Monday, November 30, 2009
Archived Video: The Hells Angels 1970s
Archived Video: Police Disperse Street Vendors, 1903
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Archived Audio: Grateful Deal Live at the Filmore East, 1970
This archival performance is of one of many Grateful Dead performances at the Filmore, recorded February 11, 1970, at the height of the Filmore's legendary run.
FULL PLAYLIST HERE: http://www.archive.org/details/gd70-02-11.early-late.sbd.sacks.90.sbefail.shnf
Archived Video: Lower East Side Fish Market, 1903
Saturday, November 28, 2009
Inside a Turkish Night Club on Allen Street: 1942
Image descriptions:
- New York, New York. Turkish nightclub on Allen Street
- Joe Levy, Jewish-Turkish-American owner of a nightclub on Allen Street
- Turkish-American and his wife who own a nightclub on Allen Street. Their son is in the United States Army
- Orchestra at a Turkish nightclub on Allen Street
- The girl plays a tambourine between dances.
- Guests get up and dance to the Oriental music whenever they please
- Habitues of a Turkish nightclub on Allen Street drinking beer and eating hors d'oeuvres. Apparently women are left at home
CREATED/PUBLISHED: 1942 Dec.Posted by Knickerbocker Village
CREATOR: Collins, Marjory, 1912-1985, photographer.
PART OF: Farm Security Administration - Office of War Information Photograph Collection (Library of Congress)
REPOSITORY: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
DIGITAL ID: (digital file from intermediary roll film) fsa 8d24224 http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/fsa.8d24224
Thursday, November 26, 2009
We Recommend: TAKE IT! a film by Max Weissberg
155 First Avenue
(between 9th and 10th Streets)
New York, NY 10003
8:00pm - $5
MORE: http://www.theaterforthenewcity.net/newfilm.htm
Happy Thanksgiving from LESHP
Feeling guilty after dinner? Adopt a turkey! (This is legit...)
http://www.adoptaturkey.org/aat/adopt/index.html
Enjoy the holiday, and thanks for your support.
-LESHP Staff
We Suggest: Spiritual Sounds, an Evening of Interfaith Music
The evening’s coordinators: priests, imams, ministers, rabbis, and monks, will be in attendance along with their choirs and or musicians.
Light refreshments will be served following the performance. No tickets are required but a free will offering will be requested.
Visit LocalFaithCommunities.com for more details.
This group of local clergy, all practicing within a few block of each other, held its first meeting spring 2009 in New York City’s East Village. In a desire to know each other personally and to see where partnership might lead, the group has grown around its shared mission to serve, to celebrate its tremendous diversity, and to rejoice in the rich traditions represented.
Each institution below will share from its tradition with intended offerings to include Taize, jazz, gospel, chants, and traditional holiday songs and hymns.
- Iglesia Alianza Cristiana y Misionera
- Mary House
- Medina Masjid Mosque
- Middle Collegiate Church
- Most Holy Redeemer Catholic Church
- Nechung Foundation
- Russian Orthodox Cathedral of the Holy Virgin Protection
- Sixth Street Community Synagogue
- St. Mark’s Church in the Bowery
- St. Mary’s American Orthodox Church
- The Bhakti Center
Commemoration Of The Centennial Of The Uprising Of the 20,000: Part 2
Joe Raico speaking at the Commemoration of the Centennial of the Uprising of the 20,000. This took place on Sunday November 22, 2009/ 1- 3:30 pm at IBT Local 237 Union Hall, 216 W 14th St, New York, New York. There was a screening of Alex Szalats Clara Lemlich: A Strike Leaders Diary. This was followed by discussion with honored guests: Rita Margules (Clara Lemlich's daughter), Richard Greenwald (Triangle Fire Historian), and Bob Lazar (former ILGWU archivist).
Organizers of the event were
The Remembering the Triangle Fire Coalition and
Organizing the Curriculum
Posted by David Bellel, Knickerbocker Village
Commemoration Of The Centennial Of The Uprising Of the 20,000
Ruth Serkel speaking at the Commemoration of the Centennial of the Uprising of the 20,000. This took place on Sunday November 22, 2009/ 1- 3:30 pm at IBT Local 237 Union Hall, 216 W 14th St, New York, New York. There was a screening of Alex Szalats Clara Lemlich: A Strike Leaders Diary. This was followed by discussion with honored guests: Rita Margules (Clara Lemlich's daughter), Richard Greenwald (Triangle Fire Historian), and Bob Lazar (former ILGWU archivist).
Organizers of the event were
The Remembering the Triangle Fire Coalition and
Organizing the Curriculum
Posted by David Bellel, Knickerbocker Village
Friday, November 13, 2009
Miriam Friedlander Honored
Posted by David Bellel: Knickerbocker Village
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Eric Ferrara lecture at Bluestockings
Henry Eckstein: A Lower East Side Legend Passes
An email I received from Bernie Dolnansky:
ECKSTEIN--Herbert, died peacefully at home in Great Neck at the age of 87 on October 27, 2009. Beloved husband of Nadine for 56 years; devoted father of Kenneth, Linda and Myra Mogilner; cherished father-in-law of Ruthann Eckstein and Dr. Alon Mogilner; adored grandfather of Max, Sam, Shoshana, Josh, Zack, Joey and Gabi; much loved brother of David, Eugene and Barbara Shostak. During his lifetime he was proprietor of H. Eckstein & Sons, a dry goods store and Lower East Side institution. He will be sorely missed.
I believe that's Eckstein's store window showing on Grand Street on the left of the picture above. I fondly recall my trips to Eckstein's with my mother. The basement at Eckstein's was a world unto itself and there was always interesting back and forth sales talk/flirting going on between my mother and the salesmen.
An excerpt from a 2004 nytimes article about Eckstein's
Trendiness Among the Tenements; Descendants Return to a Remade Lower East Side
By JOSEPH BERGER
H. Eckstein & Sons was not quite as much a fixture of the Lower East Side as Guss's Pickles or Yonah Schimmel Knish Bakery. Still, Brenda Zimmer spent much of her life there, haggling with customers in the cramped and hectic clothing store on Orchard Street that her family owned, hanging on until a greatly weakened Eckstein's finally shut its doors in 1998.
Yet when she told friends a few years ago that her daughter, Amy, was moving into one of the neighborhood's storied tenements, ''they looked a little shocked,'' she said.
''Everybody spent their lives trying to get out of there, and my daughter is trying to come back,'' Mrs. Zimmer said, recalling her friends' puzzlement and suggesting more than a little of her own.
The rapid changes in a neighborhood famous as the squalid foothold for immigrants just off the boat have produced more than a few such expressions of astonishment.
There are still many people around who were glad to escape the neighborhood when the old life seemed to be seeping out of it more than a half-century ago. Some of them are now wonderstruck as their adventurous children and grandchildren are returning.
On a recent stroll from Hester Street to Houston Street with Amy, Mrs. Zimmer seemed tickled that her daughter, a 28-year-old Yale graduate and freelance writer, had actually settled a few blocks from where Amy's grandfather was born and where Mrs. Zimmer worked full time for 15 years. Sure, only a handful of the wholesale and retail stores that sold hosiery, linens, lingerie, and handbags were still around, and even many of the bodegas of a more recent era of migration were gone. But the neighborhood had once again quickened to life, something closer to the bustle of the days when the walk-up tenements were teeming and the dowdy stores drew shoppers from all over for their Sunday bargains.
''Now it's exciting; it's prestigious to live there,'' Mrs. Zimmer, a high-spirited woman, observed.
Dry-goods shops are being replaced by restaurants with $30 entrees; by boutiques where the tastefully spaced wares are fashionably retro but the prices are decidedly nouveau; by galleries like Fusion-Arts Museum, which exhibits a robotlike ''fusion golem'' made of motorized hardware; by cafes where young people peck at laptops while sipping lattes; and even by one shop, Toys in Babeland, that, to Mrs. Zimmer's embarrassed amusement, sells sex toys.
''A very unusual store,'' Mrs. Zimmer observed, gathering up her dignity. ''Colorful.''
A link to another article by Amy Zimmer about Eckstein's