1890s to 1910s In the 1890s, businessman
William Steinway began a project to construct a tunnel for trolleys under the East River to link
Manhattan to his
company town,
Steinway Village, in
Astoria, Queens; the tunnel would be named the
Steinway Tunnel after him. Work on the project was halted in 1892 after a dynamite blast near a shaft in Long Island City killed five workers. Steinway died before his tunnels' completion, and financier
August Belmont Jr. saw the project to completion between 1905 and 1907. The tunnels, which pass directly beneath the island, are now part of the
New York City Subway system and used by the
IRT Flushing Line (). A
shaft dug into the rock outcrop known as '''Man-o'-War Reef''' during construction of the tunnel produced excess
landfill that built up the reef and created a small island. Belmont Island, named after the financier, became the legal name of the island. Two other groups of rocks were located between Man-o'-War Rock and Blackwell's Island. Parsons noted that the site of the shaft was commonly called Man-of-War Reef even though that reef had been removed by the federal government. Permission to construct two shafts on Man-o'-War Reef and create a temporary island to support the staging of equipment was obtained from
Robert Shaw Oliver of the
War Department on June 28, 1905. The permit was effective for a two-year period beginning on July 1, 1905 and allowed a temporary island up to wide by long to be created. At the conclusion of the work, the equipment was to be removed and the rock outcrop was to be returned to its original condition. A similar permit was obtained from the Commissioners of the Land Office of New York State on July 8, 1905. In addition to containing the two shafts with an air lock above them, the island included buildings containing an air receiver, pumps, electric motors, and a steam engine. Construction of the shafts in the middle of the river allowed workers to tunnel from them in both directions, adding more workfaces and helping to speed up construction. Four workers were killed on January 16, 1906 during an accident that occurred in the shaft under the island. After the tunnel was completed in 1907, there were talks about retaining the island for the erection of a lighthouse as an aid to navigation. In 1909,
Commissioner of Public Charities Robert W. Hebberd proposed connecting the southern tip of Blackwell's Island to Man o' War Reef using landfill to create an additional of park space designed by architect
Raymond F. Almirall. The proposal would have eliminated the need to use a boat to access Belmont Island. The tracks in the tunnel were not placed into permanent operation until 1915. The tunnel was purchased by the city, which reconstructed it beginning in 1914 to accommodate subway cars; this work also included filling in the shaft on Man o' War Reef. However, no actions were taken to remove the temporary island, demolish the buildings that had been erected on it, or restore the Blackwells Island Reef light to its original condition. By 1916, the structure that the light had been placed on top of had fallen into disrepair and the War Department sent an inquiry to the
Public Service Commission asking who was responsible for the building and if there was any reason why it should not be demolished so the light could be replaced.
1920s to 1960s On July 7, 1926, the submarine ran aground at Man-o'-War Reef while it was being towed down the East River to the
Brooklyn Navy Yard. The vessel was pulled off the reef eleven hours later by tugboats with the help of the tide. The submarine had been raised from the bottom of the ocean earlier in the week after it had sunk off
Block Island and was being taken to the Brooklyn Navy Yard for salvaging. In the late 1930s, the
U.S. Waterways Experiment Station conducted a study of tidal currents in the East River to improve alignments through
Hell Gate and flow conditions in the vicinity of Belmont Island, the latter of which involved a tendency of northwesterly river currents during the
flood tide to direct ship traffic towards the Manhattan shore. Twenty different improvement plans were tested, some of which included the complete removal of Belmont Island. The study recommended widening the channel to the south of Belmont Island and removing part of a rock ledge located north of the island. Improvements to the East River were recommended to the
United States Congress the following year as part of a $39 million improvement program between the Brooklyn Navy Yard and
Throgs Neck. In the 1950s,
Buckminster Fuller proposed installing a
Geoscope with its bottom suspended above the water, supported by cables hung from towers erected on the outcropping of rocks in the middle of the East River south of
Welfare Island (which was renamed Roosevelt Island in the 1970s). He later presented his idea to a group of United Nations ambassadors during a luncheon held at the
Hotel Pierre, but no funds were available to construct the project, which was then estimated to cost $10 million. On the evening of February 7, 1964, the Norwegian tanker
Sigdal ran aground on Belmont Island. The vessel was traveling up the East River carrying fuel oil from
Aruba to
the Bronx. Such a ship normally would have been accompanied by one or two tugboats but it arrived in New York Harbor during a tugboat strike and was operating on its own. Fuel was offloaded from the tanker into
lighter barges so the vessel could be pulled off the rock ledge; it took three days before the ship was freed by a salvage vessel from
Merritt-Chapman & Scott and two tugboats. In 1968, the
Hudson Institute published a proposal for connecting Welfare Island and Belmont Island by landfill to form a single larger island, as part of an economic redevelopment.
42nd Street would have extended across the island from Manhattan to Queens, connected by a
Ponte Vecchio-like bridge covered in shops. "Belmont Center", modeled on
Rockefeller Center, would have had towers of up to 80 stories. The
Delacorte Fountain, a
Jet d'Eau–like fountain sponsored by
George T. Delacorte Jr. stood nearby at the southern tip of Roosevelt Island, and faced calls for its relocation to Belmont Island from the time it was dedicated in 1969 until it stopped operating in 1986 and was subsequently abandoned.
1970s to present and
United Nations Secretariat Building, with U Thant Island in the foreground On August 25, 1972, the island was declared "
Soviet Jewry Freedom Island" and
symbolically occupied for hours by six activists led by Manhattan and Bronx Borough Presidents
Percy Sutton and
Robert Abrams to protest a United Nations speech by
Leonid Brezhnev and the imposition of the
diploma tax as a barrier to emigration from the Soviet Union. Other members of the group that landed on the island included Rabbi Gilbert Klaperman, chairman of the
Greater New York Conference on Soviet Jewry, and
Sister Rose Thering of
Seton Hall University. The group rented a tugboat for reporters and camera crews to cover the event and carried a banner displaying the new name of the island. The event caught the attention of the Soviet delegation at the United Nations, which complained to
Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim. The
New York City Police Department dispatched a boat to the island, but let the group stay when they found out they had obtained a temporary deed to the island from state officials. Publicity for the event had been organized by
Howard Rubenstein. After the death of
U Thant, the former Secretary-General of the United Nations, the island was adopted by a group called the Peace Meditation at the United Nations, employees at the United Nations headquarters and followers of the guru
Sri Chinmoy, who served as the interfaith chaplain there. They leased the island from New York State, greened its surface, and unofficially renamed it after U Thant, who was a friend of Chinmoy. The island was dedicated to the memory of U Thant on September 16, 1977 in a ceremony attended by Daw Aye Aye Thant, the daughter of U Thant. On October 7, 1982, Belmont Island was formally named as U Thant Island and the island, along with a "oneness arch" made of steel tubing, with a buried vessel preserving personal items of the island's namesake, was dedicated by Sri Chinmoy with officials from New York State in attendance. The followers of Sri Chinmoy made visits to the island once or twice a year for maintenance, but these visits became less frequent when security around the United Nations tightened in the mid-1990s. The group later affixed a sign to the west side of the island's navigational beacon tower that includes the name of the island, a note about its dedication, a poem written by Sri Chinmoy about U Thant, a brief biography of the former Secretary-General, and text that reads: "Simplicity was U Thant's life. Sincerity was U Thant's mind. Purity was U Thant's heart. His was the approach of serene and illumined dignity." During the
2004 Republican National Convention, local artist and filmmaker
Duke Riley, who has traveled to various abandoned islands around the New York City area, rowed a boat with a friend to the island under cover of darkness, proclaimed it a sovereign nation and hoisted a -long pennant depicting two electric eels from the island's navigation tower. On their return voyage in daylight, they were apprehended by a
United States Coast Guard boat but were not arrested. The entire incident was videotaped for a piece Riley titled
Belmont Island (SMEACC). ==Wildlife==