This is 126 Sterling Place in Park Slope. Most likely, you’ve never paid much attention to it…

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…and if you have, chances are you haven’t noticed the that the bricks on the upper levels don’t match the rest of the building.

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While it might seem like a trivial detail, this is pretty much the only clue that the area once played a role in one of the worst airplane disasters in history.

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On December 16, 1960, two commercial airliners collided in mid-air over Staten Island. One plane crashed into Staten Island; the other, in Park Slope, Brooklyn, with much of the wreckage landing at the intersection of Sterling Place and Seventh Avenue. Ten brownstones, a church, a funeral home, a deli, and a Chinese laundry all caught fire or were destroyed.

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This is the above picture recreated today. A new development has replaced the building on the corner and an additional level has been added to the next building, but the rest is more or less the same.

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Of the 128 passengers and crew members aboard the two flights, all were killed save for one young boy: 10 year old Stephen Baltz of Wilmette, Illinois.

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Stephen was traveling alone to meet his mother and sister, who had flown in the previous day. They were planning to spend Christmas together in Yonkers.

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Somehow, Stephen miraculously survived the plummet of over 5,000 feet, though was badly injured. Local residents quickly rolled him in a snowbank to extinguish his burning clothes, and he was rushed to the nearby New York Methodist Hospital.

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Stephen was conscious, and was briefly interviewed by rescuers. He related that, prior to the crash, he saw snow falling on the city out the plane window, and “It looked like a picture of a fairy book. It was a beautiful sight.” As for the crash: “I heard a big noise while we were flying. The last thing I remember was the plane falling.”

Stephen succumbed to his injuries and died the following day.

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Above is a picture of the New York Methodist Hospital’s Phillips Chapel, open to the public 24 hours a day. It is largely unremarkable except for one small detail when you first enter: a plaque on the wall memorializing Stephen and the other 135 victims of the crash.

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Reading “Our tribute to a brave little boy,” you will also find 65 cents in nickels and dimes melded to the plaque.

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This was the pocket change Stephen Baltz carried with him on that flight.

I find this small plaque to be that rare instance of perfection in simplicity, effortlessly compelling the viewer to reflect on all aspects of life: hopes and dreams; triumphs and failures; priorities and difficulties; friends and family; life and death.

If you’re ever in the area, stop by and take a moment to touch the coins for yourself. You can visit the chapel by entering the New York Methodist Hospital through the main entrance (non-emergency) on 6th Street between 7th & 8th Avenues. The door to the chapel will be directly in front of you, and you don’t have to ask permission to go in.

I’m one of those people whose concept of the afterlife is that we live on until we’re forgotten – and for reasons I’m not eloquent enough to put into words, I hope Stephen Baltz is never forgotten.

-SCOUT

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  1. […] I wrote a detailed post about the incident last summer, which has become one of the most popular on my site. The comments are especially touching, and I’ve posted a sampling below. It’s clear that anyone who was alive in New York that day will never forget the incident. […]

  2. Allan Chin Avatar
    Allan Chin

    I was only 3 months old, so I wouldn’t have remembered anything, but it made it into the folklore of growing up in New York. I learned of it at least by the time of its 10th anniversary, in 1970.

    Thanks for the pictures of the Stephen Baltz Memorial plaque. I always wondered what it looked like and where exactly I could find it. Now I’ll come down to pay my respects and say a prayer…

  3. Peter Avatar

    According to accounts of the day, the crippled United jet was trying to land in Prospect Park but could not make it.

    Possibly, but there’s no way to know for sure. There were no radio communications from the United jet after the impact, and the aircraft either didn’t have a cockpit voice recorder or it wasn’t recovered.

    Looking at pictures of the aftermath, there’s one obvious difference between then and now: spectators were allowed to go very close to the crash scene, today the police lines would be blocks away with the entire neighborhood evacuated.

  4. […] what it has to do with this plane crash, then you should read this.  Or, if you like quirky little buildings like […]

  5. Nelida Totter Avatar

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  6. pb Avatar
    pb

    i was 8 years old at the time. my father was the united employee who was waiting to flag the plane into its gate at the terminal when it arrived. he came home that night and told the family how he was waiting for the plane to arrive when his supervisor came out and got him. i remember following the story very closely because steven was very close in age to me and because my father worked for united.

  7. […] he had sustained. Today there’s a plaque there for Baltz, which includes the 65 cents he had in his pocket that day… and some believe his ghost still resides in the […]

  8. Rich Jewett Avatar
    Rich Jewett

    Inside of Methodist hospital ,they have a picture of Steven in the snowbank

  9. jpm Avatar
    jpm

    My brother moved onto that block in 1970. The lot was still vacant. There was also a story about the Catholic Church on the corner of 5th Ave. It had (and still as I believe) a large angel on the top of it’s steeple with an unusual iron brace holding it in place. Story we heard was that the plane knocked it off the steeple as it as coming down. Anyone know if it’s true, or an urban legend?

  10. George miller Avatar
    George miller

    This tragedy happened three years before I was born. As a young boy living in massapequa I don’t recall my age but was new to reading the paper and if memory serves me correctly news day had a magazine inside that had ran an article about this crash, perhaps it was the ten year anniversary told a story of two policemen who were on patrol that day and narrowly.missed getting caught up in the crash.
    That story stuck with me my entire life. I never recalled where it happened but remember the boy, and of the coins that were in his pocket. I however thought the accident happened in Chicago but several years aGo while explaining it to co workers was told where it took place, and the Internet brought back the story and so much more, especially now the past twenty years working at LaGaurdia Airport.