On this day 107 years ago, my father (Harold
Burk) was born at home, 77 E. 109th Street in Manhattan, the second of four children of Isaac
Burk and Henrietta
Mahler Burk.
Until the mid-1920s, the Burk family lived in a series of tenements in upper Manhattan. Dad used to tell stories of how, on a summer's day, the family would pack a big picnic lunch and take a street car to the top edge of Manhattan. There, they would pick up a horse-drawn conveyance for crossing into the Bronx.
It was a full-day outing, between the slow transportation and then enjoying lunch and a stroll or nap in the park. A welcome change from the heat, noise, and bustle of Manhattan, he remembered fondly decades later.
By 1930, the Burk family had managed to move uptown, with three of the four children working and contributing to the household coffers. They lived at 1580 Crotona Park East in the Bronx, a leafy, "suburban" part of the city.
Today, a single family home sits on the site. But 80 years ago, 20 families lived in a tenement at that address. Looking at the 1930 Census, every family in the building was either headed by an immigrant or included an immigrant (sometimes as a boarder). Most were from Russia, Poland, Romania, or thereabouts.
The Burk family's next-door neighbor in the apartment building became a character reference for Dad in 1931. He was applying for a "fidelity bond" as the first step toward his dream of becoming a travel agent.
Two other character references shown on the bond were, in reality, family members: Louis
Volk was married to his aunt, Ida
Mahler; Joseph
Markell was married to another aunt, Mary
Mahler. Both lived on Rochambeau Avenue in the Bronx, 3 miles uptown from the Burk family.
Except for the years he served in World War II, Dad lived the rest of his life in the Bronx, where I was born and spent my early years.