Roosevelt and Moses had been feuding as far back as 1924, when the two clashed over funding for the Taconic State Parkway. (Roosevelt was then chairman of the Taconic State Park Commission; Moses was president of the Long Island State Park Commission.) Now Moses wanted another soaring bridge—not an unsightly tunnel—to connect Brooklyn to Lower Manhattan, and he was determined to prevail over his old nemesis, now president of the United States.
But the Power Broker met his match as community groups, civic leaders, historic preservationists, Wall Street executives, and the mayor and the governor, not to mention friends of the New York Aquarium at Castle Garden—which would have been demolished to make way for the bridge—closed ranks in opposition to his imperious plan. “A bridge with its terminus and approaches at the Battery will seriously disfigure perhaps the most thrillingly beautiful and world renowned feature of this great city,” wrote one opposition group.
But it was ultimately the secretary of war Harry Woodring, who intervened, scuttling Moses’s bridge because it was “seaward of a vital naval establishment,” the Brooklyn Navy Yard. Reportedly out of spite, Moses took retaliatory aim at the aquarium, one of the city’s most popular attractions, shuttering it on the dubious grounds that construction of the tunnel would undermine Castle Garden’s fragile foundation.
The last remnants of Little Syria were demolished in the early 1940s to make way for the entrance ramps to the tunnel. “Expediting auto traffic to suburbia took priority over the community of politically powerless city dwellers,” New York University professor Jack Tchen wrote in his 2002 essay, “Whose Downtown?!?” “The Syrians had to leave and restart their businesses and their lives somewhere else.”
“Most [Little Syria] residents were Christian, their loyalties divided only between St. George’s Syrian Catholic Church at 103 Washington Street and St. Joseph’s Maronite Church at 57 Washington Street,” wrote The New York Times’ David Dunlap in 2012. St. George’s is one of just three remaining buildings from the days of Little Syria and was declared an official landmark in 2009 by the city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission. “It remains Lower Manhattan’s most vivid reminder of the vanished ethnic community once known as the Syrian Quarter,” wrote the commission in its report, “and of the time when Washington Street was the Main Street of Syrian America.”