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Summer / Fall 2016


The Staten Island Ferry Disaster Monument wasunder renovation for the winter months. The Plaque shown below was in its place across from the World War II Memorial. Please come visit.

Spring / Summer 2017

Spring/Summer 2018

NYC Urban Legends

Fall/Winter 2017

Staten Island Ferry Disaster Memorial Museum

About the Memorial


The Staten Island Ferry Disaster Story. . .

It was close to 4am on the quiet morning of November 22, 1963 when the Steam Ferry Cornelius G. Kolff vanished without a trace. On its way with nearly 400 hundred people, mostly on their way to work, the disappearance of the Cornelius G. Kolff remains both one of New York’s most horrific maritime tragedies and perhaps its most intriguing mystery. Eye witness accounts describe “large tentacles” which “pulled” the ferry beneath the surface only a short distance from its destination at Whitehall Terminal in Lower Manhattan. Nobody on board survived and only small pieces of wreckage have been found…strangely with large “suction cup-shaped” marks on them. The only logical conclusion scientists and officials could point to was that the boat had been attacked by a massive octopus, roughly half the size of the ship. Adding to the tragedy, is that this disaster went almost completely unnoticed by the public as later that day another, more “newsworthy” tragedy would befall the nation when beloved President John Fitzgerald Kennedy was assassinated.  The Staten Island Ferry Disaster Museum hopes to correct this oversight by preserving the memory of those lost in this tragedy and educating the public about the truth behind the only known giant octopus-ferry attack in the tri-state area.

Where to See the Monument


The Staten Island Ferry Disaster Monument will be on display at Battery Park. Check us out on Facebook for schedule.