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History & Culture · New York City

Fort Totten Keeps Queens' Harbor-Defense Edge

Fort Totten helps Bayside and northeast Queens read as harbor defense, parkland, water views, and old federal land at once.

Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026

Fort Totten gives northeast Queens a different kind of color than subway lines or restaurant corridors. NYC Parks says the fort was built across the East River from Fort Schuyler and was initially charged with defending the eastern approach to New York Harbor.

Parks also notes that Fort Totten was acquired through the Federal Lands to Parks Program and opened to the public as a park in 2005. That turns Bayside’s waterfront edge into something people can actually walk through, not just read about as military history.

The point is not just a scenic walk. It is an old defensive site becoming public parkland, where the East River, Long Island Sound approaches, civic reuse, and neighborhood recreation share one peninsula. Fort Totten gives Bayside a waterfront story with cannons in the background and dog-walkers, families, and harbor views in the foreground.

That mix is what makes the park feel different from a normal green space. It carries military geometry, federal-land reuse, neighborhood routines, and a real sense of the city’s outer harbor edge.

Bayside gets a local landmark with more than one mood: old fort, public park, waterfront path, and Queens harbor lookout all in the same place.

Filed under: History & Culture Queens queensfort-tottenbaysideharbormilitary-history

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Last reviewed
June 24, 2026

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