Amazing Vintage Photographs Capture Scenes of Little Syria in New York City From the 1910s_Ha

Once upon a time in New York City, years before the World Trade Centre was built and the area known as TriBeCa came to exist, the lower west side of Manhattan was a different place. For this corner of the city was once home to a vibrant neighborhood, the streets filled with the sound of Arab music, the smell of fresh Baklava wafting from bakeries, shops brimming with everything from rugs to brass lanterns, veiled mothers watching their children playing and the newspapers and shop signs were written in Arabic. Little Syria, as it was known, was the cultural hub of America’s first middle eastern immigrant community and it was located just south of where the current World Trade Centre stands today.

For 60 years between 1880 until the 1940s, Arab-Americans poured into New York City from Greater Syria made up of present-day countries including Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Israel to escape religious persecution and poverty. They found homes in crowded tenements on a six block stretch of Washington Street from Liberty Street to Battery Park, alongside Armenians, Greeks, and other communities from the Middle East and the Mediterranean.
The Syrian Quarter and its 3,000 residents, the newly arrived immigrants made a home for themselves in this tousled unwashed section of New York. Many of the early Syrian-Americans began their new lives as street vendors before saving up to establish their own businesses.
Little Syria declined as a neighborhood as the inhabitants became wealthier and gradually dispersed to other areas, and had disappeared almost entirely by the 1940s when the remaining community was displaced by the construction of the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel. If you go looking for the neighborhood today, you’ll find just three buildings from the era: St. George’s Melkite Church, a tenement building at 109 Washington Street and the Downtown Community House.

Little Syria in New York City From the 1910s
Little Syria in New York City From the 1910s
Little Syria in New York City From the 1910s
Little Syria in New York City From the 1910s
Little Syria in New York City From the 1910s
Little Syria in New York City From the 1910s
Little Syria in New York City From the 1910s
Little Syria in New York City From the 1910s
Little Syria in New York City From the 1910s
Little Syria in New York City From the 1910s

Related Posts

39 Wonderful Color Photos Captured Everyday Life of the United States in the Early 1950s_Ha

Here is a wonderful collection of Kodachrome slides that documented American life in the early 1950s. Everyday Life of the United States in the Early 1950s Everyday…

These Old Photos Show What High School Looked Like in the 1970s _ nan

The 1970s in America marked a period of remarkable social and cultural change, with high schools serving as microcosms of the shifting values and attitudes of the…

40 Vintage Photos of American Children During the Great Depression Era_Ha

The economic collapse of the 1930s was staggering in its dimensions. Unemployment jumped from less than 3 million in 1929 to 4 million in 1930, 8 million…

Vintage Photos of Teenage Girls’ Fashion in the 1950s_teo

These vintage photos capture the teenage girls’ fashion and style of the 1950s. During this time, the fashion was more conservative and gender-specific than it is today….

Before Television: Interesting Photos of People With Their Radios During the Radio Golden Age_Ha

The old-time radio era, sometimes referred to as the Golden Age of Radio, was an era of radio programming during which radio was the dominant electronic home…

Before the Internet: Lovely Black and White Shots Capture Everyday Life of Children in the Past_Ha

Internet is truly a great telecommunication revolution to change the lives of people. It helps to connect us closer together, so of course it’s good for us,…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

10 + seventeen =