In this image from 1914, a Hungarian undertaker served Harlem’s Hungarian community with funeral services.

Winter & Reich (located at 30 West 116th Street) was a team of Hungarian undertakers who like most of their competitors offered the full package for funerals: a chapel, a notary, automobile or coach services, connections to cemeteries citywide, and day and night availability.
Look at the hearse shown in the window’s photograph.
Below is the view, now:

Icahn Stadium
If you’ve gone across the Triborough Bridge, from Manhattan, you’ve likely seen the sign for the Icahn Stadium.
This stadium, which hosts a variety of athletic and music events every year, was the site where America’s Jesse Owen qualified to race in the 1936 Olympic Games in Nazi Berlin.

Before being named “Icahn” the stadium was known as Downing Stadium, Triborough Stadium, and simply Randall’s Stadium. The original facility was built by (you guessed it) Robert Moses and it was completed just in time for Jesse Owens to prove his mastery of the track.

There were a couple of football teams who used the facility (the New York Yankees football team and the Brooklyn Dodgers football team) over the years.

Robert Moses’ Downing Stadium was demolished in 2002 and rebuilt in the form we see now.
