RE: A Jewish Tour of The Lower Eastside

Tomorrow we meet at The Tenement Museum at 9:45 am. Afterwards we will walk around the Lower Eastside exploring the remnants of what once was a vibrant Jewish community and it’s current transformation.  The Tenement Museum is at 103 Orchard St. between Delancey and Broome. More details are under the menu tab “Trips”. Don’t be late as the tour starts promptly at 10 am. If you owe me $15 please bring it.

In its turn-of-the-century heyday, the Lower East Side was home to a flourishing Jewish community of Germans, Eastern Europeans, Russians, and Greeks. They lived in cramped tenements and peddled pushcarts or toiled in the garment industry for a living—when they weren’t agitating for social reform or establishing synagogues, community centers, Yiddish theaters, and newspapers. These days, the neighborhood has a different flavor. New waves of Chinese and Latino immigrants have set up their own shops, bodegas, and religious sites, converting defunct synagogues into churches and Buddhist temples. And though still an immigrant hub, the area is also decidedly hip, with pricey boutiques, swanky nightspots, and rising rents. But beneath the L.E.S.’s ever-changing identity, remnants of a gritty, tumultuous, and Jewish past remain.

Here are a few links to maps and walking tours of the Lower Eastside.

http://nymag.com/visitorsguide/neighborhoods/jewishles.htm

http://wikitravel.org/en/Manhattan/Lower_East_Side

http://www.fodors.com/news/story_5400.html

Interactive Map of Old Synagogues and other historic sites.

https://maps.google.com/maps/msmsa=0&msid=206007659040055832231.
0004bcde3e55c43d4bef6&hl=en&ie=UTF8&ll=40.718544,-73.989812&spn=
0.009099,0.00802&t=m&source=embed&dg=feature

https://www.google.com/maps/search/map+of+lower+east+side+
synagogues/@40.7198407,-73.9975384,15z

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RE: The Neighborhood of Five Points

Here is a link to various maps from 1700 through mid 1800s. Five Points no longer exits, but there is a detailed map comparing landmarks including Five Points in the 1800s and
it’s current status. http://www.nychinatown.org/history/1800s.html

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=1132847  NPR audio clip about Five Points. See below:

The lower Manhattan neighborhood of “Five Points” was once the most notorious slum in the United States. It got its name from the convergence of three streets, and it got its reputation from its gangs, unfair politics and its hard drinking inhabitants. Robert talks with Tyler Anbinder, who just wrote a new history of the neighborhood. It’s called Five Points: The Nineteenth Century New York Neighborhood That Invented Tap Dance, Stole Elections and Became The World’s Most Notorious Slum. (7:30) Five Points is published by the Free Press, ISBN: 0684859955.