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Home→Categories Locales→Bronx - Page 15 << 1 2 … 13 14 15 16 17 … 32 33 >>

Category Archives: Bronx

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Played the game in the Bedford…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on July 26, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsMarch 23, 2019
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Played the game in the Bedford Park section & Grand Concourse in the Bx. Got our chestnuts from Riverdale, St. James Park (Fordham area)and the Bx. Botanical Gardens. Everybody had their own “secret” formula for hardening them (boiling in vinegar, nail polish, etc.). I don’t think any of them really worked. Never had a real name for the game.

Posted in Bronx, Locales, Other Games | Tagged chestnut fights, Fordham, Riverdale

Does anybody remember Captain…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on July 26, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 20, 2014
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Does anybody remember Captain or Chinese Handball where the ball had to bounce before you hit the wall. You could put spin on it if you were good. You played to 11 or 21. You might know it by another name but those were the two names we used in the Bronx.

Posted in Ace King Queen, Bronx, Other Spaldeen games | Tagged Chinese handball

Hi All, I’m a Queens…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on June 26, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 20, 2014
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Hi All, I’m a Queens raised guy who remembers getting tire-treads vulcanized to a pair of Puma sneakers in the late 60’s/early 70’s at a shoe repair shop in the Bronx. Anyone know about this? Thanks, Grape

Posted in Bronx, Locales, Queens, Street Fashion | Tagged sneakers

“Kick the can” was also…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on June 20, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 20, 2014
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“Kick the can” was also a Bronx game. The kids on my block use to hide our cans so that we wouldn’t have to go scurrying around looking for one the next day; Because the last one to tap their can was it. That was my favorite game, back then. We did all types of cheap tricks, like changing sneakers and hiding inside the garbage can closest to the “can”. And if we didn’t really like the kid that was it. We would run through the backyards and wind up on the other street, leaving the kid all alone for what seemed like hours, trying to find someone. oh, it was the best. I’m glad I not the only one that remembered this game. Thanks for the memories…..Vanessa (32)

Posted in Bronx, Other Games, Street Fashion | Tagged kick the can, sneakers

My first real job was at…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on June 19, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
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My first real job was at the A&P Supermarket on E. 31 street & Lexington. After school (in my senior year) I’d take the 4 train down to Grand Central and the 6 across the platform to 33rd street. It was there I learned about produce, dairy, stocking shelves, packing PAPER bags, working the cash register. I had to give out change and count it back to the customer… no digital display on the register telling me what was owed to the customer. Yeah and I learned how to mop and dry seven aisles of a supermarket. And, oh, I hated truck night. It would arrive around 7:00pm and we’d be done by 10:00pm. I had to take the train back to Bronx on a school night.

Posted in Bronx, Reader Stories | Tagged first jobs

I, who has been known to…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on June 19, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
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I, who has been known to have a memory like an elephant, still do not recall EVER playing sandlot baseball with BOBBY BONILLA in the Bronx. Yet two of my closest friends (Will & Tony)and Tony’s mother insist that I did.

Posted in Bronx, Reader Stories | Tagged celebrity neighbors

Born & raised in the…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on June 19, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsMay 9, 2019
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Born & raised in the Bronx and current resident. I was born at St. Francis Hospital on St. Ann’s Avenue. I grew up near Tremont Ave & Southern Blvd area as a child. My teen years were spent on Grand Avenue off Fordham Road. My high school years and current residence is White Plains & E 233rd Street. We played alot of stickball when I grew up on Fordham Road. We’d play in the summer time on the street if we weren’t at a the Stadium sitting in the bleachers. In high school, my love for the game lessened as I found out I could croon a little bit. I met my first (late) wife singing ‘My Girl’ on the first day of school my soph year at Bronx Science (class of ’81). 15 years later after high school I wind up singing with Earl Lewis & The Channels Joe Rivera

Posted in Bronx, Locales, Stickball | Tagged Fordham, I grew up..., South Bronx, Summer

This past Father’s Day I…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on June 19, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
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This past Father’s Day I called my dad in Arroyo, PR and thanked him for teaching me how to switch-hit, hit the cutoff man (although I wound up being a second baseman), how to run the bases and I always remember him telling me “never go down looking, take a cut if you’re going to make an out”. My friends all learned something from dad and applied it to their “game”. My dad played stickball as a teenager in “El Barrio” on East 103 Street and Lexington Ave, the HILL. He later played for “Los Astros” softball team in the Bronx in the early 1970’s as their 3rd baseman at Starlite Park .

Posted in Bronx, Reader Stories, Stickball | Tagged Dad

Am looking to purchase “spaldeens”…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on June 18, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 14, 2014
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Am looking to purchase “spaldeens” for our second annual stickball game and dinner in the Bronx on July 27. Last year I bought a dozen online but this year I don’t see them offered. Need help.

Posted in Bronx, Locales, Stickball | Tagged Hoe Avenue

It was probably the summer…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 16, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsMay 9, 2019
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It was probably the summer of ’70, a very hot and humid Saturday afternoon. I had just finished smoking a joint and was walking up Mott Street toward Houston Street, where I intended to walk straight down to Greenwich Village and sit in Washington Square Park for a few hours. Before I reached Houston, a car loaded with a bunch of guys slowed down and one of the guys, Mike Fink, a good friend of mine, called out to me and asked me if I wanted to go up to the Bronx to play stickball. Right behind the car was another one filled with a few more stickball players. The team from Mott Street were desperate; they were short a player, and Mike, who I had known since we were kids, was almost pleading with me to jump in and go with them. Mike Fink was an outstanding stickball player and he knew that I had a little game in me because when we were kids we would always be playing in the streets of Little Italy together. Stoopball, punchball, kick-the-can, stickball–seems we were always rounding the bases. But, that was then, and now I was about twenty and hadn’t picked up a stick in years–smoking pot and listening to the Beatles and Stones had replaced the childhood games. The truth of the matter was, Mike had invited me because absolutely no one else was around the neighborhood that Saturday afternoon. I jumped into the car and the next thing that I know is that I am in the South Bronx on Fox Street. When we had gotten out of our cars, the Puerto Rican players greeted us with handshakes and smiles. I was surprised how well players from both teams knew each other. They were even calling each other by first names. Simply put, it amazed me. The Puerto Rican team was truly happy to see us and get the afternoon rolling with some exciting stickball. Mike, our captain, knew I had always had a problem seeing and catching fly balls, so he stuck me on first base. I played a decent game, hitting the ball hard all four times and collecting two singles, but we got trounced 8-3. Early in the game a funny thing happened to me. A left-handed hitter sent a sizzling line drive off of my forehead. Man, the ball streamed at me so quickly that I don’t even remember moving my hands an inch. The ball stung me with the force of a powerful overhand punch just above my right eye. After ricochetting off my forehead, the balled ended up near home plate. I quickly chased and retrieved it and the batter wound up on second with an easy double. When I walked back to first with the ball in my hand, our second and third basemen came over to me to see if I was okay. With an angry glare, I sent both of them back to their bases before they even got close to me. Their were hundreds of fans lining up both sides of the streets, standing on fire-escapes, and looking out of windows. And, everyone of them knew I must have been aching from the shot I took, but I did not even go as far as touching or rubbing my forehead. I went back to first and waited for the next batter to hit as though nothing had happened. By now, it was very humid and hot, so I took off my t-shirt and tied a red bandana around my forehead to keep the sweat from dripping into my eyes. Then, after the inning was over, and I came up to bat, so many spectators watching the game began chanting at me: “Com’on Samson, let’s see if you could hit.” I lined a wicked singled past first base, and for the remainder of the day, each time I stepped to the plate to bat, everyone watching the game would chant at me: “Samson, Samson, Com’on, Samson hit the ball.” (I had shoulder length hair at the time) In the second game, we were leading 3-0 in the eight inning when an argument broke out and the Puerto Rican team quit. Our guys must have lost about $400 the first game and we scrapped up about $350 for the second. When the game broke up, we split up our money. I was happy to get my $10 back. That second game, I went 2 for 3 with a single and a double. My 2-game totals were 4 for 7 (3 singles and a double), hitting the ball hard six times and dribbling out once. As we rode back to Manhattan, I learned that the Saturday before on Mulberry Street, the Italians home field, the Italian squad quit on the Puerto Rican team, which was way ahead in that contest late in the game. So, that is why the Puerto Rican team quit on us; they got even. It turned out to be tragic because never again would these two teams play each other. True, all of these guys were stickball players, some were great ones, but even more than just ballplayers, these guys were diplomats. Those days–the ’50s, ’60s, and ’70s–weren’t the best times for Puerto Ricans and Italians. But, by going into each other’s neighborhoods, which were considered hostile back then, these guys did their best to smooth the relationship between both etchnic groups. They were more than just stickball players–they were diplomats. And, it was a shame that the rivalry between some mighty big men ended on such a sour note. Anyhow, I tip my cap to you athletes and peace-makers from both neighborhoods. You truly deserve it! God bless!!

Posted in Bronx, Manhattan, Punchball, Stickball, Stoopball | Tagged South Bronx, Summer

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