INTRODUCTION
This book is about the games we used to play in
Queens, N.Y. before TV or at least before my friends and me had a tv in our
apartment. No Nintendo, Gameboy, CD's, or videos to watch on a VCR. I guess we
were deprived as you look at the “things” the kids of today have to play with
but we did OK. In fact we even had fun. To begin with I spent most of my
childhood years in Flushing, Queens after moving there from Bay Ridge,
Brooklyn. We lived in a three room, rent controlled apartment. I slept in the
living room on a hide-a-bed. My father worked for the NYC Transit Authority and
my Mom didn’t work during my early childhood years but began working in
Bloomingdales, Fresh Meadows, N.Y. when
I was about ten years old. Anyway, one day while I was attempting to describe
some of the games I played in my childhood to my two grandchildren, aged nine
and seven I thought , “why not write some of these games down, seek an
illustrator and see what happens”.
You have to understand the geography of my neighborhood.
Our twin apartment houses were six stories high, with another apartment house
right in back of it that was five stories high. There was a candy store on the
corner and a few other stores in a line next to the candy store. At the end of
the street facing the busy boulevard was a bowling alley and pool hall, next to
that a gas station and then another street parallel to the street I lived on.
When you crossed that street there was a huge Firestone Tire building whose
left wall served as our “Strikeout” game wall. I will explain that game as
well. When you turned left out of my apartment you headed for another busy
street, 35th Avenue that went all the way downtown into Main Street, Flushing,
if you again turned left. The boulevard in front of my apartment building led
you to Main Street also, if you turned right. There were “tons’ of stores and
two great movie theaters there; RKO KEITHS AND THE PROSPECT, plus a real big soda parlor where we “hung
out” as teens.....but that is material for another book that really describes
the 50’s..
Yes, we did have two ball fields to play on,
Memorial Field and Victory Field. Memorial Field was the home field for
Flushing High School and Victory Field was the “home” of many football teams
that played in the Long Island Football League. But most of our neighborhood
games were played right on the street where you and your friends lived. As cars
lined the streets, the car fenders were used for first and third base.
Most “working people” took the bus on the corner to
Main Street and then the IRT Subway to their job. So their cars remained parked
in the street in front of the apartment houses. Second base was a manhole
cover.
Of course we played touch football in the streets as
well and car owners were not very happy about us banging the football off their
cars. In one case breaking a front windshield... man did we “cut-out” of there
in a hurry.
We would pool our money and buy a broom handle from
the hardware store across the boulevard and a pink Spalding Hi-Bouncer from the
candy store, The “bat” was 75 cents and the ball 25 cents. We would drill a
hole thru the bottom of the bat and have a bent hanger nearby, under one of the
cars, to place thru the hole in the bat and hang the bat on a sewer grating
“rung” when the cops would arrive on the scene to tell us to move on or keep
the noise down because somebody complained. After the cops left we would
retrieve the bat and continue play. Of course on Halloween night we always
“got” the complainer.
I hope you enjoy this book of games and maybe
attempt to get the “family” involved in a few of them. Fresh air never hurt
anybody and it’s time spent away from those sometimes violent video games our
children and grandchildren are currently “in to”. Enjoy!