EFTA02437225.pdf
Extracted Text (OCR)
To:
Cc:
Philip Kafk
; Janet Kafka
Jeffery
Edwards[jeevacation@gmail.com]
From:
Terry Kafka
Sent:
Tue 9/15/2009 4:18:24 PM
Subject: Fw: Going Back To Or Brooklyn
— Original Message —
From: Gerri Kvhill
To: mom • Arty Podnos
; Gerri Kvhill • Terry Kafka ;
Mark Houllif ; Hank Adler ; Linda Rothschild ;
Susan Danzig • Karla Sona
Cc:
Sent: Tuesday, September 15, 2009 11:11 AM
Subject: Going Back To Cl' Brooklyn
Enjoy!
Gerri
THIS IS REALLY A GOOD ONE TO ALL THE BROOKLYNITES OF DAYS GONE BY -
OLD BROOKLYN
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1. The subway, bus and the trolley were only a thin dime to ride.
And if you are really old, you'll remember a nickel a ride.
2. Schools were the showcase for the whole country.
3. Tuesday night was fireworks night in Coney Island, put on by
Schaefer Brewing.
4. There was very little pornography.
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5. There were the bath houses: Stauches, Bushman Baths,
Steeplechase Baths, Washington Baths, Ravenhall, and
Brighton Beach Baths.
6. There was respect for teachers and older people in general.
7. There was almost no violence.
8. The theme of the music of the times, even when it became rock
and roll, was love...not anger.
9. A great day was going to the beach at Coney Island or
Brighton Beach.
10. People made a living, and, rich or poor, people all knew how
to have a good time, no matter of status.
11. There was no better hot dog than the original, at Nathan's, in
Coney Island; and no better French fries than the Nathan's
thick ripple cuts.
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12. There were no divorces and few "one parent" families.
13. There were no drugs or drug problems in the lives of most
people.
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14. The rides and shows of Coney Island were fantastic:
Steeplechase Park
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The horses, the big slide, the barrels, the zoo (maze), the human
pool table, the Cyclone Roller Coaster,
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The Tornado Roller Coaster, the Thunderbolt Roller Coaster, the
Bobsled, the Virginia Reel, the Wonder Wheel, the Bumper
cars, the Tunnel of love, Battaway, the Loop the Loop, the
Bubble Bounce, Miniature Golf, The Whip, the many Merry-Go-
Rounds, the Penny Arcades, the Parachute Jump, Fabers
Sportsland and Fascination, toffee and cotton candy stores,
custard stands, Pokerama,
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Skeeball, prize games, fortune tellers guess games, hammer
games, the Harlem revue, the freak shows, the house of wax,
the animal nursery, restaurants, rifle ranges, push cart rides
and parades.
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15. The fruit man, the tool sharpener, the junk man and the
watermelon man, all with the horse and wagon.
16. Sheepshead Bay was Lundy's Restaurant and fishing.
17. Only place for pizza, and only whole pizzas was Joe's Bar
and Grill on Ave U. Then, in the mid-50's, a pizza explosion:
you could buy it by the slice for a dime at many places. By the
late 50's, it was a whole 15 cents a slice!
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A tuna fish sandwich or a BLT were 45 cents. A small Coke was 7
cents, a large Coke was 12 cents. Remember Vanilla Cokes,
when they pumped real vanilla syrup into the glass, before
adding the Coke?
18. There were many theaters, where every Saturday afternoon
you could see 25 cartoons and two feature films: The Highway,
The Avalon, The Kingsway, The Mayfair, The Claridge, The
Tuxedo, The Oceana, The Oriental, The Avenue U, The Kent,
The Paramount, The RKO Tilyou, The RKO Bushwick, The
Lowes Gates, The Fox, The Mermaid, The Surf, The Walker,
The Albemarle, The Alpine, The Rugby, The Ambassador, The
People's Cinema, The Canarsie, The Marlboro, The Avon and
The Globe.
19. Everybody knew all the high schools in Brooklyn
20. Big eating and coffee hangouts: Dubrow's on Kings Highway,
also on Eastern Parkway/Utica Avenue, Famous on 86th
Street, Bickford's on Church Avenue, and Garfield's on
Flatbush Avenue .
21. Ebinger's was the great bakery...loved the chocolate butter
cream with the almonds on the side, Boston Cream pie, and
the Blackout cakes! ...Bierman's was terrific also.
22. Kings Highway stores had their own ornate glitz, as far as
style goes..
23. There were many delicatessens in the 50's -- very few today.
The best? Adelman's on 13th Avenue and Hymie's on Sutter
Avenue. The food was from heaven!
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24. Big night clubs in Brooklyn were the Ben Maksiks' "Town
and Country" on Flatbush Avenue, "The Elegante" on Ocean
Parkway, and the Club 802 on 64th Street in Bay Ridge.
25. There were no fast food restaurants in the 50's, and a
hamburger tasted like a hamburger.
26. There was Murray the K's Rock and Roll concerts at the
Brooklyn Fox and the Brooklyn Paramount . You had to go the
night before and stand in line, to get good seats.
27. Quick bites at Brennan and Carr, Horn and Hardart Automat,
Nedick's, Big Daddy's, Chock Full o' Nuts, Junior's,
Grabsteins or Joe's Delicatessen. Junior's, you'll be glad to
know, is still in the same place, and the cheesecake is still
fabulous.
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28. Knishes were great at Mrs. Stahl's in Brighton or at
Shatzkin's Knishes. Remember the knish guy on the beach
with the shopping bags? (Mrs. Stahl's Knishes is now a
'Subway's')
29. People in Brooklyn took pride in owning a Chevy in the 50's;
there was nothing better than General Motors then. The cars
would run and run and run -- no problems.
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30. You bought sour pickles right out of the barrel -- for a nickel --
and they were delicious. By the 60's, they cost a whole
quarter.
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Anyone remember Miller's Appetizing, on the corner of 13th
Avenue and 50th Street ?
31. The Brooklyn Dodgers were part of your family.
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The Duke, the Scoonge, Pee Wee, Jackie, the Preacher, Campy,
Junior, Clem, Big Don, Gil. They were always in a lot of our
conversations. Remember Ebbet's Field and Happy Felton's
Knothole club? For a nickel, you got into Ebbet's Field and
saw the Dodgers play. For Brooklynites, it was -- and will
always be -- a shrine.
32. You come from Brooklyn, but you don't think you have an
accent. To you, Long Island is one word which sounds like
"Longuyland."
33. You played a lot of games as kids. Depending on whether
you were a boy or a girl, you could play: ring-a-leaveo, Johnny
on the Pony, Hide and Seek, three feet off to Germany, red light-
green light, chase the white horse, kick the can, Buck, Buck,
how many horns are up?, war, hit the penny, pussy-in-the-
corner, jump rope, double-dutch, Stories, A-My Name Is, box
ball, stick ball, box baseball, catch a fly, dodge ball, stoop ball,
you're up, running bases, iron tag, skelly, tops, punch ball,
handball, slap ball, whiffle ball, stick ball, poison ball, relay
races, softball, baseball, basketball, horse, 5-3-1, around the
world, foul shooting, knockout, arm wrestling, Indian-
wrestling. And then there were card games like canasta,
casino, hearts, pinochle, war and the unhappy game of 52-card
pickup.
34. You hung out on people's stoops or in the Courtyard.
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35. You learned how to dance at some girl's backyard or house
36. You roller skated at Park Circle or Empire Blvd. skating
rinks, in skates with wooden wheels. You had roller skates at
home, with metal wheels, for using on the sidewalks, and you
needed a skate key to tighten them around your shoes Those
metal wheels on concrete were deafening!
37. The big sneaker was Converse. Also Keds and P-F Flyers.
38. The guys wore Chino pants with a little buckle on the back,
peg pants, and the girls wore long wide dresses. Remember
gray wool skirts, with pink felt poodles on them? The poodles
had rhinestone eyes.
39. In the 50's, rock and roll started big teen styles for the first
time.
40. Everyone went to a Bar Mitzvah, even if you weren't Jewish.
41. Everyone took their date to Plum Beach for the submarine
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races.
42. There were 3 main nationalities in Brooklyn in the 50's:
Italians, Irish and Jewish. Then there was a sprinkling of
everyone else. The Scandinavians and Greeks in Bay Ridge,
the African Americans in Bedford Stuyvesant and the Polish of
Green point.
43. The only way to get to Staten Island was by ferry, from the
67th Street pier in Brooklyn. It was a great ride in the summer
time for a dime.
44. In Brooklyn, a fire hydrant is a "Johnny pump"
45. Rides, on a truck, came to your neighborhood to give little
kids a ride for a dime. The best one was the "whip," which
spun you around a track.
You got a little prize when you got off, sometimes a folding
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paper fan, sometimes a straw tube that you inserted two
fingers into, that tightened as you tried to pull your fingers out
again.
46. As a kid, you hit people with water balloons from atop a
building, you shot linoleum projectiles from a carpet gun, you
shot dried peas from pea shooters, and you shot paperclips at
people, with a rubber band.
47. You shopped at EJ Korvettes, Robert Hall, Woolworth's,
Mays, McCrory's, Packers, A&P, Bohack, A&S. Barney's was
Barney's Boys Town back then, and not a luxury store. You
bought your shoes at National, Miles, Thom McAn, and A S
Beck. When you got married, you bought your dishes at
Fortunoff's under the "el".
48. NBC's main production studio was on Avenue M. and E.16
St.The Cosby show was made there.
49. Everybody lived near a candy store and a grocery store.
50. The first mall comes to Brooklyn at Kings Plaza .
51. Bagel stores start popping up everywhere in the 60's.
52. Went to Jahn's Ice Cream Parlor with a big group and had the
"Kitchen Sink." If it was your birthday (you had to bring your
birth certificate), you could get a free sundae.
53. Everybody knew somebody who was a connected guy.
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54. We used the word "swell
55. In the summer, we all waited for the Good Humor, Bungalow
Bar, Mister Softee or Freezer Fresh Man, to come into our
neighborhood, to buy ice cream. In the early to mid 50's, the
Good Humor man pushed a cart, instead of driving a truck
Remember the bells? A pop was 15 cents. A large cup was 15
cents, a small cup was a dime. And a sundae -- remember
licking the chocolate off the back of the cardboard top? --
was a quarter.
(Movie stars pictures were on the bottom of the Dixie cup lids).
As a kid growing up in the 1950's, we would spend our money on
bubble gum baseball cards, candy and ice cream. A pack of
baseball cards (complete with a stick of bubble gum) and full-
sized candy bars were 5 cents each, or six for a quarter.
In those days, there were lots of interesting coins still in
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circulation. Dimes and quarters we still made of silver. The
oldest Roosevelt dimes were not yet 15 years old. It was not
uncommon to find Mercury dimes or worn-out Standing Liberty
quarters; and Buffalo or Indian Head nickels were common
too. Most pennies were wheat-backs; they didn't get the
familiar Lincoln Memorial on the reverse until 1959. With luck,
it was even possible to find an occasional Indian Head penny
in your change. But the most coveted find (for us kids,
anyway) was the unusual 1943 steel penny.
56. Many of us would sneak cigarettes and hide them when we
got home.
57. When we talked about "the city", everyone knew we meant
Manhattan .
58. The Mets in the 60's became our substitute for the Dodgers;
but they never did, and never will, make-up for the Dodgers
leaving.
59. In the 60's, we were ready to drive and hit the night life scene.
With the car, came the girls.
60. We are all in a select club...because we have roots in
BROOKLYN.
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| Filename | EFTA02437225.pdf |
| File Size | 2986.4 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 12,531 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-12T16:58:49.223426 |
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