Our Lady of Loreto

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Our Lady of Loreto
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Re: The Old Neighborhoods

Phyllis,
Thanks for your reply. Yes. I understand your sentiments about the people making the neighborhood. Most of the things you mentioned took place after my departure from Brooklyn.Doo-wop was unheard of, although the Ink Spots and the MIlls Brothers were everyone's favorites. Our Italian festa took place every year. They built a temporary band stand up against the school. Every night there would be Italian music and singers performing and food carts up and down the street. We had a little bit of Italy at those feasts in the '30s and '40s. We kids were listening to a new kid from New Jersey (Frank Sinatra) sing some songs that made the girls swoon. The big bands were going strong and the movies were trying to make us forget the Great Depression as well as WWII. What a time that was. Frightened one moment, happy the next. I hope more people on this site chime in. I'm approaching my 80th year on this earth and most memories of the old neighborhood are pleasant.
Joe Di Mento

Re: The Old Neighborhoods

Joe, I graduated OLL in 1957. My family lived there until Dec. 1978. I have been back there many times over the years and it is very desolate now. I passed through their just this past Sunday and nothing is the same. I would love to see the neighborhood revitalized. They look like the brownstones that are all over Manhattan. It's sad looking, but it has so many wonderful memories for most of us. It was a joy growing up in a place where everyone looked out for and cared for each other.

Re: The Old Neighborhoods

Hello Carolyn.
Reading your posted message, I sense how you feel. I guess it's true; "you can never go back." At times, I search Google Earth for the neighborhoods I lived in while attending Our Lady of Loreto and am not shocked that two of the three tenement buildings we lived in no longer exist. Oh well! they were run down when we lived there in the '30s and '40s. They were due to be cleared out when we lived there. In fact most of the homes on Liberty Avenue (between Christopher and Sackman) have been torn down. I keep hearing about the gentrification that some sections of Brooklyn are going through. It would be nice if someone went in there and started a rehabilitation. I'm afraid, from what I've seen of low cost housing projects, that kind of thing won't do it. The Church has been saved; if only the neighborhood may also be saved.

Re: The Old Neighborhoods

The people made our neighborhood, the church, the school, the merchants................broke my heart to see where carlucci's restaurant was all the buildings were boarded up..................this was on april 5th when I went to the rally.............let us keep our memories close to our hearts and continue them through this great website.............we can still stroll down memory lane, if only electronically........