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Lynch Triangle

Coordinates:40°41′5.2″N73°51′36″W / 40.684778°N 73.86000°W /40.684778; -73.86000
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Green space in Queens, New York

Reverend Lawrence E. Lynch Memorial Triangle – also known colloquially asLynch Triangle – is a 0.138-acre (0.056-hectare) park located at the intersection ofRockaway Boulevard,Atlantic Avenue, and 81st Street inOzone Park,Queens,New York City.

History

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The neighborhood's streets were laid out in a grid of streets and avenues at the turn of the 20th century while Rockaway Boulevard cuts diagonally through the grid on its route betweenCypress Hills andWoodmere. Triangular intersections that were too small to be developed were designated as public plazas, including this one. In 1949, the city designated this triangle in memory of Lynch, a Woodhaven resident who served as a chaplain in the Pacific Theater during World War Two.

Lawrence Lynch was born in Brooklyn in 1917, one of twelve children of devout Catholic parents who emigrated from Ireland. He served as an altar boy at the St. Sylvester church and was ordained as a priest in 1932 through theRedemptorist Order.[1]

During World War Two he was assigned as chaplain the legendary Fighting 69th Infantry of the National Guard, where he earned the nickname Father Cyclone for his tireless efforts to comfort the injured and ill of all faiths. He was killed at age 38 on April 25, 1945, during theBattle of Okinawa, while administering Last Rites to a dying soldier. Lynch was buried at the Redemptorist Cemetery, Mount Saint Alphonsus, inEsopus, New York. Although the triangle was named for Lynch in 1949,[2] the sign carrying the name disappeared and the honor was forgotten for more than a half century.[3]

In 2018, Ed Wendell, President of Woodhaven Cultural and Historical Society, approachedCouncilman Eric Ulrich to have the triangle rededicated for Lynch. On March 10, 2019 the triangle was officially named for Lynch with a ceremony that commemorated his actions during the war.[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^McClarey, Donald R. (April 24, 2018)."April 24, 1945: Death of Father Cyclone".The American Catholic. Archived fromthe original on April 17, 2019. RetrievedApril 17, 2019.
  2. ^"Queens Triangle Named for Priest".Brooklyn Daily Eagle. October 9, 1949.
  3. ^Khedaroo, Jennifer (March 12, 2019). "Queens triangle renamed for local priest killed in WWII".Queens Ledger.
  4. ^Colangelo, Lisa (March 7, 2019)."Queens to rededicate memorial to priest who tended to soldiers during WWII".AM New York. RetrievedSeptember 7, 2025.

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40°41′5.2″N73°51′36″W / 40.684778°N 73.86000°W /40.684778; -73.86000

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