107 years of “Advertising the Kingdom” from Brooklyn, NY, what is it New Yorkers will remember about JWs after their move in 2016?

by AndersonsInfo 11 Replies latest jw friends

  • AndersonsInfo
    AndersonsInfo

    https://www.bisnow.com/new-york/news/commercial-real-estate/10-biggest-nyc-real-estate-stories-2016-69239

    December 23, 2016

    The 10 Biggest NYC Real Estate Stories Of 2016

    #9:

    The 10 Biggest NYC Real Estate Stories Of 2016

    Wikimedia: Jud McCranie

    … And the Jehovah's Witnesses, who own some of the finest real estate in NYC, sold more than $1B worth of it to Jared Kushner, LIVWRK and the CIM Group, including the Watchtower complex (above).

    ------

    On December 22, 2016 what was the most read story on BISNOW – The #1 Commercial Real Estate News Source In The World?

    https://www.bisnow.com/new-york/news/mixed-use/jared-kushner-and-jv-partners-pay-354m-for-brooklyn-parking-lot-69188

    Jared Kushner And JV Partners Pay $354M For Brooklyn Parking Lot

    Jared Kushner and LIVWRK have closed on yet another Brooklyn acquisition they’ve picked up from the Jehovah’s Witnesses. It’s a parking lot, and the buyers paid $345M for it.

  • eyeuse2badub
    eyeuse2badub

    I will admit that the wt society did help increase the desirability of the Brooklyn Heights area. They showed how run down property in that neighborhood could be restored. After all, the labor was basically free so why not?

    just saying!

  • RubaDub
    RubaDub

    I will admit that the WT society did help increase the desirability of the Brooklyn Heights area.

    eyeuse2 ...

    Yes, in all fairness, what I can remember of Brooklyn Heights when I was younger is nothing like it is today. The Society, after so much restoration, did a lot to attract others to the area. The Society was, of course, not the only reason but they certainly helped to get properties and the area more desirable.

    Of course, there is always the issue about not paying property taxes which support the community. There is also the argument that organizations like the Society, add value to the area and thus increase the property values and attract people that pay higher prices for their homes and thus the property tax burden is shifted to them.

    I haven't looked lately but I bet a 2 bedroom condo/co-op is WELL over a million dollars anywhere in the area. Maybe you can still get an Efficiency for a half million dollars but it is about the size of a large walk-in closet in other areas.

    Just my point of view.

    Rub a Dub

  • no password
    no password

    Seeking copy of letter read to all Congregations in USA wanting $ so Watchtower could buy Squibb Bldgs. back in 1969.


    Will $ now be returned ?
  • OrphanCrow
    OrphanCrow
    nopassword: Seeking copy of letter read to all Congregations in USA wanting $ so Watchtower could buy Squibb Bldgs. back in 60's.
    Here is the letter thanking JWs for sending in funds for the purchase:

    http://www.brownstoner.com/history/jehovah-witness-history-brooklyn-squibb-1969-donations/

    Jehovah Witness History Brooklyn

  • no password
    no password
    http://www.brownstoner.com/history/jehovahs-witnesses-history-brooklyn-properties-selling/


    How the Jehovah’s Witnesses Acquired Some of Brooklyn’s Most Insanely Valuable Properties

    Joseph Rutherford. Photo via Wikipedia
    Read Part 1 of this story.
    The Jehovah’s Witnesses — aka the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society — first came to Brooklyn in 1908, in hopes of having their sermons syndicated in newspapers alongside the writings of the borough’s most famous pastors. It was under the Watchtower’s autocratic second leader, Joseph F. Rutherford, that the religious group truly began practicing the art of Brooklyn real estate.
    This is the 100-year story of how the Jehovah’s Witnesses grew to be a global phenomenon and came to own some of Brooklyn’s most valuable properties.
    Jehovah Witnesses History Brooklyn Joseph Rutherford
    Joseph Rutherford. Photo via Wikipedia
    Joseph Rutherford, the Uncompromising Leader and Brilliant Propagandist
    Joseph Rutherford was voted into office by the governing body of the Society, but he was dictatorial and autocratic — not the leader the Watchtower directors had imagined.
    He angered many with his beliefs that faith should come before patriotism — a big no-no for the time, as World War I was raging halfway around the world. In May of 1918, the U.S. Attorney General called his writings and lectures “one of the most dangerous examples of propaganda” ever written, and his works were banned in Canada.
    Rutherford claimed that 1918 was the year God was coming to claim his kingdom, and that the governments of the world and their “unrighteous” religions would come to an end.
    Jehovah Witness History Brooklyn Properties
    Rutherford’s 1918 prison mug shots. Photo via eBay
    A Little Legal Trouble for the Witnesses
    Rutherford and seven other Watchtower executives were arrested and charged under the 1917 Espionage Act for insubordination, disloyalty, refusal of duty in the armed services, and obstructing recruitment and enlistment. Seven men — including Rutherford — were sentenced to 20 years in prison.
    The Society sold the Brooklyn Tabernacle building on Hicks Street, as well as the office furniture out of their main headquarters — Bethel — on Columbia Heights. The Society still owned the building, they told the press, but were likely to sell it “any day.”
    The Brooklyn Eagle rejoiced, and a Watchtower member was quoted as saying, “I blame the Eagle for all of our troubles. It first attacked us years ago and never has ceased.”
    But the Eagle crowed too soon.
    In March of 1919, the Watchtower men were all released on bail, and the charges were dropped a year later. Rutherford had been re-elected as the head of the Society, and they were not going anywhere.
    Jehovah Witness History Brooklyn Properties
    Postcard of Bethel at 124 Columbia Heights. Photo via eBay
    The Worldwide Growth of the Jehovah’s Witnesses
    Between 1920 and Rutherford’s death in 1942, the organization grew to include millions of followers worldwide. This success and the Witnesses’ emphasis on studying printed materials — in 100 languages — meant that they needed to expand their Brooklyn operations dramatically.
    Even in the very beginning, the Society relied on volunteers to operate the presses and staff shipping rooms. These volunteers dedicated years to their work and were paid only pennies, while living in dormitories and group housing. The Eagle saw this as a sure sign of cult behavior even in 1910.
    Jehovah Witness History Brooklyn Properties
    1955 Watchtower publication. Photo via eBay
    Although the Watchtower Society looked like the organization Charles Russell began, the Rutherford years changed almost everything they believed in. He changed their name to Jehovah’s Witnesses in 1931 to differentiate them from the remaining Russellites — although the legal name remains the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society.
    He was also responsible for the group’s practices that are frequently compared to cult behavior, including the shunning of holidays and birthdays, the banning of singing at services, and the requirement and sacred duty of door-to-door visits.
    And the group continued to grow.
    Jehovah Witness History Brooklyn Properties
    Squibb Building. Photo via Brooklyn Public Library
    In 1927, the Watchtower had just finished a new printing plant at 117 Adams Street, the Eagle noted. The Society was tearing down the old Beecher house at 124 Columbia Heights, as well as the surrounding buildings and was building a new nine-story dormitory and headquarters on the large site. This would be the new Bethel world headquarters.
    Jehovah Witness History Brooklyn Properties
    Volunteer workers at Brooklyn printing facility in 1953. Photo via Brooklyn Public Library
    Rutherford was still bitter about his incarceration by the government, and instructed Witnesses to never bend a knee to a worldly government, serve in the armed forces or salute a flag. In the 1930s and ’40s, the Witnesses would be in court for years over both issues and eventually won, changing constitutional law regarding freedom of religion.
    Joseph Rutherford died of colon cancer at his luxurious home called Beth Sarim, in San Diego, on January 8, 1942, at 72 years old. He was replaced as president by Nathan H. Knorr.
    Jehovah Witness History Brooklyn Properties
    New printing facilities. Photo via cultnews.com
    By 1950, the Witnesses, still growing, purchased a large block of land in Dumbo that included several tenement buildings as well as factory space. They planned to relocate the residents before tearing everything down for a huge new factory.
    The annual Witnesses’ Convention of 1953 included a tour of this new building. Thousands of people lined the streets from the Heights down to Dumbo, all eager to see the new printing presses.
    Jehovah Witness History Brooklyn Properties
    Witnesses visiting new printing press, 1950. Photo via Brooklyn Public Library
    In 1969, they acquired an even larger complex of buildings — the former Squibb pharmaceutical plant just down the street from the Bethel HQ. The number of volunteers living in the Bethel headquarters had grown to more than 1,300 people, and the organization also needed somewhere to store the paper for their massive printing operation.
    For the majority of the 20th century, the Witnesses continued to grow and quietly buy up surrounding real estate. They purchased some of largest buildings in the Heights and Dumbo, including the Leverich Towers, the Bossert Hotel, the Standish Arms and a score of smaller buildings. After the Hotel Margaretburned down in the 1990s, they built another large residence on the site.
    Jehovah Witness History Brooklyn Properties
    Bethel (center), Leverich Towers (left) and other Witness properties. Hotel Margaret on far right. Postcard via eBay
    Although some Heights residents did not particularly like the masses of Witnesses walking to work, or knocking on their doors, or not paying property taxes, most people had to admit that they were excellent stewards of their properties.
    The Witnesses had not been in favor of the landmarking of Brooklyn Heights in 1965, but after it went through, they complied with all of the rules. While most of their Brooklyn Heights holdings are within the landmark district, the large Squibb buildings on Columbia Street lie just outside of the designation area.
    Detractors — from the Eagle’s editorials in 1911 to the present — have always said, “If the Kingdom was coming any day, why not rent? Why buy all of this valuable real estate?”
    Brooklyn Development 85 Jay Street Dumbo
    85 Jay Street. Photo by Barbara Eldredge
    The Witnesses Begin Moving Out of Brooklyn
    More than a century after Charles Russell set up the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society in Brooklyn, the Witnesses decided it was time to move their operation somewhere with more expansion potential. They purchased a 250-acre forested plot in Warwick, N.Y., and in 2011 began liquidating their Brooklyn Heights holdings piece by piece. Even the Bethel headquarters is for sale.
    Estimates put the value of all their remaining properties at well over $1 billion. The full-block site at 85 Jay Street in Dumbo is particularly attractive to developers.
    With the Witnesses leaving Brooklyn Heights, they’re also leaving behind a rich local legacy. Though members of the organization weren’t always welcomed with open arms, the Jehovah’s Witnesses have had an undeniable impact on the Brooklyn of today. And their exodus with undoubtedly shape the Brooklyn of tomorrow.
  • Village Idiot
    Village Idiot
    107 years of “Advertising the Kingdom” from Brooklyn, NY, what is it New Yorkers will remember about JWs after their move in 2016?

    They will remember nothing. Nobody gives a fig about them even if they are neighbors.

  • SAHS
    SAHS

    Joseph Franklin Rutherford was basically just as whacky as Charles Taze Russell, but one thing he certainly did have going for him was a bold entrepreneurial sense which gave him the foresight to turn Russell’s little cult, the International Bible Students Association, into a thriving new religious sect. Rutherford had the ability to manipulate and play people so as to acquire a diligent, driven volunteer workforce to serve his needs from the bottom up while he projected his clenched-fisted leadership from the top down.

    In that respect, Rutherford was pretty much on par with Donald Trump – persevere and win at any and all costs. Rutherford’s tangible legacy carried through time his own unique brand of organized religion, replete with various anomalous and disingenuous twists and turns reminiscent of his bearded predecessor, but one thing he accomplished well: He put the Watchtower corporation on the map and changed an integral portion of the skyline in Brooklyn, New York.

    And in terms of stalwart ambition and old-school stubbornness, I’m sure he could have taught Donald Trump a thing or two.

  • blondie
    blondie

    But now there will be a larger base of property tax. There will be families and shoppers in the area, better parks than the WTS once promised and did not deliver on until forced. No more jws monopolizing basketball hoops and other facilities without paying for them.

    I wonder how long it will take for people to forget the handprint of the WTS in the NYC area. Fewer congregations not dominated by Bethel brothers on the BOE. New people to suck up to the GB.

  • jwleaks
    jwleaks

    Soon, very soon as one generation overlaps another generation the mere mention that Watchtower owned billions of dollars of prime Brooklyn real estate, sold it and pocketed the cash, will be considered apostate talk.

    As it is today, the mere mention that Watchtower used dedicated funds to build their president, JF Rutherford, the mansion Beth-Sarim, is called apostate lies.

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