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The Community of St. Albans and surrounding areas

By The Times/Ledger

Moving to the east out of Jamaica is St. Albans. Named in 1899 for St. Albans, the English village in Hertfordshire, St. Albans, New York City is mostly African-American today and during the 1940s became home to super jazz talents such as Lena Horne, Count Basie and Fats Waller. Many of them settled into Addisleigh Park. Built in the late 20s, Addisleigh Park is several blocks of Tudor-style homes on large plots on 179th and 180th Sts. between Murdock Ave. (114th St.) and Linden Blvd. In addition to the names mentioned, Babe Ruth liked to play golf in St. Albans, Joe Louis got married there, while Milt Hinton and his wife are still residents of the area. Let me add Earl Bostic, Illinois Jacquet, Roy Campanella, James Brown, Brook Benton, Jackie Robinson and the one, the only, Ella