Ozone Park, Queens Ozone Park Ozone Park Welcome Sign Ozone Park Welcome Sign Ozone Park is a neighborhood positioned in the southwestern section of the borough of Queens, in New York City, New York, United States.

The northern border is Atlantic Avenue; the southern border is South Conduit Avenue, and the easterly border is 108th Street. The border is the county line with Brooklyn (mostly along Ruby and Drew Streets).

The current ground level of Ozone Park is about four feet higher than the initial ground level.[original research?] Initially the avenues and cross streets were raised above ground level and then all of the basements were set on ground level and the territory was back filled around the homes.

4.1 South Ozone Park The name "Ozone Park" was chosen for the evolution to "lure buyers with the idea of refreshing breezes blowing in from the Atlantic Ocean to a park-like community," with "ozone" meaning not the alternate form of oxygen, but "fresh healthy air, especially from the sea." Aqueduct Racetrack, in Ozone Park An region now part of Ozone Park that pre-dated that improve was called "Centreville".

Part of Ozone Park is still called "Centreville". The church consolidated with the United Methodist Church of Ozone Park in 1957 and a new church, the Community Methodist Church of Ozone Park, was assembled at the Southeast corner of Sutter Avenue and Cross Bay Boulevard.

Ozone Park was created and settled in 1882. Ozone Park was the only one of these neighborhoods that continues to exist, mostly because of the daily service at the now-defunct Ozone Park station on the Long Island Rail Road.

The name persisted because of the many commuters[who?] who passed through the Ozone Park station and referred to it as an meaningful landmark.

In addition to this barns station came the nickel fare, which was another primary factor in the evolution of Ozone Park.

This new fare was considered to be the "single most effective stimulus to home building"[this quote needs a citation] in the Ozone Park region because the real estate developers began buying up all the lots on either side of Liberty Avenue in hopes the new station would attract more citizens to want to live in Ozone Park.

Historic clock fortress assembled amid the 1860s that is a mostly small remnant of the Lalance & Grosjean porcelain enamelware factory complex on Atlantic Avenue at north end of Ozone Park or, alternatively, the south end of Woodhaven.

This made Ozone Park more accessible by both bus and car.

Between 1921 and 1930, Ozone Park saw a populace increase of over 180% from 40,000 to 112,950 citizens .

In 1996, a scandal broke encircling two Ozone Park Jewish cemeteries, Mokom Sholom Cemetery and Bayside Cemetery, which share a coterminous tract bounded by 80th and 84th Streets and Liberty and Pitkin Avenues with Acacia Cemetery, which was not involved.

One infamous[weasel words] region of Ozone Park is known as "The Hole", and includes the region bounded by 75th (Ruby) Street, South Conduit Avenue, 78th Street and Linden Boulevard.

In the 1930s, the town/city of New York decided to install sewers and sewage lines in Ozone Park to stop the serious flooding that was a primary problem.

Since its beginnings, Ozone Park has been largely populated by various groups of immigrants.

Germans and the Irish made up a large part of Ozone Park in the late 19th century and early 20th century.

Eventually, the Italians, who are one of the biggest ethnic groups in the neighborhood (giving it the name "the Little Italy of Queens"), started to migrate into Ozone Park from East New York, Brooklyn.

Fears of changing neighborhoods caused a stir amongst the Italians that caused them to move into Ozone Park, which at the time was mostly Germans and Irish who had migrated themselves from neighboring East New York.

Enumeration data from the early years[when?] shows how Ozone Park was a sparsely populated neighborhood because of the lack of transportation.

By 1915, the Fulton Street Line opened, connecting Ozone Park with the rest of New York City, thus starting the enormous influx by the Italians.

Ozone Park then formed many lesser sub-neighborhoods with specific identities.

The Tudor Village section, which is still known by this name, was positioned on the south bordered by Pitkin Avenue and North Conduit Avenue and from east to west Cross Bay Boulevard and North Conduit Avenue.

Liberty Heights, which is only known by the old-timers, is a triangular region bordered by Liberty Avenue on the south, diagonal-running 101st Avenue (Jerome Avenue) from the southwest to the northeast, and Woodhaven Boulevard to the east.

In the 1980s, Ozone Park's 106th police precinct became the origin and scene of a several police brutality incidents, including April 17, 1985's stun gunning of high schooler Mark Davidson, who was arrested on marijuana possession charges.

At the turn of the 21st century immigrants from Latin America, South Asia (Bangladesh), the West Indies, and South America (Indo-Guyanese & Indo-Surinamese) moved in, adding a diverse atmosphere to the neighborhood, which is especially apparent along 101st Avenue and Liberty Avenue near the neighborhood's border with Richmond Hill. The neighborhood remains largely Italian-American; however, these new arrivals have made Ozone Park turn into one of the fastest-growing and most ethnically diverse neighborhoods in New York City.

Aside from these larger groups, there is a large Hispanic populace in Ozone Park, mainly concentrated in the northern portion of the neighborhood near the Woodhaven border, and an black minority, spread throughout the neighborhood.

Rockaway Boulevard in South Ozone Park South Ozone Park is an urban neighborhood in Ozone Park, but despite its name, South Ozone Park is mostly in the east of the neighborhood of Ozone Park. It extends from the Aqueduct Racetrack eastward to the Van Wyck Expressway. Its chief thoroughfare is Rockaway Boulevard.

South Ozone Park is home to a more diverse populace of about 45,498, with many Indians, Pakistani, Guyanese, Trinidadian, and Blacks living in the area, in addition to the area's longtime Italian-American population; Italian-Americans are most prevalent in the southern and areas in the neighborhood near the Conduit.

There has been a recent surge of evolution in South Ozone Park that rivals many of the encircling communities in terms of home value. Rockaway Boulevard is South Ozone Park's chief company strip.

The neighborhood, in Ozone Park, is extremely small, consisting of approximately two hundred and fifty homes; it spans only five residentiary streets and two avenues.

The village is also home to Tudor Park, a 20-acre (81,000 m2) recreational park which features a baseball field, racquetball courts, picnic area, and a fountain as well as a play region with slides, swings and almost everything else one would expect to find in a suburban park.

The B15 runs through the neighborhood without stopping. The New York City Subway's IND Fulton Street Line (A train) and IND Rockaway Line (A train) also run through the neighborhood. Our Lady's Catholic Academy Our Lady's Catholic Academy is a diverse , child-centered Catholic elementary school with 2 campuses that serves the South Ozone Park community.

Al-Ihsan Academy, established in 1989 to furnish education to the burgeoning Muslim populace of Ozone Park Ozone Park has served as the setting and subject of various media works.

Boss of Bosses (2001, starring Chazz Palminteri) features a scene with John Gotti in Ozone Park at the Bergin Hunt and Fish Club.

Goodfellas (1990) is an Academy Award-winning gangster film that takes place in and around Ozone Park.

This Is My Life (1992) starring Julie Kavner as Dottie Ingels living in Ozone Park All in the Family's (1970s TV sitcom) principals, Archie and Edith Bunker, had cousins who lived in Ozone Park.

Getting Gotti (1994 TV film starring Lorraine Bracco) is based on a real life woman, Diane Giacalone, who interval up in Ozone Park and through the years first-handedly watched Gotti rise to power on the streets of Ozone Park; she eventually became an Assistant US Attorney and assembled up a case against him.

The Perfect Crimes History Channel documentary features the Lufthansa heist and discusses the Lucchese crime family crews living, killing and running businesses in Ozone Park.

The Sopranos character, Rusty Millio (played by Frankie Valli), lives in Ozone Park, as revealed in the episode "Live Free or Die".

Pope John Paul II jubilated mass for 75,000 citizens at Ozone Park's Aqueduct Racetrack in October 1995. Jack Kerouac lived above this flower shop in Ozone Park.

Notable current and former inhabitants of Ozone Park include: Joseph Addabbo, Jr., member of the New York State Senate from the 15th District and of the New York City Council from the 32nd Council District.

Born in Lowell, Massachusetts, he lived in Ozone Park with his parents at 133-01 Cross Bay Boulevard for 11 years, after discharge from the U.S.

He wrote his first novel, "The Town and the City", as well as the quintessential "On the Road", while living in Ozone Park.

Jack Lord - actor, star of the 1960s Hawaii Five-0 TV series, attended John Adams High School positioned on Rockaway Boulevard in Ozone Park a b Queens Community Boards, New York City.

"Ozone Park" on the Queens Economic Development Corporation website "If You're Thinking of Living In/Ozone Park; Changing Faces, Enduring Values", The New York Times, October 5, 2003.

Addabbo Jr., who represents Ozone Park and lives there with his wife, Dawn....

Addabbo Park, titled after Representative Addabbo, a lifelong resident of Ozone Park who served in Congress from 1960 until his death in 1986." "...at which members of long-forgotten groups like the Elegants (from Staten Island) and the Capris (Ozone Park, Queens) examined the Italian-American influence on doo-wop." "Contributing four of those 10 wins is former primary leaguer John Frascatore of Ozone Park, New York (4-2 with a 2.05 ERA)." "CAROL HEISS GAINS 3 - D WORLD CROWN IN FIGURE SKATING; Ozone Park Girl Adds to Her Compulsory Phase Lead in Free-Style Exhibition", The New York Times, February 16, 1958.

"Carol Heiss of Ozone Park, Queens, Miss Personality of the ice, skated off with her third world figure skating championship tonight with a perfectly-executed freestyle exhibition." "She found simpatico musicians to help her repossess the music that reverberated through her childhood block in Ozone Park, Queens.

It's that of a boy from Ozone Park, Queens, who was adrift until he joined the Fire Department in 1970 at age 24." Media related to Ozone Park, Queens at Wikimedia Commons