My Brooklyn

Readers Report


Jerry Rothfeld

My Brooklyn was the era of the '30s. Saw the first automatic car wash on Coney Island Ave.—all the kids couldn't believe their eyes. Hot summer days we would wait for ice man so that we get free chunks of ice from back of his wagon. My neighborhood was East 8th & 9th Sts. between Aves. U & V. Of course we were great stickball, association, skelly, and handball players. Winter time was cooking mickeys [potatoes] in empty lots. First job was usher at Mayfair Theater on Ave. U., pay was .25 per hr., while going to James Madison High. Wonder where everyone is today: Heshy Baron, Mickey Vincenzo, Jerry Mason, Westy; and the lovely girls: Dorothy Clements, Thelma Siegel, Gladys Bloomberg, Florence Bomser. Last summer before Pearl Harbor was a counselor at Manhattan Beach Daycamp, and then away to the war. Was lucky and came home in one piece. Have been living in California for the past forty years, in the beautiful Napa Valley. Would LOVE to hear from anybody!

29 May 2001


Janine

Hangin' out on the stoop in front of my building with my mom hollering down at us out the window to come up. Going down the block to Kayloshes candy store and buying five-cent Bazooka gums. Eating lots of Wise potato chips and Devil Dogs, which are both items we do not get to indulge here in California, which is where I live now. Sitting on people's cars, no one used to care.

30 May 2001


Irene Agosta

I think it was called Brownsville. Saratoga & Livonia, the Ambassador Theater, Pitkin Ave., Strauss Street, E. 98th Street. Winthrop Ave. Where are all the people from these area? I read all the time and all I see is Red Hook, Boro Park, Utica Ave. Where are you other people? Write to me.

31 May 2001


Readers' reports continue . . .

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