Vinegar Hill, Brooklyn

Vinegar Hill is a neighborhood in the borough of Brooklyn in New York City on the East River waterfront between DUMBO and the Brooklyn Navy Yard. The neighborhood is served by Brooklyn Community Board 2 and by the NYPD's 84th Precinct.

Vinegar Hill gets its name from the Battle of Vinegar Hill, an engagement near Enniscorthy during the Irish Rebellion of 1798. Originally settled by the Irish, this community has maintained its 19th Century look while facing modernization and development from all sides.

Vinegar Hill stretches from the East River waterfront to Front Street and from the Brooklyn Navy Yard to Bridge Street, roughly comprising a six-block area, although before the construction of the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway in the 1950s Vinegar Hill's area was significantly larger, extending south to Tillary Street. Most of Vinegar Hill consists of 19th Century Federal Style and Greek Revival style homes mixed with industrial buildings. The streets on Hudson Avenue, and Plymouth, Water and Front Streets are made of Cobblestones.

The Vinegar Hill area includes the Vinegar Hill Historic District and is home to the Con Edison Hudson Avenue Substation.

On the corner of Evans and Little Streets is Quarters A, the Commandant's House, a Federal Style mansion which was once home to Commodore Matthew C. Perry.