Thursday, April 30, 2009

Neighborhood Luncheonettes

Corner luncheonettes may not be unique to Oxford Circle, but I think they are, or used to be, characteristic of Philadelphia neighborhoods. Back in the 1950's, my mother would give me a dime and send me across the street to buy a loaf of bread at Marty's (it became Richie's sometime in the 1960's). Located on Frontenac street between Hellerman and Greeby Streets, it appears that it is still a corner store of some sort, judging from a recent photo obtained courtesy of Google Earth. Marty's/Richie's had a pinball machine that kids used to play and every once in a while I was treated to a Texas Tommy. That's a hot dog wrapped in a bacon strip. I'm pretty sure the term Texas Tommy is unique to Philadelphia, as I've lived outside of Philly for over 30 years and never heard of saw it since. In the 1950's they sold assorted candies including little candied dots on paper strips. Does anyone remember what they were called? Baseball cards sold for 5¢ and the package included a pink bubble gum strip.

The other nearby luncheonette, Freda & Al's (or "Punzie's" as it was nicknamed by some kids) was run by proprietor Al Shein and located on Summerdale Avenue between Hellerman and Greeby streets. I worked there part-time during my high school years. I remember making hoagies, cheesesteaks, pizzas, and doing a variety of other chores. There was also a soda fountain, which contained syrups that were mixed into club soda and stirred manually. I doubt there are many places still around with soda fountains like that. It also had a grill, a pizza oven, and a room with slicer in it. Working that slicer to cut deli meats, cheese, and other things made me quite nervous. When I first started working there, I accidentally flipped a burger from the grill to the floor. Al instructed me to place the burger back on the grill and finish cooking it. After that incident, I never ate in there unless I made it myself :-) For some reason, some high school kids used to hang out there. And there were a few strange people in the neighborhood. One kid in my high school class asked me, seriously, if he could sleep in our garage. He would also buy model airplane kits that came with a small tube of glue. Come to find out, he'd throw away the kit and keep the glue for sniffing. That was one messed-up dude. Freda & Al's is now only a vague memory for me. The building that it once occupied appears to be entirely residential today.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Cottman Avenue: From Algon to the Boulevard

Today I'll list the few places that I remember from the 60's that no longer exist along Cottman Avenue, from Northeast High School to Roosevelt Boulevard:

Burger Chef: This was directly across the street from Northeast High. Never ate in there, but I do remember it's neon sign. (No, that's not same Burger Chef in the picture, but has a pretty good likeness of it).

Polar Cub: A soft serve ice cream store, similar to Dairy Queen.

Horn & Hardart (at Large St.): Don't remember much about it, but I think it had been there in the 1950's.

Kresge's (at Large St.): A small department store similar to Woolworth's.

Cottman Lanes (at Horrocks St.): I used to bowl occasionally back in the good old days. I remember that Cottman Lanes used to award a free game for every "A" on your report card. I also remember spending a New Year's Eve there with a friend bowling the entire night while "Hey Jude" played on the radio again and again. That must have been Dec 31, 1968.

Record Museum (one block from the Northeast Library, between Oakland St. and Bustleton Ave.): A great place to buy 45's. I believe this is where I bought my first ever 45rpm record in 1967. I believe it was owned by Jerry Blavat, not sure.

S. Klein "on the square": A department store where John Wanamaker (?) is now. Was this also a Korvette's back in the 60's before it was Klein's?

I do remember that Bill Deal & the Rhondells gave a free concert at the Roosevelt Mall once. It must have been around 1969.

Hey, if anyone out there is reading this, please leave a comment. I'd like to hear about memories that you had of that time period. Photos also welcome!