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Louis Chock Since 1921-The Chock sign on tenement building on Orchard Street is an example of the storefronts that tenement owners allowed on the ground floor.-PSH
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Top_1- A look down Orchard Street with back facing to Canal Street.-PSH
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Top_2-Pink building 321 on corner of Grand and Orchard Street has more windows then what was normal. It was a department store that had large windows for displays. The store was called E. Ridley and sons Department Store.-PSH
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Top_3- Man sitting outside of local business on Orchard Street.-PSH
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Top_4- A push cart selling food items on Orchard Street. Street vendors used to be part of the "push cart market" where vendors were a community with their buyers.-PSH
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Top_5- Intersection of Canal Street and Essex where two men go their separate ways.-PSH
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Orchard St. 1- Posted at the tenement museum on Orchard Street. A look at the rows of tenements, some dating back to the 1860s.-PSH
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Lamp Post- New style lamp post based on Orchard Street.-PSH
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Orchard St. 4- Smaller building between two larger ones is the oldest building on Orchard Street. Where once houses stood, land was flattened then tenement buildings as these were built.-PSH
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Women in Hair Salon- Women in hair salon on Canal Street, business is slow midday.-PSH
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Food Cart-Women shop for food items at One Essex Market on Canal Street and Essex.-PSH
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Bank-Pictured is S.jarmvlowsky's Bank which was established in 1873. The bank at this location was built in 1912 and is 12 floors high.-PSH
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Memorial-View from Stratus Square through to Rutgers Street.-PSH
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Shoes-Shoes hang from an electrical wire running from one corner on the Canal-Orchard Street intersection to another.-PSH