Okay, so I was four months old on this particular Tuesday back in 1948; however, that was not the BIG news.
In fact, the BIG news on this day was announced without a great deal of fanfare. And yet, THIS changed EVERYTHING!
At the Bell Telephone Labs in New Jersey, the nerds decided to announce that they had received a patent for this thing they called a “transistor,” which pretty much revolutionized electronics. In other words, no more bulky, fragile vacuum tubes for radios, baby! The transistor radio was on its way!
The doohickey was invented by three Bell Lab dudehickeys named (left to right) John Bardeen, William Shockley and Walter Brattain. Check out their ties in this photo.
As for the term “transistor,” it was coined by another Bell nerd named John Pierce. About that, Bell Labs says this: “Transistor. This is an abbreviated combination of the words 'transconductance' or 'transfer', and 'varistor.' The device logically belongs in the varistor family, and has the transconductance or transfer impedance of a device having gain, so that this combination is descriptive.” But Pierce says this: “The way I provided the name, was to think of what the device did. And at that time, it was supposed to be the dual of the vacuum tube. The vacuum tube had transconductance, so the transistor would have 'transresistance.' And the name should fit in with the names of other devices, such as varistor and thermistor. And. . . I suggested the name 'transistor.'” And the gang at the Nobel Foundation claims that the term is a combination of the words “transfer” and “resistor.” But were the Swedes there? Of course not, so they should just mind their own beeswax.
While all of this might have flown under the radar for most of the public in 1948, the announcement would reverberate down through the ages. Within a few years, there would be radios powered by transistors that could be installed in (gulp) automobiles! That would mean those long drives back to the Cape from Cranston would be enlightened by such people as Jack Benny. (There were probably others, but I was asleep by then.)
Most importantly to those of us in the U.S. baby boom was that advertisers with things to sell us would come looking for us and try to grab our attention. The best way to do that was to start us young, maybe send some guy with a Duncan yo-yo into the schoolyard and show us tricks. (Try attempting THAT these days!)
But the next best way to do that would be to get our attention through music that spoke to our age group and our hormones. That meant that New York girls like Carol King (who was already six when the transistor was announced) and California guys like Brian Wilson (who was also already six that year) eventually would be able to share with their cohorts in the baby boom some thoughts that we all might be able to understand.
“Tonight, the light of love is in your eyes, but will you love me tomorrow?”
or
“Do you love me, do you, surfer girl?”
Without the transistor, Snatch Alley would have been just another road. Instead, Snatch Alley remains part of American History. And it was fun, fun, fun.
A history and memoir of life along a beloved section of Dennisport's Old Wharf Road on Cape Cod.
Wednesday, June 29, 2016
Thursday, June 23, 2016
ALL roads (and bridges) lead to Snatch Alley.
Sunrise on this date back in 1935 shown upon the Sunday traffic that crossed the two new canal bridges that had opened just the day before.
New Bourne Bridge opened 22 June 1935
And this should serve as a little reminder as to just how much effort it had taken people to get to Snatch Alley when it was constructed in 1932. The Great Depression aside (for the moment), even the new automobiles were not known for either their comfort or their speed. The same can be said for the roadways. But the new bridges at Bourne and at Sagamore were a step (on the gas pedal) in the ride direction.
Original drawbridge at Bourne
Even before work could begin on digging the canal in 1914, two drawbridges had been constructed in 1911 to carry traffic above the work site and onto the Cape.
Bourne Bridge under construction
Sagamore Bridge under construction
Old Bourne Bridge in the foreground raises its span to reveal the new Bourne Bridge to its east
While the bridges did move traffic over the canal, the ride to Snatch Alley was still a long and winding Route 28 that was not likely to have much of a radio to blast out the tunes.
And so it went.
Friday, June 17, 2016
Trying to Make A Little Sense of It All
Though you really don't need to know what I've been up to since the last post, I'll tell you just the same. I'm working on pulling together all the threads that weave the story of Snatch Alley. Some of that is personal, and some of that is History (both town and nation). At some point, it needs to focus upon the Snatch Alley Years, when the Baby Boom came of Age and the road along the beach was packed with teenagers in cars and teenagers on foot and teenagers just sitting on the fences that lined the road. Summer was in the air, and so was the music of the night. But before I can get to that, I thought I'd track down some of the events that eventually led to that road.
In the beginning, after all, there was no road. No Snatch Alley. No Old Wharf Road. No way along the beach whatsoever. This part of the town and the village was known as "The Plashes," and it was mostly woods and beach and bogs. A look at this 1922 map of Dennisport shows us that, as compared with the roads of today.
In 1922, Cape Cod was not much of a destination at all. And the same could be said about Dennisport.
On THIS date some 90 years ago, however, things began to quietly change and property in The Plashes began to change hands. Before there was Ray Grindell from Brockton, or Arthur Chase from Onset, there was Charles B. Long from Dennis. With his partner, Carl S. Ell, Charles formed the Longell Land Trust. At the same time, though, Charles Long also dealt in property on his own. And on 17 June 1926, Charles B. Long sold a large chunk of land in The Plashes to Arthur F. Chase. Here is the record from the Barnstable County Registry of Deeds. There had also been a transaction three days before.
Now, if this were some other time and some other place, you and I would be chuckling at the idea that Long had managed to sell some sort of swampland to Chase, and then he was laughing all the way to the bank. But we already know where this story is going to lead. So, let's get back to the point.
The point of all this is simply that there suddenly became some need for a road. After all, if Arthur Chase planned to do anything with his land, he would need to be able to access it. And so the tale continues.
This is a picture of what this part of town looked like in those days. Sand and pine and water.
In the beginning, after all, there was no road. No Snatch Alley. No Old Wharf Road. No way along the beach whatsoever. This part of the town and the village was known as "The Plashes," and it was mostly woods and beach and bogs. A look at this 1922 map of Dennisport shows us that, as compared with the roads of today.
In 1922, Cape Cod was not much of a destination at all. And the same could be said about Dennisport.
On THIS date some 90 years ago, however, things began to quietly change and property in The Plashes began to change hands. Before there was Ray Grindell from Brockton, or Arthur Chase from Onset, there was Charles B. Long from Dennis. With his partner, Carl S. Ell, Charles formed the Longell Land Trust. At the same time, though, Charles Long also dealt in property on his own. And on 17 June 1926, Charles B. Long sold a large chunk of land in The Plashes to Arthur F. Chase. Here is the record from the Barnstable County Registry of Deeds. There had also been a transaction three days before.
The point of all this is simply that there suddenly became some need for a road. After all, if Arthur Chase planned to do anything with his land, he would need to be able to access it. And so the tale continues.
This is a picture of what this part of town looked like in those days. Sand and pine and water.
Saturday, June 4, 2016
R.I.P. "The Greatest"
While I am thinking of "The Greatest" on this day and all the memories created by the life and times of Muhammad Ali, I can't help but flashback to a Snatch Alley Saturday morning in June of 1959. I was 11 that summer. Across the street from us lived, Marion and Everett Hall from Mansfield. She was secretary to the Dean at Wheaton College, and he was a CPA. Though they were still "summer people," they came to the Cape most weekends whenever the weather permitted. To me, they were always "old," and were much like surrogate grandparents. As with my Aunt Myrtle and Uncle Al, Marion and Everett had no kids of their own. So, they spoiled my brother and me.
When the Halls were down and the campground was open at Grindell's, one of my weekend chores was to walk over to Grindell's store and pick-up Everett's copy of the Boston Record. The Record-American was the tabloid forerunner to the Herald-Traveler. The morning edition was the Boston Record, and the evening edition was the Boston American. Same with the Herald and the Traveler. All the neighborhood newspapers were delivered to the store, where each was set aside with a subscriber's name penciled on the upper right hand corner. Needless to say, I was entrusted with the Record set aside for Hall.
As I type this mindless episode I can clearly see me stopping in my tracks in front of #5, which was owned by a couple that for years I knew only as "Tina and Morey." (Their cottage was one of the earlier ones of the street built by Wilbur Grindell, just south of #7, the one he had built for his sister Maida.) There were still tall pines along the edge of the dirt road, and I stopped beneath the pines in front of Tina and Morey's to read the story that went with the picture on the back of Record. As with all tabloids, that was the sports page. And the full-page photo was the image of the stunning upset in the world of boxing: Ingemar Johansson had knocked out Floyd Patterson before a sold-out crowd at Yankee Stadium. THIS was BIG NEWS. In 1959, there were two major sports in the United States. One was baseball; the other, boxing. As we know, baseball was America's pastime, something that filled the days of summer. Boxing, however, was an event. And some events were greater than others. Some were championships of the WORLD!
Forget the fact that this was a white guy defeating a black guy in 1959 America, because Floyd Patterson would come back to pommel Johansson in their next two fights. This was only the fifth time that a non-American had won the heavyweight belt.
Boxing was big in the U. S. of A., but it was even BIGGER on Snatch Alley. Because the Grindell family was from the city of Brockton, Massachusetts, and because a lot of folks who camped in the Grindell's park or who bought land from Ray Grindell had hailed from Brockton, and because Brockton also was the hometown of Rocky Marciano, the so-called "sweet science" of boxing was BIG on Snatch Alley. The Rock had been the undefeated heavyweight champeen of the world (!) from 1952-1956: 49 wins in 49 bouts. (You can do the math on the frequency of those events.)
Anyway, when word reached Snatch Alley that Patterson had been upset by a Swede (by a Swede, by golly!), the beach was abuzz.
Having been born three years before Rocky, my mom had gone through a lot of school years with the champ. So, even she had a mild interest in boxing. But both my folks and the Grindells all lived in the Campbello section of Brockton, which was predominantly populated by immigrants from Sweden, of which my mom was a first generation. So, the name Ingemar floated along Snatch Alley; however, he was nothing compared to "The Greatest," who "floated like a butterfly and stung like a bee."
Despite his rapid rise to fame, Ingemar Johansson proved to be more a palooka than a Joe Palooka. A palooka was an inept fighter, but Joe Palooka was a comic book character who epitomized the best of the American character. (By the same token, most of us kids confused Joe Palooka with Bazooka Joe, who was the character in Bazooka bubble gum comics. Grindell's sold both Bazooka and Double-Bubble gum for a penny.)
Such was life on Snatch Alley in June of 1959. Floyd Patterson had become not only the youngest heavyweight champion of the world, but would become the first heavyweight champion ever to re-gain a championship, and he would go on to fight "The Greatest" on two occasions. Both times, though, Patterson lost.
In 1970, a fictional match between the undefeated heavyweights, Marciano and Ali, had the Rock defeating "The Greatest." That's fiction for ya.
But that was life on Snatch Alley.
When the Halls were down and the campground was open at Grindell's, one of my weekend chores was to walk over to Grindell's store and pick-up Everett's copy of the Boston Record. The Record-American was the tabloid forerunner to the Herald-Traveler. The morning edition was the Boston Record, and the evening edition was the Boston American. Same with the Herald and the Traveler. All the neighborhood newspapers were delivered to the store, where each was set aside with a subscriber's name penciled on the upper right hand corner. Needless to say, I was entrusted with the Record set aside for Hall.
As I type this mindless episode I can clearly see me stopping in my tracks in front of #5, which was owned by a couple that for years I knew only as "Tina and Morey." (Their cottage was one of the earlier ones of the street built by Wilbur Grindell, just south of #7, the one he had built for his sister Maida.) There were still tall pines along the edge of the dirt road, and I stopped beneath the pines in front of Tina and Morey's to read the story that went with the picture on the back of Record. As with all tabloids, that was the sports page. And the full-page photo was the image of the stunning upset in the world of boxing: Ingemar Johansson had knocked out Floyd Patterson before a sold-out crowd at Yankee Stadium. THIS was BIG NEWS. In 1959, there were two major sports in the United States. One was baseball; the other, boxing. As we know, baseball was America's pastime, something that filled the days of summer. Boxing, however, was an event. And some events were greater than others. Some were championships of the WORLD!
Forget the fact that this was a white guy defeating a black guy in 1959 America, because Floyd Patterson would come back to pommel Johansson in their next two fights. This was only the fifth time that a non-American had won the heavyweight belt.
Boxing was big in the U. S. of A., but it was even BIGGER on Snatch Alley. Because the Grindell family was from the city of Brockton, Massachusetts, and because a lot of folks who camped in the Grindell's park or who bought land from Ray Grindell had hailed from Brockton, and because Brockton also was the hometown of Rocky Marciano, the so-called "sweet science" of boxing was BIG on Snatch Alley. The Rock had been the undefeated heavyweight champeen of the world (!) from 1952-1956: 49 wins in 49 bouts. (You can do the math on the frequency of those events.)
The Rock with Floyd Patterson.
Anyway, when word reached Snatch Alley that Patterson had been upset by a Swede (by a Swede, by golly!), the beach was abuzz.
Having been born three years before Rocky, my mom had gone through a lot of school years with the champ. So, even she had a mild interest in boxing. But both my folks and the Grindells all lived in the Campbello section of Brockton, which was predominantly populated by immigrants from Sweden, of which my mom was a first generation. So, the name Ingemar floated along Snatch Alley; however, he was nothing compared to "The Greatest," who "floated like a butterfly and stung like a bee."
Despite his rapid rise to fame, Ingemar Johansson proved to be more a palooka than a Joe Palooka. A palooka was an inept fighter, but Joe Palooka was a comic book character who epitomized the best of the American character. (By the same token, most of us kids confused Joe Palooka with Bazooka Joe, who was the character in Bazooka bubble gum comics. Grindell's sold both Bazooka and Double-Bubble gum for a penny.)
Such was life on Snatch Alley in June of 1959. Floyd Patterson had become not only the youngest heavyweight champion of the world, but would become the first heavyweight champion ever to re-gain a championship, and he would go on to fight "The Greatest" on two occasions. Both times, though, Patterson lost.
In 1970, a fictional match between the undefeated heavyweights, Marciano and Ali, had the Rock defeating "The Greatest." That's fiction for ya.
But that was life on Snatch Alley.
Thursday, June 2, 2016
Here's May in June, 1948.
This photo was taken on my mother’s 28th birthday (2 June 1948) as she posed with my brother and me on the front steps of the beach house. There’s only so much that could be done with a Kodak Brownie in those days, but this box camera seems to have done the job. And I’m guessing that my dad is the one taking the picture. From the angle of the sun, it appears to be mid-day.
In retrospect, I can inspect a number of things in this picture. The paint is all fresh, and the screen door is one that my father had made from scratch. In years to come, it would be painted gray and slam shut each time my brother or I or the dog ran out the front door. In the winter, it would be taken off its hinges and stored away. Obviously, it let in the breeze and kept out the bugs, but it was useless against the dust of a dirt road and the rain. Such was life on Snatch Alley. (C’est la vie, arracher ruelle.)
The steps lack any garden on both sides, and I’m guessing there are no window boxes there yet. In years to come, this front step would be THE site for posed pictures, as well as 8mm silent movies. Apparently, no visitor could escape the Kodak magic.
And then, I look at my mother. Bobby socks, lipstick, and some sort of rebellious hairstyle that foreshadowed the hotrod pompadours of Snatch Alley.
Here also is a picture of my mom and dad, mugging for the camera on her birthday. The sign on the tree reads “Happy Birthday, Dot,” and it’s nailed to the pine between our house at #10 and #12, which has been owned by several families over the years: Sandell, Brown, Novello, Rochefort, and McGrillis. [In the 1951 picture of my Uncle Al, the man on the left in the picture is Stanley C. (Pete) Sandell, who was the first owner.] This birthday picture was snapped in 1974, when Julie and Al Novello owned the place. That would make my mom 54 on that day, and my dad was 58. Though you might think that these two are just hamming it up for the picture, that would only be partially true. They were always together and always loved each other’s company. And they seemed to enjoy expressing that in front of any camera. Everyone we know was accustomed to seeing that.
What I also see in this picture is the lack of stockade fence . . . anywhere. In the background, the Wakefield (now Mitchell) place on Shirley Avenue was still on its original cement block foundation at ground level.
As a final note, I’ll add this. Among the things that I never thought of asking my mother was just why her parents named her May, even though she was born in June. If they had expected her to be born sometime the month before, they still had a day to reconsider and go with the name of June. Still, they did not, and no one ever called her May, unless it was done so in jest. Of course, to me, it was always Mom.
So, happy birthday, Mom.
In retrospect, I can inspect a number of things in this picture. The paint is all fresh, and the screen door is one that my father had made from scratch. In years to come, it would be painted gray and slam shut each time my brother or I or the dog ran out the front door. In the winter, it would be taken off its hinges and stored away. Obviously, it let in the breeze and kept out the bugs, but it was useless against the dust of a dirt road and the rain. Such was life on Snatch Alley. (C’est la vie, arracher ruelle.)
The steps lack any garden on both sides, and I’m guessing there are no window boxes there yet. In years to come, this front step would be THE site for posed pictures, as well as 8mm silent movies. Apparently, no visitor could escape the Kodak magic.
And then, I look at my mother. Bobby socks, lipstick, and some sort of rebellious hairstyle that foreshadowed the hotrod pompadours of Snatch Alley.
Here also is a picture of my mom and dad, mugging for the camera on her birthday. The sign on the tree reads “Happy Birthday, Dot,” and it’s nailed to the pine between our house at #10 and #12, which has been owned by several families over the years: Sandell, Brown, Novello, Rochefort, and McGrillis. [In the 1951 picture of my Uncle Al, the man on the left in the picture is Stanley C. (Pete) Sandell, who was the first owner.] This birthday picture was snapped in 1974, when Julie and Al Novello owned the place. That would make my mom 54 on that day, and my dad was 58. Though you might think that these two are just hamming it up for the picture, that would only be partially true. They were always together and always loved each other’s company. And they seemed to enjoy expressing that in front of any camera. Everyone we know was accustomed to seeing that.
What I also see in this picture is the lack of stockade fence . . . anywhere. In the background, the Wakefield (now Mitchell) place on Shirley Avenue was still on its original cement block foundation at ground level.
As a final note, I’ll add this. Among the things that I never thought of asking my mother was just why her parents named her May, even though she was born in June. If they had expected her to be born sometime the month before, they still had a day to reconsider and go with the name of June. Still, they did not, and no one ever called her May, unless it was done so in jest. Of course, to me, it was always Mom.
So, happy birthday, Mom.
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