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  1. Area codes. 718, 347, 929, and 917. Brownsville is a residential neighborhood in eastern Brooklyn in New York City. The neighborhood is generally bordered by Crown Heights to the northwest; Bedford–Stuyvesant and Cypress Hills to the north; East New York to the east; Canarsie to the south; and East Flatbush to the west.

  2. Murals by Brownsville Matters near Belmont Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Christopher Lee for The New York Times. By Ginia Bellafante. March 30, 2017. One recent morning, Nadia Lopez, a...

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  4. Jan 15, 2020 · Robert Mosesplayed a major role in the physical transformation of many New York City neighborhoods throughout the Bronx, Manhattan and Brooklyn, including Brownsville. ... Moses was known as a "master planner", New York City's Park Commissioner from 1934 to 1960, and Chairman of the Triboro Bridge and Tunnel authority from 1936 to 1968, and was ...

  5. Jan 4, 2017 · Published January 4, 2017. Winston Vargas. Brownsville, Brooklyn, 1972. The neighborhood's current health problems can partly be traced to economic trends and policy decisions that harmed it decades ago. * * * This is the second part in Death’s Disparities, a series about the growing gap in life expectancy between rich and poor New York. * * *

  6. Apr 4, 2023 · For decades, Brownsville, Brooklyn, has suffered from some of New York City’s highest crime rates, while Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, has remained relatively low-crime. To understand why, it is important to examine not only criminal justice policies but the history of investment, development and service delivery in the two neighborhoods.

  7. Explores life in an urban immigrant Jewish neighborhood, Brownsville, Brooklyn, experiencing cataclysmic world events through the prism of the American Jewish lens - from World Wars, the Cold War and the Holocaust to Saturdays at the Loew's Pitkin and the desertion of the Brooklyn Dodgers.

  8. Brownsville. Brownsville was predominantly Jewish from the 1880s until the 1950s. In 1887, businessman Elias Kaplan showed the first Jewish residents around Brownsville, painting the area as favorable compared to the Lower East Side, which he described as a place where one could not get away from the holds of labor unions.

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