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Suffolk Closeup: On changing the name of Robert Moses park over racism

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SUFFOLK CLOSEUP | opinion

A bill to change the name of Robert Moses State Park because of the racism of Moses was introduced last week by state Assemblyman Daniel O’Donnell of Manhattan.

An attorney, he grew up in Commack and is an older brother of Rosie O’Donnell, the TV personality and author.

His measure declares that “Robert Moses repeatedly abused his power to entrench racial and economic segregation.”

Examples cited: when Moses built Jones Beach State Park “he intentionally ordered the overpasses of the connected parkway too low for buses, so that poor people, particularly African-American families, could not access the beach.”

He “built most public parks, playgrounds far from Puerto Rican and African-American neighborhoods.”

And he “pursued the systematic displacement and segregation of families of color” to build Lincoln Center and “effectively allowed for the discrimination against black veterans and their families in the Stuyvesant Town development.”

“The names of great state parks serve as powerful symbols of which people…celebrate,” the bill reads. “The state of New York needs to begin the process of accounting for the historic harm done to communities of color by people like Robert Moses, whose actions still affect many African-American and Hispanic New Yorkers to this day.”

It provides for creation of a commission “to choose a new name” for 875-acre state park that dominates the western portion of Fire Island. 

Moses’ racism has long been described including in a book published this year, “Saving Fire Island From Robert Moses: The Fight For a National Seashore” by Christopher Verga, who teaches Long Island history at Suffolk County Community College.

Bridges on both Moses’ Southern State and Northern State Parkways were built low because, says Verga, Moses didn’t want buses to pass under them taking African-Americans and Latinos from the city to Jones Beach and other parks on Long Island.

“He was very biased,” Verga said.

Robert Caro of East Hampton who wrote “The Power Broker,” the 1974 biography of Moses, has described him as “the most racist human being I have ever really encountered.”

Opposing the renaming of Robert Moses State Park—for an unusual reason—is writer Rebecca C. Lewis in a column last week with a head: “Robert Moses State Park already has the perfect name for a notoriously segregated region.”

“The temptation to remove the honor for a legendary mid-century builder, whose legacy has been tarnished by revelations of racist views and exclusionary policies, is understandable,” she writes on cityandstateny.com. “But no one better reflects the history of the island—racist, segregated, car-dependent, but blessed with beautiful public beaches—than Robert Moses.”

Racism “is embedded in Long Island’s history, whether we like it or not. It’s built into the very foundation of its suburban neighborhoods, as minorities were steered into communities away from white families with brokers that outright refused to sell to non-white homeseekers.

Levittown, the nation’s first true modern suburban neighborhood, was literally built for whites,” she continues. “Long Island today remains incredibly segregated.”

This is true—and, indeed, an exemplary recent investigative report by Newsday of racism on Long Island in how whites and people of color are steered (illegally) to different neighborhoods is current documentation. Still, in running the “Long Island Divided” series, Newsday went out of its way to publish an “acknowledgement” in an editorial that the newspaper “missed a critical chance to lead” in regard to Levittown.

It boosted Levittown although blacks, it noted, were “barred…This was no secret. The covenant was in every early lease, in caps: THE TENANT AGREES NOT TO PERMIT THE PREMISES TO BE USED OR OCCUPIED BY ANY PERSON OTHER THAN MEMBERS OF THE CAUCASIAN RACE.”

The continuing racism on Long Island is outrageous.

In Southern states, there has been a reckoning with efforts to end the display of the Confederate flag and statues of Confederate leaders. There needs to be a similar reckoning here when it comes to Moses, a resident of Babylon (where a bronze statue of him was put up in 2003).

Full disclosure: Moses got me fired in 1964 from my first job as a reporter. It was over an article I wrote about civil rights activists being beaten by private security guards on opening day of the New York World’s Fair, which he ran. They were demonstrating against racism in the fair’s hiring.

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