Parkchester+ +The+Grand+Old+Neighborhood SD

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  • čas přidán 24. 03. 2014

Komentáře • 216

  • @djblackruss
    @djblackruss Před 4 lety +48

    parkchest in the 70's was beautiful, and at christmas time OMG the best childhood ever

    • @selassiesuntstv7040
      @selassiesuntstv7040 Před 4 lety

      Bro how long were u in p.c

    • @katherinenichols4831
      @katherinenichols4831 Před 2 lety +2

      I used to do my clothes shopping in Parkchester. If I am not mistaken, I believe there was a Macy's there I used to shop in.

    • @a.t.6322
      @a.t.6322 Před rokem

      @@katherinenichols4831 Yes the Macy’s is still there. That is the first branch Macy’s outside of 34th St.

    • @Richardofdanbury
      @Richardofdanbury Před rokem +1

      @@a.t.6322 As of the 1st of the year 2023 Macy's or its parent corporation has decided to close many stores. I understand Parkchester's Macys is on the list.

    • @user-or6yn8pm3c
      @user-or6yn8pm3c Před rokem +1

      Most of 70s NYC was actually nice and felt like America. I dont know what country most of NYC is today.

  • @maureenkelly4831
    @maureenkelly4831 Před 2 lety +10

    What a wonderful walk down memory lane. Many of my friends were named in this presentation. Amazing. All of us who grew up there know how special it was and at times miss it a lot. Thank you for this delightful video. Maureen Kelly Parkchester 1943-1980.

  • @robertdavis3433
    @robertdavis3433 Před 5 měsíci +1

    My fathers parents lived in Parkchester. I went there once at night when i was small. My first impression was that it was upper class. Lots of room and greenery around the buildings. My grandmother had white carpeting. Very luxurious for the times. This was in the late 50's. My dad never mentioned all the supervision in the complex. Happy to see it was there. Good video from Sacramento

  • @Candyrainaka
    @Candyrainaka Před 2 měsíci

    I'm still here. Been here for over 20 years. Nothing as nice as what's seen in this documentary. Though it still holds some of that today. The best thing for me is taking a simple stroll in the neighborhood to my favorite tree🌻

  • @floridacruisers7705
    @floridacruisers7705 Před 3 lety +7

    I played hand ball at Parkchester.We always had breakfast at Step-ins restaurant.As a kid my grandmother always dragged me to Macy's.My friends and I always watched movies at the Circle,Loews and Palace theaters.There was a great Italian bakery right on the circle,I can't remember the name but they had the best cannolis and bread.I can go on and on..I miss you Bronx.Always and forever..

  • @rronay2732
    @rronay2732 Před rokem +2

    I grew up there in the 60s and 70s. My family moved in when Parkchester opened and 2 generations lived in the same apartment for over 70 years. Those metal slides would burn your butt in the summer. Thank you for this video.

    • @MemoGrafix
      @MemoGrafix Před 11 měsíci +1

      YOU KNOW IT. 75 Degrees was enough to heat those slides 150 degrees of reflected sunlight to cook a meal. Yeah the original Solar Cooker.
      Kids today are so weak due to the NANNY-STATE.

  • @roberttoe4612
    @roberttoe4612 Před 4 lety +15

    I was raised in the Bronx in the mid 60s till 2017 and I love the Bronx 😆

    • @roberttoe4612
      @roberttoe4612 Před 4 lety +2

      @Devon Gonzalez back in The days there where lots of Jews more than Irish.

    • @helenmurphy3143
      @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety

      i did no longer

  • @rogervartanian2821
    @rogervartanian2821 Před 4 lety +6

    Thank you so much for posting these amazing memories!!!
    Life was so simple and Parkchester was a retreat for me when i had the chance to hang out there. I lived in Morris Park very near by.

  • @afrodite9801
    @afrodite9801 Před 2 lety +3

    I remember going to Macy's there and Cornell's store....it was a beautiful place in the 60s and 70s....in the 80s it started to go to seed.

    • @Richardofdanbury
      @Richardofdanbury Před rokem

      Yep! Cornell's was where my folks bought my Easter suits... there or Robert Hall's on Westchester Ave just east of Hugh Grant Circle.

  • @choosetoshine2610
    @choosetoshine2610 Před 2 lety

    Beautiful documentary! Thanks for posting.

  • @edwinjimenez3802
    @edwinjimenez3802 Před 4 lety +4

    Excellent Documemtry very well narrated

  • @edwinjimenez3802
    @edwinjimenez3802 Před 4 lety +29

    This documentary is a reflection of how the Bronx once really was

    • @helenmurphy3143
      @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety +2

      i will not set one foot in the bx

    • @edwinjimenez3802
      @edwinjimenez3802 Před 2 lety

      @@helenmurphy3143 I understand you completely

    • @helenmurphy3143
      @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety +3

      @@edwinjimenez3802 i remember when u couldnt hang a picture with out hearing from the agent,

    • @edwinjimenez3802
      @edwinjimenez3802 Před 2 lety +3

      @@helenmurphy3143 my family first moved to the Bronx in the 1940s it was a beautiful place to live and raise children all buildings were well kept and clean people left there doors open 24 7 a different type of people back then very cultured and educated

    • @helenmurphy3143
      @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety +1

      @@edwinjimenez3802 we closed our doors in 1963 when some one tried to rob us, but we had a great dog then, no robery took place, still till this day i will lock my door even to toss the trash, never let neighbors in, u get robbed that way, i do not invite any neighbors in, i learned the hard way and never take any one in, ya get no thanks, they sponge off of u, they will find a way, the helpfull hannhana days are over with, ya get no thanks but a slap in the face take it from me send them to a church, or hra trust me ya get a slap in the face, ya learn

  • @tombaer4503
    @tombaer4503 Před 4 lety +6

    At 2:55 I laughed out loud when you say, "you got your name taken by the Parkchester Police." As a pre-schooler (St. Raymond's), I took that expression quite literally, and wondered how you got it back!
    We moved out in 1960, when I was 9, but I have great memories. Thanks for the trip back in time.

    • @peggykid9946
      @peggykid9946 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes they took your name and it went on record. If you got caught and name taken your parents got a letter stating your misbehaving act and this quoted sentence at end of letter “if this continues your family maybe EVICTED. They tried eviction many times on my Future Mother in law in 50s and when we applied for residence as newly weds in 64 was refused because of so many letters on my husbands record .It didn’t matter he had a honorable discharge from service or was employed as NYC police . I was also resident without letters on our records but we were refused and dismissed from the office.

  • @bikethebronx9465
    @bikethebronx9465 Před 3 lety +5

    Didn't live in Parkchester but have wonderful childhood memories of shopping there with parents. Never went home without the latest Hardy Boy Mystery from the old Womrath book shop. Not to be forgotton.

  • @sunny71169
    @sunny71169 Před 3 lety +10

    Great video, thanks for posting it. Does anyone know what the rent was for a 1 bedroom? Great narration too. Lived there from 1945-1962. 18 Met Oval and then 20 Met oval. Anyone remember Stan the Good Humor Man and his pushcart parked under the flagpole in the East Quadrant? Great guy.
    One amazing thing, when you think about it, is when the Parkchester cops took your name for walking on the grass, you actually told them your right name and where you lived! Went to 106, then 127, then James Monroe. The train ride to Elder Ave was 10 cents, but 5 of us could grab a cab at the Circle and take it to Monroe for 5 cents each! The outdoor showers were still on in the East Quadrant playground in the mid 50's. Big fun climbing on the monkey bars with concrete or blacktop to break your fall if you fell. Don't remember that anyone ever did. Even as young kids we could go anywhere we wanted to after school safely without our mothers.
    Brought back nothing but great memories. Those were good times, I am sorry to hear that it has turned into a far less attractive place to live.

    • @nakedshadows
      @nakedshadows Před 2 lety

      1 bedroom there now is around $1800

    • @sknoll01
      @sknoll01 Před 2 lety

      My grandmother lived 20 Met oval and I was always there. Remember Stan well on the Good Humor bicycle freezer. I lived on Unionport and grew up there. Yes it has gone down hill with lots of crime hate to say.

    • @13203543
      @13203543 Před 11 měsíci

      Terrible...high crime!

  • @terilee7791
    @terilee7791 Před 2 lety +3

    My mother grew up at 34 Metropolitan Oval in Parkchester. I am pouring through this wonderful video, hoping for a glimpse of my mom - thank you so much for posting ❤️

    • @neeyamahmed2589
      @neeyamahmed2589 Před 2 lety

      I grew up in 5 metropolitan oval seem like we live near each other

  • @auroman302
    @auroman302 Před 2 lety +6

    I was born in Parkchester Hospital. Thanks for this!
    This looks like two completely separate films, film 2 at 21:47, with no attempt at blending or continuity. "Film 1" has amazing photos, and a pretty rich historical context of the development (at least from the 1930's, nothing before that). While there were a few words about the "elephants in the room" at the beginning, what proceeded was some highly over-romanticized nostalgic narration, bordering on weepy and saccharine like "Happy Days". Everything was brand-spanking new and it was all so wonderful for select Boomer children, whose middle-class, mostly immigrant parents moved uptown from shabby 19th and early 20th century dumbell tenements in Manhattan, right after a decade of Depression and in the middle of a World War.
    Parkchester was literally a wartime corporate curated, manicured, and regulated community intended as an investment and public relations showpiece, after corporations in the public perception were in the doghouse for years since the Depression. So, you betcha, it had to be nice to live in a private housing project Disneyland!
    Then there is "film 2" which jumps ahead 50 years to the 70th anniversary. No discussion of what happened in the interregnum. Why did everyone leave this "Paradise"? For sure, the "8% Rule" was in full-effect sometime in the 1970's, when white flight takes effect when 8% too many POC families move in due housing segregation being made illegal. From some of the awful comments below, presumably from at least some former nostalgia residents, that is confirmed. Also, right at the outset, being "too poor" was a disqualifier - one good way to screen out "those people". Could be that by the 1960's, MetLife had little interest in maintaining a now more aging infrastructure, and could happily focus on other lucrative investments, especially at NYC headed toward bankruptcy in the late 60's.
    But one might say that Parkchester's expiration date was built in. Like buying a new car, the first 3 years are the best, then the investment steeply declines - which is why the City had a rule of not having insurance corporations owning developments such as this one. Corporations never stick around for the long haul when things go south and money bleeds. Lastly, at the end of the day, there was the lure of an even "better" suburban life Upstate or in NJ, houses that could accommodate those larger families that these mostly 1-2 bedroom apartments could not, while also moving far away from "those people". Within the very design of Parkchester and in the context the so-called "American Dream," the seeds were planted for this place was to be transitional. As soon as a family made too much money, they had to move out anyway.
    The anniversary celebration looked great, and the investment for some rehab was a good thing. It was good to get the history, but I have greater interest in the future.

  • @pamelabodley
    @pamelabodley Před 3 lety +16

    If you can remember Parkchester from the 60s and 70s, you may recall these stores that are now long gone:
    1) Cornells - children’s store
    2) 3 movie theaters - American, Circle, Paradise
    3) Florist next to where Dunkin DOnuts is now
    4) Where Walgreens is now, it used to be Buster Brown shoe store, Hallmark, Liberty Travel and Plymouth
    5) Macys used to take up the entire block and had many entrances
    6) Where Appleby’s was (closed now) it was Lerners.
    7) Woolworth
    8) Bonds - Men’s clothing store
    9) Arthur Treachers where Burger King is now
    10) Zaros - it’s now a Boston Market

    • @peggykid9946
      @peggykid9946 Před 3 lety

      There also was a great restaurant called St. Clairs . A place for special occasions. Learners and “ The Plymouth Shop “women’s clothing stores. Don’t forget about the Hat shop on the circle a Easter favorite store. The ladies lined up every April to sit in beauty shop style chairs and have a clerk fit them with the perfect “Easter Bonnet” don’t forget about the annual “Easter Parade “ walking around the perimeter of the circle of cascading water fountains. Everyone dressed in their best the men dressed in suits & ties and highly polished shoes women in dresses and new shoes and matching handbags and children proudly wearing their new Easter outfits little girls with straw hats with pastel ribbons . It was a beautiful time and place to grow up.

    • @XxBURNOUTxX92
      @XxBURNOUTxX92 Před 3 lety

      Zaros is still there it's just super small now

    • @russliberti5879
      @russliberti5879 Před 2 lety

      Yes I remember all of them there was jordans liquor store where park south medical is now and the hamburger express where step in is now located.

    • @helenmurphy3143
      @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety

      sad

    • @rogerknights857
      @rogerknights857 Před rokem

      From 1946-77 I lived on Wood Road, parallel to West Ave, which was accessible thru a tunnel in the middle, which IIRC had these shops, going from North to South, downhill:
      Safeway, Good Humor ice cream shop, Deli with a picture of a boar’s gnarly head, Western Union, liquor store, Shoe store with an X-ray machine for feet, Corsetorium with a little plaza in front (both later replaced by a post office), big toy store (later replaced when Macy’s expanded and blocked West Ave and the tunnel), and a large bar at the lower end of the block.

  • @kathleenpaule4938
    @kathleenpaule4938 Před 3 lety +3

    Moved to Parkchester when I was fourteen and loved every moment of living and growing up in such an great area. It was just my mom and myself and fortunately the rent was affordable for my mom. Made many great friends and still in touch with a few.

    • @helenmurphy3143
      @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety

      the ice cream parlor the movie house
      the record store

  • @firesurfer
    @firesurfer Před 3 měsíci

    I worked in Macy's for most of the 70's. It's almost half in size now. They chopped off the upper half beyond the PO and made it into other stores. There is a clear space now between the two parts.

  • @jr4915
    @jr4915 Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks for posting! I was born there and my mom and dad lived their for much of their early lives. They are from the Roscigno and Barresi families.

  • @frederickgriffith7004
    @frederickgriffith7004 Před 4 lety +18

    As an African American whose father was stationed in Okinawa in the 1960s,I and my brother and sister had the honor of visiting him on many occasions.I was shocked how well treated we were by the Japanese.But in America the hatred was unbearable, especially if we ventured out of our neighborhood.As I got older I began to understand what that kind of stress does to the human mind and body.In Japan I felt so comfortable with my existence.What I learned from that experience is that that all human beings deserve the presumption of innocence and to be treated with respect unless proven otherwise.How else can human beings develop into happy productive adults.When I asked my older brother and younger sister why they decided to return to Japan as adults to live,they both agree that freedom and prosperity are wonderful attributes of America but the Japanese make them feel that they have something to offer and that all of their institutions adhere to the concept of positive reinforcement.

    • @Richardofdanbury
      @Richardofdanbury Před rokem +1

      Let me just say that I was white and lived just outside of Parkchester and we faced a lot of incrimination from the residence of Parkchester simply because we were from the other side of the tracks, so to speak.

    • @CarlosRodriguez-ox3bg
      @CarlosRodriguez-ox3bg Před 11 měsíci

      Still going on now called MAGA

  • @kevinbutler1955NYC
    @kevinbutler1955NYC Před rokem +1

    My Junior High School Graduation was held at The Lowe's American Movie Theater in The Parkchester section of The Bronx,NYC back in the summer of 1971.

  • @Bippy55
    @Bippy55 Před 2 lety +1

    I lived three block away from Parkchester but visited Macy's, the movies and bakeries often. Long live Parkchester, Bronx, NYC!

  • @christineroberts6972
    @christineroberts6972 Před 2 lety +1

    Best place to grow up ever!! 2200 East Tremont! PS 106! Best days of my life ❤️

  • @dliberatore78
    @dliberatore78 Před 5 lety +4

    Thanks for posting!

  • @user-oo8mb6el5j
    @user-oo8mb6el5j Před rokem +3

    WONDERFUL NOSTALGIA

  • @vinceparlante3723
    @vinceparlante3723 Před 2 lety +1

    Wow sir thank you for posting this video and sharing the rich history of this section in the Pelham Park and Morris Park areas. My late Great Grandfather established A ice distributorship in Parkchester ...then my late Grandfather of whom I am named after ? Turned it into a beer and soda distributor in the Parkchester community. My Grandfather sold the business back in the late 1970s. My late father and us lived in the Parkchester apartment community lived there for a little time in the 70s... The early 70s . in close sir? You are very correct of this wonderful communities rich history . In close ? I am now in my mid 60s and to this day ? Have rich memories of not just my native birth place The Great Bronx but also? Parkchester ...well sir ? I could go on for hours but I will leave my personal small nugget of a comment here and as a fellow Native New Yorker Italian American who always has been a proud and still proud guy of the Bronx as it stills lives deep and rich within my heart. Grazie mille ...Ciao. Who knows maybe ? Just maybe your father and Grandfather also? Use to go to my late family's business Parkchester and bought some beer and soda flats then huh? Small world indeed. Again ? Grazie ... Ciao

  • @judithhx888
    @judithhx888 Před 5 lety +12

    I went to st.Raymonds!

  • @erica7991
    @erica7991 Před 5 měsíci

    How wonderful ❤

  • @Stitchxavi
    @Stitchxavi Před 3 lety +3

    I lived in a studio for over a decade! Every time I told ppl there, they were like “they have studios?” Lol

  • @timnone2835
    @timnone2835 Před 3 lety

    Thanks so much for compiling this and sharing. :-)

  • @myyardsale
    @myyardsale Před 4 lety +2

    thanks for sharing this!

  • @zaybx3485
    @zaybx3485 Před 3 lety +4

    Being a soundview kid I would always troop it and or hop on the 39 to parkchester to shop or get food so getting to know the history was interesting

  • @katherinenichols4831
    @katherinenichols4831 Před 3 lety +9

    The Bronx was once a great place. I remember getting on the bus for 15 cents and going to Orchard Beach for the day.

    • @abcdef-kx2qt
      @abcdef-kx2qt Před 2 lety

      ONCE UPON A TIME THE IRISH WERE THE SOUTH BRONX MAJORITY !!!!!!!

    • @helenmurphy3143
      @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety +1

      pizza a dime the papers 7 cents orchard beach s 4 was my spot

  • @risteardwest3384
    @risteardwest3384 Před 2 lety +2

    The good old days this is what America was all about today it's changed it's not the same anymore 🇺🇸💯👍

  • @larry1824
    @larry1824 Před rokem +1

    Great neighborhood old school

  • @Richardofdanbury
    @Richardofdanbury Před rokem +2

    You mentioned that it was "middle class", not too poor or rich. Well I guess I was too poor as I attended school at St. Anthony's in Stratton Park. We were allowed to go to the various movies theaters, Macy's Woolworth's and the Public Library. If "caught" by the Parkchester Police we were escorted out. Many a times I recalled being in the back of the swaud car and driven to White Plains and Wood Ave. to be let out. It sure seemed discriminatory to me but if you couldn't make the grade... too bad! Spending our money at the shops was allowed though. Hey! Who remembers Hamburger Express and Zaro's bakery in Hugh Grant Circle?

  • @louiscaruso4167
    @louiscaruso4167 Před 2 lety +1

    My friend Kathy and I would shop at Macy's and all the stores and go to the Step Inn for Dinner...I miss those days...

  • @damianmcdonagh7908
    @damianmcdonagh7908 Před 3 lety +4

    There used to be a large Irish community living in Parkchester.

    • @helenmurphy3143
      @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety

      no more are u related to thee late sr maureen mc donagh op i was her friend r i p

  • @FEARisCOLD
    @FEARisCOLD Před 5 lety +2

    Great video

  • @haroldlaetsch9848
    @haroldlaetsch9848 Před 3 lety +2

    This was a little before my time; grew up there in the fifties and sixties. No mention of the Glee Club singing Christmas Carols at the Oval? Got my name taken once by the Playground Teacher but nothing came of it. We used to tease the Parkchester Cops and then run from them knowing they couldn't possibly catch us! But where has my Gristede's gone?

  • @gastonenriquebautistagiral5499

    Beautiful History,, aquí en Bogotá Colombia Existe la Supermanzana dos, de 1.069 apartamentos en Ciudad Kennedy.,,Imagen pequeña de Parkchest.👍

  • @kater.7563
    @kater.7563 Před rokem

    Thank you for posting. Loved seeing a young Mrs. Chess (South playground rec. teacher.) Just a quick correction: the showers were turned back on - at least in the South playground, in the early 1960s.

  • @helenmurphy3143
    @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety +1

    wish it were all back the good old days

  • @OfficialRsix3
    @OfficialRsix3 Před 5 měsíci

    Miss those days 2010-2020 had to move to Detroit mi

  • @MariaGonzalez-nv3nl
    @MariaGonzalez-nv3nl Před 2 lety +3

    Zeros bakery in t seventies was my first job. Loved t cookies n cakes.

    • @MrBillie1234
      @MrBillie1234 Před 2 lety +1

      Zaros - loved that place! a neighborhood fixture, for sure. ~ b.

    • @Richardofdanbury
      @Richardofdanbury Před rokem +1

      @@MrBillie1234 Yep! I remember bakeries and drug stores were the only commercial businesses in the 50's and early 60's opened on Sundays. The bakeries were closed at 1:PM and the drug stores rotated between various competing outlets to see who had to be open on Sunday in case of emergency need.

    • @rogerknights857
      @rogerknights857 Před rokem

      I remember Zaria as being a new store, around 1955-ish. I don’t remember what preceded it. A bank?

  • @danielwilliamsullivan3192
    @danielwilliamsullivan3192 Před 11 měsíci

    I remember taking the trolley, with my Grandmother, across Tremont Avenue from Third Avenue to Parkchester to visit her Sister Grand Aunt Josie.

  • @kennethhariston6947
    @kennethhariston6947 Před 3 lety +1

    great video

  • @bronxkies
    @bronxkies Před rokem +3

    I remember going to the movies there about 20 years ago. I was mesmerized by how well they maintained its vintage interior. I don’t think it’s there anymore or maybe it has been converted into something else. Nevertheless, it was pretty cool.
    I’m not a huge fan of the neighborhood. It just always felt a little scary and suspicious to me. I’ve walked through it a few times and taken the bus through it 100s of times. Not my cup of tea but I can see how folks like and enjoy living there.

    • @el-Cu9432
      @el-Cu9432 Před rokem +1

      That movie theater closed about 10 years ago. At that time it was showing movies for $5 per person, which was the cheapest in the Bx. It is now a Marshall's. Funny that you think Parkchester is scary. I consider it one of the least scariest neighborhoods in the Bronx, and we got a lot of them.

    • @phunkidruma
      @phunkidruma Před 11 měsíci

      Scary? where do u live now westchester county?

  • @rizzy6687
    @rizzy6687 Před 2 lety +2

    Wow Love this short film. I am 49. I visited parkchester in the 90s. It was not so great. Different cultures came in and destroyed it!
    Thank you for this wonderful piece of history. I never knew Parkchester was so beautiful at one time. Such a different time & liife.

    • @Bippy55
      @Bippy55 Před 2 lety +1

      I'm sad to hear Parkchester today is not at it's best. When you say, ".... destroyed it!," what did you see? (I lived three blocks from Parkchester.)

    • @rizzy6687
      @rizzy6687 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Bippy55 It looks & has a feel of the South Bronx.
      Super dirty etc Actually I visited back in 1982. It was still very nice back then...

    • @Bippy55
      @Bippy55 Před 2 lety +1

      @@rizzy6687 Thanks for replying. I just had a sense as a kid in the 60s Parkchester was somehow immune to downfall some sections of the Bronx suffered through 1969-72-ish. Please take care.

    • @rizzy6687
      @rizzy6687 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Bippy55 Your welcome... I understand what you mean by immune... I'm in Riverdale Bronx. It's starting to change here too..Slowly but surely. Have a good!

    • @Bippy55
      @Bippy55 Před 2 lety +1

      @@rizzy6687 I'm glad you understand. I thought the Parkchester Police, Landlords, Rec Department and tenants would keep things decent. I hope it returns to the way I remember mid 60s. Please take care!

  • @helenmurphy3143
    @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety +1

    i remember the ice cream parlor the old movie house, and record store macys a and s

  • @mike26fl89
    @mike26fl89 Před 4 lety +7

    I lived near Parkchester on Rosedale Ave and at Noble Mansion from 1977 to 1984. Went to St Anthony's Catholic School.

    • @angeloreyes6202
      @angeloreyes6202 Před 4 lety +1

      It's a small world . I lived in Rosedale right off Cross Bronx n went to St Anthony's too.

    • @Richardofdanbury
      @Richardofdanbury Před rokem

      @@angeloreyes6202 I too lived on Rosedale Ave just over the CBx Expressway and attended St. Ant'nys. This was back in the 50's, 60's and early part of the 70's before getting my first apartment in Ft. Lee, NJ

    • @Richardofdanbury
      @Richardofdanbury Před rokem

      @@angeloreyes6202 Hey! Maybe we know each other? I might be older though. BTW,
      St. Anthony's in now closed permanently as of late last year and is up for sale.
      Since the neighborhood is now predominantly Moslem maybe they will buy it to make into a mosque. Yikes! Those old Sisters of Charity will turn in their graves at that prospect.

  • @georgebefanis680
    @georgebefanis680 Před 4 lety +9

    Now" Hard working people of modest means" Will not be able to afford to live there anymore!!!

    • @miguelalind3768
      @miguelalind3768 Před 4 lety +4

      George Befanis Who In there right mind would want to live in ParkcAster The groundskeepers Don’t Do they’re Job properly There’s no place to park the parking lot 1500 Union port The elevated never works they overcharge you to park there’s no parking in the surrounding area to park in the outside stalls they want you to pay $200 for a sticker and you don’t have any guaranteed parking it sucks to live in Parkchester today

    • @JoeCaviano
      @JoeCaviano Před 2 lety +1

      @@miguelalind3768 Isn't it ironic the place is called "park"chester yet there is no parking? :)

    • @helenmurphy3143
      @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety +1

      you wouldnt want to live there now

    • @el-Cu9432
      @el-Cu9432 Před rokem

      ​@@helenmurphy3143Why not? I go there every week day or night. Never had any problems. Compared to where I'm live in the Bx, Parkchester is light. Never had any problems in my neighborhood either.

  • @elizabethvargas5039
    @elizabethvargas5039 Před 2 lety +1

    It's 2022. Pandemic
    Mgt changed and need sensitivity & empathy for every renter. No evictions. People first not profits. Even your stores going out of business. Be part of solution not part of problem. The present and future of our homes is what is priority.

  • @donreed
    @donreed Před 4 lety +4

    ALL GONE.

  • @RogerDuly
    @RogerDuly Před 11 měsíci

    My God Mother lived in Parkchester. We lived on Long Island, so I really can’t say I have a particular affinity to the Bronx.

  • @FlipWarBucks
    @FlipWarBucks Před 2 lety +2

    Statues are being removed but I think it’s for a different reason than just to remove it

  • @joanbenjamin6345
    @joanbenjamin6345 Před rokem +1

    I wouldn't trade those early years there for anything.

  • @redt4056
    @redt4056 Před rokem +1

    Born and raised in Manhattan NYC and as kids we played in the playgrounds, neighborhood with not much supervision , we had so much fun,it was like that in NYC , it was a different time, now children can’t do that, btw had friends who lived in Parkchester in the 80’s. What is Parkchester now? Co-op?

  • @helenmurphy3143
    @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety +4

    i remember parchchester housing as being clean well kept, and snow removed side walks all swept , i will not return there ever, i live else where now

    • @sknoll01
      @sknoll01 Před 2 lety +2

      terrible now and lots of crime. ever since met life sold it went down hill

    • @helenmurphy3143
      @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety +2

      @@sknoll01 sad to hear it

  • @selassiesuntstv7040
    @selassiesuntstv7040 Před 4 lety +9

    So it did start as projects I knw I wasnt bugging

  • @helenmurphy3143
    @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety

    i had a crush on tommy logan from park chester bx in the 60s

    • @joannekelley1808
      @joannekelley1808 Před 2 lety

      I had a boyfriend named Tommy Logan from Unionport Rd in the mid 60's when I was about 12.

    • @helenmurphy3143
      @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety

      @@joannekelley1808 did he have a sister by the name of patricia wow i wonder how he is doing now, he was a nice guy kid too, say do u have a sister named nancy kelly on virginia ave we knew each other, if so u played with my sister ethel

    • @helenmurphy3143
      @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety

      @@joannekelley1808 i hope he is doing well hes a nice guy

  • @sm1734
    @sm1734 Před 11 měsíci +1

    we can never go home again

  • @dianevelez2955
    @dianevelez2955 Před rokem +1

    I lived there back in the late 80s. It was beautiful then but it has changed lately,
    Not as clean i as

  • @unc1589
    @unc1589 Před 3 lety +17

    As a black kid I remember my mother taking us shopping in parkchester in the 60s. She was absolutely fearless when it came to traveling to so-called “White neighborhoods” if those neighborhoods had what she wanted. Sneers and dirty looks meant NOTHING to her. She was tall and pretty and admired by all but she brooked no bullsht! As far as living in parkchester she wouldn’t touch a housing project with a 10 foot pole.

    • @stevenbalfour6001
      @stevenbalfour6001 Před 3 lety +7

      It was a private housing project not a city housing project. Big difference.

    • @littlecharlie4293
      @littlecharlie4293 Před 3 lety +1

      Right dummy........all white people were racists?

    • @haroldlaetsch9848
      @haroldlaetsch9848 Před 3 lety +3

      I think I would really admire your mother.

    • @Sabodable
      @Sabodable Před 2 lety +1

      Your mother was projecting her bigotry onto the residents of Parkchester while they were providing her with services her own community failed to provide. Sounds like the apple doesn't fall far from the tree. There are many neighborhoods then and now 'white people' prudently choose not to travel and it is because they are rightfully concerned about much worse than perceived dirty looks.

  • @roadtrip2943
    @roadtrip2943 Před 4 měsíci

    Been to a few party receptions at the chester house and walked the oval with my high school GF

  • @JohnDoe113
    @JohnDoe113 Před rokem +1

    Yeah back then my Uncle went to high school in Parkchester but would get chased by the white gangs on his way to and from school.

  • @miguelalind3768
    @miguelalind3768 Před 4 lety +10

    Now they Don’t Care about The Neighborhood anymore they walk in the grass pissing in the stairways. Dropping garbage all over the place. I’m from Harlem and came to Parkcaster. Because I got married and I regret living in ParkcAster

  • @helenmurphy3143
    @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety

    the logans the cooks on virginia ave bx nyc off the circle e `77 st

  • @helenmurphy3143
    @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety

    i wonder how the dumprey kids are from union port rd bx ny

  • @FlipWarBucks
    @FlipWarBucks Před 2 lety

    The movie theater is now a marshals

  • @sm1734
    @sm1734 Před 11 měsíci

    where did all those yesterdays go

  • @helenmurphy3143
    @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety

    the dunpreys on union port rd
    sons ed and other 2

  • @johnnywilliams7237
    @johnnywilliams7237 Před 2 lety

    Kkk

  • @TheGrowler55
    @TheGrowler55 Před 4 lety +2

    The so called Irish Dancers are actually doing a Scottish Jig, just saying lol

  • @CarlosRodriguez-ox3bg
    @CarlosRodriguez-ox3bg Před 11 měsíci

    The parkchester folks you see in this video all moved down to a place in Central Florida called the Villages. They are down here living in Parkchester still. Way more women than men and there is lots of sex going on. Viagra and Cialis had been a Godsend.

  • @aprieto7998
    @aprieto7998 Před 5 lety +10

    Parkchester is now expensive and becoming very dangerous. Long gone are those days highlighted in this video.

    • @carmelasilvestri4634
      @carmelasilvestri4634 Před 4 lety +3

      Yes it is getting dangerous. Different people now live there.I remember all the stores that used to be there that are no longer there now. It was safe to shop in Parkchester. Sadly not now.

    • @butterflykisesfromdabronx5547
      @butterflykisesfromdabronx5547 Před 3 lety +3

      Sadly it’s now a dive and very dangerous section. Those good old days are long gone, Now it’s just filled of people who just don’t care.

  • @thetruthspeaker5101
    @thetruthspeaker5101 Před 3 lety +8

    It’s a shame what happened to Parkchester it was beautiful, but sadly as the rest of NY white people moved out others moved in and it turned ghetto....crime and drugs so sad. People took pride in themselves no one was out shopping with pajamas with socks and flip flops on that’s disgusting. People took pride in their neighborhoods. It’s a shame how society lowered its standards on just about everything

    • @nancimanuele4129
      @nancimanuele4129 Před 3 lety +1

      I'm right there with you. We never misbehaved in public because we knew. And when your families lived there that long everybody knows who you are lol

    • @abcdef-kx2qt
      @abcdef-kx2qt Před 2 lety +1

      say it LOUD " THOSE PEOPLE "

    • @barryobee1544
      @barryobee1544 Před 4 měsíci

      Very nice video. I’m from Throggs Neck Projects…my father used to take us to Baskin Robbin’s in Parkchester for ice cream…ha ha.

  • @wileecoyote5749
    @wileecoyote5749 Před rokem

    It's called "DarkChester" now. How come?

  • @jem8637
    @jem8637 Před rokem +1

    With those gay statues in the oval😎

  • @devongonzalez9207
    @devongonzalez9207 Před rokem +1

    Why did all the Irish move out of parkchester

    • @Richardofdanbury
      @Richardofdanbury Před rokem

      Most moved to the suburbs as the neighborhood went down hill. Their kids and grand-kids now live in NJ, CT Lung Island, (not a misspelling) and Westchester. Here they listen to us old codgers reminisce and they just yawn. Those great days and memories are lost on them. Well, indeed, these were our own special times and experiences.

  • @OffTheHookGirls
    @OffTheHookGirls Před 11 měsíci +1

    Must've been really segregated yikes

  • @Supervillainmc
    @Supervillainmc Před rokem

    My parents lived in The Bronx near Westchester Square and told me parkchester houses were beautiful till Jackie Robinson bought it and the Property went to shit

    • @el-Cu9432
      @el-Cu9432 Před rokem +3

      Sorry but they lied to you. Jackie Robinson never bought Parkchester. By the way that area Westchester Square area where they lived is a dangerous area now . Parkchester is nicer

  • @MemoGrafix
    @MemoGrafix Před 11 měsíci

    60s Love-Child here. 16:44 - I miss those hard STEEL swings. We could stand on them. when I was young through the 1970s-1990s.
    The rubber straps across the ass they call swings today are so boring.
    Nanny-State Liberals took the fun out of swings, all due to a few stupid kids not paying attention or not being taught to WATCH OUT.

  • @iral.jacobson6463
    @iral.jacobson6463 Před 2 lety +1

    Mention of quota on Jewish residents?

    • @helenmurphy3143
      @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety +1

      there were jewish folks we were friends with them

  • @blackpudding9247
    @blackpudding9247 Před 3 lety +3

    Segregated as hell!!

    • @ellenrousso6599
      @ellenrousso6599 Před 3 lety +1

      That's why no crime

    • @michaelsmith-ws2mb
      @michaelsmith-ws2mb Před 2 lety +1

      Stop lying there was crime then too….

    • @helenmurphy3143
      @helenmurphy3143 Před 2 lety

      nope

    • @sknoll01
      @sknoll01 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ellenrousso6599 Segregated for a reason and it worked well with no complaints

    • @sknoll01
      @sknoll01 Před 2 lety +1

      @@michaelsmith-ws2mb yes from people coming in from outside. now the outside people live there and it is a SH

  • @mrsmith8737
    @mrsmith8737 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Parkchester “used” to be a nice place to live….. These days it just like some of the many public housing projects a few miles away….

  • @BuckyBrown-lt4ry
    @BuckyBrown-lt4ry Před 4 lety +1

    Look what's there now. Just like Co-op City. Once a beautiful place with beautiful people. Now, well, you know what I mean. Disgrace to humanity.

  • @laurenb6451
    @laurenb6451 Před 5 lety +4

    Hmm, no matter how hard I looked I did not see AOC. LOL.

    • @Richardofdanbury
      @Richardofdanbury Před rokem

      Her Dad had a legal firm in the Castle Hill area catering to Hispanics, mostly Puerto Ricans. While she was ensconced and sheltered in upper Westchester County. SO I guess she is not simply Sandy Cortez from the Bronx, the name she preferred in the upper crust more exclusive County,

  • @HelloooThere
    @HelloooThere Před 2 lety +1

    hahah not anymore what a joke

  • @el1061
    @el1061 Před 2 lety +4

    OHHHHHHHH U YT PPL AND UR RACISM "WE JUST LIVED UNDER THOSE RULES"

  • @daedaetinez6406
    @daedaetinez6406 Před 3 lety +1

    Where are the ricans & blacks???

  • @michaelmatovu1990
    @michaelmatovu1990 Před 3 lety +4

    damn the good ole days of segregation

  • @muppoboy
    @muppoboy Před rokem +1

    Used to be a beautiful place. Until the Great Replacement began.

    • @MemoGrafix
      @MemoGrafix Před 11 měsíci

      Oh Please stop acting like y'all wasn't nasty & degraded in Europe.