This research and public history website explores Jewish immigration experiences and Americanization from the perspectives of young Jewish immigrant women around the turn of the 20th century. I used archival material from Cornell University’s School of Industrial and Labor Relations to highlight these women’s voices, and archives from the Tenement Museum and the Jewish Daily Forward to illustrate Jewish life in this period. Additionally, archives from the New York Times were used to examine how Jewish immigrants were viewed. I searched these archives for primary sources to shed light on how Jewish immigrant women worked and lived, including how life in the Lower East Side’s cramped tenements was photographed and written about by outsiders - White society, and how this propagated the notion of Jewish people as Others. My goal for this research was to tell the stories of these women and listen to their voices. They tell of long hours in crowded and often dangerous garment factories, of unionizing and striking for better labor conditions, and the tragedy of the Triangle Shirtwaist factory fire. These women were often the main breadwinners for their families, but many saved a little for themselves to spend on ‘American’ activities such as seeing shows, frequenting dance halls, and developing an interest in ‘American’ fashion and buying clothes. White society dubbed these women’s fashion as tacky, outlandish and vulgar. Their dresses were described by White society, as well as their own community, as cheap knockoffs of the dresses they made, with too many bows, too much jewelry, and too much makeup. These immigrant women were often called ‘Ghetto Girls,’ as the Lower East Side was called the Jewish Ghetto at this point. This research also brings the present into focus and examines how immigrants are viewed and often judged.