Mapleton contains
Washington Cemetery, the largest inhabited Jewish cemetery in New York. Many Orthodox Jews are buried there, as are many prominent people. The cemetery is located on Bay Parkway and stretches from 59th Street to East 3rd Street. It contains two baseball fields, two basketball courts, fitness equipment, four handball courts, and four playgrounds. Properties in the neighborhood that were too small to develop, such as
Dahill Triangle, have also been designated as parks. The neighborhood also contained a park named Mapleton Park (also known as Mapleton Oval) at 62nd Street and 20th Avenue, which was completed in 1916. The field lasted through at least 1920 The oval may have been named after an old neighborhood name for the area. Today, the legacy of the name Mapleton Park exists in a local synagogue, the Young Israel of Mapleton Park, near
65th Street and
Bay Parkway (22nd Avenue). and was sold in 2012 to a developer, who planned to demolish the bowling alley to construct condominiums and a synagogue. At the time of its closing, Maple Lanes was one of the few remaining bowling alleys in Brooklyn. ==References==