LOWER EAST SIDE, Manhattan (WABC) -- Orchard Street on Manhattan's Lower East Side is where many Italian and German immigrants lived in tenements in the 1860s. "A lot of institutions have forgotten or ...
Visitors can explore the Black migrant experience in post-Civil War era New York City through a 75-minute guided, multimedia tour. Calling all museum-goers! On Feb. 1, the Tenement Museum in Lower ...
Social-media users could relate to the sentiment in the viral post, with one user saying, "this is familiar to me." ...
The parlor, or living room, of the Rogarshevsky family, who immigrated to New York from Russia in 1901. Visitors can see the room at the Tenement Museum’s 97 Orchard Street tenement. (all photos ...
Kat Lloyd stands in the dim light on the first-floor staircase of a dilapidated, New York City tenement building. Before her: a tour of wide-eyed teens on a field trip from their high school in Queens ...
The Tenement Museum undertook extensive research for its interactive exhibit. For years, The Tenement Museum in New York City's Lower East Side has become a living monument to the stories of 19th and ...
The Lower East Side Tenement Museum features a five-story brick tenement building that was home to an estimated 7,000 people, from over 20 nations, between 1863 and 1935. This building, located at 97 ...
The Tenement Museum (108 Orchard Street, 212-982-8420), with its tours of meticulously preserved apartments dating back to the 19th century, plays a crucial role in honoring the Lower East Side’s ...
The recreated tenement room where Rachel and Joseph Moore slept (photo Elaine Velie/Hyperallergic) In 1863, 25- and 35-year-old Black New Yorkers Rachel and Joseph Moore moved into a tenement at Lower ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results