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Jewish immigrants earned their living in a variety of ways. They sold goods from pushcarts, operated restaurants, and small retail shops and a great number worked in the garment industry. Children and adults often labored from dawn to dark in their small apartments doing piecework, paid by the number of items they had completed... They also worked in sweatshops-workshops that were squeezed into tenement apartments or loft buildings- and were crowded, poorly-lit, stifling in summer and cold in winter. Wages were low and hours long. ..Real progress was not made until the tragedy of the Triangle Shirtwaist Company factory fire on March 25, 1911, when 146 immigrants, many of them Jews, died. Their deaths eventually led to many reforms in both buildings and fire-code safety regulations.
Nevertheless, Jewish immigrants were eager to be assimilated into American life. Some of them too quickly. If you can, read Yekl. A Tale of the New York Ghetto, written in 1896 by Abraham Cahan's , Russian-American novelist emigrated to the United States to escape the mass roundups of revolutionaries following the assasinations of Russia's tsar Alexander II. Yekl is the story of a callow young immigrant who sloughs off many of his Old World values while adopting superficial aspects of the new American life, ending with an uneasy feeling about his future...
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Source: The Historical Atlas of New York City: A Visual Celebration of Nearly 400 Years of New York City's History, The Encyclopedia of New York City, Wikipedia and Ned Flanders.
2 comments:
He buscado en el catalogo de la red de bibliotecas de lectura pública y no la tiene ninguna biblioteca de Catalunya... I'm sorry... igual ya lo has hecho pero mirate este link.
http://www.priceminister.es/offer/buy/21758568/Hester-Street.html
Pi.
Esta entrada me está dando mucho trabajo. Good story!
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