***Of This And That
In The Old North Adamsville Neighborhood-In
Search Of….. The Lost Submarines
From The Pen Of Frank
Jackman
For those who have been following
this series about the old days in my old home town of North Adamsville,
particularly the high school days as the 50th anniversary of my
graduation creeps up, will notice that recently I have been doing sketches
based on my reaction to various e-mails sent to me by fellow classmates via the
class website. Also classmates have placed messages on the Message Forum page when they have something they want to share
generally like health issues, new family arrivals or trips down memory lane on
any number of subjects from old time athletic prowess to reflections on growing
up in the old home town. Thus I have been forced to take on the tough tasks of
sending kisses to raging grandmothers, talking up old flames with guys I used
to hang around the corners with, remembering those long ago searches for the
heart of Saturday night, getting wistful about elementary school daydreams,
taking up the cudgels for be-bop lost boys and the like. These responses are no
accident as I have of late been avidly perusing the personal profiles of
various members of the North Adamsville Class of 1964 website as fellow
classmates have come on to the site and lost their shyness about telling their
life stories (or have increased their computer technology capacities, not an
unimportant consideration for the generation of ’68, a generation on the cusp
of the computer revolution and so not necessarily as computer savvy as the
average eight-year old today).
Some stuff is interesting to a
point, you know, including those endless tales about the doings and not doings
of the grandchildren, odd hobbies and other ventures taken up in retirement and
so on although not worthy of me making a little off-hand commentary on. Some other
stuff is either too sensitive or too risqué to publish on a family-friendly
site. Some stuff, some stuff about the old days and what did, or did not,
happened to, or between, fellow classmates, you know the boy-girl thing (other
now acceptable relationships were below the radar then) has naturally perked my
interest.
Other stuff defies simple
classification as is the case here in dealing various locations in the old town
that formed a key part of the teenage coming of age experience. As an
ocean-edged town the beach, rocky, pebbly old Adamsville Beach, oil-slicked
then at low tide (which did not stop us from digging for clams down at the Merrymount
to who knows what effect) played a central role in that drama. From daytime sitting
between the two boating clubs watching, waiting, hoping that one of the beach
blanket bingo blondes (hell, any colored hair) might give you a tumble to the chaste
early evening ice cream cone at Howard Johnson’s across from the beach to whet
one appetite to the not so chaste struggle to find those damn midnight “submarine
races” off the coast to whet another appetite. In any case I can hardly do justice to the
delights and heartaches associated with the beach that one classmate did with a
posting about the doing there. So I will let him tell the story from here, with
thanks for the memories many of which I had forgotten:
Daydream Visions Of Adamsville Beach, Circa 1964-For “The
Girl On The Rocks”-NAHS Class of 1964
Taffrail Road, Yardarm Lane,
Captain's Walk, Quarterdeck Road, Sextant Circle, and the Adamsville Old
Sailor’s Home (and cemetery about a quarter of a mile away, closed now but the
final resting place for many a sea-faring man, known and unknown). Yes, those
names and places from the old housing project down in Adamsville South where I
came of age surely evoke imagines of the sea, of long ago sailing ships, and of
desperate, high stakes battles fought off shrouded, mist-covered coasts by
those hearty enough to seek fame and fortune. And agile enough to keep it.
Almost from my first wobbly, halting baby steps down at “the projects” I have
been physically drawn to the sea, a seductive, foam-flecked siren call that has
never left me. Moreover, ever since I was a toddler my imagination has been
driven by the sea as well. Not so much of pirates and prizes but of the power
of nature, for good or evil.
Of course, anyone with even a
passing attachment to Adamsville has to have had an almost instinctual love of
the sea; and a fear of its furies when old Mother Nature turns her back on us.
Days when the fugitive waves respect nothing in front of them surging over
crumbling seawalls, laying waste to helpless abandoned houses, and flooding
roadways from Malibu to Adamsville Boulevard (oops, Adamsville Shore Drive).
And moonless nights when she shows her furious face to sea- craft from dingy to
super-tanker leaving drowning men to ponder their lives in those long last
moments. Yes, the endless sea, our homeland the sea, the mother we never knew,
the sea... But enough of those imaginings. If being determines consciousness,
and if you love the ocean, then it did not hurt to have been brought up in Adamsville
with its ready access to the bay and water on three sides anchored by its
longest shoreline stretch, Adamsville Beach of blessed memory.
The glint of silver off the Long
Island Bridge when the sun hit it at a certain time of sunny day. The early
morning winter sun coming up over the horizon on the bay. The Boston skyline at
dusk (pre-Marina Bay times when there was an unimpeded view). Well, I could go
on and on with my beach view memories but the one thing that mattered for me in
any season or any weathers was the word “escape.” Adamsville Beach can serve as a metaphor for
that idea. I do not know about you and your family but I had a very rocky time
growing up and certainly by the time I got to high school I was in desperate
need of a sanctuary. It is no accident that I spent a fair amount of time
there. It may be hard to believe looking at its disheveled sands and tepid
waves aimlessly splashing to shore seen with today's older eyes after recent
trips there and after subsequently seeing many more spectacular ocean settings
but then the place provided a few happy memories, now old hazy, happy memories.
For the Class of 1964 one cannot
discuss Adamsville Beach properly without reference to such spots such as
Howard Johnson's famous landmark ice cream stand (where now stands a
woe-begotten clam shack of no repute). For those who are clueless as to what I
speak of, or have only heard about it in mythological terms from older
relatives, or worst, have written it off as just another ice cream joint I have
provided a link to a Wikipedia entry for the establishment below. Know
this: many a hot, muggy, sultry, sweaty summer evening was spent in line
impatiently, and perhaps, on occasion, beyond impatience, waiting for one of
those 27 (or was it 28?) flavors to cool off with. In those days the prize went
to cherry vanilla in a sugar cone (backup: frozen pudding). I will not bore the
reader with superlative terms and the “they don’t make them like they use to”
riff, especially for those who only know “HoJo’s” from the later, orange pale imitation
franchise days out on some forsaken great American West-searching highway, but
at that moment I was in very heaven.
Moving on how could one forget the
19 cent hotdogs sold on the beach a few doors down at Maggie’s. (That can’t be
right, I must be misremembering, maybe it was nineteen dollars, nothing in this
wicked old world ever cost 19 cents.) Or
those stumbling, fumbling, fierce childish efforts, bare-footed against all
motherly caution about the dreaded jellyfish, pail and shovel in hand, to dig
for seemingly non-existent clams down toward the Merrymount end of the beach at
the just slightly oil-slicked, sulfuric low tide. (By the way the jellyfish are
still there in all their glory and please, take mother's advice, do not step on
them, they might be poisonous.) And one could always see some parent parading a
group of kids down to the flats. Generally staying for a couple of hours before
high tide, and after as well, and that parent always seemed to have had snacks
and drinks in tow in an all-purpose cooler.
Elsewhere along the shoreline older
kids swam, dug dream castles in the sand to be washed away by an indifferent
tide, played catch in the water with a rubber ball, and when they finally got tired,
could be seen laying on towels strewn every which way listening to WRKO or WMEX
on the transistor radio. Listening to Earth
Angel, Johnny Angel, Teen Angel, Who’s
Sorry Now, I Want To Be Wanted, Suzie Q and the like. [I know this is a geriatric
site but there may be a stray child who sees grandma’s computer glued to this
page, you know some young member of generations X, Y or Z, who may not be
familiar with the term “transistor radio.” For their benefit that was a little
battery-powered gizmo that allowed you to listen to music, the “devil's music,”
to hear one’s parents tell the story, rock 'n' roll, without them going nuts.
And no, sorry, you could not download whatever you wanted. Yes, I know, the
Stone Age.]
Farther down the shore came
overpowering memories of the smell of charcoal-flavored hamburgers on those
occasional family barbecues (when one in a series of old jalopies that my
father drove worked well enough to get us there) at the then just recently
constructed barren old Treasure Island (now named after some fallen Marine, and
fully-forested, such is time) that were some of the too few times when my
family acted as a family. Memory evoked too of roasted, really burnt, sticky
marshmallows sticking to the roof of my mouth. Ouch!
But those thoughts and smells are
not the only ones that interest me today. No trip down memory lane would be
complete without at least a passing reference to high school Adamsville Beach.
The sea brings out many emotions: humankind's struggle against nature, some Zen
notions of oneness with the universe, the calming effect of the thundering
waves, thoughts of immortality, and so on. But it also brings out the
primordial longings for companionship. And no one longs for companionship more
than teenagers. So the draw of the ocean is not just in its cosmic appeal but
hormonal as well. Mind you, however, I am not discussing here the nighttime Adamsville
Beach, the time of "parking" and the "submarine races." Our
thoughts are now pure as the driven snow. We will save that discussion for
another time when any kids and grand-kids are not around. Here we will confine
ourselves to the day-time beach. Although I still have a long-standing
nighttime question now grown fifty years hoary with age- Why, while driving
down the boulevard on some cold November night could one notice most of the
cars parked there all fogged up? What, were their heaters broken?
[For the heathens, the pure of
heart, the clueless, those who just got in from Kansas or some such place, or
the merely forgetful, going to watch the “submarine races” was a localism
meaning going, via car, preferable your own car and not some borrowed father’s
car to be returned by midnight no later, down to the beach at night, hopefully
on a very dark night, with, for a guy, a girl and, well, start groping each
other, and usually more, a lot more, if you were a lucky guy and the girl was
hot, while occasionally coming up for air and looking for that mythical submarine
race out in the bay. Many guys (and gals) had their first encounter with sex
that way if the Monday morning before school boys’ lav talk, and maybe girls’
lav talk too, was anything but hot air.]
Virtually from the day school got out
for summer vacation I headed for the beach. And not just any section of that
beach but the section directly between the Adamsville and North Adamsville Yacht
Clubs. Most of the natural landmarks are still there, as well as those poor,
weather-beaten yacht clubs that I spend many a summer gazing on in my fruitless
search for that aforementioned teenage companionship. Now did people, or rather
teenage boys, go to that locale so that they could watch all the fine boats at
anchor? Or was this the best swimming location on the beach? Hell no, this is
where every knowledgeable boy had heard all the "babes" were. We
were, apparently, under the influence of Beach Blanket Bingo or some
such early 1960s Frankie Avalon-Annette Funicillo teenage beach film. (For
those who are again clueless this was a “boy meets the girl next door” saga,
except at the beach...)
Get this though. For those who
expected a movie-like happy ending to this piece, you know, where I meet a
youthful "Ms. Right" to the strains of Sea of Love, forget it.
I will keep the gory details short. As fate would have it there may have been
"babes" aplenty down there on the shore but not for this boy. I don't
know about you but I was just too socially awkward (read: tongue-tied) to get
up the nerve to talk to girls (female readers substitute boys here). And on
reflection, if the truth were to be told, I would not have known what to do
about the situation in any case. No job, no money, and, most importantly, no
car for a date to watch one of those legendary "submarine races" that
we have all agreed that we will not discuss here. But don’t blame the sea for
that.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Howard_Johnson's)
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