Jonathan Cohen's photos with the keyword: factory

The Old Streit’s Matzah Bakery – Rivington Street…

01 Jul 2015 2 4 743
Matzah is the Hebrew word for the unleavened bread eaten by Jews during the springtime festival of Passover. Aron Streit, Inc. (sold under the brand name Streit's) is a kosher food company based in New York City. It is the only remaining family-owned and operated matzah company in the United States. The company was founded in 1916 by Aron Streit, a Jewish immigrant from Austria. Its first factory was on Pitt Street in the Lower East Side of Manhattan. There, Streit and his business associate Rabbi Weinberger made each piece of matzah by hand. In 1925, with the growing number of Jewish immigrants congregating in the Lower East Side, Streit, along with his two sons, moved his business to nearby Rivington Street. Soon thereafter, they bought the adjacent buildings where the company operated until April, 2015. Streit’s 47,000-square-foot (4,400 m2) matzah factory, along with Katz’s Delicatessen and Yonah Schimmel’s Knish Bakery, was a surviving piece of the Lower East Side’s Jewish heritage. At the turn of the 20th century Jews, along with other European Immigrants, were crammed into the many unsanitary tenements of the Lower East Side. In 1915 they made up 60 percent of the Lower East Side population. Because of the large Jewish presence, Jewish-centric businesses like Streit’s opened and flourished. However, because of the poor living conditions, many Jewish families moved out of the tenements as soon as could afford to new areas of New York City, namely uptown and Brooklyn. Slowly Streit’s became a relic of the past. Since the 1980s the Lower East Side has experienced hyper gentrification. The neighborhood is now a burgeoning area for glass luxury high rise buildings such as the Blue Condo and the Hotel on Rivington – a stark contrast to Streit's modest brick factory. Despite the changing neighborhood, the factory still tried to integrate itself with the community. It gave out fresh pieces of matzah to passing pedestrians. (I can vouch for this myself -- you've never tasted matzah until you've eaten it still warm from the oven!). At one time its adjacent shop even served as a community art gallery. The Streit family even considered opening a café or bar that served matzah, to go with the Lower East Side’s new nightlife scene. In April 2015, they sold the building for a reported $25 millionand moved the operation to a location in New Jersey. It is worth noting that any employee who chose to make the move was guaranteed his or her old job in the new location.

The Shifting Economic Base – Seneca Falls, New Yor…

25 Sep 2013 365
Call me cynical, but when we visited Seneca Falls – the site of the world's first women’s rights convention in 1848 – I couldn’t help feeling that the economic base of the town had shifted from textiles to feminist tourism. It was only when I returned home that I found out that the old Seneca Knitting Mill, which dates to 1844, is to be the new home of the National Women’s Hall of Fame. The Knitting Mill was owned for over 40 years by the Souhan family. In 1995 the mill was sold to Ridgeview, that closed the mill in 1999 with the loss of some 250 jobs. The owners, who had invested millions of dollars in Seneca Falls, said they couldn’t make a profit on the subsidiary, which specialized in making heavy, woolen socks. In an interview with the Syracuse Post-Standard, Tim Souhan said that in 1999 the economic conditions in Seneca Falls weren’t the greatest. "If there’s a growth industry here, it’s tourism," he added. The Hall of Fame was founded in 1969 and has some 247 inductees so far. Nine more American women, including House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi, will be inducted later this year.

Canada Malting Company – Saint-Ambroise and Saint-…