Lebanon Restaurant ca. 1936
The blocks on Washington Street between Rector Street and Battery Place formed “Little Syria,” settled in the 1880s by Middle Eastern immigrants. Many became successful merchants and moved to Brooklyn. In the 1930s, their upwardly mobile progeny returned to the old neighborhood for family gatherings and traditional cuisine. The Lebanon Restaurant, opened in 1920, featured shish kebab, baklava, and thick Turkish coffee. Abbott may have delighted in the mixture of traditional and modern elements: the window displays of Turkish coffee cups and RCA Victor records, and the juxtaposition of Arabic calligraphy with a poster advertising a seven-course blue-plate special for $5.00. In 1946, the neighborhood was demolished for construction of the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel.