's History, learn all about the small channels in the Holland and Lincoln Tunnels that used to carry tiny police cars.

Chapters:
00:00 - New York’s 1954 Tunnel Police car
01:05 - The History of Transportation to Manhattan
02:33 - How Horse wagon regulations paved the way for car laws
05:52 - How The Automobile Changed New York City
07:02 - How Tunnels Changed New York City
08:26 - Port of New York Tunnel Police
09:30 - Could modern Police officers fit in the Tunnel Police car?

[WATCH] NYC's Biggest Train Stations: Modern Logistical Wonders

This episode follows life at Penn Station NYC. 700,000 passengers a day pass through the station making it the busiest in the Western Hemisphere. But there are plans to make it even bigger as the station is currently undergoing a multi-billion dollar revitalisation and railroad infrastructure reconstruction.

With unprecedented behind-the-scenes access to the World's Busiest Stations, this series buys a unique first-class ticket to the secret life of the station. It follows station staff, train drivers, track maintenance crews and transport police as they battle through human drama, travel disruption and engineering challenges to keep trains on time and passengers on track.

Open 24 hours a day these amazing institutions are places of noise, colour and stunning architecture, but they are also symbols of their country - a window into the culture and history of their city and to the stories of those who live there and pass through.