To wrap up our 15th anniversary celebration -- and to set up our big 400th episode -- we take a fond look at one corner of New York City which taught us to love local history.
Perhaps you know this area for Seward Park, the first municipal playground in the United States, or for Straus Square, named for Nathan Straus, philanthropist and co-owner (with his brother Isidor) of Macy's Department Store. Today, trendy artists and influencers instead spend their weekends in Dimes Square, just one block (and seemingly one world) away.
In the 19th century, as Rutgers Square, this area became a small portion of a large German immigrant community called Kleindeutschland. In an inconceivable historical moment, a statue was almost raised here -- to William 'Boss' Tweed, leader of Tammany Hall.
By the late 19th century, this place was the center for American Jewish culture, and East Broadway became Yiddish publishers row, hosting newspapers and magazines from a host of perspectives. In the 20th century, thanks to a mid-century housing boom (fueled partially by the labor unions firmly rooted to this place), some also called it Cooperative Village, with hundreds of old, deteriorating tenements replaced with new high rises.
It's a neighborhood that means so much to so many -- and we hope you learn to love it all yourself, no matter what you call it.
PLUS: We're join by staff members of the Forward, celebrating its 125th year of publication. Forward archivist Chana Pollack joins us along with Ginna Green and, hosts of the the newspaper column-turned-podcast version A Bintel Brief.
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#392 The Bowery Boys Podcast 15th Anniversary Special
#391 A Walk through Little Caribbean
#390 The Story of Flatbush: Brooklyn Old and New
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#389 The Ruins of Roosevelt Island
#388 The Hudson River School: An American Art Revolution
#387 Hyde Park: The Roosevelts on the Hudson
#386 On the Trail of the Old Croton Aqueduct
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#385 Frederick Law Olmsted and the Plan for Central Park
#384 Nuyorican: The Great Puerto Rican Migration
#383 The Temple on Fifth Avenue
#382 Architect of the Gilded Age
Introducing: Love Thy Neighbor
#381 The Wonderful Home of Louis Armstrong
#380 Dorothy Parker's Last Party
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