Title: At the Esplanade: Journal of Harold Davis • 1996–2000
Author(s) Harold Davis

 

Harold Davis was born over his father’s saloon on the corner of Houston and Orchard Streets in New York City on July 10, 1904. He was a practicing lawyer for more than 65 years.

At the age of 91 he moved to a senior residence at The Esplanade, on West End Avenue in Manhattan. He began writing this Journal as a way to keep in touch with family and friends, and also, it is clear, as a way to come to grips with a radical change in his life: he was now, for the first time in a long life, alone.

At first he was appalled by what he saw as the physical ugliness of his elderly fellow-residents, but after a few weeks he had an epiphany of sorts and realized there was beauty, intellect, and talent inside their ruined, aged shells.

He told stories in his Journal about:

•  Selling hotdogs at the Dempsey-Carpentier fight in 1921

•  Attending the Pickle Shul on Ludlow Street

•  His wonderful, tiny teacher, Miss Murray, in 1-A and 1-B

•  His mother and father

•  Being told by the dean of admissions at NYU that they couldn’t accept him because the 5% Jewish quota had already been filled.

The Journal, then, is partly a lesson in aging, partly a family chronicle and partly a glimpse at one man’s passage through the 20th century.

 

Published by: Old Orchard Street Press
ISBN13: 978-0692638293