Posted on 07/14/2017 5:01:38 AM PDT by SJackson
A few days after the infamous July 13, 1977, New York City blackout, I joined a group of pals setting out from Park Slope, Brooklyn, a neighborhood that hadnt yet gentrified, for Williamsburg, home to Hasidim and Puerto Ricans in the decades before it, too, became a hipster hot spot. Headed for Jacks Pastrami King, our favorite restaurant, we were in a jovial mood, though New York was reeling from two days of rioting and looting, which had destroyed 1,600 stores. The riots were another blow to a city still struggling to rebound from its near-bankruptcy of 1975.
Jacks Pastrami King was famous for hand-sliced pastrami, served on delicious rye bread smeared with Ba-Tampte mustard, with healthy sides of potato salad, coleslaw, and fabulous sour pickles included. The restaurants reputation was built on the meats smoked on site, in its basement. Jack, explained our friend Louis Menashe, who grew up around the corner, smoked the pastrami in cedar, not the customary hickory, and flavored it with fresh garlic, not garlic salt. This was food fit for the hardworking Jewish manual laborers who had hailed from the Russian Pale of Settlement 75 years earlier.
The restaurants fame was such that a mutual friends wife, an airline stewardess, made regular deliveries of its corned beef, pastrami, and rye bread to Louiss friends in Paris. But what amazed us was the day we heard an enormous commotion as we were sitting and stuffing ourselves. Three guys had just come in from San Juan, via JFK, to pick up several thousand dollars worth of smoked meats, sides, and rye bread. They brusquely paid in cash, shouting at the largely Latino staff, already hustling, to hurry up, weve got a plane to catch. The food was packed in Styrofoam to keep it as fresh as possible for the return trip. Apparently, they had carefully coordinated their trip so that they could quickly return to San Juan for what we gathered to be a party of some sort.
. But when we returned to the neighborhood in the aftermath of the riots and looting, we were in for an unpleasant surprise. So many stores and building had been torched that we couldnt find the restaurant. Louis, who knew the neighborhood best, wasnt with us, and without him we were clueless. The driver, Freddy, circled round and round; we saw block after block in ruins, until we were able to make out what we thought might be the charred remains of Jacks. Freddy pulled over, and I stepped out to ask some guys standing on the sidewalk if the burned-out building behind them had, in fact, been the restaurant. (We must have been naive to assume that Jacks Pastrami King would survive the riots, but we couldnt believe that anyone would destroy a restaurant that provided pleasure to so many people.) Several told me, smirking, that the looted building had been liberated. I had no response but bewilderment. It was only later, in lesprit de escalier, that I wished that Id asked them how many people had lost work due to the looting.
Today, the graffiti and gang violence of the 1970s evoke a contrived nostalgia on the part of some hipsters, many of whom hail from out of town but wish that they could have been part of the funky seventies as evoked by Saturday Night Fever and other films of the time. But as a native New Yorker, I look back on the seventies as a kidney stone of a decadea decade in which I heard the frightening, reverberating thud of a truck crashing through the old elevated West Side Highway a few blocks from my apartment. The city was too caught up in expanding its welfare system to pay much attention to small matters like bridge and road repair.
The dreadful 1977 riots hit Brooklyn the hardest of New Yorks boroughs; the poorer the neighborhood, the greater the damage. The damage that I sustained was relatively trivial, but instructive: told that the vandalism that had destroyed Jacks Pastrami King was an act of liberation, I lost much of my political innocence. The city itself had been mugged, I realized. Im still haunted by that moment from 40 years ago, when my political reeducation began
A FReepter a while back opined that it was the influx of Puerto Ricans that turned NY NY from the era of “I could walk across Central park at night with my little sister, alone” to what we have today.
Of course we now know there were other influences too, but that struck me.
This is the barbarian's answer, the same would have been said at any sack of a city. The Mongols probably spoke it as they drove through any number of cities in Asia as did the Huns/Goths/Visigoths before them against Rome.
There is that dark place in every human that revels in destruction. The civilized repress it, the barbarian rejoices in releasing it!
The good old days! Son of Sam was roaming around and the Yankees were kick ass!!!!!!!!!!!!!! A great time to be a New Yorker indeed.
FYI: While it is entirely facile to place sole blame upon the Mayors of New York City (NYC), given that the city council has great control over financial matters, the decades leading up to 1977 had Robert F. Wagner Jr. (1954-65), John V. Lindsay (1966-73) and Abraham D. “Abe” Beame (1974-77) as Mayors. The first 2, while of opposite parties, were very free-spending and socially LEFT in orientation. Abe Beame was of similar orientation but faced the financial crunch and had little to spend thanks to his predecessors.
John Lindsay, for whom the term ‘Limousine Liberal’ was coined, started off as GOP but later switched to Democrat when he tried for US Senate and the Presidency.
Allan Smith
July 13, 2014
The sneakers are $10. The BLS inflation calculator says they should now cost $40. I just looked on the internet and they are $50 and up, and they are probably lower quality now.
Ahh but you all had Paul Kersey too!
I see the cop but wheres the indian and the biker?
Below is the '77 Lincoln Mark 5. These days Lincoln is an embarrassment.
I would describe this as "sport luxury"
pimp car
Here is a "pimp car"
lol
I lived on the edge of Harlem in those days. People got out and directed traffic. No riots, no looting.
I remember well the '77 blackout/riots in NYC. Saw it all on TV. Glad I wasn't anywhere near New York at the time. But that was a good summer for me, lot of good memories. I remember a lot of hot, steamy weather and hanging out at the beach.
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