Woodtree Playground

Woodtree Playground

This text is part of Parks’ Historical Signs Project and can be found posted within the park.
Woodtree Playground is so named for the prominent willow oak (Quercus phellos) trees in the playground. A popular tree for parks and streets, the willow oak is one of the more durable trees. Although it flourishes in a wetter climate, the willow oak adapts to widely varying conditions. The trees narrow leaves create a comfortable shade, and are among the last to fall during the autumn.

Woodtree Playground is one of many New York parks built under the supervision of Robert Moses (1888-1981), a New York City Parks commissioner and a legendary figure in New York City politics. Moses, who served as Commissioner from 1934 to 1960, supervised the construction of 255 New York City playgrounds. Prior to 1934, the only parklands serving the Steinway neighborhood were Astoria Park and Rainey Park. This site was acquired by condemnation on April 27, 1950, and placed under Parks jurisdiction on August 23, 1950.

The Steinway neighborhood is named for Steinway and Sons, the piano business established by Henry Engelhard Steinweg in 1853 before emigrating from Seesen, Germany, to America. He opened a piano factory in Manhattan in 1860, and the family name changed to Steinway in 1866. Henry died in 1871, and his sons Theodore and Henry, Jr., continued to craft pianos while Henry's brother William managed the business. Between 1870 and 1873, William purchased a 400-acre tract of land near Bowery Bay in Queens and built a factory and worker facilities. Steinway's Astoria Homestead Company included a kindergarten, a church, a public trolley line, a bath house, parks, athletic fields, a free library, and frame houses for the workers. The factory eventually relocated, but the neighborhood still bears the name.

When the playground opened in October 1951, it featured handball and basketball courts, a see saw, a jungle gym, a gated wading pool, slides, swings, a comfort station, drinking fountain, benches, and a flagpole. A reconstruction was completed in 1996 with $849,000 in capital funding provided by Council Member Peter Vallone. Today the playground also holds dolphin animal art, play equipment with safety surfacing, a sprinkler area, and a flagpole with a yardarm.

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