Death (being edged to the doorway): Where’s a good hotel? What am I talking about hotel, I got no money. I’ll go sit in Bickford’s. (He picks up the News).” —Getting Even, Woody Allen
In 1921, the Bickford’s “lunchrooms,” as they were known, offered modestly priced fare and extended hours. Bickford’s architect was F. Russell Stuckert, who had been associated with Samuel Bickford since 1917. Stuckert’s father, J. Franklin Stuckert, had designed buildings for Horn & Hardart in the 1890s.
During the 1920s, the Bickford’s chain expanded rapidly with 24 lunchrooms in the New York area and others around Boston. A letter with a company stock offering stated, “The lunchrooms operated are of the self-service type and serve a limited bill of fare, which makes possible the maximum use of equipment and a rapid turnover. Emphasis is placed on serving meals of high quality at moderate cost.” A 1964 New York City guidebook noted:
- Breakfast at Bickford’s is an old New York custom. In these centrally located, speedy-service, modestly-priced restaurants a torrent of traffic is sustained for a generous span of hours with patrons who live so many different lives on so many different shifts. – Wikipedia
Bickford’s Revisited – Eighth Avenue – Midtown, NYC
Gatske de Jong – Maternal Great-Grandmother – Resurfaces on Internet
Today I found my great grandmother all over the Internet on Pinterest originating in an online exhibition on the history of Amsterdam as told through documents. Thanks to a distant cousin in Friesland, Jelle Rietsma, I was able to trace my maternal lineage to the 1700s. My paternal lineage is less clear but perhaps this will also become more evident in the near future.
Other mentions of Gatske de Jong on the Fading Ad Blog here!
I. Rubin, Clothier & Tailor – for Men, Young Men & Boys – Bushwick,
Through the window of his car in the rain, on the corner of Jefferson & Wilson Streets, Vincenzo captured this portal to the past with his iPhone.
Also at:
- Eating in Translation – May 12, 2013
- Flickr – David Cook
Broadway Sleep Mart – Furniture Manufacturing – Bushwick, Brooklyn
Vincenzo took the shots above on Park Avenue just south of Broadway with his iPhone. So this is my theory. From the look of the fonts and the weathering, the signs written on the brick between the windows are clearly very early 20th-century (c.1910). My guess is the sign for Broadway Sleep Mart can be anywhere from 1930’s to 1940’s. I’m going to assume that the proprietors conducted their business at the Park Avenue location for several decades and then outgrew their space and moved up the street on Broadway. The public records above show the address at 835 Broadway with an incorporation of 1956 – up the street a bit in a larger space, now a laundromat. Vincenzo also points out that the Park Avenue location may have been maintained as a warehouse. I’m also inferring from these records that in 1962, they changed the name of the store.
Ideal Hosiery Revisited – LES, NYC – Uptown Correspondent, Iman R. Abdulfattah
Previously posted on FAB:
- David Drake – Featured Fade – July 14, 2013
- November 17, 2007 – You can see considerable weathering since then.
Raul Candy Store – East Village, NYC – Uptown Correspondent, Iman R. Abdulfattah
A fine interview, Making It, can be found at The Local East Village – September 19, 2012. Apparently opening its doors in 1976 on Avenue D, then moving to 208 Avenue B five years later, finally landing at 205 Avenue B, owner Petra Oliveiri tells a story of the gentrification of Loisada and the resilience of a Puerto Rican bodega.
Nom Wah Tea Parlor – Chinatown, NYC – Uptown Correspondent, Iman R. Abdulfattah
History of Nom Wah
Nom Wah Tea Parlor first opened at 13-15 Doyers Street back in 1920 as a bakery and a tea parlor. For most of the 20th century, Nom Wah Tea Parlor served as a neighborhood staple offering fresh chinese pasteries, steamed buns, dim sum and tea. After it lost its lease at 15 Doyers in 1968, it moved into a brand new kitchen at 11 Doyers Street and has occupied 11-13 Doyers Street ever since. Nom Wah is most famous for its homemade lotus paste and red bean filling for moon cake during the Chinese autumn festival. It is also famous for its almond cookie. – For more see the Nom Wah Tea Parlor Website!
- The History of Doyers Street – Nom Wah Tea Parlor Website
- The History of Dim Sum – Nom Wah Tea Parlor Website