"Crossing Delancey" Photo: NYdiscovery
Of all the neighborhoods of New York, none is more evocative of the blood, sweat, and tears that built the city than the Lower East Side. It's one of the oldest neighborhoods in Manhattan, having provided a home to millions of lower class African, Italian, Polish, Irish, Ukrainian, German, Jewish, and Latin American immigrants throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. Even the name sounds tough. Just hearing the words 'Lower East Side' evokes images of close-knit families, soot-covered laborers, pushcart vendors, overcrowded tenement apartments, and kids playing in the street as dead horses rot in the gutter and bloodthirsty criminals search for their next victim. After all, it was the setting for Martin Scorsese's Gangs of New York, where gangs like the Five Points, Roach Guards, Dead Rabbits, and Bowery Boys would fight for supremacy in an area that was all but lawless. These were mean streets indeed.
In those days, "crossing Delancey" was a way to say you had succeeded in life, because once a Lower East Side resident crossed Delancey Street and headed north toward the wealthier neighborhoods uptown, they had left their poverty behind for good. These days, however, people cross Delancey in the other direction, as the Lower East Side is now one of the most fashionable parts of the city. A recent afternoon stroll revealed a tantalizing mix of history, culture, and cuisine from what was once one of the most miserable ghettoes in the world.
Victor Ozols is a Brooklyn-based writer and editor with an interest in anything travel-related. Originally from Virginia, he spent a couple of years in Riga early in his career, where he gained an appreciation for dark Latvian bread, hot running water, and unforgiving newspaper deadlines. He's been in New York long enough to no longer philosophize about what it means to be a New Yorker, but he still loves the city and feels like living there is like traveling while staying in one place. Victor is weekend editor of Jaunted.com and he writes the blog New York City Diary.
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