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Lunatics, Inmates, and Homeowners: The History of Roosevelt Island

The nurses plunged her into an ice-cold bath, pulled her out sopping wet, and threw a sheer flannel slip over her head. Large black letters spelled “Lunatic Asylum, B.I., H. 6.” across the garment. Nellie Brown, the now-freezing woman, was relegated to Blackwell’s Island, Hall 6.

ByMuseum of the City of New York logoMuseum of the City of New York
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City Hospital, Welfare Island icon

City Hospital, Welfare Island

However, all was not as it appeared. In reality, the name Nellie Brown served as a pseudonym for Nellie Bly, an investigative reporter who exposed the abuses of the Lunatic Asylum in 1887 for the New York World. She feigned insanity in order to be committed to the ward, where she stayed for ten days and nights. Her experience on Blackwell’s Island, later known as Welfare Island and currently called Roosevelt Island (in honor of Franklin D. Roosevelt), represents just one piece in the island’s storied history.
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City Hospital, Welfare Island icon

City Hospital, Welfare Island

The island, located in the East River, was originally referred to as Minnehanonck by local Native Americans, who eventually sold it to Wouter van Twiller, the Dutch East Indies employee who succeeded Peter Minuit as Director-General of New Amsterdam. In 1668, Captain John Manning purchased the property. His son-in-law, Robert Blackwell, then acquired the land, which he used for farming.
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City Hospital, Welfare Island icon

City Hospital, Welfare Island

After New York City gained ownership of the island in 1828, construction began on a series of public institutions, including a prison, an almshouse, and several hospitals. Although the penitentiary was eventually moved to Rikers Island in 1935, early inmates quarried stone to build one of the hospitals. Eventually, the thin strip of land became known as “Welfare Island” because the prison and the workhouse gained a reputation for overcrowding, violence, and drug trafficking.
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Queensboro Bridge icon

Queensboro Bridge

Despite years of neglect, the island finally began to transform. Two architects, Philip Johnson and John Burgee, envisioned a waterfront paradise inhabited by a variety of residents from diverse socioeconomic backgrounds. In the 1970s, New York State initiated a plan to develop the property into a residential community, which accommodated working- and middle-class families.
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Octagon Field icon

Octagon Field

By the 1980s, the island’s reputation continued to improve, attracting residents to its quiet neighborhoods connected to Manhattan by an aerial tramway. When luxury apartments began to appear in the early 2000s, residents expressed concerns that affordable housing would vanish. For the most part, however, regulations have ensured that rent-regulated units remain available.
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Octagon Tower icon

Octagon Tower

Today, preservation efforts seek to maintain the island’s historic landmarks for future generations. For instance, the iconic octagonal tower that topped the Lunatic Asylum where Nellie Bly lived for ten days was restored in 2006. The building now houses upscale apartments
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Queensboro Bridge icon

Queensboro Bridge

More recently, the Franklin D. Roosevelt Four Freedoms Park opened to the public in 2012. This presidential memorial serves as a tribute to the four essential human freedoms Roosevelt articulated in a 1941 speech: freedom of expression, freedom of worship, freedom from want, and freedom from fear. The park symbolizes the island’s historical transformation from a place inhabited by confined inmates, sick patients, and destitute indigents to a community of families and homeowners.
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