Lower East Side Tenement Museum, New York, NY
Web site: www.tenement.org
Press Contact: Kate Stober, kstober@tenement.org,
212-431-0233 ext 235
 |
The kitchen
in the Levine apartment,
photo by Battman Studios.
|
Between 1815 and 1914, more than 30 million
immigrants poured into America looking for decent work
and a safe place to live. Some 7,000 people from 20 countries
made their way to 97 Orchard Street, a New York City tenement.
Today, the Lower East Side Tenement Museum recreates homes
and stories of tenants who lived in these cramped spaces
with stifling ventilation, poor lighting, and lack of
privacy. Since 1988, the Tenement Museum has been integral
in the education of visitors, from both the United States
and abroad, interested in the history of immigrants in
America.
The museum, which began as a simple display
in 97 Orchard’s storefront, takes a unique hands-on
approach to connecting visitors to the struggles and triumphs
faced by former tenants. Instead of a building filled
with artifacts displayed in cases of glass, rooms rented
by six families from the 19th and 20th centuries have
been recreated from Census records, first-hand accounts,
and old photographs. Visitors to the museum are encouraged
to interact with the rooms, not simply observe them from
a distance. Tour guides give insight into the lives of
the immigrant families that lived, and sometimes even
worked, in their apartments, and in sharing these personal
stories, aim to promote tolerance, give historical perspective,
and encourage discussions about the larger issues concerning
immigration in the present day.
The Tenement Museum prides itself on its
efforts to foster civic engagement, provide services to
new immigrants, and promote community development through
a number of outreach initiatives. One such program is
Shared Journeys, which brings students from ESOL (English
for Speakers of Other Languages) and ELL (English Language
Learner) classes to the museum free of charge to listen
to a costumed reenactor discuss the trials faced by immigrants
in 1916 America. Students are then encouraged to discuss
their own experiences as recent immigrants. Many find
that even though they are almost a century removed from
the story the museum tells, it is in many ways much like
their own.
Another program geared toward finding a
common ground between recent immigrants and people whose
ancestors made the journey to America long ago is Kitchen
Conversations. After a tour of the museum, participants
discuss and share their opinions on current immigrations
issues facing the United States. This relaxed environment
promotes candid and open, yet always respectful, conversations
on a potentially controversial topic.
In 2004, the museum provided an invaluable
service to recent immigrants with the publication of The
New York Times Guide for Immigrants in New York City.
The guide features current information for immigrants
in New York on topics including obtaining green cards,
finding apartments, getting jobs, enrolling children in
school, protecting their legal rights, utilizing social
services available to immigrants, and much more.
The Lower East Side Tenement Museum has
had numerous important achievements since its inception
in 1988, including its addition to the National Register
of Historic Places and its recognition, paired with Ellis
Island, as a National Historic Area. These accomplishments
complement the museum’s creative and interactive
tours and programming, which help visitors—approximately
one million in the past 20 years—put a face and
a name to a quintessentially American story.
“The Lower East Side Tenement Museum
is deserving of this high honor. The museum’s programs
strive to unite our City’s diverse population by
focusing on the shared immigrant experience. Their outreach
efforts help recent immigrants forge a new life in New
York City, and have brought about a greater understanding
of the challenges faced by so many,” said U.S. Representative
Nydia M. Velázquez (D-NY-12).
Community Member Daryl Hamilton
Major Adversity Leads to the Best Job of
His Life at the Tenement Museum
In 2004, Hamilton lost 70 percent of his vision
to congenital glaucoma and lost his job in corporate America.
A take-charge kind of guy, Hamilton began researching
New York services and job opportunities for visually impaired
and blind people. Over the next few years, he sewed uniforms
for American soldiers in Iraq and worked as an employment
recruiter for the visually impaired and blind. He also
connected with Info Share, a group that brings adults
who are blind or partially sighted to New York City cultural
institutions. In 2007, he visited the Lower East Side
Tenement Museum with Info Share and was so inspired by
the fascinating museum and the friendly and well-trained
staff, that he contacted the museum about getting involved.
A month later, the museum invited him to join the staff
as a museum educator. Today, Hamilton leads interactive,
participatory tours and facilitates visitor discussions
on immigration as part of Kitchen Conversations, a free
program. The 30 hour-a-week job is the “best work
experience of my entire life,” he said.
|