For 131 years, Henry Street Settlement has opened doors of opportunity to help our neighbors reach their full potential. Whether helping people find jobs, thrive in school, heal from trauma, explore their creativity, or so much more, Henry Street is here, opening doors and changing lives.
55,577
individuals reached by Henry Street
New Programs Deliver Results
>$28/hr
the average wage earned by graduates of the Building Automation Systems training program working in the field
235
of 386 Abrons Arts Center students (48%) received financial assistance, including free tuition through the NYCHA Arts Initiative
280
participants received mental health care through new CONNECT support groups
Education
2,997
participants nurtured academically and emotionally by early childhood education, afterschool, college prep, and psychosocial support
Employment Services
484
adult workers successfully connected with jobs, through workforce programs and the ACCES-VR vocational rehabilitation program
Visual & Performing Arts
14,983
people enriched by a performance at the Abrons Arts Center, more than half of whom received free or discount tickets
Transitional & Supportive Housing
58
families—including 343 individuals—placed into permanent housing
Health & Wellness
7,650
individuals served through mental health support, The Parent Center, benefits consultation, and community health outreach
Community Engagement
1,715
visitors captivated by The House on Henry Street permanent exhibition in our headquarters
3,523
participants experienced joy at outdoor community events
25%
Henry Street team members call the Lower East Side home, a testament to the settlement tradition of proximity to the community we serve
Every dollar you give opens doors for the people Henry Street serves.
It is an honor to share with you Henry Street Settlement’s 2023 annual report. There is much to be proud of in the stories you’ll read here. Our work to expand adult and youth mental health care and to create access to jobs in the changing economy is coming to fruition, and we’re grateful to be able to provide caring services to our new migrant neighbors in programs across the Settlement.
The stories here shine a light on the meaningful work our team does to lift up our program participants, many of whom have a multigenerational connection to Henry Street. It is the highest possible acknowledgment of the consistency of our work when one generation says to the next, “Here’s what Henry Street did for me, and now the Settlement is still here for you.”
When our work is done responsibly and caringly, it draws on all channels of our humanity—emotional, physical, psychological, and even spiritual. It can be exhausting but also extremely rewarding to bring our whole selves to this work. Harnessing each of these levels of our humanity was essential when we received the heartbreaking news in early 2024 that our Urban Family Center—the nation’s first family homeless shelter—would be closed for much of the next year as NYCHA undertakes unavoidable repairs. At the same time, a long-awaited construction project to improve community accessibility to our Abrons Arts Center has begun. These are the cycles—and the unpredictability—that define human service work.
Our team’s ability to sustain care and create transformative opportunities for our community, regardless of the ups and downs around us, is possible only due to your loyal and generous support. Thank you for standing with Henry Street.
Peace. Health. Hope.
2023
Our youngest annual report cover designer, Myah Goris, 18, is a first-year student at Stonybrook University, enrolled in a multidisciplinary studies program, concentrating on biology, studio art, and environmental design. A year ago, as a participant in Henry Street’s Expanded Horizons College Access and Success Program, Myah came to the attention of the Abrons Arts Center team, who recognized her talent. For the cover of this report, she gravitated to bright, opaque colors—a departure from realism that she says makes each building unique—using Posca paint markers, watercolor markers, and acrylic paint. She worked on the artwork every Friday afternoon during her fall semester.
On Wednesday, November 1, thousands of artists, collectors, celebrities, philanthropists, and long-time Settlement supporters convened at the stunning Park Avenue Armory for the 35th edition of The Art Show Benefit Preview to experience 78 booths of historic and contemporary art. The Art Dealers Association of America (ADAA) presents The Art Show to benefit Henry Street every year, with support from the show's lead partner, AXA XL, a division of AXA Group. The 2023 Art Show raised more than $1.3 million for the Settlement’s work, thanks to the extraordinary generosity of our committees, co-chairs, sponsors and patrons, and the sale of an Henri Matisse drawing donated by our partners the Pierre and Tana Matisse Foundation.
In tandem with this year’s show, the Settlement and the ADAA embarked on an exciting collaboration with the artist Kate Capshaw, who in fall 2023 exhibited two new oil paintings she had created of individuals close to the Settlement and its programs. One of them, a vibrant portrait of Henry Street team member Toddrick Brockington, was featured at The Art Show. The other painting, featuring three brothers, Rashun, Jayden, and Jayvon, who have participated in multiple Henry Street programs, was part of a solo exhibition of Capshaw’s work, which ran from October 31 to November 19, 2023, at Henry Street’s Dale Jones Burch Neighborhood Center. The exhibition on Henry Street also featured a collection of portraits from Capshaw’s Unaccompanied series, which aims to raise awareness of homeless adolescents across the United States.
Save the date: The next Art Show Benefit Preview takes place October 29, 2024.
Henry Street on August 2, 2023, celebrated the 100th birthday of our beloved sewing teacher and Lower East Side icon, Ruth Taube. Ruth started teaching sewing classes at the Settlement in the early 1960s. She became director of the Home Planning Workshop in 1966 and stayed for 54 years, not only teaching sewing but overseeing a program that included shoe repair, furniture building, and television maintenance. As Ruth told The New York Times on her centennial birthday, “We sewed, we talked. Whatever your heart needed, you sat at that table, and your heart got back opinions and ideas. People coming in with a lot of unhappy feelings walked out with very good feelings.”
This year, we grew our Leadership Team, the group of senior team members who guide strategic thinking and overall organizational direction at Henry Street, from 11 members to 15. This expansion ensures that our leadership accurately reflects Henry Street’s programmatic focus, experience, diversity, perspective, responsibility, and authority across the Settlement. It also recognizes the insight and contributions of our four new Leadership Team members.
On October 24, MTA President Richard Davey rode the H train—for Henry Street Settlement—to our afterschool program at P.S. 110 to greet fourth and fifth graders who were participating in the transit authority’s STEM education program. When he arrived, “President Richard” was presented with a mural made by the participants, with teaching artist Robin Hoodd. P.S. 110 is one of six schools where Henry Street’s energetic activity specialists provide a nurturing afterschool experience. Students learned about the science, technology, engineering, math—and art!—that keeps New Yorkers moving both underground and above.
It started with the Healthy Relationships group. Then came the Anger Management group. And, by the end of 2023, Henry Street’s CONNECT mental health program was offering nearly 20 weekly support groups. As the flexible CONNECT “clinic without walls” has expanded, so have the variety of topics addressed within these groups. CONNECT was created in 2022 with funding from the New York City Department of Health, as one way to address the profound mental health crisis in our community. Several groups—including Chinese dancing and a Spanish health and wellness group—address the needs of Lower East Side residents of specific ethnicities. Others focus on relapse prevention, life skills, processing grief, resume building, meditation, and self-expression through art and music.
In 2023, Abrons Arts Center celebrated the diverse history and worldwide impact of the Lower East Side in several well-received exhibitions. From June 3 to 30, Abrons presented noted street photographer Clayton Patterson’s photo mural Front Door: Residents and Writers as a part of the annual Photoville Festival. The exhibition was displayed on the exterior gates of LES Coleman Skate Park and the Martin Luther King Jr. Community Park and included rare selections from Patterson’s Front Door series, portraits taken in front of Patterson’s 161 Essex Street studio from the mid-1980s to early 2000s.
In collaboration with the Tenement Museum, Abrons also celebrated garment workers of the Lower East Side through Objects of Permanence, an installation curated by Mellány Sánchez. On view from September 6 to 14, during New York Fashion Week, the installation paid homage to the Lower East Side as a pioneer in the garment industry during the 20th century, and specifically to the thousands of immigrant garment workers whose labor played a pivotal role in making New York City a fashion capital of the world. The exhibition drew critical acclaim in The New York Times, Vogue, NY 1 News, and other outlets.
A series of offerings at Henry Street, established to connect Lower East Side youth to recreation, community, and mental health support, has ballooned into a new programmatic area called A.C.E.S.: Athletics and Community Enrichment Services.
It began with a four-year grant that Henry Street received in 2022 from the New York City Department of Youth and Community Development and NYCHA to begin the Teen Expansion Program, to address the social and emotional needs of youth on summer evenings in the wake of the pandemic. The program allowed Henry Street to keep two youth centers open until 11 p.m., filling those hours with classic programming like basketball as well as new classes in cooking, technology repair, dance, and more. More than 440 young people participated during 2023.
The program was so successful that, now, under the banner of A.C.E.S., Henry Street continues to build on it, offering both sports and recreation six nights a week at Boys & Girls Republic and 301 Henry Street. In 2023, the organization expanded its athletics offerings to younger participants, with free Saturday co-ed basketball and baseball clinics for children as young as three.
Henry Streeters hit the streets in 2023 to speak up about causes we care about. In May, 80 team members across our departments joined more than 6,000 human services workers outside of City Hall for a Day Without Human Services. It was part of the #JustPay campaign, a coalition of New York City government-funded human services organizations demanding higher wages (including cost-of-living adjustments) and improved working conditions for frontline workers. In 2022, Henry Street increased its wage floor to $22/hour in recognition of the real cost of living in New York City. On December 5, 2023, the Settlement also reiterated its support of New York’s right to shelter law in a demonstration focused on the housing needs of new migrants.
Henry Street has been the New York home of Rambler Studios—an Amsterdam-based creative incubator for youth to express themselves through street fashion—since 2020. During summer 2023, fashion design also became a job for 10 young designers, through New York City’s Summer Youth Employment Program. The creators’ final fashion show was featured on NY1 News. In October, several of the Ramblers were invited to sell their wares at Williamsburg’s Artists & Fleas market.
In the studio, we all help each other,” said participant Sukilie Hughes. “We got to travel to Chanel and see the alterations floor. We met with Macy’s designers and saw the process of pattern making. These experiences were once-in-a-lifetime opportunities I got to share with my design partners.”
Every dollar you give opens doors for the people Henry Street serves.
Transitional & Supportive Housing
I love the apartment so much....They offer every single thing here. It’s absolutely amazing.
When I’m here at school, I feel happy. I have so many people that really support me and are there for me.
Education Services
Health & Wellness
I realized, I was telling my story through my artwork.
If I hadn’t met up with Jay, I don’t think I would have this job. Henry Street wrapped me in support.
Employment Services
Older Adult Services
It feels like coming full circle, giving back to the community that shaped me.
Visual & Performing Arts
Health & Wellness
I’m more confident in myself. Now, I’m doing stuff on the job that I learned here.
Every dollar you give opens doors for the people Henry Street serves.
Volunteering
For more than four decades, colleague volunteers from Macy’s have served meals at Henry Street’s Older Adult Center, replanted gardens, led arts and outdoor play activities with Early Childhood Education tots, and more recently staffed booths at Community Day and helped organize the food pantry at the Community Consultation Center mental health clinic. In addition to giving thousands of hours of service, Macy’s has also been a long-time committed donor, bolstering and supporting the individuals and communities Henry Street serves.
As one of Henry Street’s longest serving and most dedicated partners, Macy’s illustrates how a company can engage with the Settlement in multifaceted ways, as it has since 1983.
“From building gingerbread houses with children in the afterschool programs to painting artists’ studios at the Abrons Arts Center, Macy’s volunteers are always there to lend a hand,” says Henry Street Director of Partnerships and Public Policy Erica Chung.
Over the past several years, the company’s engagement with Henry Street has grown deeper and richer, with Macy’s providing Henry Streeters with unique opportunities such as walking in the annual Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade® and donating hundreds of flowers from the annual Macy’s Flower Show®. The company regularly gives needed clothing to participants and donates more than 1,000 toys to the annual Holiday Drive.
In addition, through its Mission Every One initiative, the company provided a generous grant to Rambler Studios, Henry Street’s fashion internship program for young people.
Thank you to Macy’s for your ongoing partnership and commitment to Henry Street’s mission!
In 2023, Henry Street Settlement received a generous five-year gift from the Ted Slavin Family Foundation—a foundation that invests in health care, housing security, families and children, mental health, the arts, and Jewish life. The grant has enabled the Settlement to create the Ted Slavin Family Foundation Youth Innovation Fund, which will provide flexible support for young people across the agency’s programs and ensure Henry Street can help those in most need of our services.
The foundation is the living legacy of Ted Slavin, a Bronx native and grandson of immigrants, who founded U.S. Sales, one of the largest catalog businesses in the United States. “Our family recognizes that we have been blessed and are able to share our good fortune with those who need assistance to carry on,” he says.
Describing the foundation’s mission, trustee Matt Slavin says, “The word we use in our family is ‘access.’ If there are services we can help provide access to, that is what we want to do, whether it’s food, education, or the many types of youth services Henry Street provides.”
The Slavin family toured the agency with CEO David Garza and were “so impressed with everything we saw,” Matt says—"with how the services were provided and the community was impacted. It aligned perfectly with what we as a family believe in.”
Henry Street’s Boys & Girls Republic is the target of the first year of funding. The foundation was attracted to BGR’s promise that youth have a place to go whenever they need emotional help, in addition to offering athletics and enrichment, civic responsibility, and friendship. Ultimately, the Ted Slavin Family Foundation Youth Innovation Fund will support programming across the spectrum of early childhood education, mental health care, parenting classes, college access and success, young adult employment, and community engagement.
The two-year-old foundation aims to partner with organizations over time, because the trustees know that impact is made gradually. “Henry Street is the kind of place where everyone we met are people we want to work with on a personal level, and that speaks to who we are as a foundation,” Matt says.
1
Buy a brick in our historic firehouse—the Dale Jones Burch Neighborhood Center—for yourself or a loved one.
2
Engage your employer through matching gifts, special campaigns, and volunteerism.
3
Launch an online campaign to direct your birthday, wedding, or other special occasion gifts to Henry Street.
4
Leave your legacy and include Henry Street in your will or trust, impacting future generations.
5
Attend The Art Show, a celebrated art fair opening with a glamorous benefit preview on October 29, 2024.
6
Give through your Donor Advised Fund using our legal name Henry Street Settlement and Federal Tax ID Number 13-1562242.
Henry Street Settlement’s work would not be possible without thousands of individuals, foundations, and corporations, including those who have given for generations and those supporters who are new to the Henry Street family. We are deeply grateful for their generosity.
Our DonorsMeet Henry Street’s dedicated Board of Directors and Leadership Team.
Henry Street community events were in full swing in 2023, with our first daylong Juneteeth event and Summer Saturdays throughout the season, a captivating Sleeping Beauty performance, and our eighth annual Lillian Wald Symposium on the mental health crisis facing New York City and the nation.
Our EventsHenry Street operates more than 50 programs in the areas of Health & Wellness, Transitional & Supportive Housing, Older Adult Services, Education, Employment, Visual & Performing Arts, and Community Engagement & Advocacy.
Our Services