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A tree may grow in Brooklyn, but farms grow in Queens

Queens County Farm Museum | Queens, NY 11004

Though Queens has changed dramatically, communities across the borough are seeking ways to bring farming back.

By Elle Mclogan
CBS News
Nov 1, 2023

Excerpt:

NEW YORK – For the past decade, Danny Morales has worked as a farmer across the northeast. He never imagined the job would bring him back to his native Queens.

As director of agriculture for the Queens County Farm Museum, he grows fruit, vegetables, herbs, and flowers, including vibrant dahlias.

“You can see the colors we have here: Red, salmon, pink, peach, orange,” he said.

The museum offers free admission to its 47 pastoral acres in New York City.

“We are standing here on one of the longest continually-farmed sites in New York state. It dates back to 1697,” executive director Jennifer Walden Weprin said. “We tell the story of how New York City grew around this historic agricultural site.”

Jason Antos with the Queens Historical Society says agriculture in the borough began with native tribes.

“The Algonquin peoples, they lived off the land,” he said.

The borough remained rural until surprisingly recently.

“It’s amazing to note that this was the case up until the 1920s and ’30s,” he said.

Read the complete article here.