ALOHA -
or as Philadelphia People Say:
Y O !
When I was sixteen years old,
I rented a room in West Philadelphia,
and attended an alternative school
in center city.
in center city.
Back then I traveled mostly by bicycle.
Philadelphia's City Hall - From Wikipedia - "At 167 m (548 ft), including the statue, it is the world's tallest masonry building: the weight of the building is borne by granite and brick walls up to 22 feet thick, rather than steel;...It was the tallest habitable building (although surpassed by monuments) in the world from 1901 to 1908."
Every night, I bicycled past City Hall
checking the time on her tower clocks;
10 minutes till 11pm-
I'll be on time for my job
Painting by Robert Finale
Independence Hall
The US Declaration of Independence was signed here
July 4, 1776
I can close my eyes and see the pale old face of her clock also.
Roman Numerals - I'm right on time.
I headed all the way east
towards the Delaware River
towards the Delaware River
and the historic part of town.
Today they call it
"Olde City."
Back then, it was just old.
There she is, 320 Walnut Street.
Just one little office building in a big city full of them.
My dad's tiny building maintenance company
had the contract to clean her.
had the contract to clean her.
I arrived at 11pm to sign out the cleaners.
Then I spent the night there
replacing the paper products in the restrooms,
touching up the cleaning;
Checking in at night watchman stations
where I inserted a big key
and left a timed record of my visits.
She was mine till morning,
all six floors of offices,
and east & west office 'penthouses'
320 was one of the buildings
that I had visited with my father
that I had visited with my father
since I was 12 or 13.
Back then she still had only a
manually operated elevator.
Have you even BEEN in such a contraption?
I learned to run it from floor to floor -
in fact I now recall
that on a few Saturdays
I was elevator operator all day!
Close the lobby door, close the
scissor-action
inner metal gate,
scissor-action
inner metal gate,
then pull back on the
brass handle
brass handle
to send us UP.
You could see the floors
and innards of the building
as they went past the gate.
You could see the floors
and innards of the building
as they went past the gate.
I became quite good at stopping
RIGHT at the floor I wanted.
But if someone was annoying,
I could stop the car a few inches
below grade
and make them step up.
It's true what they say:
"Be nice to the people you meet on the way up.
You'll meet them on the way down too. "
And I had the power to make you wait.
"Where IS that elevator kid?!"
They rang a bell for service. . .
They rang a bell for service. . .
The ground under this piece of
Olde Philadelphia
Olde Philadelphia
had once been the Quaker Almshouse
where Evangeline, of the great American
Wadsworth poem,
reunited with her love at last!
Back then,
ghosts were people I hadn't personally known
in life.
It was all very cool and abstract,
without the tugging on one's heart.
A block further down Walnut
towards the river was
the First Bank of the United States -
- Looking much as she always had.
Only the city changed around her.
The Old Customs House was also a neighbor.
I could see into that glass cupola from my building
and marvel at that small, still, space
full of morning light
and history's dust motes.
Sailing ships had been
espied from there;
Documents written with quill
by lamp light.
George Washington, Franklin,
Jefferson had all
walked these streets!
Sailing ships had been
espied from there;
Documents written with quill
by lamp light.
George Washington, Franklin,
Jefferson had all
walked these streets!
During long stretches of the night,
I could sit by the window of the east penthouse,
an architects office,
and watch the river traffic of lighted tug boats
and freighters from ALL over the globe
in the tidal Delaware River.
on her banks near-by
to found his City of Brotherly Love,
the capitol of his
Comonwealth of Pennsylvania,
"Penn's woods."
(Pennsylvania does not call herself
a "state'
a "state'
though she technically is
one of the fifty.)
one of the fifty.)
When I was growing up,
the Delaware Valley
was called:"Workshop of the World."
The great Ben Franklin Bridge
to New Jersey
to New Jersey
presided over the river scene,
like the local god
like the local god
of the 20th Century's triumph
over river ferries
and sail.
How many nights
I watched her tower lights
I watched her tower lights
blink RED off
and on.
Listening to the sounds of the city,
so close,
yet so far below
my locked princess tower;
Sirens, 24 hour industry.
Refinery flames lit the skies
over South Jersey.
I felt very alive
and expectant,
As one does at sixteen.
Eager to get away. . .
into all that tumult.
As one does at sixteen.
Eager to get away. . .
into all that tumult.
Little did I know,
that in my marvelous future
I would muse with such love
over these formative years,
and value the memories
so very much.
In the morning, when I exited 320's lobby
these colonial homes
and their present-day sleepers
were what I saw across Walnut Street.
I peddled to breakfast at Dewey's,
rest at home,
and the school day.
We can do anything
when we are young.
I was making my way in the world.
I was a working adult - not a dependent child.
That was very important to me.
Today, Google Street View shows
the brass we polished,
the lobby I mopped on snowy mornings,
in disrepair.
According to Google Search,
320 Walnut is now for sale.
If I was as rich as a Russian oligarch
I would buy her,
and she would be a museum
of ME-
and Dad too.
That Philly kid didn't know
that today this would be my city view at night.
My Honolulu Town -
Though not born here,
Though not born here,
I have worked, lived, laughed
& cried here.
& cried here.
Here is where Dad breathed his last.
The only wonder I wonder
is which city I shall choose
to haunt?
My birthplace of Brotherly Love-
or the Aloha home of my adulthood?
These are the wonders
one wonders
in the depth of night
with a great city
in view. . . .
Thank you for sitting beside me here-
and there.
It means the world
to share these musings
with you.
Leave me a little comment
to keep the magic going.
Warmly, cloudia
and there.
It means the world
to share these musings
with you.
Leave me a little comment
to keep the magic going.
Warmly, cloudia
Very nice buildings and photos. I was however also expecting a photo from you at the age of 16.
ReplyDeleteGreetings,
Filip
What a beautiful post! I have visited Philadelphia many times but its not the same as living there. For me my home has always been Lancaster.
ReplyDeleteI love living in Amish country and having my pick of which scenic back roads to take to work each day. :)
I wish you could have that building, too - what wonderful memories! You have certainly made yourself some fine new memories, too.
ReplyDeleteLoved this post, Cloudia. Happy Friday.
Good morning Cloudia,
ReplyDeleteI loved this post. Could feel it...so rich. Really enjoyed learning more about you.
I think you will haunt the city where you and your family lived. As you know I traveled the world for 7 years before returning to my birthplace. I will haunt Honolulu after I die.
ReplyDeleteI was probably older than 16 before I ever rode in an elevator. No such things in my home town. But maybe at the mall when I was a teenager.
ReplyDeleteGreat story. Bravo.
ReplyDeleteSorry, I am not Russian Oligarch to help the building...
Nope, I've never been in a manually-operated elevator.
ReplyDeleteSo true we CAN do anything when we are young.
I really like the Robert Finale painting, want to dive right in and poke around. And perhaps I shall!
Here's to Philly, may I immerse myself in it for few days, then move to Hawaii to live on a boat!!
xoxo
Now knowing, difficult to forget !
ReplyDeleteSpend the first holidays on me own three weeks in the North of Spain, after a bus ride from North of Germany, while being sixteen.
Got lost while walking in a forest and met a goatherd and drank some milk.
Please have you all a good weekend.
Bonza photos, i've never heard or seen a manually operated elevator before :-).
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your Philly, I enjoyed the personal tour.
ReplyDeleteBack then I doubt you knew that these activities would leave such vivid,important memories. I appreciate your sharing them with us. Reading them, I was captivated.
ReplyDeleteThank you for 'going there' with me!
ReplyDeletethank you for the beautiful journey!
ReplyDeletenamaste /\ from mumbai!
aloha!!
Namste
ReplyDeleteWonderful memories. Thanks for sharing. Great pictures too. :)
ReplyDeleteThank you ~ Cloudia... you burst with stories that I love! Keep going sistah. Aloha Nui, Jen
ReplyDeleteSuch a beautiful pictorial narrative Cloudia! Enjoyed it every bit.
ReplyDeleteHigh buildings and a very good memory, do you like it?
ReplyDeleteA great story about your life !
ReplyDeleteThis is a lovely post, Cloudia. You must have been some tough and determined kid to combine school with a full-time job.
ReplyDelete♥ •˚。
ReplyDelete°°Olá, amiga! 。♥。
● ♥• Lindas fotos de lembranças maravilhosas.
˚。˚ Bom fim de semana!
♥ •˚。Beijinhos.
•˚。Brasil
..(░)(░)
(░)(♥)(░)
..(░)(░)
Thanks for the tour!
ReplyDeleteThat building you cleaned... ghosts?????? Hey, it's October... I'm just thinking...
ReplyDeleteHaving lived in South Philadelphia for a year or so all of those places looked so familiar, given the choice though I think I'd just as soon sleep then haunt anywhere...except maybe some quiet corner of Detroit, ha ha ha ha ha ha.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing, this is great!
ReplyDeleteVery interesting and touching account.
ReplyDeleteMy compliments!
Ciao bella. Buon weekend!
*-*
OMGosh how awesome! Please let me know which you choose so I can come and listen to you tell me in person, these awesome tales of your life. And we can haint people together and really mess with their heads!!!
ReplyDeleteThanks Sis!!! I have a feeling the building remembers and misses you as well!!!!!
John
I want to start taking Architecture pics next! AWESOME oh Talented one!!!!
Hugs and haunts,
John
The best part of my days is feeling like that girl of sixteen, we can do anything, still today...I really enjoyed this glimpse into your yesterday, (we have much in common) no wonder I relate to so much of what you have to say... Cloudia, have a great reflective but inspiring weekend ...before it's over!
ReplyDeleteOops forgot to mention the stunning views......they are olde, mostly and so much a treasure to the beholder!
Thanks for taking us on your trip down memory lane!
ReplyDeleteLOVE this! Thank YOU SO much!
ReplyDeleteI like how analyzed the dark spot !
ReplyDeleteThanks for the walkabout and your memories. Philadelphia is a wonderful city, the more so because you were once a pat of it.
ReplyDeleteHi Cloudia, I've just come in a little later today, thank you so much for sharing a part of your 'growing up' years with us, I really enjoyed getting to know know you a little more. As for where you might 'haunt' ..why not be a world traveler then, and visit places like........Perth perhaps haha!
ReplyDeleteGosh Cloudia -- you were a brave kid to be in that building by yourself! You could write another book just from stories from that adventure! DrumMajor
ReplyDeleteYou are magical, indeed. I've been sitting with a palliative client. I want to ask him his stories, but he is deaf. He has speech issues, too. Thank you for this trip.
ReplyDeleteThank YOU!!
ReplyDeleteBeaut--------i----ful~~!
ReplyDeletethanks Erik
ReplyDeleteCloudia, this is such an engaging and interesting post, and quite a nice glimpse at your youth and heritage. I thoroughly enjoyed your musings and the tour!
ReplyDeleteI also enjoyed the reference to "Evangeline," that you had mentioned in your comment on my blog. And, for another synchronicity, we have the fact that I grew up in Pennsylvania, too! But in the suburbs--Allentown to be exact--about an hour from Philly.
Thank you for a great post!
thank YOU
ReplyDelete