The Greater Astoria Historical Society's “Long Island City Forum” is a multi-faceted program that includes lectures, video presentations, walking tours, exhibits and programs designed for local schools to increase awareness of Long Island City history. Regular tours include the
East River and the piano factory
Steinway & Sons. The Greater Astoria Historical Society sponsors an annual Haunted Waters Walking Tour along the
East River in Long Island City as part of the
Socrates Sculpture Park's Halloween Harvest Festival. The Greater Astoria Historical Society's most recent program, the Winged Fist Project, is dedicated to preserving the legacy of the
Irish American Athletic Club, an amateur athletic organization that was active in Long Island City in the first two decades of the 20th century.
Preservation When possible, the Greater Astoria Historical Society attempts to acquire and preserve artifacts of historical significance to Queens. The GAHS played an important role "in saving the cornerstone of Congregation Mishkan Israel, the third oldest temple in Queens. It had been sitting near (a sidewalk in Queens) until a
Greek American, George Stamatiades, and others helped to get a hearse from Quinn's funeral home, whose historical background is
Irish Catholic, to save the synagogue stone," and relocate it to the Greater Astoria Historical Society. They also lobbied the city EDC to preserve the
Dutch Kills Millstones.
Collections The holdings of the Greater Astoria Historical Society, on loan and owned, include a collection of rare and unusual items available for public perusal. The GAHS maintains a Library/Research Center that contains over 10,000 items, including books and publications on local history, a photographic record of the community, and neighborhood ephemera and memorabilia. The GAHS holdings include dozens of antiquarian atlases and thousands of historic maps of
Queens and surrounding areas from the now defunct Belcher Hyde map company among others. The holdings also include an almost complete run (or the
morgue file) of the
Long Island Star Journal, "a daily paper that informed the community about local and world news until it folded in 1968. A banner across the
Star-Journal masthead reminded readers that the newspaper's name came from the merger of the
Long Island Daily Star (1876) and the
North Shore Daily Journal—The Flushing Journal (1841)."
Historic preservation The Greater Astoria Historical Society actively solicits the donation of photographic images related to
Queens history. The GAHS holdings include thousands of black and white photographs,
photographic slides,
glass negatives and
tintypes and include the works of notable Queens historians
Vincent F. Seyfried and Frank Carrado, informally known as the "Mayor of Long Island City." The GAHS has published hundreds of these photos in their books, and has scanned thousands of images. More than 3,000 of these images are available online through the Astoria History Project. The GAHS also has an extensive collection of images relating to the history of the East River. The Greater Astoria Historical Society has a historical plaque program, which designates noteworthy locations in Queens. The GAHS has erected a plaque on the apartment building at 43-30 46th Street, in
Sunnyside, Queens, where legendary jazz musician
Bix Beiderbecke, "the remote and mysterious jazz cornettist... died in obscurity." In collaboration with local historians, the Greater Astoria Historical Society has authored or co-authored four books on the history of Queens:
Long Island City,
Postcards of Long Island City,
The East River, and
The Queensboro Bridge. The GAHS has also published a free map that includes popular walking tours along the East River in Queens. The GAHS also compiles a weekly column for the
Queens Gazette, summarizing historical articles from the
Long Island Star Journal, a newspaper that chronicled life in Queens, from the 1840s until 1968. ==Facilities==