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Of Egg Creams, Ed Koch and 49 Other Facts You Didn't Know About Jewish New York

  

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Via:  buzz-of-the-orient  •  10 years ago  •  11 comments

Of Egg Creams, Ed Koch and 49 Other Facts You Didn't Know About Jewish New York

Of Egg Creams, Ed Koch and 49 Other Facts You Didn't Know About Jewish New York

A Guide to the World's Most Jewish City Outside Israel

2881_discussions.jpg

Man About Town: Bronx-born Milton Glaser designed the INY logo in 1977.

By Laila Caron November 15, 2014

1. The first Jews to set foot in North America arrived in New York as a group of 23 in 1654.

2. Congregation Shearith Israel, founded in New York in 1654, was the first synagogue in the colonies. It was the sole purveyor of kosher meat until 1813.

3. By the late 19th century, there were over 5,000 kosher butchers and 1,000 slaughterers in New York.

4. In 1902, the Beef Trust raised the price of kosher meat on the Lower East Side from 12 to 18 cents per pound. After butchers boycotts proved ineffectual, 20,000 Lower East Side women stole meat from kosher butcher shops and set it on fire on the streets in protest. The Forward supported their efforts, running the headline Bravo, Bravo, Bravo, Jewish women!

5. On March 25, 1911, the Triangle Shirtwaist fire claimed the lives of 146 garment workers, the majority of whom were Jewish immigrants. Reporting on the tragedy, the Forverts wrote that the disaster is too great, to dreadful, to be able to express ones feelings.

6. When entertainer Al Jolson came to New York City at age 14, he held jobs in the circus and as a singing waiter. Born to a cantor, Jolsons career took off when he began performing in blackface.

2882_discussions.jpg Al Jolson, 1930. Getty Images

7. In 1903, the Lower East Side Chinese and Jewish communities formed an unlikely partnership when Chinese organizers put on a benefit for Jewish victims of the Kishinev pogrom, raising $280.

8. In 1930, there were over 80 pickle vendors in the Lower East Sides thriving Jewish pickle scene. The briney delights were brought to America in the mid-19th century by German Jewish immigrants.

9. The egg cream is thought to have been invented by the Jewish owner of a Brooklyn candy shop. musician Lou Reed was a famous admirer of the frothy drink.

10. From the beginning of the 20th century till the close of World War II, the Lower East Sides 2nd Avenue was known as the Yiddish Theater District, or the Jewish Rialto. It extended from 2nd Avenue to Avenue B, and from 14th Street to Houston. Considered Broadways competitor, the Jewish Rialto was home to a variety of productions including burlesque and vaudeville shows, as well as Shakespearean, Jewish and classic plays, and were all in Yiddish.

11. The Jewish Rialtos most popular haunt was the Cafe Royal on Second Avenue and 12th Street, where one could find performers such as Molly Picon and Charlie Chaplin sharing blintzes.

2883_discussions.jpg Getty Images

Pushcart City: Pushcarts were all the rage among Jewish vendors on the Lower East Side from the turn of the century until 1940, when Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia banned their use. Jewish pushcart operators sold everything from vegetables to cigars to stockings.

12 . Pushcarts were all the rage among Jewish vendors on the Lower East Side from the turn of the century until 1940, when Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia banned their use. Jewish pushcart operators sold everything from vegetables to cigars to stockings.

13. At Sammys Roumanian Steak House on Chrystie and Delancey, every table is provided with a bottle of chicken fat as a condiment; resident emcee Dani Luv entertains diners with renditions of Jewish standards and punchy Borsht Belt humor.

14. One of the first kosher Chinese restaurants in New York was Moshe Peking, whose all-Chinese waitstaff wore yarmulkes.

15. The Second Avenue Deli opened in 1954 in the then-fading Yiddish Theater District. It featured a Yiddish Walk of Fame on the sidewalk outside its original location on Second Avenue and Tenth Street, and served up such Jewish specialties as matzo ball soup and corned beef. In 2007, it closed and reopened in Murray Hill.

2884_discussions.jpg A feast at the Second Avenue Deli Wikimedia Commons

16. Famed music club CBGB was opened in 1973 by Jewish founder Hilly Kristal.

17. Mayor La Guardia, who served for three terms from 1934 to 1945, was born to a Jewish mother and descended from Rabbi Samuel David Luzzatto, but practiced as an Episcopalian.

18. The Jacob K. Javits Convention Center was named in honor of the Jewish U.S. senator, who served from 1957 to 1981.

19. Sig Kleins Fat Mens Shop opened in the late 1800s at 52 Third Ave., and carried plus-sized clothes for men. Its sign featured the slogan: If everyone was fat there would be no war.

20. Abraham Beame was the first practicing Jew to become mayor of New York. He held office from 1974 to 1977.

21. The popular and proudly Jewish mayor Ed Koch, who served from 1978 to 1989, was known for the phrase Howm I doing? which he would ask passersby while standing on street corners or riding the subway. Newsday called him the ultimate New Yorker.

2885_discussions.jpg Ed Koch reads the Forward

22. The erection of the Brooklyn Bridge in 1883 and the Williamsburg Bridge in 1903 catalyzed a Jewish exodus from the Lower East Side to Southside Williamsburg. Crossing the bridge on foot, the LESs Jews left in search of better living conditions.

23. By 1930, more than 40% of New York Citys Jews lived in Brooklyn.

24. Jewish-fronted band The Ramones formed in the Forest Hills neighborhood of Queens in 1974.

25. Allen Ginsberg moved to New York to attend Columbia in 1943. He was purportedly related to seminal Zionist thinker Ahad Haam.

26. Poet and kabbalist Lionel Ziprin entertained visitors including Thelonius Monk, Charlie Parker, and Bob Dylan in his Lower East Side living room, expounding for hours on Jewish esoterica and history.

27. The bagel originated in Poland, and arrived in New York City in the 1880s in the hands of Eastern European Jewish immigrants.

28. Three hundred all-Jewish New York bagel craftsmen formed a trade union in the early 1900s, the Bagel Bakers Local 338, which established standards for bagel production and conducted meetings in Yiddish.

29. In December 1951, New York City was hit with what The New York Times termed the bagel famine, when a dispute between the members of the Bagel trade union and the Bagel Bakers association led to the closing of 32 out of 34 of the citys bagel bakeries.

2886_discussions.jpg New York bagels Getty Images

30. As a result of the bagel outage, the sale of lox dropped nearly 50%. Murray Nathan, who helped resolve an earlier lox strike in 1948, was brought in to mediate the situation. The outage lasted until February.

31. Coney Island Bagels and Bialys, the oldest kosher bagel shop in New York, was set to close in 2011 until two Muslim businessmen, Peerzada Shah and Zafaryab Ali, bought the store and promised to keep it kosher. Ali had previously worked at the shop for 10 years.

32. Lou Reed was born in Brooklyn, and in 1989 released an album whose title, New York, paid tribute to the city.

33. In a reinterpretation of Edgar Allen Poes The Raven, Lou Reed asked the four questions at the Downtown Seder at the Museum of Jewish Heritage in 2004.

34. Musician Lenny Kaye was born in the Washington Heights neighborhood of Manhattan in 1946. He met Patti Smith while working at Village Oldies on Bleecker Street and went on to become a member of the Patti Smith Group.

35. Starting in the 1970s, hundreds of thousands of Jews left the Soviet Union for New York, many settling in Brighton Beach, which came to be known as Little Odessa.

36. Established in 1927, Kehila Kedosha Janina at 280 Broome St. is the last remaining Greek Jewish synagogue in the Western Hemisphere.

37. Streits Matzo Company, the last remaining neighborhood matzo factory, stands at 148-150 Rivington St.

2887_discussions.jpg Streits Matzo Getty Images

38. The oldest Orthodox Jewish Russian congregation in the United States, Beth Hamedrash Hagadol, is still active at 60 Norfolk St.

39. On the corner of Essex and Rutgers, down the street from the original Forverts building on Seward Park, the Garden Cafeteria served as a gathering place for Jewish actors, artists and playwrights such as Sholem Aleichem and Isaac Bashevis Singer from 1941 to 1983. It became Wing Shing, a Chinese restaurant, in 1985, and now houses Reena Spaulings Fine Art.

40. Seward Park on the Lower East Side was created in 1900. New immigrants worked in the parks artisan market, and on special occasions such as elections, thousands gathered in the park to watch the Forvertss flashing news sign in Yiddish.

41. Jewish gangs rose to prominence during the Prohibition; at a conference in New York in 1931, Jewish gangsters agreed to partner with Italian Americans, and together remained the most dominant groups in organized crime until several decades after WWII.

42. After an appeal from a New York judge, Nathan Perlman, Jewish gangster Meyer Lansky and members of Murder Inc. broke up Nazi rallies around the city for over a year, with the one stipulation that there be no killing.

43. Lines of a sonnet by Sephardic poet Emma Lazarus, who was born in New York City in 1847, are inscribed on the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty.

2888_discussions.jpg Getty Images

44. The house that stands at 770 Eastern Parkway in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn is the center and spiritual home of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement. Formerly inhabited by Chabads late leader Menachem Mendel Schneerson, Lubavitchers have built replicas of the building all over the world to serve as movement outposts.

45. The first Reform congregation in New York City, Temple Emanu-El, was founded in 1845 by 33 mostly German Jews, and moved to its present location in 1929. Members have included Joan Rivers and Michael Bloomberg.

46. As large numbers of German Jews fleeing Nazi persecution made their homes in Washington Heights in the mid-1930s, the area was dubbed Frankfurt on the Hudson.

47. Sweet n Low was invented in 1957 in Brooklyn by Benjamin Eisenstaedt.

48. Bronx-born Milton Glaser designed the INY logo in 1977.

49. Eight hasidic dynasties are headquartered in the Borough Park neighborhood of Brooklyn.

50. Outside of Israel, New York City is home to the largest population of Jews in the world.

51. As of 2011, 1 in 6 households in New York were Jewish.


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Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
link   seeder  Buzz of the Orient    10 years ago

Damn, it made my mouth water to see that pastrami sandwich, and behind some baby beef, fresh rye, old dills, onion rings and a little coleslaw. But then I saw the bagels, and started to cry.....

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
link   Kavika     10 years ago

Buzz, later today I'll be going to ''Red Hawk Goldstein'' deli for a pastrami...It's true Buzz, we have a Indian, Jewish deli here.Smile.gif

 
 
 
Enoch
Masters Quiet
link   Enoch    10 years ago

Great article Buzz.

I enjoyed it thoroughly.

Thanks.

Enoch.

 
 
 
Larry Hampton
Professor Participates
link   Larry Hampton    10 years ago

Sweet article Buzz and thank you!

 
 
 
Larry Hampton
Professor Participates
link   Larry Hampton    10 years ago

Loved the bagels of course, outstanding. One restaeraunt though (Just a family styleplace, I think called "Bens") had some great foods. One dish I had I loved, and still crave from northern Minnesota...

Stuffed Derma...

_mg_2813.jpg ....Mmmmmmm!

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
link   seeder  Buzz of the Orient    10 years ago

Known to some of us as "kishka", one of the Jewish "K-rations".

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
link   seeder  Buzz of the Orient    10 years ago

Actually, given the choice, my sandwich preferences in order of priority would be (1) hot tongue, (2) baby beef, (3) corned beef, (4) brisket, (5) Montreal smoked meat, and only then (6) pastrami. It's just that I have been deprived of all of them for so long that I would even settle for pastrami.

 
 
 
Larry Hampton
Professor Participates
link   Larry Hampton    10 years ago

one of the Jewish "K-rations".

LOL!

:~)

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
link   seeder  Buzz of the Orient    10 years ago

In Toronto, lox and bagels with fresh cream cheese, herring in cream sauce, sliced cheeses, egg salad and sliced tomatoes was a Sunday brunch ritual for my family.

 
 
 
A. Macarthur
Professor Guide
link   A. Macarthur    10 years ago

In the 70's, a store that specialized in Chanukah gifts for children opened for a brief time. However, labor problems and poor managerial practices led to the failure of the business.

Oys are Usclosed after a protractedlox outof its workers.

The business reopened several years later, this time as a kind of "Big Brother" operation that paired Gentile adults with Jewish children who, like myself, were dissuaded by family members from cultivating non-Jewish relationships.

Sadly, like the TV show,Bridget Loves Bernie(which was cancelled by the Network on which it appeared because both Christians and Jews objected to the show's alleged "promotion of mixed marriages"),Goys-for-Totsalso fell by the wayside.

DISCLAIMER: All of the above is merely whim on my part

Except for theBridget Loves Berniepart which is completely factual, that part, and the part about my being dissuaded from cultivating non-Jewish relationships during my youth.

I have no argument with ethnic traditions as long as they do not thrive on castigating the ethnic traditions of others.

One exception Corned beef or Pastrami on white bread with mayonnaise? You f'n kidding me with that?

NOTE: The secret to making egg creams with the white head above the chocolate bottom is in the sequence of pouring the ingredients Pour the milk into a very cold 12-ounce glass, slowly pour in the seltzer, then gently add the syrup. Using a long spoon, stir well and serve.

And please, anyone who takes exception to this comment, I would hope there will not be a schmear campaign in protest.

I bagel of you.

 
 

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