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Home→Categories Spaldeen games - Page 45 << 1 2 … 43 44 45 46 47 … 99 100 >>

Category Archives: Spaldeen games

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We liked to use spaldeens…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on August 13, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsJanuary 3, 2020
Original author: Jimbo [e-mail]
 

We liked to use spaldeens for stickball, pensie pinkies for punchball, king queen, handball. They had a smoother feel. Also, back in the day, Spaldeens cost 25 cents and Pensie Pinkies cost 30 cents. As I recall, Pensie Pinkies had the Keystone symbol of the State of Pennsylvania stamped on it. Can someone please confirm that for me. Hey, back in Flatbush in the late 50’s early 60’s, there wasn’t much car traffic to deal with, so we really got a lot of use out of our block.

Posted in Brooklyn, Other Spaldeen games, Punchball, Stickball | Tagged Pennsy Pinkie, spaldeen types

Hello Don’t know…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on August 13, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 13, 2014
Original author: maritza j joubert
 

Hello Don’t know if many remember me, but I am Pete’s x girlfriend Maritza. Just have been wanting to give my sympathy to his family. My heart goes out to you. He was a good stickball player and fun to hang out with. I never thought i would know someone in a tragedy as this one, but when i found out about Steve my insides went numb. But i believe he was just to good to be on this earth and our Lord just wanted him all to himself. God Bless You Maritza

Posted in Stickball | Tagged 9/11, Steve Mercado

Wireball, pimple ball, half…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on August 6, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 14, 2014
Original author: patti
 

Wireball, pimple ball, half ball, hand ball, we played all of them. Especially lots of stick ball in my neighborhood, in the Far Northeast..

Posted in Halfball, Locales, Philadelphia, Stickball | Tagged pimple ball, spaldeen types, wireball

Does anybody remember Captain…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on July 26, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 20, 2014
Original author: Steve Scavott [e-mail]
 

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

In 1953, after a summer…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on July 22, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsMay 9, 2019
Original author: Jon Goodman
 

In 1953, after a summer with relatives in Logan, Philadelphia, I introduced stickball to Williamsport, PA. (Home of Liitle League) My hometown friends took to the game eagerly, but adapted it for local conditions. This meant straight pitching, solid rubber ball and grassy backyards. Attemtping to put them right with the Gospel, I would be taunted “Philadelphia rules.” It was still a gas. By the way, my true moment of glory as an eight year old contestant near Wingahocking St was a towering drive that went all the way from 13th Street to Camac. Once and never again, alas.

Posted in Stickball | Tagged Summer

I grew up in the Alfred…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on July 18, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsFebruary 16, 2019
Original author: Wooly Bully [e-mail]
 

I grew up in the Alfred E. Smith Projects (Catherine and Madison Street intersection) across from P.S. 1. Lived there from 1953-1967 when my family moved to Brooklyn. I remember the Essex Street Markets as well as the “pickle man” on Essex Street. If none of you have not seen it, I highly recommend you watching “Crossing Delancey” starring Amy Irving. It was filmed on location! Shows the handball courts on Essex Street and centers around Amy’s character and the pickle man! Used to go with my mom to the Fulton Fish Market (still remember seeing the dead fish staring at me on the ice there! Later on, we bought fish at a market on Monroe Street. The only supermarket in the area was an A&P that was on Market Street and almost directly under the Manhattan Bridge. I played little league ball at Coleman’s Oval near the Manhattan Bridge (off Cherry Street). Played a lot of stickball at Cherry Street Park, across the street from the then Journal American building on one side and Knickerbocker Village on the other. The Journal American building is now the home to the NY Post. Remember the original hand warmers in the winter time? Right. A 15 cent knish off the knish cart! There was so much to do back there: San Gennaro festival on Mulberry Street, Chinese New Year on Mott Street, the Jewish Deli’s (Katz’s and Issac Gellis were my faves). I went to St. James School on St. James Place. That is the same school that Alfred E. Smith went to. It is also the parish that lays claim to the first American order of the Ancient Order of Hibernians. Played lots of chinese handball on St. James Place, on the outside wall of Vanella Funeral Home of all places! Played stickball, slap ball, punchball, stoop ball, all with the Spaldeen. Much prefered that over the Pensie Pinky. I can still hear the echoes of “chips on the ball, 25 cents” before playing a game of ball. Anyone here remember making the chalk socks? You take about 5 big sidewalk chalks put them inside a sock, smash them a bit, tie the sock up and then sneak up on someone and bop them with the sock! It didn’t really hurt but was kind of funny to see the shocked face and the chalk smoke linger a moment in the air over the unsuspecting victim! In my neighborhood we called them Mama Lucci’s. Maybe it was called that because I lived so close to Little Italy. Anyone here remember “salugee”? This was a spontaneous devilish game where you would take a personal item from someone and then keep it from them as you threw it to your friends (keep away). After a while some wise guy would start daring you to “roof it” and you would throw the object towards the roof of the many cold water flats of the area. What rotten kids! I have been contemplating writing a book about growing up in NYC in that time period, illustrating the various street games, rituals, etc. that made that little part of NY so special. If anyone would like to contact me. Bill

Posted in Ace King Queen, Brooklyn, Locales, Manhattan, Punchball, Stickball, Stoopball, Street Lifestyle | Tagged "The Projects", Chinese handball, chips on the ball, I grew up..., Lower East Side, Pennsy Pinkie, salugi, spaldeen types

Frankly, I never heard of…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on July 17, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsJanuary 3, 2020
Original author: Jerry
 

Frankly, I never heard of Pensie Pinkies. When I lived Brooklyn in the 30’s all we had were spaldeens. We played all our games with spaldeens: off-the wall, punchball, boxball, stoop-ball and so on. You name it; we played it. Reading the above messages brings on such sweet memories of my early teens. We lived on a block that had four story apartment buildings. My mother would lean out of our fourth floor apartment window and watch us play stickball. Occasionally, if we lost the ball down the sewer, she would wrap 10 cents in a piece of newspaper and drop it down to us so that we could buy a new one.

Posted in Boxball, Brooklyn, Other Spaldeen games, Punchball, Stickball | Tagged Pennsy Pinkie, spaldeen types

Spaldings were the ball…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on June 20, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsJanuary 3, 2020
Original author: Marino Cabrera (titoisme) [e-mail]
 

Spaldings were the ball of choice at McCarren Park in Greenpoint, Bklyn. Some used the Pinkies, but everyone had their blue ball with their initials or tags either written with a magic marker or engraved using either a knife or a small piece of broken glass (which there was a lot of back in the day).

Posted in Brooklyn, Other Spaldeen games | Tagged Pennsy Pinkie, spaldeen types

Born & raised in the…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on June 19, 2002 by Streetplay DiscussionsMay 9, 2019
Original author: Joseph J Rivera (curet30) [e-mail]
 

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
Original author: Joe Rivera [e-mail]
 

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

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