Tenement Museum

103 Orchard Street
Because of the challenges in predicting the impact of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak, and in consultation with public health experts, city and state officials, the institution is closed until further notice. Click here for latest infor... more
Because of the challenges in predicting the impact of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak, and in consultation with public health experts, city and state officials, the institution is closed until further notice. Click here for latest information form the NYC Dept of health. The Tenement Museum's mission is "to promote tolerance and historical perspective through the presentation and interpretation of the variety of immigrant and migrant experiences on Manhattan's Lower East Side, a gateway to America." The heart of the Museum is the tenement at 97 Orchard Street. Located on Manhattan's Lower East Side, 97 Orchard was home to an estimated 7,000 people from over 20 nations from 1863 to 1935. In 1998, President Clinton and the United States Congress designated the Museum a National Historic Area affiliated with the National Park Service. 97 Orchard Street had been named a National Historic Landmark and a featured property of the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Visitors to the Tenement Museum tour carefully restored tenement apartments and learn about the lives of actual past residents: the Gumpertz family, German Jews (1870s), the Rogarshevsky family... more
Because of the challenges in predicting the impact of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak, and in consultation with public health experts, city and state officials, the institution is closed until further notice.

Click here for latest information form the NYC Dept of health.


The Tenement Museum's mission is "to promote tolerance and historical perspective through the presentation and interpretation of the variety of immigrant and migrant experiences on Manhattan's Lower East Side, a gateway to America."

The heart of the Museum is the tenement at 97 Orchard Street. Located on Manhattan's Lower East Side, 97 Orchard was home to an estimated 7,000 people from over 20 nations from 1863 to 1935. In 1998, President Clinton and the United States Congress designated the Museum a National Historic Area affiliated with the National Park Service. 97 Orchard Street had been named a National Historic Landmark and a featured property of the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

Visitors to the Tenement Museum tour carefully restored tenement apartments and learn about the lives of actual past residents: the Gumpertz family, German Jews (1870s), the Rogarshevsky family, Eastern European Jews (1900s), the Baldizzi family, Italian Catholics (1930s), and the Moores, Irish Catholics (1860s). A living history program for children and families focuses on the Confinos, Sephardic Jews from Turkey (1916).

Please note that all tours begin at the Visitors Center & Tenement Shop located at 103 Orchard Street (between Delancey & Broome Streets).

Calendar of Tours

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Lower East Side Description

Tenement Museum is located in the Lower East Side neighborhood of Manhattan. While this could apply to most neighborhoods in this guide, the Lower East Side might be the best example yet of an area that was once down-at-the-heels, full of recent immigrants striving towards the American dream and long-time residents just trying to make ends meet, and is now as expensive as anywhere else in Manhattan, filled to the gills on weekends with the bridge-and-tunnel crowd looking to eat fancy and party hard.

The Lower East Side is boxed in between Alphabet City and Chinatown and between Little Italy, Nolita, and the East Rive, running roughing south from Delancey Street to FDR Drive and from the East River west to Allen Street. In the last 150 years, the Lower East Side has been populated by successive waves of lower-income German, Irish, and Jewish immigrants, and has seen extensive immigration of Chinese and Latin populations in recent decades. Although the well-known Tenement Museum on Orchard Street chronicles the historically difficult, even squalid, conditions in the neighborhood’s tenements, rents have risen to four, six, even eight times what they were just five years ago. Today, Ludlow and Orchard Streets reflect the newest wave of immigrants: the dot-com and downtown crowd. In fact, an unbelievable array of new boutiques, restaurants, stores, fabulous bars and music clubs compete with the area’s long-established tailors, fabric dealers, button wholesalers, religious artifact suppliers, pickle vendors, and Kosher wine distributors.

The neighborhood’s crowded parks and outdoor recreation areas reflect the pastiche of New York’s ethnically diverse groups, especially in summer, and a dizzying array of music from around the world can be heard literally on every corner. Take a stroll around to see some of the city’s oldest synagogues, famous delicatessens, shopping streets, and hang out with the hippest crowds.

Art enthusiasts will be interested to know that the mother lode of art galleries in New York's Chelsea neighborhood has seen tectonic shifts, albeit slowly, to the Lower East Side, with trendy smaller new galleries popping up here and there. Many attribute this gallery migration to the Lower East Side to the presence of the New Museum of Contemporary Art on the Bowery, the first art museum ever constructed from the ground up in this neighborhood.

Nightlife on the Lower East Side, especially on the weekends, is always rocking, with almost as many people cruising its narrow streets as there are inside its numerous bars, restaurants and live music venues. Up and coming alternative rock bands play at Bowery Ballroom on Delancey Street and Mercury Lounge on East Houston Street, while lesser known acts perform at smaller venues, such as the performance space in Pianos and the Living Room on Ludlow Street, or by booking Arlene's Grocery on Stanton Street.

If you're looking to grab a bite to eat before concert-hoping from venue to venue, try Apizz, which features great Southern Italian cuisine and Prune, which is renowned for its fine American dining.

The Lower East Side is definitely moving upwardly in its hotel and real estate offerings. The growth of this neighborhood has brought several new luxury boutique hotels, including Hotel On Rivington and the deluxe boutique Blue Moon Hotel on Orchard Street.

There are no events taking place on this date.

Info

103 Orchard Street
New York, NY 10002
(212) 431-0233
Website

Editorial Rating

Admission And Tickets

$25 - Adults
$20 - Students & Seniors
Members: Free

This Week's Hours

To visit the Museum, you must take part in one of their many tours. Not all tours are offered every day. Consult www.tenement.org for details.
Tours run daily from 10:00am-6:00pm

The Tenement Shop is located within the Visitors Center and operates during the same hours.
Mon-Fri: 11am-6pm
Sat&Sun: 10:45am-6pm

Nearby Subway

  • to Essex St
  • to Delancey St -- 0.1

@tenementmuseum

If you are in the neighborhood this #MemorialDay, stop by the Lower East Side War Memorial, one of the 207 war memorials in NYC, dedicated to the Service Men and Women from the Lower East Side
https://t.co/KOF56m1P6N
https://t.co/R3MdNHgOiv Mon at 2:13 PM

Learn more about the Johnson-Reed Immigration Act of 1924 and it's lasting legacy on the U.S. here:
https://t.co/GE1TRg9zVY Fri at 6:41 PM

One family affected was the Baldizzis. Adolfo Baldizzi departed for New York in 1923, to find a job and set aside money for his wife, Rosaria, to join him. But he arrived just before the passing of the Immigration Act, and it would take also two years for the two to be reunited.
https://t.co/dEO9h4ifSf Fri at 6:41 PM

As an example of how this law affected people in non-Western Europe, in 1921 a recorded 222,260 Italians were able to immigrate to the United States. By 1925, only 6,203 officially entered. The impact of the 1924 Johnson-Reed Act had an immeasurable effect on countless families. Fri at 6:41 PM

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