Greenridge, Staten Island
Greenridge is a name sometimes used to denote the western part of
Eltingville, a neighborhood on
Staten Island's
South Shore.
Staten Island is one of the five boroughs of
New York City, which is the largest city in the
United States.
The area's earliest setllers were
French Huguenots, who are also responsible for another South Shore neighborhood not far away being named Huguenot. The
Dutch called it Kleine Kill, or Little Creek, and the
British called it
Fresh Kills, into which
Richmond Creek, which forms its western boundary, empties. The area appears to have received its present name (sometimes spelled as two words) about
1876.
In
1921, a highly popular restaurant and amusement place resembling today's
Chuck E. Cheese's opened at the northwest corner of Arthur Kill Road and Richmond Avenue. Known as Al Deppe's, it was forced out of business in the late
1960s when its property was condemned to make way for the proposed
Richmond Parkway. However, due to intense opposition — much of it from environmental activists — the section of the parkway that would have passed over the land on which the establishment stood ended up never actually being built. Only the section of the parkway south and east of this point was constructed; overlaying a pre-existing thoroughfare named Drumgoole Boulevard (in honor of the
Roman Catholic priest who founded an
orphanage in
Pleasant Plains), it opened in the autumn of
1972.
Greenridge has seen much development — a great deal of it commercial — in recent decades, including the construction of a public transit center in the early
2000s. Many passengers wait there each weekday morning for express buses that take them to their jobs in downtown or midtown
Manhattan.