Borscht Belt

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{{Infobox settlement

| name = Borscht Belt

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| settlement_type = Cultural region of United States

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| image_map = File:Map of New York highlighting Borscht Belt.png

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| map_caption = Map of New York State with the counties that constituted the Borscht Belt highlighted

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The Borscht Belt, or Yiddish Alps, is a region which was noted for its summer resorts that catered to Jewish vacationers, especially residents of New York City.{{cite web |last1=Herrmann |first1=Michele |title=The Borscht Belt Was a Haven for Generations of Jewish Americans |quote=A new exhibition examines the more than 1,000 resorts and hotels that dotted New York’s Catskills Mountains and provided relaxation, dancing and laughs |url=https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/pop-up-exhibition-on-the-catskills-borscht-belt-to-evolve-into-permanent-museum-180982906/ |website=Smithsonian Magazine |date=2023-09-18 |access-date=2024-09-03 |language=en}} The resorts, now mostly defunct, were located in the southern foothills of the Catskill Mountains in parts of Sullivan and Ulster counties in the U.S. state of New York, bordering the northern edges of the New York metropolitan area.

"In its heyday, as many as 500 resorts catered to guests of various incomes."{{Cite web |first=Stanley |last=Turkel |title=Nobody Asked Me, But… No. 217, Hotel History: Catskill Mountain Resort Hotels |url=https://www.hospitalitynet.org/opinion/4094418.html |work=Hospitality Net |date=2019-08-01 |access-date=2024-04-20}} These resorts, as well as the Borscht Belt bungalow colonies, were a popular vacation spot for New York City Jews from the 1920s through the 1960s.{{cite press release|url=http://www.brown.edu/Administration/News_Bureau/1995-96/95-062i.html|title= Jewish scholars study history, cultural significance of the Borscht Belt|publisher=Brown University|location=Providence, Rhose Island|archive-date= December 3, 2019|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20191203163353/https://www.brown.edu/Administration/News_Bureau/1995-96/95-062i.html|url-status=live}} By the late 1950s, many began closing, with most gone by the 1970s, but some major resorts continued to operate, a few into the 1990s.

Name

The name comes from borscht, a soup of Ukrainian origin (made with beets as the main ingredient, giving it a deep reddish-purple color){{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=c4kvrPEweOcC&q=borscht+origin&pg=PA65|first=Sydney|last= Schultze|title=Culture and Customs of Russia|series=Series: Cultures and Customs of the World|publisher=Greenwood|year=2000|isbn=978-0313311017|pages= 65–66|quote=The very poor might have few vegetables in the soup other than cabbage, making it shchi, or if it also had beets it was considered borscht. Borscht, actually Ukrainian in origin....}} that is popular in many Central and Eastern European countries and brought by Ashkenazi Jewish and Slavic immigrants to the United States. The alliterative name was coined by Abel Green, then editor of Variety, and is a play on existing colloquial names for other American regions (such as the Bible Belt and Rust Belt).{{cite news |last=Karnow |first=Stanley |date=1990-01-18 |title=Goodbye to the Borscht Belt |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1990/01/18/goodbye-to-the-borscht-belt/bc36b764-156d-4387-b038-c6644f90c904/ |newspaper=The Washington Post |access-date=2024-04-20 |quote=But Abel Green, the editor of Variety, reputedly coined the term Borscht Belt -- and so it remains.}} An alternate name, the Yiddish Alps,{{cite magazine |date=1938-01-31 | author= |title=The story of a song: "Bei Mir Bist Du Schön" now heads bestsellers |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yUoEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA39 |magazine=LIFE |publisher=Time Inc. |publication-place=Chicago, IL |access-date=2024-04-20 |quote=The Grossinger Hotel is on the fringe of the Catskills, known as the 'Yiddish Alps' or the 'borscht belt'.}} was used by Larry King and is satirical: a classic example of borscht belt humor.

History

File:Udmap.jpg

After the expansion of the railway system including the tracks Ontario and Western as well as the Ulster and Delaware Railroad, the area of the Catskill Mountains became a tourist destination because of the beauty of the landscape, which impressed the painters of American Romanticism, and because of the rising popularity of fly fishing in its trout-rich rivers. As New York City streets would bake in the summer and air-conditioning was not yet available, people flocked to the Catskills.

In the early 1900s, some hotels' and resorts' advertisements refused to accept Jews and indicated "No Hebrews or Consumptives" in their ads.{{Cite news |url=https://www.jewishtimes.com/spotlight-on-nostalgia/ |title=Spotlight on Nostalgia |first=Michael |last=Jankovitz |date=2014-11-26 |work=Baltimore Jewish Times |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20231209182619/https://www.jewishtimes.com/spotlight-on-nostalgia/ |archivedate=2023-12-09 |quote=We shouldn’t forget that the Jewish resorts in the Catskills 'were created in large part because other hotels in the region refused to admit Jews around the turn of the century through the 1930s' Rosenberg reminds audiences. 'The phrase, No Hebrews or Consumptives were included in advertisements for these restricted hotels,' he says.}} This discrimination led to a need for alternative lodging that would readily accept Jewish families as guests. Visits to the area by Jewish families were already underway "as early as the 1890s ... Tannersville ... was 'a great resort of our Israelite {{sic|breathren|expected=brethren}}' ... from the 1920s on [there were] hundreds of hotels."{{Cite magazine |first=Lily |last=Rothman |title=The Real History Behind The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel's Trip to the Catskills 'Borscht Belt' |url=https://time.com/5470834/marvelous-mrs-maisel-catskills-history/ |magazine=Time |date=December 6, 2018 |quote=New York City would bake in the summer. Air-conditioning hadn’t been invented yet, so people wanted to get away from the asphalt and the cement and the concrete as much as they could, so they went up to the Catskills. This was starting to happen as early as the 1890s. I found a quote from Rand McNally’s Guide to the Hudson River that says that Tannersville, one of these areas, was “a great resort of our Israelite breathren.” [..] there were a lot of hotels and places in the Catskills that were restricted, that did not allow Jews to come, and so the Jews essentially said, We’ll create our own hotels that will be welcoming to Jews. In the 20th century, particularly from the 1920s on, it really exploded. We’re talking about hundreds of hotels. }} The larger hotels provided "Friday night and holiday services as well as kosher cooking", thus supporting religious families to take a vacation in accordance to their customs.{{Cite news |url=https://jewishbusinessnews.com/2014/11/26/kutshers-documentary-captures-eclectic-legacy-of-borscht-belt-relic/ |title=Kutsher's Documentary Captures Eclectic Legacy Of Borscht Belt Relic |work=Jewish Business News |first=Jeffrey F. |last=Barken |date=2014-11-26 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20141223234408/https://jewishbusinessnews.com/2014/11/26/kutshers-documentary-captures-eclectic-legacy-of-borscht-belt-relic/ |archivedate=2014-12-23 |quote=The culture of Kutsher’s and other Jewish hotels in the Catskills evolved to accommodate religiously observant patrons, providing Friday night and holiday services as well as kosher cooking. For the first time in history, it was possible for strictly religious Jewish families to go on holiday.}}

= Rise =

Borscht Belt hotels, bungalow colonies, summer camps, and kuchaleyns (kuch-alein, literally: "Cook it yourself",{{Cite web |url=https://repository.library.northeastern.edu/downloads/neu:m041gv69p |first=Irwin |last=Richman |title=The Bungalow Colonies, "Kuchaleyns" |date=2003-11-10 |work=Newsletter of the Catskills Institute #14 |access-date=2024-09-28 |quote=The bungalow colony of old, the 'kuchaleyn' (literally: 'Cook it yourself!') was the quintessential do-it-yourself Borscht Belt resort.}} a Yiddish name for self-catered boarding houses){{Cite web |url=https://www.travelwithjan.com/kochalein |first=Jan |last=Polatschek |title=Berastagi: "Kukh-aleyns" |date=2008-06-29 |work=Travel with Jan – Since 2001 |access-date=2024-09-28 |quote='Kukh-aleyns' literally means to cook alone or to cook for yourself. Here's the way it worked: in a large boarding house, several families had a bedroom room or two upstairs. On the main floor was a spacious, open area with ten or fifteen small kitchens, side by side. Each kitchen had a stove, sink, a refrigerator, some cabinets and a dinette set.}} flourished. The bungalows usually included "a kitchen/living room/dinette, one bedroom, and a screened porch" with entertainment at the casino, the communal center, being simple: bingo or a movie.{{Cite news |url=https://jewishworldnews.org/borscht-belt-staff-reminisce-about-the-glory-days-of-the-jewish-alps-and-their-part-in-making-it-happen/ |title=Borscht Belt staff reminisce about the glory days of the Jewish Alps and their part in making it happen |date=March 15, 2019 |work=The Jewish World |first=Marilyn |last=Shapiro |access-date=March 12, 2021 |archive-date=October 27, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211027041801/https://jewishworldnews.org/borscht-belt-staff-reminisce-about-the-glory-days-of-the-jewish-alps-and-their-part-in-making-it-happen/ |url-status=dead }} The kuchaleyns were often visited by lower middle-class and working-class Jewish New Yorkers. Because of the many Jewish guests, this area was nicknamed the Yiddish Alps or Solomon County (a malapropism of Sullivan County) by many people who visited there.{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qH0eT_cpkywC&dq=borscht+belt++Jewish+%5B%5BAlps%5D%5D+and+%22Solomon+County%22&pg=PA160 |title=Did Jew Know?: A Handy Primer on the Customs, Culture & Practice of the Chosen People |page=160 |section=From the Catskills to California: How the Borscht Belt Went From Lo Pro to High Ho and the West Was Won |first=Emily |last=Stone |year=2013|publisher=Chronicle Books |isbn=9781452129570 }}

File:Concord Hotel, Kiamesha Lake, New York LCCN2017710733.tif

A sufficient choice of Jewish cuisine was an important feature of the hotels in the Borscht Belt, and "too much was not enough" developed as a notion. Jonathan Sarna wrote: "To understand the emphasis on food, one has to understand hunger. Immigrants had memories of hunger, and in the Catskills, the food seemed limitless."{{Cite news |url=https://blogs.timesofisrael.com/the-bygone-era-of-the-jewish-catskills-resorts/ |title=The Bygone Era of the Jewish Catskills Resorts |work=The Times of Israel |first=Sheldon |last=Kirshner |date=September 25, 2018 |quote=At these hotels, food was of primary importance. 'To understand the emphasis on food,' writes the scholar Johnathan Sarna, 'one has to understand hunger. Immigrants had memories of hunger, and in the Catskills, the food seemed limitless. There was a sense that too much was not enough.' When someone asked the wife of a New York newspaper columnist how to lose weight at Grossinger’s, she replied, 'Go home.'}}{{Cite book |title=The Catskills: Its History and How It Changed America |first1=Stephen M. |last1=Silverman |first2=Raphael D. |last2=Silver |year=2015 |publisher=Knopf Doubleday Publishing |isbn=9780307272157 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=02CWBgAAQBAJ}}{{rp|303}} The singles scene was also important; many hotels hired young male college students{{Cite web |url=https://www.hadassahmagazine.org/2019/09/03/remembering-summers-honeymoons-mountains/ |title=Remembering Summers and Honeymoons in the Mountains |date=2019-09-03 |work=Hadassah Magazine |first=Marlene |last=Post}} to attract single girls of a similar age. One book on the era contended that "the Catskills became one great marriage broker."{{Cite book |first1=Irwin |last1=Richman |title=Catskill Hotels |year=2003 |publisher=Arcadia Publishing |location=Charleston, SC |isbn=9780738511610 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5xs5BV92J40C&pg=PA9 |quote=Hotels hired college boys to attract single girls, and the Catskills became one great marriage broker.|page=9}}

Borscht Belt resorts stood in towns such as Liberty, Fallsburg, Mamakating, Thompson, Bethel and Rockland in Sullivan County as well as Wawarsing and Rochester in Ulster County. Such resorts included Avon Lodge, Brickman's, Brown's, Butler Lodge, The Concord, Grossinger's, Granit, the Heiden Hotel, Irvington, Kutsher's Hotel and Country Club, the Nevele, Friar Tuck Inn, the Laurels Hotel and Country Club, the Pines Resort, Raleigh Hotel, the Overlook, the Tamarack Lodge, Shady Nook Hotel and Country Club, Stevensville, Stier's Hotel, and the Windsor. Some of these hotels originated from farms that Jewish immigrants established in the early part of the 20th century.{{Cite book|last=Finkelstein|first=Norman H.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5RfJAwAAQBAJ&q=borscht+belt+comedians&pg=PT15|title=Jewish Comedy Stars: Classic to Cutting Edge|date=2014-01-01|publisher=Kar-Ben Publishing ™|isbn=978-1-5124-9029-9|language=en}}

Two of the larger hotels in High View (just north of Bloomingburg) were Shawanga Lodge and the Overlook. One of the high points of Shawanga Lodge's existence came in 1959 when it was the site of a conference of scientists researching laser beams. The conference marked the start of serious research into lasers.{{cite book | last = Hecht | first = Jeff | title = Beam: the race to make the laser | publisher = Oxford University Press | date = 2005 | page = 101 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=6jOnlRViWPoC&q=Shawanga&pg=PA116 | isbn = 9780195142105 }} The hotel burned to the ground in 1973."Mamakating" by Monika A. Roosa, Arcadia Publishing, 2007, p. 29 The Overlook, which offered rooms in the main building as well as bungalows, spiced up with entertainment, was operated by the Schrier family.

File:Granit Hotel & Country Club, Kerhonkson, New York LCCN2017710824.tif|A view from the Granit hotel,
Kerhonkson, 1977

File:Nevele lobby, Ellenville, New York LCCN2017713282.tif|The Nevele hotel lobby,
Ellenville, 1978

File:Kutsher's Room 950, Thompson, New York LCCN2017712991.tif|A room at Kutcher's,
Monticello, 1977

File:Brickman pool area, South Fallsburg, New York LCCN2017712682.tif|Brickman's pool area,
South Fallsburg, 1977

File:Grossinger's ping pong, Liberty, New York LCCN2017712854.tif|Grossinger's ping pong,
Liberty, 1977

File:Menges party, folk dancing, Della Menges 2nd from right, 9-3-77, Livingston Manor, New York LCCN2017713052.tif|Folk dancing at Menges' Lakeside,
Livingston Manor, 1977

=Decline=

The Borscht Belt reached its peak in the 1950s and 60s with over 500 resorts, 50,000 bungalows, and 1,000 rooming houses{{cite web |url=https://borschtbelthistoricalmarkerproject.org/the-borscht-belt |title=The Borscht Belt |author= |date=2023 |work=Borscht Belt Historical Marker Project |publisher=Jewish American Society for Historic Preservation |access-date=2024-04-24 |quote=From the 1920s through the early 1970s, the Borscht Belt was the preeminent summer resort destination for hundreds of thousands of predominantly east coast American Jews. The exclusion of the Jewish community from existing establishments in the 1920s drove Jewish entrepreneurs to create over 500 resorts, 50,000 bungalows and 1,000 rooming houses in Sullivan County and parts of Ulster County.}} but the start of a decline was apparent by the late 1960s. "Railways began cutting service to the area, the popularity of air travel increased, and a younger generation of Jewish-Americans chose other leisure destinations."{{Cite magazine |url=https://time.com/3778413/the-disappearance-of-the-borscht-belt-hotels/ |title=The Disappearance of the Borscht Belt Hotels |magazine=Time |first=Christina |last=Clusiau |date=June 23, 2011}} A secondary factor was that "anti-Semitism declined, so Jews could go other places."{{Cite web |url=https://hvmag.com/life-style/history/borscht-belt-hotels-catskills/ |title=History of Borscht Belt Hotels and Bungalow Colonies in the Catskills |first=David |last=Levine |date=July 23, 2014 |work=Hudson Valley Magazine}}

Access to the area improved with the opening of the George Washington Bridge and upgrade of old travel routes such as old New York State Route 17. On the other hand, passenger train access ended with the September 10, 1953 termination of passenger trains on the Ontario and Western Railway mainline from Roscoe at the northern edge of Sullivan County, through the Borscht Belt, to Weehawken, New Jersey.{{Cite web |work=American Rails |title=New York, Ontario & Western Railway (NYO&W): "Route Of The Mountaineer" |date=July 3, 2022 |first=Adam |last=Burns |url=https://www.american-rails.com/nyow.html}} A 1940 vacation travel guide published by the railroad listed hundreds of establishments that were situated at or near the railway's stations.{{cite web |url=https://catskillsinstitute.northeastern.edu/item/neu:m0403p29n/|title=1940 Vacation Guide - New York Ontario and Western Railway |website=The Catskills Institute |publisher=Northeastern University |access-date=21 January 2022}} The following year, the New York Central ceased running passenger trains on its Catskill Mountain Branch.{{cite web |url=http://www.prrths.com/newprr_files/Hagley/PRR1954.pdf|title=1954 Chronology of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and its Historical Context |website=PRR Chronology |publisher=Pennsylvania Railroad Technical and Historical Society |access-date=12 February 2022}} The area suffered as a travel destination in the late 1950s and especially by the 1960s. Another source also confirms that "cheap air travel suddenly allowed a new generation to visit more exotic and warmer destinations."{{Cite news |url=https://www.businessinsider.com/borscht-belt-photos-by-marisa-scheinfeld-2013-8 |title=23 eerie photos that show the crumbling beauty of New York's abandoned 'Borscht Belt' resorts |date=July 5, 2018 |first1=Megan |last1=Willett-Wei |first2=Talia |last2=Lakritz |work=Business Insider}} More women remained in the workforce after marriage and could not take off for the entire summer to relocate to the Catskills.{{cite magazine |last=Danailova |first= Hiliary |date= September 3, 2019 |title=Young Jews Are Bringing the Catskills Back to Life |url=https://www.hadassahmagazine.org/2019/09/03/young-jews-bringing-catskills-back-life/ |magazine=Hadassah Magazine}}

A Times of Israel article specifies that "the bungalow colonies were the first to go under, followed by the smaller hotels. The glitziest ones hung on the longest" with some continuing to operate in the 1980s and even in the 1990s. Bungalow colonies fell into disrepair or many of the nicer ones have been converted into a housing co-op.{{cite news |first=Constance L. |last=Hayes |title=Catskill Bungalows: Rustic Goes Co-op |work=The New York Times |date=1987-08-24 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1987/08/24/nyregion/catskill-bungalows-rustic-goes-co-op.html |url-access=subscription |access-date=2024-01-10 |quote=Most of the nicer places, they found, have long waiting lists or have been converted to co-ops.}} The Concord Resort Hotel, which outlasted most other resorts, went bankrupt in 1997 but survived until 1998 and was subsequently demolished for a possible casino site. By the early 1960s, some 25 to 30 percent of Grossinger's Catskill Resort Hotel visitors were not Jewish; nevertheless it closed in 1986.{{Cite web |url=https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/ruins-of-grossingers-resort |title=Ruins of Grossinger's Resort |work=Atlas Obscura |date=August 24, 2013 |quote=[...] the hotel closed {{sic|it’s|expected=its}} doors for the last time in 1986.}}

The Stevensville Hotel in Swan Lake was located on the shores of an artificial reservoir of the West Branch Mongaup River which fed a tannery since the 1840s.{{YouTube|id=PUFV3OIvVn8|title=Stevensville Lake Resort -- Swan Lake -- Classic Catskills|time=1m9s}} It was commissioned in 1924 and managed by the Dinnerstein and Friehling families{{cite web |author= |title=Swan Lake Marker |url=https://borschtbelthistoricalmarkerproject.org/swan-lake |work=Borscht Belt Historical Marker Project |date=2008-03-28 |access-date=2020-09-24 |quote=Swan Lake’s most well-known resort, the Stevensville Lake Hotel, was constructed in 1924 and run for many years by the Dinnerstein and Friehling families.}} until around 1990.{{cite news |first=Dan |last=Hust |title=Former Stevensville Hotel has a new owner |location=Swan Lake |url=https://www.scdemocratonline.com/stories/former-stevensville-hotel-has-a-new-owner,44669 |work=Sullivan County Democrat |publication-place=Callicoon, NY |date=2015-07-28 |access-date=2024-04-20 |quote=A key part of the Borscht Belt up until it closed circa 1990, the Stevensville was bought by the Gallo family, who reopened the sprawling facility in 1999, adding, among other amenities, an Asian restaurant.}}

It reopened as Swan Lake Resort Hotel{{cite web |author= |title=Swan Lake Resort Hotel |url=https://www.manta.com/c/mmcxwr4/swan-lake-resort-hotel |work=Manta Media |date=2009-03-22 |access-date=2024-04-20 |quote=Briscoe Road Swan Lake, NY 12783, established in 1997, employs a staff of approximately 10}} in 1999 offering Asian cuisine plus Tennis & Golf facilities but only survived until 2007.{{cite web |first=Bruce |last=Forsyth |title=The crumbling remains of America's Jewish Vacationland – The rise and fall of the Borscht Belt |url=https://militarybruce.com/the-crumbling-remains-of-americas-jewish-vacationland-the-rise-and-fall-of-the-borscht-belt/ |work=Things From My Travels |date=August 2023 |access-date=2024-04-20}}

In 2015 the ultra-Orthodox{{cite web | url=https://eu.recordonline.com/story/news/2015/07/29/former-catskill-resort-sold-to/33783572007/ | title=Former Catskill resort sold to ultra-Orthodox organization }} Congregation Iched Anash bought the property for $2.2 million{{cite news |first=Steve |last=Israel |url=https://eu.recordonline.com/story/news/2015/07/29/former-catskill-resort-sold-to/33783572007/ |title=Former Catskill resort sold to ultra-Orthodox organization |newspaper=Times Herald-Record |location=Middletown, New York|date=2015-07-29 |access-date=2024-04-20 |quote=Congregation Iched Anash of Brooklyn and Monticello, which has been running a summer camp there, bought one of the last of the old Catskill resorts for $2.2 million}} and began to operate the Satmar Boys Camp, a religious summer school (yeshiva gedolah).{{cite news |author= |title=Satmar Yeshiva Gets Permits to Open in Swan Lake as College Campus |url=https://www.boropark24.com/news/satmar-yeshiva-gets-permits-to-open-in-swan-lake-as-college-campus |location=Queens |date=2020-06-12 |work=BoroPark24 |publication-place=Borough Park, Brooklyn |access-date=2024-04-20 |quote=The large Satmar yeshiva gedola announced on Friday that they have received the necessary permits to open a summer camp in Swan Lake, with strict guidelines and under the guise of a college campus. [..] The Satmar yesiva in Queens, which is affiliated with the kehilla in Williamsburg, will operate as the UTS Swan Lake Campus and will require the bochurim to adhere to social distancing rules.}}

In 1987, New York City mayor Ed Koch proposed buying the Gibber Hotel in Kiamesha Lake to house the homeless. The idea was opposed by local officials{{cite news| url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B0DE7DD123EF937A35757C0A961948260 | work=The New York Times | title=Catskills Hotel Suggested For Homeless | first=Joyce | last=Purnick | date=1987-04-04 | access-date=2010-04-26}} and the hotel instead became the religious school Yeshiva Viznitz.{{Cite web |url=http://www.brown.edu/Research/Catskills_Institute/hotelsbungalows.shtml |title=Hotels and Bungalows|publisher=The Catskills Institute, Brown University|location=Providence, Rhode Island| access-date=June 28, 2020|archive-date=January 30, 2019|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20190130221943/http://www.brown.edu/Research/Catskills_Institute/hotelsbungalows.shtml |url-status=live }}

The Granit Hotel and Country Club, located in Kerhonkson, boasted many amenities, including a golf course. It closed in 2015 and was renovated and turned into the Hudson Valley Resort and Spa, which closed in 2018. The property was sold in May 2019 to Hudson Valley Holding Co. LLC. The company did not announce its plans for the hotel.{{Cite news |url=https://www.dailyfreeman.com/2019/05/07/hudson-valley-resort-and-spa-closed-since-october-2018-bought-by-brooklyn-group/ |title=Hudson Valley Resort and Spa, closed since October 2018, bought by Brooklyn group |date=May 7, 2019 |work=Daily Freeman |first=Patricia |last=Doxsey}}

21st century

As of the 2010s, the region is a summer home for many Orthodox Jewish families. Some of the hotels have been converted into rehab centers, meditation centers or Orthodox Jewish hotels and resorts.{{cite magazine|last=Frankfurter|first=Yitzchok|title=Ruins of the Borscht Belt: A Photo Essay and Conversation with Documentary Photographer Marisa Scheinfeld|magazine=Ami Magazine|publication-date=Sep 15, 2013|issue=136|page=176}} The former Homowack Lodge in Phillipsport was converted into a summer camp for Hasidic girls. Officials of the state Department of Health ordered the property evacuated in July 2009, citing health and safety violations.{{cite news|first=Victor |last=Whitman |title=New York wants sect to leave old resort |date=2009-07-16 |url=https://eu.recordonline.com/story/news/2009/07/16/new-york-wants-sect-to/51924896007/ |work=Times Herald Record|location=Middletown, New York |access-date=2009-07-17 |archive-date=June 28, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200628184734/https://www.recordonline.com/article/20090716/news/307169935 |url-status=live}} The Orthodox Jews who flock to the region each summer provide commerce that the area would not have otherwise.{{cite magazine|last=Frankfurter|first=Yitzchok|title=Ruins of the Borscht Belt: A Photo Essay and Conversation with Documentary Photographer Marisa Scheinfeld|url=https://issuu.com/amimagazine/docs/epub_ami136|magazine=Ami Magazine|publication-date=Sep 15, 2013|issue=136|page=172|access-date=Feb 21, 2023}} The Flagler Hotel, Nemerson, Schenk's and Windsor Hotels in South Fallsburg, and the Stevensville Hotel in Swan Lake, were converted into Jewish religious summer camps.

In 1984, the Catskills division of Hatzalah was founded which covers the Borscht Belt and served the needs of a growing Orthodox clientele; as of 2020 a volunteer force of 450 rescue workers and paramedics is operating a fleet of 18 ambulances. Although financially independent from the other chapters, it cooperates in day-to-day business with Central Hatzalah of NYC as the 17. neighborhood and also with State Forces (police, forest rangers, emergency medical services, fire departments).{{cite web |url=http://hatzalahcatskills.org |title=We're making a livesaving difference |author=N. N. |date=2020 |publisher=Catskills Hatzalah |location=205 Brickman Road, South Fallsburg, NY 12779 |access-date=2024-04-21 |quote=over 4,000 calls per year, Fleet of 18 Ambulances, over 450 volunteers}}{{cite web |url=https://collive.com/hatzolah-responded-to-thousands-in-catskills-this-summer/ |title=Hatzolah Responded to Thousands in Catskills This Summer |author= |date=2019-08-15 |work=COLlive - independent Orthodox Jewish news outlet |editor=Rabbi Yehuda Ceitlin |access-date=2024-04-21 |quote=many of the attendees passed through the dispatching room at the Catskills Hatzolah Headquarters, where they were privileged to witness Hatzolah dispatching calls – many of them more than 100 miles away in Brooklyn. [..] Catskills Hatzolah operates 365 days a year in the Catskills.}}{{cite web |url=https://www.boropark24.com/news/catskills-hatzalah-is-pleased-to-announce-the-launch-of-its-drone-team |title=Catskills Hatzalah is pleased to announce the launch of its Drone Team |author= |date=2022-06-26 |website=BoroPark24 |publication-place=Borough Park, Brooklyn |access-date=2024-04-21 |quote=Catskills Hatzalah has a close relationship with New York State Forest Rangers, New York State Police, and Sullivan and Ulster County Police, Fire, and EMS agencies.}}{{cite web |url=https://jewishvues.com/articles/help-catskills-hatzolah-help-klal-yisroel-an-exculusive-interview-with-catskill-hatzolah-coordinators/ |title=Help Catskills Hatzolah Help Klal Yisroel: An Exculusive Interview With Catskill Hatzolah Coordinators |author= |date=2020-07-07 |work=The Jewish Vues |publication-place=Brooklyn, NY |access-date=2024-04-21 |quote=The Catskills division is the seventeenth “neighborhood” of Central Hatzalah of New York City. [..] The vast majority of their activity is in July and August, when summer residents arrive.}}

Many Buddhist and Hindu retreat centers have been constructed on the land or in the restored buildings of former camps or resorts to serve adherents in New York City, the establishment of which has then drawn even more temples and centers to the area. This led to the coining of the nicknames "Buddha Belt," "Bhajan Belt" and "Buddhist Belt" to refer to the area's revival.{{cite news | title=HAVENS; The 'Bhajan Belt': Serenity in the Catskills | website=The New York Times | date=2002-10-18 | url=https://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/18/travel/havens-the-bhajan-belt-serenity-in-the-catskills.html |first=Mark |last=Healy | access-date=2020-09-24}}{{cite news | last=Sullivan | first=John | title=region's 'buddha belt' keeps on expanding | website=Times Herald-Record | date=2007-08-19 | url=https://www.recordonline.com/article/20070818/news/708180338 | access-date=2020-09-24}}{{cite web | last=Brown | first=Rande | title=Borscht Belt Buddhism | website=Tricycle: The Buddhist Review | date=Winter 2003 | url=https://tricycle.org/magazine/borscht-belt-buddhism/ | access-date=2020-09-24}}

Despite the region's decline as a cultural epicenter, a handful of traveling acts, such as the Doox of Yale, continue to regularly tour the Borscht Belt.{{Cite web |last1=July 3 |last2=Comments |first2=2023 {{!}} Daniel Zhang {{!}} |title=A Brief History of Borshch |url=https://festival.si.edu/blog/a-brief-history-of-borshch |access-date=2024-02-16 |website=Smithsonian Folklife Festival |language=en-US}}

File:Concordhotel1.jpg|The Concord hotel, 2005

File:Kutsher's Hotel Monticello NY1.jpg|Kutcher's hotel, 2015

File:Grossinger's Resort Liberty, NY1.jpg|Grossinger's resort, 2015

File:Granit Resort NY1.jpg|The Granit resort, 2015

Between 2013 and 2018, the decaying state of the abandoned resorts was captured by several ruins photographers:{{cite magazine|last=Frankfurter|first=Yitzchok|title=Ruins of the Borscht Belt: A Photo Essay and Conversation with Documentary Photographer Marisa Scheinfeld|url=https://issuu.com/amimagazine/docs/epub_ami136|magazine=Ami Magazine|publication-date=Sep 15, 2013|issue=136|page=167|access-date=Feb 21, 2023}}{{cite web |url=https://untappedcities.com/2017/10/05/10-abandoned-resorts-from-the-borscht-belt-in-catskills-new-york/10/ |title=10 Abandoned Resorts from The Borscht Belt, America's Jewish Vacationland in Catskills, New York |last=Cabrey |first=Erin |date=5 October 2017 |website=Untapped Cities |access-date=16 January 2022}}{{cite book |last1=Scheinfeld |first1=Marisa |author-link1=Marisa Scheinfeld |last2=Kanfer |first2=Stefan |author-link2=Stefan Kanfer|last3=Weissman Joselit |first3=Jenna |date=15 November 2016 |title=The Borscht Belt: Revisiting the Remains of America's Jewish Vacationland |url=https://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/book/9781501700590/the-borscht-belt/ |location=Ithaca, New York |publisher= Cornell University Press |page= |isbn=9781501700590}}

  • Grossinger's Catskill Resort Hotel; the Grossinger's complex partially was demolished in 2018 and a new owner planned to build a hotel, homes and other amenities. A remaining structure on the property was destroyed by fire in August 2022.{{Cite news |url=https://www.recordonline.com/news/20190211/possible-revival-of-grossingers-resort-moves-ahead |title=Possible revival of Grossinger's Resort moves ahead |date=February 11, 2019 |first=Matthew |last=Nanci |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20190212033539/https://www.recordonline.com/news/20190211/possible-revival-of-grossingers-resort-moves-ahead |archivedate=2019-02-12}}{{cite web | url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/fire-hits-vacant-grossingers-hotel-once-a-catskills-jewel/ | title=Building at the Catskills' famed Grossinger's resort, an inspiration for "Dirty Dancing," burns down in massive fire | website=CBS News | date=19 August 2022 }}
  • Kutsher's Hotel and Country Club; a wellness club was built on the site and opened in June 2018.{{Cite news |url=https://www.recordonline.com/news/20180621/high-end-wellness-resort-opens-in-sullivan-county |title=High-end wellness resort opens in Sullivan County |work=Times Herald-Record |first=Matthew |last=Nanci |date=June 21, 2018 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20210802041318/https://www.recordonline.com/news/20180621/high-end-wellness-resort-opens-in-sullivan-county |archivedate=2021-08-02}}{{Cite web |url=https://www.lechase.com/portfolio/yo1-luxury-nature-cure/ |title=LeCHASE: YO1 Luxury Nature Cure |quote=This six-story, 295,000 SF wellness resort was built on the former Kutsher’s Country Club property in Monticello, NY.}} The original Kutcher's nightclub is all that remains of the original hotel. The Kutcher's Hotel front electric sign was donated to the Sullivan County Historical Museum.
  • The Pines Hotel closed in 1998. The dilapidated main building and surrounding structures remained in a state of decay until it was destroyed in a fire in June 2023.{{cite news |title=CATSKILLS: Abandoned Pines Hotel Destroyed in Massive Blaze |url=https://www.theyeshivaworld.com/news/general/2200677/catskills-abandoned-pines-hotel-destroyed-in-massive-blaze.html |date=2023-06-18 |work=Yeshiva World News |publication-place=Brooklyn, NY |publisher=The Jewish Content Network |access-date=2024-04-23 |quote=The once grandiose Pines Hotel, formerly a prominent establishment in the Catskill Mountains’ renowned “Borsht Belt,” was consumed by a massive blaze and destroyed, early Sunday morning. The abandoned hotel, located on Laural Avenue in South Fallsburg, has been closed since 1998 due to financial struggles and structural damage.}} The Pines Hotel golf course has been converted into a Jewish religious summer camp.{{cite web |url=https://www.grovedaycamp.com/ |title=Grove Day Camp |editor=Faige Jacobs |date=2024 |publication-place=Far Rockaway, NY |access-date=2024-04-23 |quote=Located at The Grove in South Fallsburg}}
  • The former Gilbert's Hotel and Brickman Hotel are not part of the Siddha Yoga SYDA complex. A gift shop remains open at the sites, which are not in current active use.
  • Nevele Grand Hotel
  • The Vegetarian Hotel
  • White Lake Mansion House
  • Homowack Lodge
  • Lesser Lodge
  • Tamarack Lodge
  • Concord Resort Hotel (In February 2018, Resorts World Catskills opened on the site of the old hotel.)
  • Shawanga Lodge

Comedic legacy

{{See also|Jewish humor}}

File:Brown's Hotel, Loch Sheldrake, New York LCCN2017710765.tif for Brown's Hotel, 1977]]

File:Comedian Eddie Shaffer, Granit, Kerhonkson, New York LCCN2017712830.tif

The tradition of Borscht Belt entertainment started in the early 20th century with the Paradise Garden Theatre constructed in Hunter, New York by Yiddish theater star Boris Thomashefsky.{{cite news |author=|title=Happenings at Hunter |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1909/08/01/archives/happenings-at-hunter.html |work=The New York Times |date=1909-07-31 |location=Hunter, NY |department=Special |publication-date=1909-08-01 |access-date=2024-04-21 |quote=One of the most successful affairs held at Hunter this season was the theatrical performance for the benefit of the Hebrew Infant Asylum, given at Thomaschefsky's Paradise Garden Theatre on Saturday evening when "Chaim in America" was presented by the Yiddish players of the People's Theatre in New York, under the direction of Mr. and Mrs. Boris Thomashefsky and Mr. Ellis Glickman of Chicago.}} A cradle of American Jewish comedy since the 1920s, the Borscht Belt entertainment circuit has helped launch the careers of many famous comedians and acted as a launchpad for those just starting out.{{cite web |author=Danna Paz Prins |title=Yada Yada Yada: 15 Greatest Moments in Jewish Comedy History |url=https://www.bh.org.il/blog-items/yada-yada-yada-15-greatest-moments-in-jewish-comedy-history/ |date=2018-12-18 |publisher=Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot |location=Tel Aviv, Israel |language=en |archive-date=2020-06-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200628184935/https://www.bh.org.il/blog-items/yada-yada-yada-15-greatest-moments-in-jewish-comedy-history/|url-status=live |quote=In celebration of our blockbuster exhibit, "Let There Be Laughter – Jewish Humor Around the World", honoring the contributions of Jews to the world of comedy, we at the Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot unveiled a list of the 15 greatest moments in the history of Jewish comedy. Headlining the list are Seinfeld, Mel Brooks and Carl Reiner's "2,000-Year-Old Man" routine, the "Borscht Belt", Joan Rivers' 1965 debut on The Tonight Show, Adam Sandler's "The Chanukah Song", and Henny Youngman's signature "Take my wife, please."}}

Comedians who got their start or regularly performed in Borscht Belt resorts include:{{cite news |first=Steven |last=Kalka |title=Old Jewish Catskill Comedian's Classic Jokes |url=https://www.thejc.com/lets-talk/old-jewish-catskill-comedians-classic-jokes-unyttqpo |date=2011-12-21 |newspaper=The Jewish Chronicle |publication-place=London |access-date=2024-04-23 |issn=0021-633X |oclc=5955238 |editor-first=Stephen |editor-last=Pollard |editor-link=Stephen Pollard |quote=There were so many fabulous Jewish comedians, many of whom started in the Jewish Catskills; Shecky Greene, Red Buttons,Totie Fields,Joey Bishop,Milton Berle,Jan Murray,Danny Kaye,Henny Youngman, Buddy Hackett, Sid Caesar, Groucho Marx, Jackie Mason, Victor Borge, Woody Allen, Joan Rivers, Lenny Bruce, George Burns, Allan Sherman, Jerry Lewis, Peter Sellers, Carl Reiner, Shelley Berman, Gene Wilder, George Jessel, Alan King, Mel Brooks, Phil Silvers, Jack Carter, Rodney Dangerfield, Don Rickles, Jack Benny, Mansel Rubenstein, and so many others.}}{{Cite web |url=https://richardbangs.medium.com/al-hirshen-comes-of-age-in-the-catskills-4602be0870bb |title=Al Hirshen Comes of Age in The Catskills |date=2016-08-06 |access-date=2024-10-09 |website=Medium |last=Bangs |first=Richard |author-link=Richard Bangs |quote=As a young boy, I would run home from school every day to turn on the TV and drink in whatever show or movie was playing. It turned out all my favorite performers were veterans of the Catskills, Borscht Belt comedians, mostly Eastern European Ashkenazi Jews, who cut their teeth in the Catskills at resorts like Grossinger's, Brickman's, and The Overlook. The catalogue is thick of the funnymen with Catskills cred who flickered in my living room: Woody Allen, Morey Amsterdam, Bea Arthur, Milton Berle, Shelley Berman, Joey Bishop, Mel Blanc, Mel Brooks, Lenny Bruce, George Burns & Gracie Allen, Red Buttons, Sid Caesar, Billy Crystal, Rodney Dangerfield, Phyllis Diller, Totie Fields, Shecky Greene, Buddy Hackett, Danny Kaye, Alan King, Robert Klein, Harvey Korman, Jerry Lewis, Richard Lewis, Chico + Harpo Marx, Jackie Mason, Zero Mostel, Carl Reiner, Don Rickles, Joan Rivers, Rowan & Martin, Mort Sahl, Soupy Sales, Dick Shawn, Allan Sherman, Phil Silvers, Arnold Stang, David Steinberg, Jerry Stiller, The Three Stooges, Jonathan Winters, Ed Wynn, Henny Youngman; and on, as some above would say, ad libitum.}}

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Borscht Belt humor refers to the rapid-fire, often self-deprecating style common to many of these performers and writers.{{cite web |url=https://www.myjewishlearning.com/article/1950s-jewish-humor/ |title=1950s Jewish Humor |first=Arie |last=Kaplan |date=2024 |orig-date=2001 |work=Reform Judaism |via=My Jewish Learning |publication-place=New York City |access-date=2024-04-23 |quote=Before World War II, the Jewish presence in the comedic entertainment world was marked by humiliating self-caricature. [..] In the late ’40s, Jewish road comedians were an obscure breed; with the advent of television, they could became instant celebrities. [..] 'Whatever makes us what we are, that’s what worked its way in–that sense of irony, a sense of caustic wit, of defensive wit, offensive wit, all the tools that 3,000 years of getting kicked in the yarmulke will instill in you.'}}{{cite web |first=Luke |last=Tress |title=New stand-up shows aim to revive the Borscht Belt's Jewish comedy legacy |url=https://www.jta.org/2024/04/17/ny/new-stand-up-shows-aim-to-revive-the-borscht-belts-jewish-comedy-legacy |date=2024-04-17 |work=Jewish Telegraphic Agency |publisher=70 Faces Media |publication-place=New York City |access-date=2024-04-23 |quote=Savone said that Borscht Belt comedians typically took a traditional approach, with performers doing “typical set up, punch lines.” Today, however, many “podcast comics,” as he calls them, use a more personal and longform approach. ... [Levine's] sets include jokes about his Holocaust survivor grandmother, his dating life as an Ashkenazi Jew, and how Jewish law firms don’t use jingles in their advertisements.}}{{cite web |first=Brian |last=Logan |title=Jewish humour ain't what it used to be |url=https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2016/dec/05/uk-jewish-comedy-festival-sol-bernstein-borscht-belt-cabaret |date=2016-12-05 |work=The Guardian |publication-place=London |access-date=2024-04-23 |quote=But Bernstein’s gig insisted on the necessity of irony, seeming to believe that these kinds of material – puns, classic one-liners, gentle-chauvinist gags about nationalities and henpecking wives – can no longer be performed without it. (Anyone who’s seen Jackie Mason in recent years will know this not to be true.)}} Typical themes include:

  • Bad luck: "I told the doctor I broke my leg in two places. He told me to quit going to those places." (Henny Youngman)
  • Puns: "Sire, the peasants are revolting!" "You said it. They stink on ice." (Harvey Korman as Count de Money (Monet) + Mel Brooks as King Louis XVI, in History of the World Part I)
  • Physical complaints and ailments (often relating to bowels and cramping): "My doctor said I was in terrible shape. I told him, 'I want a second opinion.' He said, 'All right, you're ugly too!{{'"}} "I told my doctor, 'This morning when I got up and saw myself in the mirror, I looked awful! What's wrong with me?' He replied, 'I don't know, but your eyesight is perfect!{{'"}} (Dangerfield)
  • Aggravating relatives and nagging wives: "My wife and I were happy for twenty years. Then we met." (Dangerfield). "Take my wife—please!" (Henny Youngman); "My wife drowned in the pool because she was wearing so much jewelry." (Don Rickles); "My wife ain't too bright. One day our car got stolen. I said to her, 'Did you get a look at the guy?' She said, 'No, but I got the license number.{{'"}} (Dangerfield) "This morning the doorbell rang. I said 'Who is it?' She said 'It's the Boston Strangler.' I said 'It's for you dear!{{'"}} (Youngman)

Historical Marker Project

The Borscht Belt Historical Marker Project was founded by Marisa Scheinfeld, a noted Borscht Belt historical photographer, author, and Borscht Belt documentarian, in 2022.{{cite web |url=https://borschtbelthistoricalmarkerproject.org/about-us |title=Our Mission |author= |date=2024 |work=Borscht Belt Historical Marker Project |access-date=2024-09-28 |quote=As of our inception in 2022, there are no historical markers dedicated to the Borscht Belt era in either Sullivan or Ulster County. [...] Marisa Scheinfeld: Founder & Project Director}} Scheinfeld had photographed the detritus of the former Borscht Belt hotels, bungalows, and historically important sites. She recognized the complete absence of any historical interpretive roadside markers documenting the sites of the former Borscht Belt.

The Borscht Belt Historical Marker Project initiated a unique program to place 20 vertical interpretive highway markers strategically sited to tell the story of the Borscht Belt and interpret the specific locations. The markers are enhanced with QR pegs for more in-depth explanations. A self-guided audio tour system is being developed.

File:Hurleyville - Borscht Belt Historical Marker Project.jpg

The markers are double-sided with representative images. All carry an interpretive text about the specific area on one side and the following common text about the Borscht Belt on the other side:

"From the 1920s through the early 1970s, the Borscht Belt was the preeminent summer resort destination for hundreds of thousands of predominantly east coast American Jews. The exclusion of the Jewish community from existing establishments in the 1920s drove Jewish entrepreneurs to create over 500 resorts, 50,000 bungalows and 1,000 rooming houses in Sullivan County and parts of Ulster County. The Borscht Belt provided a sense of community for working and vacationing Jews. The era exerted a strong influence on American culture, particularly in the realm of entertainment, music, and sports. Some of the most well-known and influential people of the 20th century worked and vacationed in the area. Beginning around 1960, the Borscht Belt began a gradual demise due to many factors including the growth of suburbia, inexpensive airfare, and generational changes."{{cite web |url=https://borschtbelthistoricalmarkerproject.org/the-borscht-belt |title=Historic Marker Text |author= |date=2024 |work=Borscht Belt Historical Marker Project |access-date=2024-09-28 |quote=Text is displayed on the backside of each historic marker}}

As of 2024, the Program has completed and sited nine markers in Sullivan County - Monticello, Mountain Dale, Swan Lake, Fallsburg, Kiamisha Lake, South Fallsburg, Hurleyville, Bethel, and Woodridge. Loch Sheldrake, Parksville, Livingston Manor, and Ellenville are being prepared for 2025. Six additional markers are planned for 2026. The Borscht Belt Historical Marker Project is funded by the Jewish American Society for Historic Preservation.{{cite web |url=https://borschtbelthistoricalmarkerproject.org/donate |title=Support the Marker Project |author= |date=2024 |work=Borscht Belt Historical Marker Project |access-date=2024-09-28 |quote=While our historic markers themselves are generously funded by the Jewish American Society for Historic Preservation, we are appreciative of any donations toward our programming efforts.}}

See also

References

{{reflist}}