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Loch Sheldrake in Sullivan County, New York — The American Northeast (Mid-Atlantic)
 

Borscht Belt - Loch Sheldrake

 
 
Borscht Belt - Loch Sheldrake Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Marisa Scheinfeld, 2025
1. Borscht Belt - Loch Sheldrake Marker
Inscription.
Borscht Belt - Loch Sheldrake
Originally Sheldrake Pond, Loch Sheldrake had about 48 hotels such as Brown's, Edgewood, Evans, Holiday, Karmel, New Roxy, Riverside Hotel, Shady Nook and about 36 bungalow colonies including Kushners, Pesekows, and Melamed's Villa.

From 1929 to 1941, Murder Inc., an organized crime group of Jewish and Italian mobsters from New York City, frequented the Catskills. Some of their victims perished in the lake, with one making national headlines in 1939.

Opening in 1944, Brown's Hotel offered supreme entertainment and atmosphere. The Brown family had a long relationship with comedian Jerry Lewis and put his name on their nightclub, the only one in the Borscht Belt named for a celebrity.

The Jerry Lewis Theater Club presented acts such as Harry Belafonte, Totie Fields, Dean Martin, Woody Allen, Sammy Shore, Liberace, and others. Hotel Evans is embedded in boxing history. Jimmy Braddock, Marcel Cerdan, and others trained at the resort. The Karmel Hotel later became Stagedoor Manor, a performing arts camp.

Borscht Belt
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
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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 areas. Beginning around 1960, the Borscht Belt began a gradual demise due to many factors, including the growth of suburbia, inexpensive airfare, and generational changes.
 
Erected 2025 by Jewish American Society for Historic Preservation, Borscht Belt Historical Marker Project, Sullivan County Historian.
 
Topics and series. This historical marker is listed in these topic lists: Arts, Letters, MusicEntertainmentIndustry & Commerce. In addition, it is included in the Borscht Belt Historical Marker Project, and the Jewish American Society for Historic Preservation. series lists.
 
Location. 41° 46.203′ N, 74° 39.45′ W. Marker is in Loch Sheldrake, New York, in Sullivan County. It is at the intersection of New York 52 and Loch Sheldrake Hurleyville Road,
Borscht Belt side image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Marisa Scheinfeld, 2025
2. Borscht Belt side
on the left when traveling north on New York 52. Touch for map. Marker is at or near this postal address: 1137 NY-52, Loch Sheldrake NY 12759, United States of America. Touch for directions.

Regionally, this marker is in Upstate New York and in the Hudson Valley. It is also in the American Northeast, in the Mid-Atlantic, in Appalachia, and specifically in Northern Appalachia. Globally, it is in the North Atlantic Region, North America, the Western Hemisphere, the Western World, and the Anglosphere. Historically, it finds itself in what was once New Netherland and also one of the original Thirteen Colonies.

Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within 4 miles of this marker, measured as the crow flies: World Wide Daffodil Project (approx. 1½ miles away); Borscht Belt - Hurleyville (approx. 2½ miles away); Borscht Belt - Woodbourne (approx. 3 miles away); Reflections on Two Hamlets (approx. 3½ miles away); The New York City Water Supply System (approx. 3½ miles away); The Neversink Reservoir (approx. 3½ miles away); a different marker also named Neversink Reservoir (approx. 3½ miles away); Borscht Belt - Fallsburg (approx. 3.9 miles away).
 
Also see . . .
1. Tick Tock.
Time was that Allie Tannenbaum was much like many other sons of Sullivan County hotel families of the day, working hard all summer and receiving no pay until the season ended, and then not much.

A chance meeting on a Manhattan street corner one day in the fall of 1931 had changed all that, and led Tannenbaum into a life of crime as one of the brutal gang of thugs that became known as Murder, Inc.
(Submitted on July 18, 2025, by Jerry Klinger of Boynton Beach, Florida.) 

2. Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis: An Exclusive Look at the Rise and Fall of the Legendary Comedy Duo
Marker prior to dedication image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Andrew Ruppenstein, July 17, 2025
3. Marker prior to dedication
.
Hollywood’s history is filled with legendary comedy teams, each leaving behind a unique imprint on the world of entertainment. Some, like Laurel & Hardy, shared a deep camaraderie that shone through both on and off the screen. Others, such as Abbott & Costello, concealed real-life tensions behind impeccably timed routines that kept audiences laughing. Then there are partnerships that began with mutual admiration, flourished into something extraordinary and ultimately collapsed under the weight of their own success. Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis—better known as Martin & Lewis—is a perfect example.
(Submitted on July 18, 2025, by Jerry Klinger of Boynton Beach, Florida.) 

3. The Borscht Belt Was a Haven for Generations of Jewish Americans.
While the region could cater well to dairy farming, its rocky terrain wasn’t as suitable for agriculture. “They quickly discovered that the land was really bad,” explains Andrew Jacobs, a reporter with the New York Times. Jacobs read accounts suggesting that these families were ill-equipped for these and other challenges, which included long winters and isolation from others.

These hardscrabble farmers and other Jews who relocated to the country adapted to a more hospitable solution to make ends meet: taking in boarders during the summertime.
(Submitted on July 18, 2025, by Jerry Klinger of Boynton Beach, Florida.) 
Marker post-dedication image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Andrew Ruppenstein, July 17, 2025
4. Marker post-dedication

4. Murder Incorporated - Bruce Springsteen. "Bobby's got a gun that he keeps beneath his pillow (oh yeah) Out on the street, your chances are zero (oh yeah) Take a look around you (come on down) It ain't too complicated You're messin' with murder incorporated" (Submitted on July 18, 2025, by Jerry Klinger of Boynton Beach, Florida.) 

5. The beginning and the end for Murder, Inc. The grisly enforcement arm of the organized crime syndicate fashionably dubbed by the media of the day as Murder, Inc., was responsible for no less than eight murders in Sullivan County during the 1930s. That number may be higher – some of the bodies, even of known victims, have never been found – but it pales in comparison to what it might have been if not for the events that transpired in the Brooklyn District Attorney’s office in March of 1940... Cohen, who was Walter Sage’s best friend and sometime roommate, and who, by all accounts had been a key figure in his demise, had left Sullivan County the night of the Sage murder and had fled to Hollywood, where he was earning a comfortable living as a film extra under the name Jack Gordon. Upon extradition, he became the first to stand trial in the Sage slaying in one of the most famous trials ever in Sullivan County Court. (Submitted on July 18, 2025, by Jerry Klinger of Boynton Beach, Florida.) 
 
 
Credits. This page was last revised on July 19, 2025. It was originally submitted on July 18, 2025, by Jerry Klinger of Boynton Beach, Florida. This page has been viewed 394 times since then and 129 times this year. Photos:   1, 2. submitted on July 18, 2025, by Jerry Klinger of Boynton Beach, Florida.   3, 4. submitted on July 19, 2025, by Andrew Ruppenstein of Lamorinda, California. • Andrew Ruppenstein was the editor who published this page.
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Jun. 30, 2026