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Gotham

The Gilded Age in a Glass: From Innovation to Prohibition

The Gilded Age in a Glass: From Innovation to Prohibition

By Zachary Veith

In the early 20th century, bartenders at the world-famous Waldorf-Astoria memorized 271 concoctions. Scores of signature drinks were dreamt up in honor of people and events: the “Arctic” to celebrate Peary’s discover of the North Pole, the “Coronation” to commemorate King Edward’s ascension to the throne, the “Commodore” and “Hearst,” honoring business tycoons, and even the “Charlie Chaplin.” Imbibing at the mahogany bar aligned oneself with the wealth and tastemakers of America; crowds of Wall Street bankers like J.P. Morgan, celebrities like Buffalo Bill Cody and Mark Twain, and the high-society elites all enjoyed more than a few of the bar’s signature cocktails.

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The Bank of United States, East European Jews and the Lost World of Immigrant Banking

The Bank of United States, East European Jews and the Lost World of Immigrant Banking

By Rebecca A. Kobrin

On a particularly cold morning ninety-one years ago this month, the owner of a small candy store in the Bronx went to his branch of the Bank of United States to withdraw some much-needed cash. Over the past two years, the bank had been selling its shares to its depositors throughout New York city to help raise funds, guaranteeing their investment would maintain its value. The Bank promised it would buy back shares at any point. Now, this storeowner was taking them up on it.

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Review: Christopher Hayes’s The Harlem Uprising: Segregation and Inequality in Postwar New York City

Decline, Rebellion, and Police Politics: Rethinking the Dissolution of New York’s Civil Rights Coalition

Reviewed by Joseph Kaplan

In his final book before his life was taken by an assassin’s bullet, Martin Luther King Jr. reflected on the state of the Civil Rights Movement and the conditional allyship of whites. According to King, whites generally believed “that American society is essentially hospitable to fair play and to steady growth toward a middle-class Utopia embodying racial harmony.” Emerging from a decade of unprecedented mobility in which a highly unionized white labor force entered the middle class en masse, many viewed the Civil Rights Movement as part of the unbroken march of progress.

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“I have shoes to my feet this time”: May Swenson, New York City, and the FWP

“I have shoes to my feet this time”: May Swenson, New York City, and the FWP

By Margaret A. Brucia

Penniless and hungry, her clothes in tatters, May Swenson was an emergency case for the Workers Alliance (WAA) in March 1938. She was fed at St. Barnabas House on Mulberry Street (“Boy, that butterless bread, gravyless potatoes, hashed turnips & salt-less meatloaf tasted swell!”)[1] and then given fifteen dollars to buy new shoes and clothing at S. Klein’s at Union Square and E 14th Street. “Jesus!” was all she could write in her diary.

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 “Are these not my streets?”: May Swenson, New York City, and the Federal Writers Project

“Are these not my streets?”: May Swenson, New York City, and the Federal Writers Project

By Margaret A. Brucia

Drawn to New York by her exposure to Lost Generation authors and the work of Alfred Stieglitz and his circle of artists, May Swenson left the security of her loving Mormon family in Utah during the depths of the Great Depression. After struggling to hold a series of low-paying positions, withering prospects for employment threatened her continued existence in New York. By a devious route, May joined the ranks of the Federal Writers Project, plunged into New York’s cauldron of creativity and went on to become a leader in the field of modern poetry.

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Interview: Andrea Mosterman on her book, Spaces of Enslavement

Interview: Andrea Mosterman on her book, Spaces of Enslavement

Interviewed by Deborah Hamer

In her new book, Spaces of Enslavement: A History of Slavery and Resistance in Dutch New York, Dr. Andrea Mosterman looks at the lives of enslaved people in New Netherland and Colonial New York from the 1620s until 1820. She shows how central enslaved labor was to individual households and to the colony as a whole and how this dependence on enslaved people shaped life for all New Yorkers — Black and white — over this two hundred year period.

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Interview: Thomas Balcerski on Sailors' Snug Harbor

Interview: Thomas Balcerski on Sailor's Snug Harbor

Interviewed by Ryan Purcell

Today on Gotham, editor Ryan Purcell interviews Thomas Balcerski about his recent New York History essay about the history of Sailor’s Snug Harbor. Sailor’s Snug Harbor, located along the Kill Van Kull in New Brighton, on the northern shore of Staten Island, was opened in 1833 as the country’s first home for retired seamen from the US Merchant Marine and the US Navy. Supported through an endowment left in the estate of Revolutionary War soldier and ship Captain Robert Richard Randall, Snug Harbor served retired sailors through the 19th century.

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The Problem of Water in New York’s History

The Problem of Water in New York’s History

By Carolyn Eastman

New York’s water problem has been on my mind because in the evening after I arrived in the city on September 1, 2021 to start a fellowship at the New-York Historical Society, Hurricane Ida barreled through the region. The water was devastating. Dozens died in basement apartments or when they unwittingly drove their cars into flooded streets and got swept away by the rushing water. Media filled with video of torrents of water pouring into the subway and dramatic water rescues in New Jersey.

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“People Love the Rat”: How Scabby, Labor’s Mascot, Took New York

“People Love the Rat”: How Scabby, Labor’s Mascot, Took New York

By Benjamin Serby

Anyone who has spent time in New York will not be surprised to learn that it is the most rat-infested city in the United States, with an estimated population of two million (roughly one rat for every four people). Strangely, rats are part of the city’s culture — and long have been. As Luc Sante explains in Low Life: Lures and Snares of Old New York, rat-baiting was the city’s “premier betting sport” in the 19th century. Boys were paid to collect rats from the street “at a rate of five to twelve cents a head,” and spectators wagered on how quickly fox terriers or “men wearing heavy boots” could massacre dozens of them at a time.

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