LaGuardia Logo

LaGuardia & Wagner Archives

  • About Us
  • Media Reproductions
    Request Photograph Reproductions Request Multi-Media Reproductions
  • Contact Us

We are moving!
Between June 2nd and July 28th, on-site research appointments and media reproduction services cannot be provided.
We look forward to welcoming researchers to our new offices in August.

    Skip Navigation LinksHome | Borders Migration Home| Shoshanna Soleyn
Migration, Homes, and Borders
  • René Sing Brooks
  • Maylyn Iglesias
  • ​Jeremy Orozco
  • Shoshanna Soleyn

Ways of Seeing Jackson Heights / René Sing Brooks

In 2018, after searching for a new apartment for over a year, my partner and I moved from Elmhurst—where we had lived for twelve years—to Jackson Heights. We knew we wanted to stay in Queens, but Jackson Heights wasn’t our first choice. Sunnyside was the prize, but we couldn’t afford it.

In Jackson Heights I found such density of people, machines, shadows, and colors. And sounds that seem to cling to Roosevelt Avenue sidewalks blended with the clicks-and-clacks of the number seven running overhead. It isn’t a community at ease; there are tensions, suspicions. There is something being shaped, and sometimes we see its kindest gestures, other times the sharp claws of intolerance. But there is communal hope that needs tending and visually documenting the daily flow might give us hints of what’s at stake.

WAYS OF SEEING JACKSON HEIGHTS is a photographic exploration of multiethnic and multi-cultural life in Jackson Heights, NY, particularly within the Roosevelt Avenue/Northern Blvd corridor. This project captures images of work, culture, faith, and social life, inviting a shared witnessing of the promises of communal life through the meeting of traditions and aspirations across generations.

caption

Hampton Street, Elmhurst, Queens, Spring 2021

caption

90th St/Elmhurst Ave., Jackson Heights, Queens #7 Station, Spring 2021

caption

37th Avenue, Jackson Heights, Queens, Spring 2021

caption

74th Street/ between Roosevelt and 37th Ave. Jackson Heights, Queens, Spring 2021

caption

37th Avenue, Jackson Heights, Queens, Spring 2021

caption

Roosevelt Avenue, Jackson Heights, Queens, Spring 2021

caption

37th Avenue, Jackson Heights, Queens, Spring 2021

caption

Roosevelt Avenue, Jackson Heights, Queens, Spring 2021

caption

33rd Street, Jackson Heights, Queens, Spring 2021

caption

Diversity Plaza, Jackson Heights, Queens, Spring 2021

caption

Roosevelt Avenue, Jackson Heights, Queens, Spring 2021

Archival Research: René Sing Brooks

I have been photographing Jackson Heights and the larger Queens borough for a few years now, guided by reflections on demographic shifts and its impact on the architectural texture of mainly Jackson Heights. In my research I instinctively gravitate more toward images than textual narratives, out of my interest in how places and people are historically depicted.

For my project with the Wagner Archive I found that while events, such as the Queens Pride Parade, are well-documented, there are fewer images portraying everyday life. I found some images that document buildings and events I myself have documented more recently and that was an exciting connection. However, I wish to fill this hole in the archival collection with more imagery of the everyday happenings of this diverse and lively neighborhood.

Access this document
Access this document

Research Video

What’s It Mean to be Nuyorican? / Maylyn Iglesias

This photography project explores the joy, pain, and paradoxes of growing up Nuyorican on the Lower East Side. My story and Loisaida can’t be separated. They’re intertwined. I will never know my family story. This neighborhood is my origin, the only family story I know. Like the Bodegas that are vanishing- I feel my identity slipping away with each shuttered storefront. A walking apparition in my own community. I am on a quest to document the last vestiges of Nuyorican Culture, community and identity in our neighborhood.

caption

Mom at Christmas – East 6th Street, Loisaida, December 1978

caption

Descansa en Paz – Gouverneur Street, Lower East Side, April 2021

caption

Yo Soy Boricua Pa Que Tu Los Sepas! – Coney Island, Brooklyn, July 2020

caption

Desvanecida – Columbia Street, Lower East Side, April 2021

caption

Nacieron Aqui – East 3rd Street, Loisaida, January 2020

caption

Pedro Albizu Campos Memorial – The Father of the Puerto Rican Independence Movement, Avenue C, Loisaida Avenue, January 2020

caption

Dolor Del Alma – East 9th Street, Loisaida, April 2021

caption

Verano en Loisaida – East 13th Street, Loisaida, May 2016

caption

Ponte un Candle y Pray – Attorney Street, Lower East Side, January 2020

caption

La Lucha Continua-Siempre Pa'Lante – La Plaza Cultural De Armando Perez, Loisaida, May 2021

Archival Research: Maylyn Iglesias

LaGuardia Wagner Archive Document
Council Members (Miriam Friedlander 1974-199) - Series: Legislative Files - Box #051424 - Folder#22 - Local Laws 3 - “Loisaida Avenue” 1987

In 1986 a request was made to Council Members allowing Avenue C on the Lower East Side of Manhattan (specifically from East Houston Street to 14th Street) to be doubly named as Loisaida and Avenue C. The request was made by numerous community groups present in the neighborhood at the time which was largely made up of Puerto Ricans.

The name was coined by the late, great, Puerto Rican Poet Bittman John “Bimbo” Rivas in his poem “Loisaida”, which loosely translated is Lower East Side in Spanglish. The common vernacular of the community of newly arrived Puerto Ricans on the mainland. On February 2, 1987 the legislation was passed.

Growing up Avenue C all my life and taking for granted that it had always been called Loisaida, reading about the history of how it came to be inspired me to dig deeper into my communities history and the contributions Nuyoricans have made to the Lower East Side.

Research Video

Nurses / Jeremy Orozco

One of every four Filipinos living in the New York and New Jersey area are working in healthcare, that being said, they are also four times more likely to be working as nurses. According to Business Insider, nurses of filipino descent comprise 4% of the US workforce but nearly a third of registered nurse deaths due to COVID-19.

Chiara is a registered Nurse, from Cebu, Philippines. She is 26 years old and migrated here at a young age thanks to her mother who sacrificed a great deal for the best interest of her children. Chiara returned to the Philippines later to study Nursing at Cebu Doctors University.

The project “Nurses”, follows a group of Nurses who are all graduates of Cebu Doctors University that have migrated to the US. The project sheds light on an alternate point of view of healthcare workers. The project Nurses is a long term project that will continue until I have a solid body of work that I can publish.

caption

March 11, 2021: A night shot of the Emergency Room, captured outside of Queens Hospital in Jamaica. This is Chiara’s first place of employment as a Registered Nurse.

caption

May 31st, 2021: Inside of Chiara’s closet, a row of uniforms for Registered Nurses at Chiara’s current place of employment, New York Presbyterian, Columbia

caption

May 14th, 2021: Outside of Eaunice’s apartment, a block away from the hospital. Chiara often comes here for lunch break during her twelve hour shifts. Eaunice is an Operating Room Nurse, allowing her to be home at 3pm.

caption

May 5th, 2021: Inside Patty’s room, a long exposure as she browses social media waiting for Chiara to get home to have dinner together.

caption

April 17th, 2021: Karaoke at Japas NYC, the girls would often go to karaoke after duty or studying to release stress by singing and dancing, a common activity in the filipino community.

caption

February 20th, 2021: Chiara patiently waits for the 7 train to arrive, the commute to Eaunice’s apartment for a friend's dinner has just started.

caption

May 8th, 2021: Patty and Eaunice watching movies at two in the morning, they are the last two awake during their trip to a lake house upstate with friends.

caption

May 14th, 2021: Thai Food and Bubble Tea are a go-to for lunch. Chiara, Nicko and Eaunice enjoying their meal in Eaunice's living room.

caption

August 2nd, 2020: Chiara sitting with her plants in uniform. Chiara acquired many plants during quarantine.

caption

May 14th, 2021: - Eaunice poses next to her Nursing degree. Eaunice graduated top five in her school which allowed her to have her tuition reimbursed.

caption

May 14th, 2021 - The number one hospital in New York, number four in the nation. Chiara’s goal has always been to work for NYP, she is now a Registered Nurse at NYP Columbia.

Archival Research: Jeremy Orozco

During World War 2, an abundance of nurses enlisted to assist soldiers with medical help. This caused a big shortage of nurses in the US. Hospitals became vacant, leading the government to ramp up on programs to push nursing as a profession for the population to consider. Millions of dollars were put to put towards encouraging women to choose nursing as their career. Once the war ended, the fall off of government funding caused nurses to quit which led to vacancies once again across the hospitals in the U.S.

America didn’t bother with raising pay as an incentive to have nurses come back to work. The U.S. eventually decided to look across their borders for a solution. The US created a temporary visitors program, this program led to Filipinos in abundance to be recruited. The Filipinos became dominant in the field when over ten thousand nurses migrate to the US over the span of a decade. The transition was seamless, given they had western medical training during the American period in the Philippines.

The document I found in the archives discusses another nursing shortage in the 1990s and puts this story into a more recent historical perspective.

Research Video

Good Things Comes Out Of This Tiny Kitchen / Shoshanna Soleyn

My photographs and videos document my Trinidadian mother's cooking to explore her own heritage as a New Yorker. “Good Things Comes Out Of This Tiny Kitchen” is something that my mother always says. The incredible thing about my mother’s tiny kitchen is the amount of love, wisdom, and delicious food that comes out. It shows my mother’s heritage, where she comes from, and the traditions we get to learn.

Trinidad and Tobago is made up of two main islands and several smaller islands. The country has a wide range of ethnicities, religions, and cultures. It was colonized first by Spain and then by the British. August 31, 1962, Trinidad and Tobago left the West Indies Federation and became independent, with Erica Williams as their prime minister.

My mother, Sheon Duke, was born and raised in Trinidad and Tobago. She had to leave her country at the age of seventeen to help my aunt out after my aunt was wounded by a gunshot. My mom was not thrilled to come to the United States because she did not know anybody in America and cried throughout her entire plane ride. After living in the U.S. for several years, my mother decided to stay. She had me and my two sisters and worked a variety of jobs. Growing up with my mother was very interesting because some words she said while talking to us sounded different from things that we will say sometimes. I respect and love that my mother was born in Trinidad because we get to embrace another culture and learn a lot more and listen to all of her fun, exciting stories. After all, how my mother was raised was very different from how we were raised.

My mother loves cooking. She started learning at the age of thirteen when she was living in Trinidad. She learns from her mistakes when trying something for the first time, and she often takes tips from other people to make her food better. I was worried that my mother would not want to have her photo taken but she has been happy to share her cooking with me and allow me to create photographs capturing things we do as a family, and what she does in her everyday life.

caption

A Photo Memory, May 2021, Brooklyn

caption

Life in Trinidad

caption

Life To My First Born, New York 1995

caption

Life Is Good, February 2021, Brooklyn, New York

caption

Getting Ready For Work, May 2021 Brooklyn, New York

caption

Family T.V. Time, May 2021 Brooklyn, New York

caption

Online Church Service, May 2021 Brooklyn, New York

caption

Mama Dukes Cooking, May 2021 Brooklyn, New York

caption

Mama Dukes Cooking Part 2, May 2021 Brooklyn, New York

caption

The Secret Ingredients To Cooking, May 2021 Brooklyn, New York

caption

Salt fish, May 2021, Brooklyn, New York.

caption

Saltfish and Fry Bakes, May 2021 Brooklyn, New York

Archival Research: Shoshanna Soleyn

I chose this photo from the LaGuardia and Wagner Archives because it shows Carnivale, which is a festival that takes place in Trinidad, my mother’s country, each February. Everyone wears bright colors and beautiful costumes as shown in this photo from the Queens Pride Parade. This is one of the only examples of Caribbean culture that I could find in the archival collection so I am happy to contribute photos that highlight a different side of Trinidadian culture. My work shows my mother’s traditional cooking and a more personal view of her culture as she teaches me about it in Brooklyn.

Research Video




Media Reproductions
  • Request Photograph Reproductions
  • Request Multi-Media Reproductions
Additional Resources
  • Teacher Resources
  • Mobile Applications
  • LaGuardia Community College Library
  • Related Links
  • Webdatabase User Satisfaction Survey
More Information
  • About the Archives
  • Contact
Follow us

Copyright©2021 LaGuardia and Wagner Archives LaGuardia Community College

City University of New York Logo CUNY LGBTQIA Consortium Logo