Summerhill Bar on Gothamist
A Brooklynian member gets a shout out/quote in Gothamist:
"Summerhill, a new "boozy sandwich shop" on Nostrand Avenue in Crown Heights, issued a press release on Monday advertising one of its cocktails next to a "bullet hole-ridden wall"—remnants of a "a rumored backroom illegal gun shop."
"Yes, that bullet hole-ridden wall was originally there and, yes, we're keeping it," the release states.
Owner Becca Brennan, a 31-year-old former attorney, said the decision to preserve the wall damage at 637 Nostrand Avenue and describe it as bullet holes for promotional purposes was a "cheeky" one. Speaking to us in the dimly-let, beach-inspired room, Brennan said, "Just looking at the angle I don't know if that is possible that that's a bullet hole. We call it that because if you look at the history, someone seriously said, 'Isn't that the place where we could buy guns?' And then we were like, 'okay.'"
According to Brennan, the idea to advertise bullet holes came from a comment on the website Brooklynian, where commenters trade gossip and details about new businesses. Last September, an anonymous commenter wrote, "If I'm not mistaken this was the corner store where you could buy a 'certified pre-owned' firearm back in the day." "
Brennan said she did not investigate the gun rumor further. "I don't have any backup to that, but when you think about it as a joke like, yep, that's a bullet hole," she said.
The establishment, which describes itself as an "oasis" on Nostrand Avenue, is not the first to mine the material or oral history of Crown Heights, a rapidly gentrifying neighborhood with Jewish and West Indian roots. Between 2000 and 2010, the neighborhood's majority-black population shrunk while its white population nearly doubled, to 16 percent. And between 2011 and 2015, according to a recent DNAInfo analysis, the 11216 zip code covering parts of Bedford-Stuyvesant and Crown Heights saw among the most significant increases in high-income renters in the city.
Last September, bar owner Dan Wilby pushed back at community opposition to his new Franklin Avenue watering hole, Crow Hill. Crown Heights was known as Crow Hill in the 19th century, and while historians debate the origin of this moniker, at that time the word "crow" was used as derogatory term. Wilby eventually changed the bar's name, citing a "significant and regrettable oversight," but another ode still exists in Crow Hill Crossfit. (Bar Corvo, an Italian Restaurant on Washington Avenue that used the Italian for "crow," recently closed.)
Beyond the "bullet" wall, Brennan's press release advertises Forty Ounce Rose, a brand of wine bottled to recall a 40-oz. Colt 45. Brennan said she is planning to serve them in paper bags. That choice that has been criticized at other bars for making light of poverty—an issue Crown Heights and other gentrifying neighborhoods are grappling with.
We asked Brennan to clarify her thoughts on the symbolism of the 40s. "I'm not an authority so don't feel comfortable commenting on anything other than my business—a new bar and restaurant that locals (/my neighbors) seem to really enjoy and appreciate," she said, via email.
"Actions speak louder than words," said Natherlene Bolden, 55, a founding member of the Crown Heights Tenants Union and a resident of the neighborhood since 1978. CHTU is a coalition of Crown Heights residents that challenges landlords who hike rents and harass tenants. The group protested outside of Crow Bar last fall.
"You are making money off of... negative aspects in our community which, you know, you're happy when these things go on because you can make money off of it," Bolden added. "And it's like you're not thinking about the black people or the long-term residents in the community. Or maybe you are thinking about them but they don't matter."
Brennan, who grew up in Toronto and moved to Crown Heights two years ago, alluded Monday to the evidence of gentrification on Nostrand Avenue, three blocks east of the bars and coffee shops of Franklin Avenue. She says she is close with the owners of the bodega next door, who used to rent the Summerhill space. "They got pushed out rent-wise," she said.
"I've noticed a lot of shutters," Brennan added. To her customers, "I was like, 'You're paying Franklin prices because I'm paying Franklin prices, to be honest." (Cocktails, including one called the #VanLife, run for $12.)
The comparisons to Franklin Avenue are no mistake. "As someone who lives on Nostrand, I was getting tired of walking to Franklin," Brennan said. "It's three blocks, but it's three long blocks. You just deserve something close, and a hang out, especially if you live on New York [Avenue] or Schenectady or something like that."
http://gothamist.com/2017/07/18/new_crown_heights_eatery_advertises.php
Comments
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That pasted as one paragraph, sorry guys! But here is the quote.............. "According to Brennan, the idea to advertise bullet holes came from a comment on the website Brooklynian, where commenters trade gossip and details about new businesses. Last September, an anonymous commenter wrote, "If I'm not mistaken this was the corner store where you could buy a 'certified pre-owned' firearm back in the day."
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If the drug war received real memorials like the Vietnam War and other wars, people would have other ways to honor the past. /s
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a "bullet riddled wall"?? 40 oz rose?? you gotta be kidding me.
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King Tai Bar, up the street at Bergen also took its name from a past incarnation as a chinese Restaurant from the 70's .Image is more upbeat thou as a Miami style club! Bullet holes? I doubt it, probably just a misguided contractor looking for a pipe.
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Several sources quote her as saying the bullet holes are not real. BTW, it is unclear to me whether this Ch 7 truck was there filming yesterday.
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Was mentioned on 1010 WINS today
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This is one of the least offensive examples I've seen of someone trying to profit from drugs and violence.
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It is certainly less offensive than much of the music around. I suspect there is not as much outrage around the music because the public imagines that the (black?) artist is the one profiting. However the whole industry profits, and they are a variety of hues. In the case of this bar, the owner seems to have only one hue. Easy target?
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From Brokelyn today: http://brokelyn.com/locals-plan-open-forum-crown-heights-bullet-hole-bar/
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I am kind of disappointed I will be out of town, and will miss the event. It looks like it could be a good show.
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Aren't there some big corporations that we can make the focus of our angry protests? This lady clearly made some dumb comments.. Let's move on. We need to support small businesses in our community.
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New bars need a gimmick to survive. We have some that focus on craft beer, others that focus on tiki cocktails, and others that serve both cocktails and pie. I'd like next one to serve sub sandwiches. Basically a Potbelly sandwich location with beer. ...Berg'n falls a little short.
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Is it controversial to think that this bar is part of the new reality of the area...and that different cultures and people coming together is part of Crown Heights tradition? The event is sounding more divisive than what the bar did. Sometimes the "our neighborhood" "your neighborhood" thing to me seems old fashioned.
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Once and a while, people feel the need to state "I know I look like them, but I am not like them." I can't imagine that ever changing.
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Agree with the two previous posts completely... Also, I've decided to stop in a for a drink at some point to support a women owned business. : - )
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I'm gonna disagree with y'all and say all of the backlash was warranted. Impact is greater than intent. Do I think she intended to offend? Not at all. But there's a reason why a number of businesses (both new and old) in the neighborhood chose not to dredge up the difficult history of this place. Because profiting off of people's trauma is dumb and not a good look. Even if they aren't real bullet holes, marketing the holes as such make her seem out of touch with the community.
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Oh My! The trauma! Well she had real bullet holes in the facade from wanna be og shooting across nostrand at some guy just last year. Im sure she got past that trauma and could joke about it. Its a lovely bar with a very diverse clientele. Its a shame its being blown up into this "HUGE RACIST INCIDENT"
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Yup.Elcaminoman said:The event is sounding more divisive than what the bar did. -
A part of me is kind of disappointed no journalist has covered how violent the recent past was. I suspect the newbies believe that people are exaggerating the past, and implicitly stating that "all that violence and dysfunction is almost over now, because all of THOSE people are gone, and/or going away." I would certainly be annoyed if people imagined I was like THOSE people merely as a result of living here through it all and/or my hue.
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I went there last night for the first time. I kept forgetting about it before this whole hub-bub since i live a mile down the road. It seemed pretty empty in my opinion (compared to what others on this board have said; that it's generally packed). Maybe like 5 or 6 people at the bar, some of which were obviously staff staying after shifts, and a small party of people in a corner table. Mixed crowd. no one was next to the "bullet hole" wall, haha The owner came in at some point to tell the bartender something about their upcoming brunch service. I assume they are trying to gloss over this controversy with the gentrifier's kryptonite; brunch.
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Some avacdo toast and and a few pitchers of sangria will certainly make folks not care about any missteps
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However, these folks are likely to remain upset: https://m.facebook.com/events/279295915880433?view=permalink&id=280892375720787
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Excellent point! Why this quiet business and not the loud speaker systems cruising Nostrand blasting violent lyrics?whynot_31 said:It is certainly less offensive than much of the music around. I suspect there is not as much outrage around the music because the public imagines that the (black?) artist is the one profiting. However the whole industry profits, and they are a variety of hues. -
Becky would be wise to encourage her clientele to patronize the local shops esp Tracy's cute place across the street which is struggling. especially considering "Tracy Reid, 47, a small business owner across the street from Summerhill Restaurant and Bar " was very outspoken at the protest. She works hard to make that little shop stay afloat.
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I find myself annoyed by the protester Prescott in the NYDailyNews saying" This is not what the neighborhood needs. The neighborhood needs child care. It needs schools." Well, unless the City or the local BID bands together to recruit child care centers, that's not going to happen. And the schools are not the province of your basic entry-level entrepreneurs. There is a lot a local entrepreneur can do: try to source goods locally, try to hire from the surrounding neighborhood, try to invest in developing their staffs' business and management acumen, try to provide muffins or sandwiches for community group meetings, contribute to some fundraisers for neighborhood causes. They can run a good business and sweep their sidewalk and bag their trash correctly and keep noise at at an appropriate level. They can be sensitive to neighborhood needs and wants and preferences, and their ability to afford such things. Most of the entrepreneurs on nostrand are like that. Becca could have stood to learn something from them. No. It's not up to individual entrepreneurs to deal with schools and child care needs. That is up to the community orgs that deal with such issues, our llocal school leadership to be responsive and proactive, our local families to be involved and demand what they want and need, and our pols to be accountable too all those parties. Seriously. Sorry. All the cheesy "Resistance" these days makes me annoyed at untargeted anger and action.
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it's a bummer to watch literally one clueless lady become the scapegoat for everyone's pain over gentrification; made all the more easy to hate because we live in a patriarchal society that vilifies women ten fold for the same transgressions as men (bye becky anyone? where were these catchy phrases at the Crow Bar protest...). let's not even discuss how many times i've seen her be called a C*** all over the internet. i can't support that shit either. meanwhile, the predominately male landlords, real estate agents, and developers with actual intent and means to cause displacement and gentrification continue to do what they do best with zero consequences (and lots of profit!) and these protesters can't/won't aim their outrage towards real systems of oppression. no, it's easier to just blame the white lady with the small business.
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Even if they are successful in driving her out of town, the factors you describe remain
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Agree with supplenuckles. I watched the speeches and found them unnecessarily personal and aiming a lot at this person. By the way, they serve that brand of 40 oz rose at other places in the city.
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