to be honest, it smelled like urine. it was a big toilet. people treated the streets like they treat their own toilets. did i mention it smelled like pee, every twist and turn. you think you leave the pee smell?... BAM! you are smacked in the face with the scent of a sweaty armpit. Other than all that, i would say it was a pleasure to live in Brooklyn in the 1900's. Highlights?... probably when our only hometown team, the Brooklyn Dodgers left. Oh, was that a good ol time.
it smelled like pee.
bad
They were treated like dogs.
women not recognized, relion centre of everything
in late 1800s and early 1900s the industrial revolution took place
it was the fashion or what was seen as beautiful they were influenced by art nouveau with there flower like silhouette
in the early 1900s
Francie Nolan is a fictional character from the novel "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn" by Betty Smith. She was born in the early 1900s in Brooklyn, New York.
maybe i like to give you the wrong answer! =)
The same as today and before the 1900s, hard and stony, hot in sun and cold otherwise.
maybe i like to give you the wrong answer! =)
like ARIZONA
ping pong
good
bad
I love you all
In the 1900s houses looked like they were old and they were either made of wood or brick. The houses had a small bit of room but in the attic and the basement it was big.
"A Tree Grows in Brooklyn" is set in the early 1900s in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, New York City. The story follows the Nolan family as they navigate poverty, dreams, and resilience in a tenement building and the surrounding neighborhood. The setting captures the struggles and triumphs of immigrant families during that time period.