Readers Report
My Brooklyn came to be in the summer of '56 when I moved from W. 90 St., in Manhattan, to the Ft. Green Projects, off of Myrtle and Prince St. I moved out to Bushwick in '64 and presently reside in Ridgewood, but my heart remains with Brooklyn.
Remarkably, I have somehow come full-circle, as I am now a student majoring in Media Arts at Long Island University, three blocks from the projects that taught me the "ways of the world" and Doo Wop.
However, in my quest for a belated formal education, I find myself right back in the surroundings of one of the most famous venues of Rock n' Roll entertainment in history, the Brooklyn Paramount. My question to all you loving Brooklynites on this webpage is: How come, in all the glory of Brooklyn, no one has mentioned the Brooklyn Paramount for all it was during the 50s. "What's up witdat?" Where are all those young folk like me that frequented the world renowned Brooklyn Paramount during the Alan Freed and Murray the "K" era?
I'll be checking the mail so tell me what you think! By the way, it's been nice to reminisce with you. Hope we can do it again real soon.
14 January 1998
Bob, Ron Edwards. St Thomas Aquinas 1952-59. Midwood H.S. 1960-63
See us on Super Mario Bros. movie tape.
Living in NC, Bklyn will always be home.
15 Jan 1998
As a teenager I lived in a large apartment building on Parade Place directly across from the Parade Grounds. This was a huge piece of land covered by grass which ran between Caton and Parkside Avenues and Parade Place and Empire Boulevard. On weekends in the nice weather you would see a few baseball games being played by local youths, a few people having a picnic with blankets spread out on the grass, mothers watching their children playing, an occasional pet owner exercising his dog and people sitting on benches which surrounded this parcel of land.
All in all, it was a lovely area to live where at least there were trees and grass and space. I often wondered just why it was called the Parade Grounds; perhaps you know.
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