world.wikisort.org - USA"Curry Row,"[1] or "Little India," [2] and sometimes called Curry Lane,[citation needed] is an area of East Sixth Street, from First Avenue to Second Avenue,[3] in the East Village of Lower Manhattan, with approximately 20 South Asian restaurants.
Ethnic enclave in Manhattan, New York
Curry Row started in 1968 when six brothers,[2] all from Bangladesh, bought a former Japanese restaurant for $1,800; the owner of the property accepted that price instead of the initial $2,000 because the brothers could only pay $1,600. The brothers established the restaurant Shah Bag because of existing demand and because the area South Asians wanted a place where they could eat familiar cuisine.[4] One of the brothers, Manir Ahmed, immigrated to the United States in 1954. Andrew Jacobs of The New York Times stated that "Manir Ahmed was the one name that was invariably stuffed in the pockets of new arrivals" and that the brothers "are revered as patriarchs in the Bangladeshi community".[2]
Most of the restaurateurs that came to the area were from Sylhet Division.[2] The restaurants, many named after films or people or characters seen in films, were popular with hippies in the 1970s who expressed an interest in South Asian culture. Many of the cooks served northern Indian cuisine even though their native Bangladeshi cuisine was significantly different.[1] Olid Ahmed, the nephew of the first restaurateurs in Curry Row, stated that he got assistance from the chef of the Embassy of Pakistan. By the 1980s the restaurants became financially lucrative, and changes in immigration law meant there were more immigrants from Bangladesh.[2] In 1984 there were about 10 South Asian restaurants. In the following decade that number was 27.[1]
By 1996, The New York Times reported that several of the restaurants experienced financial issues as Indian restaurants opened in other parts of the New York metropolitan area. With increased competition, the newspaper reported that a "price war" resulted in relationships between people being damaged.[2]
In 2008 there were around twelve South Asian restaurants in the area.[3]
In 2019 the South Asian-oriented publication The Juggernaut reported that some of the restaurants remained in operation while others had closed.[5]
See also
References
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Green spaces |
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- La Plaza Cultural de Armando Perez
- Liz Christy Garden
- New York Marble Cemetery
- New York City Marble Cemetery
- Open Road Park
- Tompkins Square Park
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Education |
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- Cooper Union
- East Side Community High School
- Grace Church School
- High School for Health Professions and Human Services
- Ottendorfer Library
- Third Street Music School Settlement
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Religion |
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- Church of the Immaculate Conception and Clergy Houses
- Church of the Most Holy Redeemer
- Church of the Nativity
- Congregation Chasam Sopher
- German Evangelical Lutheran Church of St. Mark
- Grace Church
- Middle Collegiate Church
- San Isidoro y San Leandro Western Orthodox Catholic Church of the Hispanic Mozarabic Rite
- St. Ann's Armenian Catholic Cathedral
- St. Ann Church
- St. Brigid Roman Catholic Church
- St. Emeric Church
- St. George's Church
- St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery
- St. Nicholas Kirche
- St. Nicholas of Myra Church
- St. Stanislaus Bishop and Martyr Church
- Tabernacle Baptist Church
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Culture |
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Restaurants/ nightlife |
- Burp Castle
- Club Cumming
- Death & Co.
- Joe's Pub
- KGB
- McSorley's
- Nuyorican Poets Café
- Please Don't Tell
- Pommes Frites
- Pyramid Club
- The Cock
- The Talking Band
- Veniero's
- Veselka
- Webster Hall
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Theater |
- Classic Stage Company
- La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club
- Metropolitan Playhouse
- Minetta Lane Theatre
- Nublu Club
- Orpheum Theatre
- Performance Space New York
- Theatre 80
- Theater for the New City
- Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre
- Village East by Angelika
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Stores |
- Barbara Feinman Millinery
- Ray's Candy Store
- Strand Bookstore
- Trash and Vaudeville
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Other | |
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Former |
- 8BC
- A7
- Charas/El Bohio
- Club 57
- Dos Blockos
- Five Spot Café
- Gem Spa
- Ground Zero Gallery
- Harry & Ida's Meat and Supply Co.
- Kim's Video and Music
- King Tut's Wah Wah Hut
- Limbo
- Lit Lounge
- New St. Marks Baths
- New York Vauxhall Gardens
- Now Gallery
- Old Reliable Theatre Tavern
- The Ritz
- The Saint
- SideWalk Cafe
- Sin-é
- St. Mark's Bookshop
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Other buildings |
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- 21 Astor Place
- Bracetti Plaza
- Christodora House
- First Houses
- Hamilton Fish House
- Isaac T. Hopper House
- Metropolitan Savings Bank Building
- Riis Houses
- Stuyvesant Polyclinic Hospital
- Van Tassell and Kearney Horse Auction Mart
- Village View
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Regions |
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- Alphabet City
- Book Row
- East 10th Street Historic District
- East Village/Lower East Side Historic District
- Little Germany
- St. Mark's Historic District
- Yiddish Theatre District
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Ethnic enclaves |
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- African-American
- Arab
- Armenian
- Australian
- Brazilian
- Cambodian
- Chinese
- Czech
- Danish
- Dutch
- Ethiopian
- Filipino
- Finnish
- First Nation
- French
- German
- Greek
- Hispanic and Latin American
- Hungarian
- Icelandic
- Indian
- Irish
- Italian
- Iranian
- Japanese
- Jewish
- Korean
- Lithuanian
- Malaysian
- Maltese
- Native American
- Norwegian
- Pakistani
- Polish
- Portuguese
- Russian
- Serbian
- Spanish
- Swedish
- Thai
- Ukrainian
- Vietnamese
- West Indian
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