What Is In A Name-Plenty
When You Are Taking An Ill-Advised Trip Down Memory Lane With No Direction
Home, Alone
By Allan Jackson
One of the standard reasons
given for many of the articles produced in this publication is that they relate
to a certain demographic that many of the writers here are still standing
members of-what is loosely called the Generation of ’68. The Generation of ’68 as
reflected in 1960s life in the Acre section of North Adamsville where I, we,
grew up as much as the great upheaval some of us were part of later that decade known various as the counter-culture, the descend
into hell and a resulting cultural war without end, and without reason. Some
aspects looked at from the old days in the neighborhood, as here, frankly have no
rhyme or reason except as they pertain to the life of the Acre, and its environs.
Today we are about unpleasant memories of being stiffed by forces we had no
control over. About the class issue that would later haunt a number of us, but which
went by the name-as always back then-girl trouble.
Seth Garth, Sam Lowell,
maybe Bart Webber, don’t quote me or him on this one, have gone endlessly over
the nuts and bolts of what our corner boy existences were in the old Acre
section. That desperate poverty which affected every aspect of life in the town
and which we became painfully aware of as we grew older and the beast could not
be contained any longer. But the Acre which actually protected us for a while
from the harsh realities of what “our betters,” my mother’s ragged term for
non-Acre people, those who were dead ass aimed at the fruits such as they were of
the 1950s golden age that missed us, not kissed us, as only one section of the
town, representing one segment of the high school life although the most desperately
poor section and therefore with its own challenges. There was as the case usually
is a “better” section, the Hills, where the up and coming families lived in the
new ranch houses which were all the craze back then among the upwardly mobile.
The Hills were actually
set on a peninsula across from Adamsville Beach and separated from the immediate
Atlantic section, slightly better than the adjacent Acre by a long causeway that
practically speaking might as well have served as a Berlin Wall, a Mexican
Border Wall, a free fire zone to keep the ruffian hordes out. Thus unless you
were very inquisitive about the place you had no real reason in early youth to
go there, or to know anybody there. They had their own Seal Rock Elementary
School which I would not actually see until sometime in high school. The flow of
kids, the mixing of school-age populations to reflect a broader social fabric
(nice, right) did not begin in earnest until junior high school. If anybody has
paid attention Bart Webber spent a fair amount of ink describing how the
post-World War II baby boom created the need to break down the previously six
grade high school into a four- year school by the addition of a separate junior
high school for seventh and eighth grades. This is the real melting pot if you
will of the Hills, Atlantic, and Acre Rock student populations. My oldest
brother Rex who played sports and other activities and who went through the former
six-year regime at North Adamsville High told me that he had zero friends from
the Hills during his time there. Had exactly one date, or maybe it was one girlfriend
from the Hills and he was a very handsome looking guy.
And that last remark gets to
the guts of the matter. Small town, yes, but certain social norms were not
generally broken prior to the creation of that junior high school and even then
it was a close thing. We in the Acre, we who were defined by our being corner
boys, had no particular set of expectations except nobody snitched to nobody
for no reason-or else. The social whirl in the Hills was something else. Maybe
it was parents, maybe ministers, maybe who knows misbegotten teachers but those
in the Acre were cursed with a stigmata, with the sign. See the Hills were something
like the last stronghold in town for the devotees of the Protestant Reformation
who originally landed in the town held the reins for at least a couple of centuries
before the “bloody” Irish Roman Catholic and Italian dittos came crashing in to
fill up the working class jobs at the granite quarries or the shipyards.
It is hard today having
been through eight million relationships with all kinds of different people
from all kinds of backgrounds to have heard that we of the Acre were some kind
of cretins, some social refuse. This was not some fiat from above but, I hope
the reader was being attentive, those very girls with whom we had the everlasting
“girl trouble.” As we corner boys budded into young hormonally charged teenagers
we had had our fill of those Irish Catholic girls from the neighborhood who had
as we called it-rosary beads in their hands and a Bible between their knees.
Mixing, or so we thought, with the Hills girls whom we knew were not Catholics since
there were many Protestant churches in the Hills but no Catholic church although
I am not sure what we thought they were would give us more opportunities or so
we thought.
Enter one Jill Hoffman (see
the dreaded rollcall list below taken from the membership roll of the Protestant
youth group over in the Hills with her name listed right along with the others).
Jill was this delicate flower who I (and plenty of other guys too) dreamed
dreams about. She and I would actually talk in class and afterward too since we
both loved literature. One day I decided to make my big move and ask her to the
school dance that next weekend, that next Friday I think is when they held them.
Now this is eighth grade not grad school or something like that so I was innocent
enough to ask. Here is her reply-Girls from the Hills don’t go anyplace, anytime
or under any conditions with heathen (her word gotten from who knows where)
boys from the Acre. In short we Hill girls stick with our Protestant boys. End
of story. A tough way to grow up but that is the facts.
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