Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bronxville is a lovely small town. It’s small, high-end, very quaint, and wealthy. As another poster mentioned, if you’re Jewish, there are probably other towns with a better Jewish community and culture. I doubt discrimination still happens there openly, there but it strikes me as an old school, waspy place- but a beautiful place to live.
Old school and waspy conflict with a beautiful place to live.
Anonymous wrote:Bronxville is a lovely small town. It’s small, high-end, very quaint, and wealthy. As another poster mentioned, if you’re Jewish, there are probably other towns with a better Jewish community and culture. I doubt discrimination still happens there openly, there but it strikes me as an old school, waspy place- but a beautiful place to live.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Extremely wealthy, society kind of place.
Does it feel rich? Is it a good place for kids?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It has a very WASPy feeling, if that's what you are getting at. And not wannabe-WASP like some CT towns, but actual, true, WASP.
My friend is Jewish and works in a hedge fund and he says a lot of Jewish people working in finance or law partners, even though they could afford to live there, still feel uncomfortable and left out there.
Then why do they live there?
They don’t stay. They leave.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It has a very WASPy feeling, if that's what you are getting at. And not wannabe-WASP like some CT towns, but actual, true, WASP.
My friend is Jewish and works in a hedge fund and he says a lot of Jewish people working in finance or law partners, even though they could afford to live there, still feel uncomfortable and left out there.
Then why do they live there?
Anonymous wrote:It has a very WASPy feeling, if that's what you are getting at. And not wannabe-WASP like some CT towns, but actual, true, WASP.
My friend is Jewish and works in a hedge fund and he says a lot of Jewish people working in finance or law partners, even though they could afford to live there, still feel uncomfortable and left out there.
Anonymous wrote:It has a very WASPy feeling, if that's what you are getting at. And not wannabe-WASP like some CT towns, but actual, true, WASP.
My friend is Jewish and works in a hedge fund and he says a lot of Jewish people working in finance or law partners, even though they could afford to live there, still feel uncomfortable and left out there.
Anonymous wrote:I have several friends who live in Bronxville and know the town fairly well. It seems idyllic - cute town, great school, easy commute - but hearing my friends’ stories it sounds like a nightmare socially. It’s very small and everyone knows one another’s business. If you or your kids don’t fit in you will have no other outlet. The people I know who grew up there fit the mold of snobby preppies who don’t really like to mix with people who are not like them. And yes, you need to be rich to live there.
Anonymous wrote:Extremely wealthy, society kind of place.