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Ellis Island, Recreation Shelter, New York Harbor, New York, New York County, NY

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Ellis Island, Recreation Shelter, New York Harbor, New York, New York County, NY

description

Summary

Significance: The Recreation Shelter on Islands 2 and 3 was part of the last active phase of construction at the Ellis Island U.S. Immigration Station during the 1930s. The Recreation Building and two Recreation Shelters were designed for Ellis Island alongside the New Immigration Building (1934-1936) and Ferry Building (1934), all of which were financed through New Deal funding. The construction of these new facilities contributed to a reconfiguration of the island into clearly demarcated spaces for patients, immigrants and deportees, a shift that recognized the changing dynamics of immigration in the United States during the years of the Great Depression. This concern for the physical and mental well-being of the island's temporary inhabitants was tied to larger national and international concerns about public health and social services.

In 1933 the federally-appointed Ellis Island Committee completed a report that recommended widespread improvements to the Immigration facilities, among which was the development of adequate accommodations for recreation. Plans were initiated to make the new space created by filling in the lagoon between Islands 2 and 3 into an open-air recreation area, and to build a Recreation Building and Recreation Shelter at its west end. The Recreation Building and Recreation Shelters (a nearly identical structure on Island 1 was used by deportees) were constructed simultaneously in large part because of a new recognition of the need to accommodate patient, inmate, and immigrant leisure on the three-island complex.

During World War II, the building was used by the United States Coast Guard, which also made use of the facilities from 1951 to 1954, after the United States Public Health Service vacated on March 1, 1951. The Ellis Island United States Immigration Station ceased operation on November 12, 1954 and the complex was largely unoccupied until it was made part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument in 1965, under the administration of the United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service.
Unprocessed Field note material exists for this structure: N1680
Survey number: HABS NY-6086-W
Building/structure dates: 1936-1937 Initial Construction
National Register of Historic Places NRIS Number: 66000058

date_range

Date

1937 - 1980
person

Contributors

Historic American Buildings Survey, creator
Aldrich, Chester, architect
U.S. Public Building Service
Albert Development Corporation
Ellis Island Committee
Arzola, Robert
place

Location

New York, United States40.78306, -73.97125
Google Map of 40.7830603, -73.9712488
create

Source

Library of Congress
copyright

Copyright info

No known restrictions on images made by the U.S. Government; images copied from other sources may be restricted. http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/114_habs.html

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