Showing posts with label todt hill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label todt hill. Show all posts

03 January 2016

Staten Island Stories






Moravian Cemetery: The resting place of my grandparents.
Below: The Todt Hill home they lived in for 40 years (1959 - 1999).



Below: splitscreen: 1959 / Present.
(From left to right): My Aunt Karen, Uncle Kevin and Mom.


Below: More images of Moravian Cemetery












Below: The home my parents and I lived in from 1982 - 1986:




Below: The apartment building my parents and I lived in from 1973 - 1982:





The photo above shows what was once our latticed vestibule  
window, living room window and the windows of my bedroom. 
To say the condition of the yard is saddening would be putting it mildly.
The space that is now "decorated" with wire-mesh deer, mud, stepping stones
 and an empty grotto was once occupied by grass and voluminous azalea bushes.

From the bedroom windows above, I used to be able to see across the street
to the side entryway of Edwin Markham Junior High (I.S. 51) and the playground:



On summer nights in the late 70s and early 80s, the dumpsters would frequently 
catch fire... Set ablaze, no doubt, by the packs of kids that would roam the park.
 In the age before infrared surveillance cameras, this playground was a hotbed
 of arson and its walls (like subway cars of this storied era) a showcase for bomb
   graffiti murals, which would change frequently. It was actually quite a thrill to 
enter the grounds each day to see what mischief the "night shift" had gotten up to.

Despite many coats of paint, some more recent (and less inspired) works are still visible.






On these same summer evenings, Markham Junior High
would hold dances for the neighborhood teens and pre-teens.
 I have vivid memories of riding my Superman Big Wheel
 up and down the sidewalk on my side of the street and
hearing music pouring from the open gymnasium
 windows (which transomed out onto Willowbrook Road). 


It must have been very loud in that gym because the music
 was clearly audible to my young ears, each note rising above 
the scraping sound of my large, hollow plastic wheels on the 
sandpaper-like sidewalk. It was from these open windows
(and under the streetlamps of Willowbrook Road) that I heard 
"Rapture" and "The Tide Is High" by Blondie for the very first time.


The playground behind the school, which backs up on a service road that 
approaches the Bayonne bridge, is very much the same as it was 35 years ago.




Same basic layout, but with more kid-friendly swings 
and jungle gyms. One memorable detail remains, however...


I can't even estimate the number of times I drank from this fountain.
I was almost aghast, yet somehow charmed, to find that the large concrete  
chunk missing from the front of the basin (where my little hands rested as 
other kids and I sipped cool water on hot summer days) still remains unrepaired. 


Parting Glance: The quirky copper relief on the school's corner.
Having gained a beautiful patina, it continues to stand the test of time.


25 February 2011

1962: Crownings, Communions, Christenings, Etc.






Oftentimes, May Crownings and First Communions were held on the same day at Saint Joseph Hill Academy.  I discovered this when scouring image after image of this hybrid event in carousel after carousel of slides that stretched across many years.  By the time I attended the school, First Communion was a weekend event on its own and the May Crowning was relegated to the afternoon of a school day.


Here we see my grandparents with my mother, my infant Aunt Susan, my Uncle Kevin and my Aunt Karen on the day of Susan's Christening. Cousins Dianne, Ricky and Lois are pictured with Susan below.

And then, of course, we have an AWESOME motherlode of Christmas toys...





19 February 2011

The Best Dressed Kids On Todt Hill






My Mother (in a home-sewn half-man, half-woman costume) with my Aunt Susan (the clown) and my Aunt Karen (the black cat)...  Dressed to kill in front of my grandparents' home in Staten Island on Halloween 1964.  If my Uncle Kevin wasn't too busy trying to set fire to something in the woods, he was probably wearing this...




Uncle Kevin, though athletic and "all boy", could clean up rather nicely...


Once again, we see my Mom (with her siblings) below in front of the house on 95 Browning Avenue.  Today, all of them will continually marvel at how immaculately dressed my grandparents were able to keep them, even when money was tight.  This, of course, was many years before Gap Kids, Juicy Couture Juniors and Abercrombie Zombies trudged in a trend-happy, hypnotic state through the malls of the USA.  Staten Island didn't even have a mall when these photos were taken.  Any clothing that was not bought in a department store was probably bought at a kids' specialty store on the commercial Avenues of Hylan or Victory, Forest Avenue or New Dorp Lane.