December 14, 2004 (original) January 30, 2007 (extension)
Douglaston Hill Historic District is a national historic district in Douglaston, Queens, New York. It includes 83 contributing buildings and two contributing sites. The buildings include Zion Episcopal Church (1830), houses and garages, and commercial buildings. The sites are Zion cemetery and public park. It was laid out with very large lots in 1853, at the very beginning of a movement in the United States to create suburban gardens. The buildings include a number of fine examples of late-19th- and early 20th-century architectural styles such as Queen Anne, Shingle Style, and Colonial Revival. The majority of the buildings date between 1890 and 1940.[2]
In 2012, some numbered streets in the historic district were renamed to their original names, with 43rd Avenue becoming Pine Street.[4]
Gallery
Zion Episcopal Church dates to 1830. This building was built in 1927 after an earlier building burned down.
The Zion Episcopal Church building is surrounded by generous grounds that include a cemetery.
This monument in the Zion church cemetery is inscribed "Here rest the last of the Matinecoc." It commemorates the Native Americans whose remains were found and moved to the cemetery when nearby Northern Boulevard was widened in the 1930s.
The Zion Episcopal Church rectory, built 1890 and located on the church grounds.