Learn History Through Fiction: Electrifying the Lower East Side

In many of New York City’s Lower East Side tenement buildings, electricity was not installed until mid-1924, and that was only after pressure and legal threats from City Council. Gas lighting was added abut twenty years earlier to comply with the Tenement House Act of 1901, which required a light source on every floor from sunset to sunrise. Tenants paid for gas through a coin-operated meter in the kitchen of each apartment. Before electricity, they navigated the building’s dark hallways and back rooms using kerosene or oil lamps. Read more about the hard lives of immigrants on the Lower East Side at the turn of the last century in On the Shore (see NOVELS).

Author: annsepstein@att.net

Ann S. Epstein is an award-winning writer of novels, short stories, memoirs, and essays.

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