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Rochdale Village: Robert Moses, 6,000 Families, and New York City's Great Experiment in Integrated Housing (American Institutions and Society) Kindle Edition


From 1963 to 1965 roughly 6,000 families moved into Rochdale Village, at the time the world's largest housing cooperative, in southeastern Queens County. The moderate-income cooperative attracted families from a diverse background, white and black, to what was a predominantly black neighborhood. In its early years, Rochdale was widely hailed as one of the few successful large-scale efforts to create an integrated community in New York City or, for that matter, anywhere in the United States.

Rochdale was built by the United Housing Foundation. Its president, Abraham Kazan, had been the major builder of low-cost cooperative housing in New York City for decades. His partner in many of these ventures was Robert Moses. Their work together was a marriage of opposites: Kazan's utopian-anarchist strain of social idealism with its roots in the early twentieth century Jewish labor movement combined with Moses's hardheaded, no-nonsense pragmatism.

Peter Eisenstadt recounts the history of Rochdale Village's first years, from the controversies over its planning, to the civil rights demonstrations at its construction site in 1963, through the late 1970s, tracing the rise and fall of integration in the cooperative. (Today, although Rochdale is no longer integrated, it remains a successful and vibrant cooperative that is a testament to the ideals of its founders and the hard work of its residents.) Rochdale's problems were a microcosm of those of the city as a whole—troubled schools, rising levels of crime, fallout from the disastrous teachers' strike of 1968, and generally heightened racial tensions. By the end of the 1970s few white families remained.

Drawing on exhaustive archival research, extensive interviews with the planners and residents, and his own childhood experiences growing up in Rochdale Village, Eisenstadt offers an insightful and engaging look at what it was like to live in Rochdale and explores the community's place in the postwar history of America's cities and in the still unfinished quests for racial equality and affordable urban housing.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Peter Eisenstadt makes a convincing case that Rochdale Village―which, when it opened in December 1963 was the largest housing cooperative in the world and possibly the largest integrated housing development in the United States―is a story that deserves to be rescued from obscurity. Eisenstadt has performed a service to scholars of race, housing, and New York City by shedding light on this understudied case.

American Historical Review

Review

This is a masterful book. A seemingly marginal housing project in a seemingly marginal borough becomes, in Peter Eisenstadt's work, a critical point of entry into the history of race relations in New York City and the nation. In recounting the inspiring and painful saga of Rochdale Village during the 1960s and '70s―the largest interracial housing complex in the city, and perhaps in the country-he offers fresh perspectives on a dozen different domains, including housing, schooling, religion, politics, class, crime, and labor. Drawing on bedrock-level research and his own memories (having lived there from age ten to nineteen), Eisenstadt opens up new veins of thought in well-worked scholarly mines. He revisits the 1968 teachers strike, black-Jewish relations, black power, and white flight. He rebuts, from the inside, Jane Jacobs's dismissal of high-rise living as soulless and sterile. And he gives an account of the odd coupling of utopian co-op developer Abraham Kazan and the anti-utopian, racially challenged Robert Moses that is alone worth the price of admission. Toss in the elegant, engaging, and often witty prose and provocative conclusions about the contemporary relevance of integrationist and cooperative ideals, and you've got a very compelling piece of work.

-- Mike Wallace, Distinguished Professor of History at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, co-author of Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898

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Peter R. Eisenstadt
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