Young Men's Christian Association of the City of New York. Bowery Branch.

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Organized in 1872, the Bowery Branch, also known as the East Third Street Branch, had an unbroken period of service for the unemployed and homeless for 75 years. Early on the branch experimented with providing meals for free or nearly free. The experiment was so successful that it became a permanent feature of the Bowery's services. The innovation continued with opening of dormitories. The Bowery offered the first bed service of any kind in New York's YMCA. After World War II, the branch merged with the newly opened Vocational Services Branch on East 40th Street. The Third Street building was sold to the City of New York in 1947, and continued as a major center for homeless men. The Vocational Services Branch continued many services formerly rendered at "Old Bowery."

From the description of Bowery YMCA records, 1876-1946 (bulk 1930-1946). (University of Minnesota, Minneapolis). WorldCat record id: 63319123

Organized in 1872, the Bowery Branch, also known as the East Third Street Branch, had an unbroken period of service for the unemployed and homeless for 75 years. The Bowery, a riverfront neighborhood on Manhattan's Lower East Side, was burdened with a lot of poverty, prostitution, gambling, drug and alcohol abuse in its crowded docks and streets. Morris K. Jessup, president of the New York City YMCA, saw a need for the Y’s services in the troubled area and took a personal interest in the creation of the Bowery YMCA. In 1872 the YMCA opened its first location in a small building that formerly housed a saloon and gambling hall. The original location offered a reading room, religious services, and modest entertainment alternatives to the activity outside its doors.

The original plan was not for full-scale relief; instead the plan was to follow the earlier Ys’ examples with a small reading room, religious services, and the occasional musical performance. The economic depression of 1873 changed these plans and the Bowery Branch saw tremendous growth in its facilities and the services it offered over the next several decades.

Early on the branch experimented with providing meals for free or nearly free. The experiment was so successful that it became a permanent feature of the Bowery’s services. The innovation continued with opening of dormitories. The Bowery offered the first bed service of any kind in New York’s YMCA. These short term housing programs would go on to from a cornerstone piece of the New York Y’s services.

The years following the Great War were challenging ones for the two Associations in New York. The stock market crash and ensuing Great Depression brought misery on a grand scale to the city. Prayer revivals were no longer panaceas for New Yorkers’ pain, as they had been during hard economic times of the nineteenth century. By 1931, city churches were increasingly turning to the Bowery YMCA to handle their share of relief for homeless men. That year the Branch served 1,345,000 meals in its restaurants and provided 144,540 lodging nights. The Bowery Y was not just giving handouts, however; it managed to secure jobs for more than 1,500 men.

For many years the Bowery YMCA had been an important charity in New York. Indeed, it was deemed the “Ritz-Carlton of lodging houses.” But changes brought about by the New Deal undercut and even supplanted its mission. Having lost business in its restaurant and 5-cent cafeteria to government food programs, the Branch was running a $75,000 annual deficit by 1938. Its room rentals were also declining, a result of lower demand on the now less densely populated Lower East Side. The public had grown less inclined to support its mission-style services for the poor, preferring to fund hospitals and medical services and advanced education. “Nobody likes to pay for a dead horse,” a Branch memo noted.

The Bowery Branch revived somewhat during the war years. In 1940 its Penny Cafeteria, opened with help from the New York Community Trust, served more than 9,000 meals in its first week, and nearly 50,000 the first month. After World War II, the branch merged with the newly opened Vocational Services Branch on East 40th Street. The Third Street building was sold to the City of New York in 1947, and continued as a major center for homeless men. The Vocational Services Branch continued many services formerly rendered at "Old Bowery."

Bayless, Pamela. The YMCA at 150: A History of the YMCA of Greater New York, 1852-2002 . New York: YMCA of Greater New York, 2002.

Donoghue, T. 1951. An Event on Mercer Street .

From the guide to the Bowery YMCA records., 1876-1946, (bulk 1930-1946)., (University of Minnesota. Kautz Family YMCA Archives. [ymca])

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf Young Men's Christian Association of the City of New York. Bowery Branch. Bowery YMCA records, 1876-1946 (bulk 1930-1946). University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
referencedIn Vocational Service Center records, 1938-1980, (bulk 1955-1970) University of Minnesota Libraries. Kautz Family YMCA Archives. [ymca]
referencedIn Young Men's Institute records, 1885-1924 University of Minnesota Libraries. Kautz Family YMCA Archives. [ymca]
creatorOf Bowery YMCA records., 1876-1946, (bulk 1930-1946). University of Minnesota Libraries. Kautz Family YMCA Archives. [ymca]
Role Title Holding Repository
Place Name Admin Code Country
New York (N.Y.)
New York (N.Y.).
New York (State)--New York
Subject
Homeless persons
Vocational training centers
Young Men's Christian associations
Young Men's Christian associations
Young Men's Christian associations
Young Men's Christian associations
Occupation
Activity

Corporate Body

Active 1876

Active 1946

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