Charles Denson is an American historian, writer, photographer, and art director. He is co-founder and executive director of the nonprofit Coney Island History Project. Denson also manages a YouTube channel, blog, and podcast related to the history of Coney Island.
Denson grew up in Coney Island, living on Surf Avenue and attending local schools. He showed a deep interest in the neighborhood from a young age; in an interview with the Brooklyn Daily Eagle he said, "My dream as a kid was to write a book about Coney Island."
During Denson's youth in the 1960s, Coney Island was experiencing a period of transformation. A government urban renewal program that called for the demolition of 60 blocks of homes and businesses had left the neighborhood in a state of ruin. Denson began to photograph the neighborhood and its local residents during this time as a teenager. These photographs would later make up the photo exhibit "Coney Island Streets: 1965âÂÂ1975" at the Coney Island History Project. None of the structures shown in the photographs still stand today.
In 1971, Denson began his career as a photographer for New York magazine. Since then, he has worked as an art director for numerous publications. In 1999 he was awarded a Chronicle journalism fellowship at the Graduate School of Journalism at University of California, Berkeley.
In 2004, Denson founded the nonprofit organization Coney Island History Project with Carol Albert. The organization's first project was collecting oral histories of Coney Island. A booth was set up on the Coney Island boardwalk where people could record their personal accounts and experiences. Denson is currently executive director of the Coney Island History Project.
He has lectured on the history of Coney Island at institutions such as the New-York Historical Society, Brooklyn Historical Society, Brooklyn College, and the American Folk Art Museum, among others.
He has authored multiple books on the history of Coney Island. His book Coney Island: Lost and Found won the New York Society Library's 2002 Book of the Year award.
In 2013, the New York State Marine Education Association presented Denson with the Herman Melville Award for his environmental advocacy.