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. Slate Avatar
    Slate

    Great post. Touching story.

    1. Michael Richardson Avatar
      Michael Richardson

      I just recently researched this story because for some reason, I never forgot the airplane crash and Stephen Baltz. I remember it as if yesterday. I was outside playing in puddles after it had rained here in Hampton Roads, Virginia on December 16, 1960 when the news came over our one and only black & white TV set. I believe it was on CBS. I heard the news while I was on my mom and dad’s front porch wiping my feet. I was 7 years old then and couldn’t get a grip on a young child dying or realizing that death was an end. So much time has gone by and the world has changed along with it. But, even as I type this at 63 years old, I have never forgotten Stephen and that smiling pic above which was on the front page of the 12/17/60 morning edition of the Virginian-Pilot & Ledger Star, the newspaper for Hampton Roads. In fact they had him listed as 11 years old at that time. So much for my memories. I’ll always remember Stephen.

  2. Devin Cloninger Avatar
    Devin Cloninger

    Very touching post. Thank you. I love this website!!

  3. Chris Swartout Avatar
    Chris Swartout

    And another little irony about that building (or the one next to it, hard to tell from the photo). That is the building where the man who murdered Amy Watkins in the neighborhood lived and was arrested in. The murder, which I think happened in 1998, shocked the generally safe Park Slope/Prospect Heights area.

    I never knew about the plaque. Nice story.

  4. Jeremy Brooks Avatar

    Wow. Great find, and great story. Thanks for sharing!

  5. Lisa Avatar
    Lisa

    Fascinating post! Thanks.

  6. Eddy Rhead Avatar
    Eddy Rhead

    Fascinating as usual – but with added pathos

  7. Kevin Davitt Avatar
    Kevin Davitt

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

  8. Nick Avatar
    Nick

    This post is why Scouting NY is one of my favorite blogs to read right now. Thanks again.

  9. CMK Avatar
    CMK

    Fantastic post. First time visitor, will add to my list of sites to visit. Keep on keeping on.

  10. Margarette Avatar

    Lovely. So touching. Thanks for letting us know about this little gem.

  11. elizabeth Avatar

    love this post! I think about Stephen Baltz a lot, especially when I pass sterling and 7th. I’ve been so interested in this story since I first heard about it five years ago (there is a photo of the crash up at Triange Sports at 5th and Flatbush and that’s when I discovered it). we are coming up on 50 years since the crash, and I was thinking of doing a photo story on those who were around when it happened… anyway if you search, you can find articles with firsthand accounts from those on the ground, and the most affecting one is the story of the young nurse who tended to stephen overnight. they never told her that they knew he wasn’t going to make it. the smoking gun also has old newsreel footage of the crash. I’m glad you pointed out those different colored bricks; I’d always suspected that’s what they were from but I was never sure.

  12. […] NY on a memorial for Stephen Baltz, a Wilmette native who was briefly the only survivor of an in-air collision between two planes over […]

  13. Larry Bortoluzzi Avatar
    Larry Bortoluzzi

    Nice, touching story. As a long time Park Slope resident I walked by the previously vacant site many times and had heard the story of the crash but not in such detail.
    However, your current picture is wrong. You show the crash on the south side of Sterling going down the hill from 7th Avenue. The current picture is of an also new development across the street on the north side of Sterling (heading towards Flatbush Avenue). I believe the development that went up on the crash site is a darker red brick building. Check out Google maps and you’ll see.
    Thanks again for the story. — Larry

  14. Bryan Avatar

    This is really great, but… 55 cents?

  15. Bryan Avatar

    I am clearly an idiot. Great post.

  16. Scout Avatar

    Hi Larry, if you’re referring to the angle of my then-and-now picture comparison, I’m 99% sure I got it right. The key to solving it is the odd window that juts on the second building from the far right. The window is still there:
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/scoutingny/4686270691/
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/scoutingny/4686268295/

  17. Yiftach Avatar
    Yiftach

    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.

    Have you read Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives? One of the stories in that excellent collection, Metamorphosis, posits that there are three deaths: the first is when your body dies; the second, when it is consigned to the grave; and the third death is when your name is spoken by a living person for the last time.

    Thank you for doing your part to ensure Stephen Baltz’s immortality. Amazing story.

  18. Old Skool Avatar
    Old Skool

    I was a kid in LIC when this happened. Thanks for a great story. Very touching.

  19. brian j.mcmanus Avatar
    brian j.mcmanus

    I was eleven years old, the same age as Steven and all my classmates were praying for him. It seemed impossible that
    he died and the picture of this little boy, found in the snow,
    will forever be in my memory. The added info regarding the
    change that was found in his pocket and now in the memorial
    plaque is amazing. As always, thanks for a brilliant post.

  20. CarlosPC Avatar
    CarlosPC

    You are an awesome writer.