Brownstoner takes on Brooklyn history in Nabe Names, a series of briefs on the origins and surprising stories of neighborhood nomenclature.

Windsor Terrace
A man drives around a Shetland pony on 17th Street in the 1970s, which one resident said was one of the strangest events to happen in the area. Photo by Michael Catellano via Facebook

Past Prospect Park’s southwestern corner lies the residential nabe of Windsor Terrace, abounding in American flags, columned stoop-porch hybrids and off-grid or dead-end streets. 

Just nine blocks wide, Windsor Terrace is bordered by the neighborhoods of Park Slope and Kensington, as well as Green-Wood Cemetery and Prospect Park. Today, the area abounds in low-key, long-standing landmarks like Farrell’s Bar and Kensington Stables.

Despite its petite perimeters, an astounding number of highly regarded films have been shot in the area, from Brighton Beach Memoirs (1986) to Dog Day Afternoon (1975) and The Amazing Spider-Man (2012).

Prospect Park West in the mid-1990s. Photo via NYPL
Prospect Park West in the mid 1990s. Photo via NYPL

The nabe’s name comes directly from Mother England’s southeastern town of Windsor, which English settlers deemed a proper title for the Brooklyn neighborhood. Like many swaths of Kings County, the area was originally Canarsee Indian territory and subsequently became farmland, in this case owned by John Vanderbilt.

While many neighborhood old-timers are holding fast to their properties in Windsor Terrace, preventing total turnover, the area’s time-worn landmarks increasingly contrast with fresh storefronts, new development and young transplants drawn to the nabe’s proximity to Prospect Park, Park Slope and the hub of neighborly culture Brooklyn has always been.

Prospect Park's 15th Street Entrance in 1915. Photo via the Weekly Nabe
Prospect Park’s 15th Street entrance in 1915. Photo via the Weekly Nabe
Windsor Terrace Brooklyn Fog
A foggy morning in Windsor Terrace. Photo by Jeff Scherer

Related Stories
Would You Pay $2.2 Million for This Windsor Terrace Bay-Windowed Brownstone?
The History of Windsor Terrace’s 715-811 Greenwood Avenue
Unusual Windsor Terrace Car Break-Ins Have Neighbors Talking

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