Ghost of South Philly

This Blog is the product of bygone days and haunted memories. It is about myself and my family. While most of this is about the past- as I am still alive the ghost will at times be confronted by real living sprits.

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Location: Nine Street

Friday, March 31, 2006


My Own Private Byzantium

There existed in my youth things that exits no more. Places of a one time significance, strong with a one time substance , but now gone, along with the people that occupied them. Vanished but for the memories. These memories form my own private Byzantium. My own ghosts of a fallen empire. My personal Constantinople existing under the golden dome of remembrance, where each old picture, each recollection, serves as an icon.
I like, with your indulgence, to place one of these Icons before you , to share my devotion.
The Sister of Carlo
On the north side of Dickinson street at Wilder, between 12th and 13th street, there once stood what was called a variety store. What was a variety store? Well it was not a grocery store, or a book store (scant few of these in South Philly), or a clothing store , it sold nothing particular - but it sold variety. That meant it sold bits and pieces of things- like cigarettes, news papers, candy, milk, pimple balls (remember them), cheap things, you know - variety.
The proprietor of this shop was named Carlo and hence his shop was known as Carlo’s, I don’t believe it actually had a sign or anything giving its name however. Carlo was a very nice man, what in Italian we would call simpatico. He followed what must have been good business practices of the 30’s as he was a most obliging shopkeeper who peddled his merchandise anyway his customers wanted, or could afford. He sold pimple balls by the half and cigarettes by the piece. Carlo was a soft spoken man with a faint smile who never left his house and shop, as I never saw him walking along Dickinson street. Carlo never married and lived his life in the rooms above his shop. Rooms he shared with his Sister.
Carlo’s Sister was always known to us as just that- Carlo’s Sister. She never had her own identity but lived her life as an extension of her brother. Like her brother she never married and the two lived in fraternal bliss, enjoying a sibling affection of which I could only dream. Carlo’s Sister was a looker in her youth and still kept the shadow of these looks when I knew her. The 1940’s must have been a golden era for her as she remained true to its memory for the rest of her life. I say this because she always looked as if she walked out of a 1940’s film noir- Laura of 12th street, Barbra Stanwick of the Dickinson. Her hair, makeup, and dress were always perfectly preserved in the style of the 1940’s, right down to the padded shoulders. Not that I am criticizing, the look became her very well and it was astounding that she kept, and could still get into, her outdated wardrobe thirty years later. She preserved the 40’s pure in her look, and despite the anachronism of her dress, was a happy bubbling personality. Nevertheless she must have had her own private Byzantium of which she could never let go.
My grandmother Mary Mazzola Oratorio enjoyed a friendship with Carlo and his sister , a friendship sustained over many years. My grandmother would often take me to Carlo’s for a treat, some silly candy cigarettes or cheap toy, gifts I enjoyed with great relish. When visiting her sister Anna Mazzola Postiglione, who lived on 13th and Dickinson , Grandmother often brought me along. Since this journey caused us to pass Carlo’s variety store, I was promised a treat at Carlo’s if I behaved at my great Aunt Anna’s. Of course no matter how incorrigible I was, and I was very incorrigible, I received the treat after every visit.
My grandmother, whom we called Ma, lived with us on a small widow’s pension. She was a generous person which was a hardship for her as she had no tangible assets. She never owned property, or a car, or stocks and with the exception of one short period in her life, always lived with a relative- her parents, then her in-laws, then each of her daughters my mother Dolores and my Aunt Geraldine. It always seemed natural to have my grandmother around as she was truly one of the most natural people I have ever come across. Born in South Philly in 1911 of immigrant parents ( Geraldo Mazzola and Serafina Paglia from San Donato near Caserta) she had only an 8th grade education. I won’t say she was intelligent, she was not that, she was just good , honest, and caring. Qualities perhaps worth more then intellect and discriminating tastes. She was a child of the depression and could control money as only a person who went through that hardship could. Even as late as 1994 (the year before she died) she could feed about 6 people a great dinner with clams and macaroni for about $20 in total!!
I remember my Grandmother would talk with Carlo and his sister at great length and with great delight about all kinds of things, always cheerful and laughing. When speaking to my grandmother Carlo was animated and loquacious, contrary to his normal reserved self. I don’t know what was the reason for Ma’s friendship with Carlo and his Sister. Perhaps they shared many experiences as my grandmother lived in the neighborhood since 1930. I would also assume Carlo’s Sister and my Grandmother shared make up and clothing secrets while listening to a fireside chat or the Baby Snucks show on the radio. While this trip to the store became a social visit , I played with all the silly things Carlo sold and always got a good bit of candy, some of which was given to me by Carlo and his Sister. I enjoyed my trips to Carlo’s.
Unfortunately these trips became fewer as I grew older and spent more time in school and had less time to go about with Ma. Carlo also became older and his store less stocked, soon he closed 2 days a week, then 4, and soon closed his doors forever in the late 60’s . His sister made no attempt to run the shop after he died and during her walks around the neighborhood, while still smiling, looked forlorn and lost without her brother. But she lived along and alone in her 1940’s memory play, until I stopped seeing her altogether in the late 70’s.
After her death the shop was sold and became a home. Now it is another overpriced row home on Dickinson Street with owners who may or may not know about the nondescript little variety story and the owner and his sister who augmented each other and lived by permission of the 40’s.
I can still see in my mind’s eye the layout of this shop with the afternoon sun illuminating the dark corner and warming the stacks of Philadelphia Bulletins. I remember the chatter of my Grandmother with her particular speech pattern, she always seemed so happy when talking to Carlo and his Sister as they must have reminded her of a freer more open time in her life. And I remember Carlo’s Sister with her padded shoulders and wave of roll curls looking like the lost Andrew Sister.
Carlo’s little variety store was just one of many shops along Dickinson Street between 11th and Broad, before the strip malls and mega stores upset our little village.
This icon – my Grandmother, Carlo, Carlo's Sister, the afternoon sun and the happy conversation.
My own private Byzantium

5 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Frank,
How the memories of this strange little business , and its even stranger proprietors, and customers flooded me as I read your thoughts. I was not as much a regular at Carlos as you were , because we lived blocks apart and "Josie and Charlie's" emporium was my favorite haunt for treats and small toys. And I bought many a "pimpleball" and cut it in half to play half- ball .Always inhaling the fish oil inside, as "they" told us thats what it was which kept the ball supple .Using a broom or mop handle as a bat , These bats were coveted because they were hard to come by . And I was chastized many a time because I stole one from my mothers yard, after cutting off the working end. And she did not appreciate that. So when one was procured it was kept with great care for the next game whenever that could take place.
Carlo"s shop was narrow and long and always seemed dark to me.When I think of it now, it was like a movie set of what a turn of the century grocery store would look like in a film designers head.
Carlo's sister looked indeed like a wax museum model of a 40"s era woman. And she would have made a great extra in any film from that time.
Now I have to speak of "Ma"
Ma also known as aunt Mary to me, was one of those strong women who has great influence on your life , even though at the time you have no idea its happening. I miss her very much and I think of her very often. Mary was my father's older sister. One of several sets of twins that Serafina gave birth to , the number never quite settled on by the siblings. Mary was uncle Ralphie's twin , and My father Tony , was aunt Annie's twin, but for all intents they may well have been quadruplets because they functioned as a unit, they were never far from one another and saw each other almost every day. When they did not see each other they spoke on the phone.
My father was the only one of them that ever drove or even owned a car, this meant that any trips we took as a family usually meant all of the siblings and thier children would cram into my fathers vehicle of the moment , and off we would go. The weekly trip to visit Serafina my Paternal grandmother , who was institutionalized at the state hospital Byberry took place every Sunday. We would pile in the car ,the one I recall was a bottle green Dodge big as an aircraft carrier or so it seemed to a little boy.And I would sit on my mother's lap in front , no seat belt, holding the weekly offering of Rigatoni's in a white porcelain bowl. To keep the small boys busy your grandmother, aunt Mary would give us a nickle for every four leaf clover we could find, I never found any but she snuck me the money anyway. No small gesture for a woman of no means who hardly ever parted with a cent if she did not have to. She was the Jack Benny of the Italian immigrant community in South Philly.
And to this day when I am at a party with my cousins we always cut the first piece of cake "like aunt Mary did" razor thin to serve at least 1000 people .
One of the siblings would go inside where we the children were never allowed to enter.Out of the large gates would come a tiny old woman bent over with age , brown and wrinkled, with the most luminous blue eyes I have ever seen .
(My mother always told me a story about My grandmother that I had no reason to disbelieve. She said that when she was pregnant with me , Serafina put her hands on my mothers belly and said "I hope the baby has my blue eyes".My mother and father who were both very dark haired and dark eyed , had one child a boy, me, Geraldo named for my grandfather. I have blue eyes that have been called "mazzola blue" by my partner. He says they are unlike any color blue he has seen before.)
She was always dressed in a black and white flowered dress , her "Sunday Best"and would be directed to sit in the back of my Dad's car. She would stare into space and eat her macaroni, as we kissed her and greeted her . The car was always parked under the beautiful weeping willows that lined a creek. So the branches would sweep across the car and make wooshing noises in the breeze. I cannot think of four leaf clovers or see a weeping willow tree without these visions entering into my head.And if I close my eyes I can see the ghosts of these people moving in slow motion,soft breezes ruffling their clothes. All is sepia toned.They surround this tortured old soul eating out of a white bowl in the back of an ancient car. As wild boys crawl on hands and knees near by searching for clovers so they could spend the reward money on Candy at Carlo's.

11:48 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Beautiful story

6:08 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Great sad and evocative stories from a past that each year fades further away. Being about your age and an Italian from Toronto who grew up in the now non-existent (we all moved to the suburbs)Little Italy everything you write reminds me of my youth--everything! How is it possible two Italian immigrant cultures a thousand miles away can be so similar? I have my Aunts I had my Nonno and Nonna;as I child I took it all for granted and probably despised it, as an adult I now feel a terrific nostalgia for those roots now mostly cut away. Beautiful writing and necessary to record a beautiful past. Congratulations.

6:39 PM  
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Anonymous jimmy jim said...

carlos was on dickinson and wilder st across from greenwich st he sold cold cuts etc his house which is completely new is for sale for about 400000 dollars

7:35 PM  

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