Photo by David Engelman, 2025
Felix J. Cuervo (1919-1992) founded and served as president of the Native New Yorkers Historical Association, a group that led tours and installed memorials to honor local historical figures and events.
Born on June 25, 1919 in Brooklyn, Cuervo served in the Navy in World War II and briefly attended Columbia University and New York University. He worked as a personnel administrator for several federal and state agencies until his retirement in 1983.
In 1962, he embraced his love of this city and organized the Native New Yorkers Historical Society, through which he was one of the first to provide historical walking tours in New York City. The organization's research and tours highlighted famous and lesser-known–and all fascinating–New Yorkers. Cuervo was instrumental in the installation of plaques to mark historic spots including the site of the famous Armory Art Show of 1913; the former Triangle Hofbrau restaurant, where actress Mae West got her start; and the home of President Chester A. Arthur, where he took his oath of office, and where he died four years later.
Cuervo passed away on August 8, 1992 after suffering from cancer. He was 73 years old, and had lived in Richmond Hill for many years. This street, located near his family home, was co-named in his honor in 1993.
Cuervo had once told The New York Times that his ambition was to "someday see New York City's buildings covered with little plaques, starting in the Battery and working all the way uptown. Then people on Sunday afternoons can walk through the city and realize what great things have taken place in so many of our buildings. And they can feel the same excitement that I felt when, as a boy, I used to walk with my father through old New York."
We sincerely hope he would have appreciated the Queens Name Explorer!
Lee A. Daniels, "Felix J. Cuervo, 73; Led Group Devoted To New York's Past," The New York Times, August 8, 1992
Francis X. Cline, "About New York: Of Cannibals and Mr. Cuervo," The New York Times,
Maurice Carroll, "Chester Arthur Tour of Old New York," The New York Times, September 18, 1981
Dennis Hevesi, "Native Lore Is the Passion of City Group," The New York Times, November 19, 1986
"Felix J Cuervo," FindAGrave.com,
Gil Tauber, "NYC Honorary Street Names," accessed June 15, 2022