place

Park Side Restaurant

United States restaurant stubs

The Park Side Restaurant was founded by Anthony "Tough Tony" Federici, in 1980 but it was originally opened in by his parents 1960 as the Corona Supper Club. The menu is southern Italian and Sicilian cuisine.Federici, allegedly a capo the Genovese crime family, kept racing pigeons on the roof.On March 13, 2000 Federici was shooting at hawks twice with a 20 gauge shotgun off of the roof, but he didn’t hit any. He was arrested on charges of menacing amd criminal weapons possession.Celebrity customers include Johnny Depp and Robert DeNiro.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Park Side Restaurant (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Park Side Restaurant
Corona Avenue, New York Queens

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.743888888889 ° E -73.856111111111 °
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Address

Corona Avenue 107-01
11368 New York, Queens
New York, United States
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Corona station (LIRR)
Corona station (LIRR)

Corona was a station along the Port Washington Branch of the Long Island Rail Road in the Corona section of Queens, New York City. It was one of two stations built by the Flushing Railroad in Corona, this one having been at Grand Avenue (later called National Avenue, now National Street) and 45th Avenue. The station first opened as Fashion Race Course in March 1855, then renamed West Flushing, once the West Flushing station at 108th Street closed and possibly when the race track was closed in 1869, and later renamed Corona around June 1872 when the Post Office was opened under the name of Corona. The race pens were located on this street which led directly north to the Fashion Race Course. Service opened on April 2, 1855. The second depot built in September or October 1872 and was burned down on December 9, 1880. The former Corona Park depot from the White Line, abandoned four years earlier was moved to the site as a replacement around 1890 and was itself razed around September 1894. The fourth depot was built in September 1894 and was razed in 1930 due to a grade crossing elimination project. A temporary station was put in service to the south of the former location on May 8, 1930. Elevated platforms were constructed in mid-October, 1930, with westbound platforms opening on October 13 and eastbound platforms opening on October 17. The station stop was discontinued on April 8, 1964, the same year that the World's Fair station re-opened.