Going to the Heart of Hart Island
12 photos
<p>"In 1935, a new Catholic chapel was built to replace one which had, by that point, become dilapidated. The chapel is still in remarkably good shape."</p>
<p>Interior of the church, looking toward the altar.</p>
Hart Island
Courtesy of Richard Nickel Jr.<p>The dedication plaque on the Pavilion building.</p>
<p>A room full of shoes.</p>
<p>"Patients at Phoenix House did occupational therapy as a part of their treatment. In the Pavilion building, they worked on leather shoes" which can now be found scattered around nearby.</p>
<p>"Some patient beds remain on the somewhat more intact southern side of the building."</p>
<p>The first floor of the Pavilion building, likely a dining hall.</p>
<p>"Many of the smaller structures on the island were used by the Department of Corrections as records storage buildings."</p>
Open burial pit with goose nest
Richard Nickel Jr. via<p>A room with empty pine boxes inside. "The bags full of Tyvek suits and rubber gloves helped tell the story of the boxes - here were the former resting places of people who had been buried on Hart Island, but disinterred at the requests of their families."</p>
<p>Southern entrance to the Pavilion building.</p>