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Skyscraper Settlement
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19 September 2023

The roles that Christodora House has played from 19th-century settlement house to its newest forms
Settlement house workers helped transform the lives of thousands of people despite lack of funding, the influenza epidemic of 1918, economic depressions, and two World Wars. Many of these houses still exist in the original neighborhoods where they confront the problems of today and advocate for their communities.
Christodora House, founded in 1897 as “The Young Women’s Settlement,” played an important role in the life of immigrants and other residents on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. For over 50 years, residents and volunteers at Christodora House provided classes, clubs, recreational activities, and medical and dental clinics for thousands of New Yorkers, and then continued to operate programs out of public housing and other locations for more than two decades.
The building at 143 Avenue B, now housing condominiums, has had a tumultuous history since 1948 but still stands, towering over its tenement neighborhood in the East Village. Christodora Inc. is now a nonprofit foundation with offices in Midtown Manhattan, whose staff works with underserved New Yorkers, including youth in the public school system, carrying on a long, distinguished history of service to the city and country.
— Sarah Peskin
"“A creative and illuminating synthesis of local and large-scale history. It masterfully fuses a fascinating account of a settlement house in New York’s Lower East Side, from its founding by two young middle-class women in 1897 to the present, into a wider inquiry on urbanization, migration, progressivist ideology, religion-based philanthropy, and inter-class and ethnic encounters. In the process, the author fittingly pays tribute to forgotten individuals who, regardless of the prejudices of their times, devoted much of their lives to helping others.”"
— José C. Moya
"I recommend the book for undergraduate and graduate courses in urban affairs, urban planning, public policy, and social work and for practitioners in those professions."
— Barbara Levy Simon
"This remarkable book gives voice to one of the lesser-known but essential settlement houses in the United States."