True Crime Bay Ridge: A Mafia Murder on Shore Road
James Hawkes took his terrier, Spot, for a walk. It was a cloudy Sunday, February 6, 1938, and it had probably either just stopped raining or was about to start. […]
James Hawkes took his terrier, Spot, for a walk. It was a cloudy Sunday, February 6, 1938, and it had probably either just stopped raining or was about to start. […]
The short answer: probably, sort of, eventually, maybe.
The horrifying story of Thomas McFarland, who raped and murdered his niece and mother-in-law in 1935.
Here’s how you can help us overcome the political inertia.
The full and tragic 100-year story of how Bay Ridge’s greatest natural wonder became full of cars, apartment buildings and a highway.
Why you should vote for Brannan in the Democratic primary on September 12.
Why you should vote for El-Yateem in the Democratic primary on September 12.
Bay Ridge has a troubled history of systemic racism, from its founding to the present.
A young art student was killed in Bay Ridge in 1899 and dumped in the bay. His killer remained undiscovered for decades—until two more people were murdered.
A fatal fire on Ridge Boulevard in 1952 looked accidental but was anything but.