↓
 

Streetplay Discussion Archive

Kicking it 1999 style

  • Home
    • Discussion Archive Home (this site)
    • Streetplay Discussion Group on Facebook
    • Streetplay.com
    • Streetplay on Facebook
    • Streetplay on Twitter
  • Locales
    • Boston
    • Bronx
    • Brooklyn
    • Chicago
    • International
    • Manhattan
    • Philadelphia
    • Queens
    • Staten Island
  • Spaldeen games
    • Ace King Queen
    • Box Baseball
    • Boxball
    • Curbball
    • Halfball
    • Other Spaldeen games
    • Punchball
    • Stickball
      • Stickball rules
    • Stoopball
    • Wallball / Off the Wall/Point
  • Girl games
    • Clap and Rhyme
    • Hopscotch
    • Jacks
    • Jumprope
  • Other Games
    • Bocce etc.
    • Card Games
    • Cricket
    • Hide & Seek
    • Hit the penny / stick / etc.
    • Johnny on the Pony
    • Marbles
    • Ringoleavio
    • Skully
    • Tag
  • Special topics
    • 1999 Stickball Classic
    • All Seasons
    • Member spotlight
    • Reader Stories
    • Young romance
  • Stickball
    • Stickball rules
  • Street Lifestyle
    • Bikes
    • Food & Drink
    • Hanging Out
    • Playgrounds
    • Roller skates
    • Street Fashion
    • Toys
      • Hula hoops & pogo sticks
Home→Categories Special topics→Reader Stories - Page 5 << 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 … 31 32 >>

Category Archives: Reader Stories

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

I REMEMBER GOING TO SCHOOL…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on March 26, 2007 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
[e-mail]"; } ?>
 

I REMEMBER GOING TO SCHOOL WITH COLE POWELL IN THE SOUTH BRONX IN J.H.R. PS. 52 ON KELLY STREET. WE HUNG OUT TOGETHER AFTER SCHOOL. HE WORK IN A CHILDRENS FURNITURE STORE ON WESTCHSTER AVE IN THE SOUTH BRONX.I ALSO REMEMBER PLAYING STICKBALL WITH WILLIE MAYS ALSO JOE TORRE OF THE N.Y. YANKEES.PLAYED A GREAT DEAL OF STICKBALL ON THE STREETS OF THE SOUTH BRONX. MOST OF ALL STICKBALL GAMES WERE PLAYED FOR MONEY.I AM 75 YEARS OLD NOW AND HAVE GREAT STORIES OF THE SOUTHBRONX,IT WAS LIKE WESTSIDE STORY MOVIE.WELL SO LONG FOR NOW,IF ANYONE WOULD LIKE TO CONTACT ME,I WOULD VERY PLEASED T0 REMENESE WITH THEM OF THE SPECIAL YEARS OF THE 40S, 50S,& 60S.I NOW LIVE NEAR SAVANNAH GEORGIA. RESPECTFULLY, JERRY GRINGER

Posted in Bronx, Reader Stories, Stickball | Tagged celebrity neighbors, South Bronx

i can’t remember if we drew…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on February 26, 2007 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 14, 2014
[e-mail]"; } ?>
 

i can’t remember if we drew a skull & crossbones with chalk or just the bones. and you use bottlecaps that you flick with your finger to score

Posted in Reader Stories, Skully

Does anybody remember their…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on December 13, 2006 by Streetplay DiscussionsDecember 13, 2006
[e-mail]"; } ?>
 

Does anybody remember their dad in the 60s having a drawing (my dad’s was in his office in the store we owned). It was a guy trying to flush himself down the toilet (his head was sticking out of the bowl and his hand was on the flusher) and the caption underneath said “Goodbye Cruel World”? I thought every 60s dad had one of these!

Posted in Reader Stories | Tagged Dad

Does anybody remember their…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on December 13, 2006 by Streetplay DiscussionsDecember 13, 2006
[e-mail]"; } ?>
 

Does anybody remember their dad in the 60s having a drawing (my dad’s was in his office in the store we owned). It was a guy trying to flush himself down the toilet (his head was sticking out of the bowl and his hand was on the flusher) and the caption underneath said “Goodbye Cruel World”? I thought every 60s dad had one of these!

Posted in Reader Stories

In our Kensington Brooklyn…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on November 18, 2006 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
[e-mail]"; } ?>
 

In our Kensington Brooklyn area, and others nearby, we said “Caught, Caught, Ringleavio”, not Ringleavio, 1, 2, 3. How about the nicknames most kids had? I was simply Howie, but we had Itchy (Irwin Irving Indyke), Shack, Herky and Spits, just to name a few.

Posted in Brooklyn, Reader Stories

My three year old keeps singing…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on September 20, 2006 by Streetplay DiscussionsSeptember 20, 2006
[e-mail]"; } ?>
 

My three year old keeps singing a song but she doesn’t know the rest of it. Could someone help me? it goes: “just cinderella dressed in yellow” that’s the only part she knows! If anyone has the whole song could you email me how it goes so I can teach her the whole song? Thanks jlpaus [at] sbcglobal [dot] net

Posted in Reader Stories | Tagged the family

Yackle Ball is a fun new…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on September 13, 2006 by Streetplay DiscussionsSeptember 13, 2006
[e-mail]"; } ?>
 

Yackle Ball is a fun new sports ball. The ball is very different; first of all it

Posted in Reader Stories

A HOLE IN THE FENCE The…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on July 11, 2006 by Streetplay DiscussionsFebruary 16, 2019
[e-mail]"; } ?>
 

A HOLE IN THE FENCE The Bronx in the late 50’s and early 60’s had much to offer a pre-teen boy with energy to burn. Aside from endless miles of sidewalks to ride one’s bike on at the risk of being yelled at by old ladies sitting out, there were acres of asphalt paved and bordered and subdivided by chain link fence. We called it “the park,” but there weren’t any trees, there was no grass. The playground attached to Public School 121 was my place, my world. Just three short blocks from our brick twin house on Tenbroeck Avenue was a world where structure met exploration. As the school buildings themselves were locked after class time, public school playgrounds also had scheduled operating hours. Each was staffed with someone we called “Parkie” whose job it was to dole out sports equipment and supervise the bathrooms. Parkie babysat the neighborhood and cleaned up the occasional but rare mess or spill. He was the local law with a set of keys as his only weapon. He was after school daycare while mom was home cooking dinner. The sign on the front entry gate in the fence was a classic: It read “NO Skating, NO Running, NO Jumping, NO Bike Riding, NO Ball Playing. This is YOUR playground, enjoy it!” Perhaps the wording isn’t exact, but it’s pretty darn close. It seemed to strangers that our playground was officially off limits to all fun. But unofficially it was the center of our social world. We had a blast! Interior chain link fencing subdivided the whole place. Basketball courts and a towering concrete handball wall each had their own “room.” Just inside the main gate was the playground itself. Here was the bathroom building with a place for Parkie to sit out of the sun and a room for the spongy red dodge balls and checkerboards that he gave out. Word would quickly spread through the neighborhood for blocks in every direction whenever Parkie would turn on the sprinkler fountain head that stood dry for most of its life in the center of a sea of blacktop. Such simple wet fun on a hot city day! A wading-pool sized depression ringed with cast iron fencing held a ton or two of sand to scoop and plow and dig. To the left was a bank of wooden see-saws next to an impossibly high–at least to a nine year old–ladder and slide. The “baby swings” were set off with a low chain link fence just beyond the stacked open cubes of the one-inch pipe monkey bars. Then up a cement ramp into the next room were the real swings. Thick chains that could have come from the docks held up a fat, wooden slab form-fitted with stiff and tough aluminum. Those swings demanded a room of their own and they begged to be abused: stood upon, twisted and released, straddled and hit from side to side to side. And no where to be seen was anything rubber, soft, or shock absorbent. No colors at all other than the silver and gray of metal and concrete and the occasional blood-red of skinned knees. By today’s standards our playground could have been the most dangerous place for children ever built. Dozens of kids with not a cartoon character ride or blanket of soft mulch in sight spent hours each day happily running around. The only supervision–a lone male who had the keys to the bathrooms. And yet somehow both the playground and the kids survived the mutual abuse. Until one day someone cut a hole in the fence. A four foot rip in the chain link through which anyone could enter after hours. Parkie’s locked gate was now useless. Repeated attempts at repair resulted in repeated breaches cut yet again. And eventually the City of New York gave in. One night a crew came and squared up the hole in the fence making it a permanent shortcut entrance to the basketball courts. The main gate that stood locked after dark was now locked in the open position. After a time, broken beer bottle glass was found in the sandbox and it was emptied down to its cement floor. The benches that lined the play area where the occasional young mother sat watching her children run and play had their wooden slats carved deep with endless graffiti and were eventually dismantled. The hard aluminum swings were replaced by rubber slings that could neither be stood upon nor comfortably sat upon. Parkie’s job was lost in a budget cut. The sign posted whose listed rules we loosely obeyed was obliterated with paint from a spray can. That fence had kept the social order of the day. Its detailed, posted rules were the unseen boundries that we all lived by and sometimes tested. It kept the structure that young people need as they explore their limits. But now, the happy and trusting world we knew was gone. There was a hole in the fence. read my stories: www.johnzinzi.com

Posted in Bronx, Reader Stories | Tagged Co-op City, dodgeball

Do you want to read some…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 23, 2006 by Streetplay DiscussionsApril 23, 2006
[e-mail]"; } ?>
 

Do you want to read some great memories of street games and other things from the 40’s, 50’s and 60’s – go to my site www.dwaffleman.com Joe

Posted in Reader Stories

i forgot!!! i also went…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on April 4, 2006 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
[e-mail]"; } ?>
 

i forgot!!! i also went to another private school in downtown brooklyn on joralamen street off of court st called packer collegiate institute. me and uma thurman’s old beau, Ethan Hawke were in the same classes in 5th and 6th grade. i remember him coming to a bitrhday party of mine, my mom took me and a few of my friends to a movie and then to Junior’s on Flatbush for dinner. one of the best birthdays i ever had.

Posted in Brooklyn, Reader Stories | Tagged celebrity neighbors

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Categories

  • Girl games (1,201)
    • Clap and Rhyme (504)
    • Hopscotch (82)
    • Jacks (96)
    • Jumprope (264)
  • Locales (1,369)
    • Boston (14)
    • Bronx (325)
    • Brooklyn (553)
    • Chicago (23)
    • International (13)
    • Manhattan (159)
    • Philadelphia (135)
    • Queens (220)
    • Staten Island (9)
  • Other Games (913)
    • Bocce etc. (14)
    • Card Games (27)
    • Cricket (9)
    • Hide & Seek (22)
    • Hit the penny / stick / etc. (21)
    • Johnny on the Pony (99)
    • Marbles (70)
    • Ringoleavio (49)
    • Skully (339)
    • Tag (16)
  • Site suggestions (48)
  • Spaldeen games (996)
    • Ace King Queen (94)
    • Box Baseball (21)
    • Boxball (90)
    • Curbball (16)
    • Halfball (46)
    • Other Spaldeen games (534)
    • Punchball (95)
    • Stickball (546)
      • Stickball rules (31)
    • Stoopball (101)
    • Wallball / Off the Wall/Point (65)
  • Special topics (542)
    • 1999 Stickball Classic (46)
    • All Seasons (37)
    • Member spotlight (12)
    • Reader Stories (319)
    • Young romance (97)
  • Street Lifestyle (578)
    • Bikes (35)
    • Food & Drink (159)
    • Hanging Out (61)
    • Playgrounds (59)
    • Roller skates (33)
    • Street Fashion (36)
    • Toys (174)
      • Hula hoops & pogo sticks (24)

Tags

"A My Name Is Alice..." "Miss Lucy..." "The Projects" 9/11 1999 Back to Brooklyn Festival Astoria candy store Chinese handball Chinese jumprope collecting stuff Coney Island content suggestions crayons Does anyone remember... dolls & cutouts first kiss Girl / Boy / Cub Scouts Harlem I grew up... Lower East Side Off the Wall Pennsy Pinkie pimple ball pizza potsy running around Russian 7/10/12 (the game) salugi slugs (the game) songs South Bronx South Philadelphia spaldeen types Steve Mercado stoop sitting Streetplay business goals suburbia Summer tongue twisters tops and yo-yos wallball Washington Heights weapons of choice word games young love locations

Archives

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
©2025 - Streetplay Discussion Archive - Weaver Xtreme Theme
↑