Monday, June 15, 2015
East 26th Street, like many [streets] in the area, represented a kind of social engineering. The combination of apartment houses on the corners and detached houses on the rest of the street put lower-middle-class and professional families in close proximity. For children, this led to real mixing.
Half my friends were from the apartment houses, with similar incomes to ours, half from the detached houses, whose fathers were lawyers, accountants, dentists and small manufacturers. This would have been similar for Bernard. I don't think I am deluding myself when I say that these economic and educational differences played absolutely no part in the relationships among the children.
Status had to be earned by the individual.
Much of this integration happened because the street was so important in our lives. Between school [dismissal] and dusk, almost all our time was on the street, playing the games of the season. They included softball, stickball, punchball, stoopball, touch tackle football, roller hockey, basketball and marbles.
The greatest significance, I think, is that adults played absolutely no part in our activities. We were totally self-governing. All activities and relationships had to be negotiated; it was a very democratic society. Everybody had a part, though the more athletic had more status.
To the street play, I should add the role of the high school grounds. On most weekends, we used its excellent fields and courts. They wouldn’t open the gates, so we had to cut the chain fencing with wire cutters. It was an informal agreement with the authorities. They didn’t police the grounds to keep us out, but they didn’t acknowledge responsibility.
In terms of food, we probably did better than most Americans of the time. It wasn’t until much later, for example, that I realized Americans were famous for eating packaged white bread. We had three local bakeries with a large variety of freshly baked breads, rolls and bagels and cakes. Only in France have I found an equivalent.
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