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Need Early 1900s Part 1: Brooklyn
 
I've been reading A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, a classic 1943 book by Betty Smith about a young girl growing up poor in Brooklyn around 1912-1916. 
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| royalbooks.com, first edition of 1943 A Tree Grows in Brooklyn | 
Images that come to my mind as I read are pleasant but vague.  So I've gathered a collection of 1912-1916 Brooklyn images that help to set the stage for this book:
Tenament housing in Williamsburg, Brooklyn is where Francie Nolan grew up.  It probably looked something like this:
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| brooklynpix.com; Metropolitan Ave, Williamsburg Brooklyn 1916 | 
Factories were nearby where the people worked hard to earn a meager living:
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| mcnycblog.org, "The Struggle to Save the Austin, Nichols, and Co. Warehouse" | 
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| brooklynhistory.org: female factory workers 1915 ca, Eberhard Faber Pencil Factory | 
Brooklyn (Trolley) Dodgers had another season in the new Ebbett's Field in 1913:
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| thebaseballpage.com, "Ebbett's Field 1913" | 
A "trolley dodger" was a negative name that people from Manhattan had for the people of Brooklyn--because of Brooklyn's many trolleys (see wikipedia under "trolley dodger").  Here you can see a major intersection of trolleys in Brooklyn:
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| ebay.com photo for sale, "1916 Flatbush-Nostrand Aves Junction Trolleys Flatlands Brooklyn NYC Photo" | 
Brooklyn's Vitagraph Studios was one of the first film studios:
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| brooklynology.brooklynpuliclibrary.org: 1913 fashion shoot at Vitagraph Studios | 
Now that we've looked at Brooklyn specifically, I will be posting about early 1900s interior color schemes, flooring, wall coverings, lighting, furniture, and upholstery in another post.  I want to give everyone out there with a house built around this time the context for the architects and builders at that time.
 
 
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