Lower East Side Tenement Museum

Address: 97 Orchard Street
Pricing: Adults, $20; Seniors, students: $15
Phone: 212-431-0233 (administrative offices)
Hours: Daily, 10:30 am-5 pm (museum shop open 10 am-6pm)
How To Get There:
DIRECTIONS FROM LINCOLN TUNNEL AND WEST SIDE HIGHWAY: From Lincoln Tunnel and West Side Highway, exit either the Tunnel or the Highway and go east across town on 42nd St. to 2nd Ave. Turn right on 2nd Ave. and drive south to Houston St. At Houston Street turn left and drive east 3 blocks to Allen St. Turn right on Allen St. and drive 5 blocks south to Grand St. Turn left on Grand St., go 6 blocks and turn left on Clinton St. (RiteAid Pharmacy on corner). Go 1 short block and turn left on Broome St. Go 1 ½ blocks; you will see the entrance to the parking lot on your right.
Parking:
Free at Broome Street lot with validation
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Lower East Side Tenement Museum: American immigrant history close up

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Feb 15, 2010

The Lower East Side Tenement Museum provides a glimpse into the history of peoples who helped shape the fabric of the culture of New York City and America over the past 150 years.

A five-story tenement that housed some 7,000 people from 25 countries between 1863 and 1935, the building at 97 Orchard Street was sealed off for decades before being transformed into the living testament it is today.

Two primary tours, which are conducted on all open days and last an hour, offer a fascinating exploration of the museum.

"Piecing It Together: Immigrants in the Garment Industry” centers on the restored apartment and the lives of its turn-of-the-20th-century tenants - an immigrant Jewish family named Levine from Poland. The exhibit interprets the day-to-day operation of the shop, and the Levine family life, including a childbirth that took place in the apartment that year. "Getting By: Weathering the Great Depressions of 1873 and 1929" features  the quarters of the German-Jewish Gumpertz and the Sicilian-Catholic Baldizzi families.

A docent leads visitors into each grimy urban setting, where six apartments have been refurbished to their lived-in state, and recalls the real-life stories of the families who lived in them. Tourists can pair up two apartment tours for a more in-depth experience.

More appropriate for children is the 45-minute, weekend-only Confino Family Apartment tour, which gives kids the opportunity to interact with an interpreter who plays teenage immigrant Victoria Confino (ca. 1916). Youngsters also can try on period clothes and touch any item in the apartment.

Take time to check out the Immigrant Theater, in which immigrant actors and actresses perform plays that dramatize the issues of their lives. The Museum's K-12 educational programs include walking tours, living history programs, slide shows, exhibits and hands-on artifact activities. And reserve at least 15 minutes to explore the museum store next door.

Special tours and programs often occur, so it’s a good idea to check out the museum web site before visiting. Tours sometimes sell out quickly, especially during warm weather months, so make sure to purchase tickets on line in advance.



- by Jim Brown , Henderson Reporter for HelloMetro  (Click to leave a message)

Jim Brown

Jim Brown is a longtime freelance aviation, travel and destination writer and communications professional. A former reporter for Aviation Daily, Air Safety Week and World Airline News, Jim served for more than 15 years as a senior public relations executive for American Airlines, TWA and AirTran Airways.
"We employ our own Local professional journalists (not bloggers) to give you an accurate hyperlocal story"







 

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Click Images To Enlarge
The Lower Eastside Tenement Museum is a microcosm of life in turn of the century New York City. (Photo courtesy LESTM)
The family of Adopho Baldazzi is one of the six apartment dwellings that are featured in the Lower Eastside Tenement Museum on Orchard Street in New York City. (Photo courtesy LESTM)
"Piecing It Together: Immigrants in the Garment Industry” centers on the restored apartment and the lives of its turn-of-the-20th-century tenants - an immigrant Jewish family named Levine from Poland. (Photo courtesy LESTM)
In the turn of the century, families often didn't have access to separate bathroom, but instead shared "privies" like this one. (Photo courtesy LESTM)
Various unimproved apartments within the 97 Orchard Street tenement building show signs of previous graffiti, such as this one, likely made just before 1935, when the building closed. (Photo courtesy LESTM)
Old electric meters within the walls of the Lower East Side Tenement Museum tell the story of an earlier era. (Photo courtesy LESTM)




 



     
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