The earth has cooled considerably since I was a boy in old
New York City. My corner of the city was
College Point, a working class, industrial settlement on the East River across
the Flushing inlet from La Guardia Airport, in Queens. The city was eighty-one percent white in
those days (and I’m not suggesting that that was a good thing), and there were
three professional baseball teams (that, I think, was a good
thing). There have been many changes
over the years. Some of them are
discussed, but many are overlooked. One
thing that seems to go unnoticed is that urban life is much, much cleaner now.
One thing that should shock the modern observer was just how
filthy our lives were in the post-World War II years. I suppose some families had a different
experience, a cleaner environment, but the town in general, the stores, the
schools, the restaurants and bars, and most of the domiciles, were almost all ancient,
run down, and less than clean. Dust and
grime ruled.
My little friends and I lived a kind of “Little Rascals”
existence. Like that movie gang, we
spent a lot of time well out of the range of parental oversight. In that simpler time, parents were content to
let us go “out,” and spend whole days “doing nothing.” Much of this nothing was accomplished in
vacant lots, of which there were still many.
Some were primeval, no spade had ever turned the earth there. We played in the dirt, making battlefields
for little soldiers or roads for little cars. We played marbles in circles drawn in the
dirt. Since it was New York, there were
always construction sites too, often with huge piles of loose dirt for us to
get creative with. Dirt bomb fights were
common there for a while.
Do children even play in the dirt anymore? I think these days it is considered
déclassé.
Our hygiene was less than ideal as well. I didn’t live in a house with a shower until
I was married. As boys, we took baths,
and infrequently at that. I can hardly
believe it now, but even in those beastly New York summers we took one or two
baths per week, and washed our hair once a week if that. (Recall that this was the period when most
boys loaded up their hair with products that ranged from greasy [Brylcream], to
oily [Vasaline Hair Tonic], to down-right gunky [Oddel’s Hair Trainer].)
Many of us lived in homes that were heated with coal. I lived in such a house, a “two-family
house,” with a coal bin in the basement, until I was ten. The dust got everywhere. The landlord had to go down and stoke a furnace
periodically all winter, like a boilerman on the Titanic.
We paid quite a price for these filthy habits. We got sties in our eyes and boils on our
backs, and frequent infections of other kinds as well. Our war-experienced doctors were very blasé
about it all. They were just glad that
the shooting had stopped. They’d give
you a tetanus shot with one hand while smoking a Camel with the other, sipping
scotch between house calls.
Disease was a much greater presence then. My own sister came down with whooping cough
as a baby, we were lucky not to lose her.
I was, fortunately, in the first generation to get polio shots by age
six or seven, so much of that hardship was avoided. We did, however, all get the then routine
childhood diseases, chicken pox, measles and the mumps. Mumps, in retrospect, seems like an almost
comic affliction, with the puffy cheeks and all. The reality was much worse. My own case came soon after the chicken pox
and the measles, all in less than a year, and my resistance was low. I was sick as a dog for more than a week,
with a fever so high that it was later blamed for my sudden onset of
nearsightedness. I remember the
projectile vomiting very vividly, launching baseball sized things into the
bucket next to the bed. Now most of
these diseases live only in memory.
There were the non-routine diseases too, like scarlet
fever. Many boys and girls missed an
entire year of school with that.
Most children today seem to make in through to adulthood
with their tonsils intact, never having become infected at all. Quite the contrary, most of us got that
infection too, and had the tonsils removed.
It all seems unreal to me now, like some poor, stunted
earth-like civilization visited by the Star Trek crew, or a bunch of “workuses,”
(work house kids, one workus, two workuses) in a Dickens novel. But we were relatively prosperous working
class kids, some quite middle-class even, and it’s not that long ago really.
Oh, I guess it was long ago.
New York changes more rapidly than most cities, many buildings, hell,
whole neighborhoods have come and gone since then. These days College Point is home to many of
the new minorities in New York, Chinese and other Asians, Hispanics, even
blacks. Did I say minorities? Whites are way in the minority now. I’m not complaining, it’s a good thing. That’s been the experience of New York for
all of its history. Ethnic groups move
in, move out, and shuffle around. All
of these newcomers are fine New Yorkers, and I’m sure that they make great neighbors. The fast food is much more entertaining than
it used to be too, from what I see on Facebook.
One thing is for sure:
these new Chinese, Korean, Hispanic, black or white children have a much
more hygienic lifestyle than we did. Oh,
two things: I’m sure that they’re
healthier too.
Progress!
2 comments:
Fred, your blog verifies my ongoing joke with my now grown children, who while playing with their video games and computers always asked me what my childhood toys were growing up in College Point. My set answer always was and always will be , "Rocks, Dirt and Sticks.! " What a joyous childhood it was, and we survived to talk about it
Yes, we survived, the saints preserved us. That result was often in doubt too. The traffic was terrible; we were very reckless in general; the trees were tall; the only too available drugs were strong; disease was among us; Hellgate was treacherous; misadventure was rampant. Fate was right to save you. Me I'm not so sure about.
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