Jennifer Lopez aka JLo aka Jenny From The Block surprised fans last week at Bay…
Famous Bronxites
Bronx born and raised fashion icon, Ralph Lauren, is the first American fashion designer to…
You probably know, especially if you’ve read our list of Bronx Facts, that the Piccirilli…
Bronx freestyle legend Judy Torres will perform a free concert this month at St Mary’s…
Marysol Castro recently made history by becoming the Mets’ first female announcer as well as…
The Bronx keeps churning out talented people! Jermaine Wells, a Bronx born and bred actor,…
J-Lo aka Jenny from The Block is giving a bit more back to The Bronx…
And our Bronx and Dominicana superstar Cardi B makes history yet again, this time knocking…
Bronx resident Ida Keeling is literally in a league of her own. Keeling, who turns 101 this month, has been racing for over 30 years now.
This centenarian has been setting records, particularly women in the 95-99 year category and now just days before her 101st birthday, has set yet another record for a new age bracket.
Bella Abzug (née Savitsky) was born on July 24, 1920, in The Bronx to Russian Jewish immigrants who went on to become the first Jewish woman elected to Congress as well as the first woman elected to the House of Representatives on a platform of gender equality and women’s rights.
Born in 1904 in The Bronx and attended St Anselm’s Roman Catholic school on Tinton Avenue, Helen Clare Schroeder would eventually become the inspiration for one of the most iconic and lasting cartoon characters, Betty Boop.
Little did Helen Kane, a German-Irish Catholic woman from The Bronx (as she later became known), know that her likeness would set the globe ablaze as one of the first and most famous of all sex symbols in all the world of animation.
36 years ago in 1980, Immaculate Conception Church in the Melrose neighborhood of The Bronx, along with its convent, rectory, and priests’ residence was calendered for landmarking by New York City’s Landmark Preservation Commission but nothing happened.
Until this past Tuesday.
LPC removed 65 properties from the calendar, many of which sat for decades waiting for action, but kept Immaculate Conception and prioritized for designation as a landmark by year’s end pending further hearings and a vote.
You must be logged in to post a comment.