GLENVILLE Memories of an old Cleveland Jewish neighborhood Gordon Cycle & Supply — The Last Jewish – Owned Business in Glenville
This article was found by me and lifted from the the Cleveland Jewish History website. I only take credit for finding it! All rights reserved in respect of the website and authors.
Once Jewish Community
He’s not ready for cycle to endGlenville bike shop owner continuing family tradition
Jack Gordon was the heart and soul of the business. Some thought his death at age 92 on Sept. 27, 2005, meant the end of the bike shop, but the legacy continues though his nephew Louis. “Uncle Jack died on the same day as his mother died in 1985,” said Louis Gordon. “My grandmother, Anna, and Uncle Jack lived just about their whole lives in that house. I remember telling her a long time ago that the family would move her, that she could live anywhere in the world. She said, ‘Fine, then I want to stay right here.’ ” Gordon said the shop has lost money for eight years, but he wants to stick it out. “My grandparents, Louis and Anna Gordon, bought this house in 1919,” he said. “They were Russian Jews who fled from the czar. I want to keep the business going until 2019, so I can say our family was here for a century. We stayed when everyone else left.” |
Community Institution
Gordon plans to open a variety store next to the bike shop in the next few months.”I’ll rent video games, sell snacks, but no alcohol or cigarettes,” he said. “This will be for the kids.”Gordon’s bicycle shop is a Glenville institution, as much a part of the neighborhood as Superman, who was created by Glenville High School students Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster just a couple blocks from the shop.
Gordon has such respect for Superman and Glenville that he is offering the use of a building on East 105th Street for a Superman museum, rent-free for the first five years. “I grew up with Gordon’s. Everyone did,” said Cleveland Councilman Kevin Conwell. “Generations of African-Americans took their bikes to Gordon’s to be repaired. Sometimes, Jack would fix them for free if kids had no money. He was a good guy, a great neighbor and he employed a lot of local people.” Proof of local affection for the Gordons came in 1968. “There were riots in Glenville and buildings were being burned down all over, but no one touched Gordon’s,” Conwell said. “I never heard anyone say a bad word about him or his family. They brought nothing but smiles.” |
Bicycle Repair Beginings
Louis Gordon said his Uncle Jack started repairing bicycles as a child. In 1925, Louis Gordon’s grandfather, also named Louis and a plumber by trade, enclosed the porch of the house at East 105th Street and Kimberley and started repairing and selling bicycles.During World War II, Jack Gordon and Lou’s father, Abe, enlisted in the service. The bike business kept going.”My grandmother and aunt kept the business going,” he said. “My aunt [Sylvia Gordon] convinced the Murray Ohio Manufacturing Co. to let us become distributors. So instead of our store getting a couple bikes a week, we were getting hundreds and sending them to stores all over.”After the war, the new generation of Jews left Glenville and moved to Cleveland Heights, Shaker Heights and University Heights.In 1936, Glenville was estimated as 70 percent Jewish, according to “Merging Traditions,” a book by Judah Rubenstein. By 1950, the exodus was so complete that “Cleveland in general and the Glenville neighborhood in particular, were described as ‘a city without Jews,’ ” the book says.But Jack and Anna Gordon and their bicycle shop stayed. |
Glenville Wall of Fame
Cleveland Councilwoman Sabra Pierce Scott remembers buying colorful, plastic streamers for her bicycle as a child from Gordon’s.”I nominated Jack Gordon for the Glenville Wall of Fame and I was so pleased he was able to attend the ceremony,” she said. “They are the last Jewish business in Glenville by far. Greenstein’s hardware store on St. Clair near [East] 91st Street closed up 30 years ago.”Gordon said his uncle had a unique, old-fashioned way of doing business.
“Uncle Jack was great, a real character,” said Gordon. “A guy would come in and want to buy a $300 bike for his son. Uncle Jack would argue that he should buy a used bike for a lot less. He said that customer would come back for repairs for the rest of his life.” Over the years, the Gordon family bought adjoining properties. They now own five lots on East 105th Street that go back about 200 feet. The unassuming buildings on the street are gateways to 10 more buildings in the back, about 600,000 square feet of houses and warehouses. Jack Gordon never threw anything away. After his uncle’s death, Lou Gordon found bike merchandise dating back decades, which he now sells on the Internet. “It’s amazing that adults want to recapture their youth so much that they will buy things like banana seats they could not afford as children,” he said. He plans to hold an antique auction at the bike shop on Nov. 3, 4 and 5. Copyright, 2006, The Plain Dealer. All Rights Reserved. |
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Copyright, 2006, The Plain Dealer. All Rights Reserved. |
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Copyright, 2006, The Plain Dealer. All Rights Reserved. |
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Copyright, 2006, The Plain Dealer. All Rights Reserved. |