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The New York City Farm Colony is a poorhouse that formerly existed on Staten Island, one of the city's five boroughs. It was located across Brielle Avenue from Sea View Hospital, on the edge of the Staten Island Greenbelt.
Part of the town of Castleton from the 1680s onward, the land was taken over by the government of Richmond County in 1829 and the Richmond County Poor Farm was established thereon. When Staten Island became a borough of New York City in 1898, the city assumed responsibility for the property and redesignated it the New York City Farm Colony, although it was sometimes colloquailly referred to as the Staten Island Farm Colony. In 1915 its administration was merged with that of Sea View Hospital, which had been set up with the expressed purpose of treating tuberculosis (it is now a city-run nursing home), under the new name of Sea View Farms.
Jurisdiction over the site was transferred in 1924 to the city's Homes for Dependents agency, which lifted the requirement that all residents of the colony had to work (prior to that, many varieties of fruits and vegetables — and at various times even grains such as wheat and corn — were cultivated there, and fed not only the colony's residents but met the needs of other city institutions as well).
Until the 1930s, many if not most of the farm colony's residents were elderly (noted photographer Alice Austen actually lived there for a brief period in the early 1950s), and at times numbered as many as 2,000; this number steadily declined after the Social Security system was adopted on the federal level in the United States, and the programs of the Great Society implemented in the 1960s further depleted its ranks, leading to the facility being closed in 1975.
Since its closure, the Farm Colony site has been the focus of heated debate in Staten Island political circles. In 1980 the city attempted to sell the property to developers, but environmentalists and many "old-time" Staten Islanders fiercely resisted this. As a result, in 1982 the city's Department of General Services was given authority over the land; this agency in turn transferred 25 acres to the Department of Parks and Recreation, which annexed this section to the Greenbelt. The remaining 70 acres at the site were officially designated a city landmark in 1985; many buildings remain standing at the colony, but have fallen into disrepair and have also been subjected to considerable vandalism.
In the late 1990s a Babe Ruth League baseball diamond was built on Farm Colony land.
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