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Thursday, March 12th 2009

 

 
 
Charlestown seniors pen essays for Grub Street Memoir Project by Sandra Miller

Most publishers know that everyone has at least one good story in them. The Grub Street writers on Boylston Street know this, too. They gathered the stories of Boston seniors and are publishing them in their second volume of collected essays in “My Legacy is Simply This.”
It’s the first time that seniors from Charlestown, East Boston, Mattapan and Chinatown have been published, and certainly the first time they’ve participated in a book signing like last Thursday in the Borders Bookstore on School Street downtown.
The book contains dozens of stories from seniors young and young at heart, discussing a wide span of history -- about World War II to Vietnam, from the Depression to the turmoil of the 1960s, discussing white flight and the Japanese occupation of China. Many chose to focus on the happier parts of their lives, such as dating, making friends, and eating their parents’ food from the Old Country. They drop names about businesses and nightclubs long closed, beaches long gone, and loved ones long dead but not forgotten. Their essays are fresh, unforgettable, first-person history lessons of our communities.
“It’s nice to have some historical family photos to put in the book,” said Rizzuto. The author photos are of vibrant older residents. “They’re not just people from the past. They’re still involved in their communities.”
The Memoir Project recruited seniors through the Commission of Affairs of the Elderly, and was the brainchild of the Mayor’s Office and Grub Street director Chris Castellani. For Grub Street, it’s one of two community outreach groups, the other aimed at area youth. The memoir project began in 2006 with “Born Before Plastic,” which held stories from seniors from Roxbury, South Boston and the North End. The next volume will include Mission Hill and Jamaica Plain.
“The Elderly Commission wanted to offer something that was new and different, that offered enrichment for some of its elders,” said Rizzuto. “Grub wanted to do some outreach.” In turn, it not only enriched the participants, but also the instructors and anyone who reads the book.
In Charlestown, it attracted the literary talents of William Boyle, Margaret M. Spellman, Arnold Ross, Barbara McTigue, Eileen Locke, Marie Hubbard, Marion Wood, Peter Looney, Beverly Hayes, and Carol Waller.
For eight weeks, instructor and author Michele Seaton took the memoir and essay class lessons she usually delivers at Grub Street classrooms on Boylston Street, and brought them locally. The seniors were asked to write about their childhood, their neighborhood and family, and how they met their spouses. Seaton and other mentors didn’t write the pieces for them, they only acted as guides.
“If someone wrote shorter pieces, then we’d include two shorter pieces than one longer piece,” Rizzoto said. “A few have two and three pieces in the book.”
To Rizzuto’s knowledge, only one author had to discontinue the program, due to a hip replacement. Otherwise, there was a healthy interest that may have spurred a second career for several participants.
William Boyle, 64, of 230 A Main Street in Charlestown wrote about his 32 years as a firefighter, from May to Labor Day.
Retired, Boyle appreciated the time he could spend on the project, and being able to speak on a cable show about the project, as hosted by fellow author Peter Looney.
“There’s four or five of us from Charlestown went on Thursday,” he said. “We wanted to just go and thank them for all the time they spent with us. They worked hard on it. The program was great.”
“It was my first time that I actually done something legible,” he said. “I wasn’t much of a writer. My spelling’s atrocious, my sentences run together, I didn’t know what I was getting into.”
They coaxed him to add descriptions, to cut down on the run-on sentences, and were patient with him. He left out his awards and medals, and his family life, and about serving in Germany during the Vietnam years. “It was supposed to be about the job itself,” he explained. “I enjoyed being a firefighter.”
“I say the instructors of Grub Street are very good,” he said. “They go around and critique you, they show what you did and didn’t do, you fix it, and add on a piece every week. After about 10 weeks the story was just about done, and they took things out and added things in. They had patience unbelievable. We all said ‘Wow, writing is tougher than we thought.’ Writing is not the easiest things in the world.”
But when he gave out copies of his book to friends and family, everyone liked it, he said. Fire chaplain Dan Mahoney is also showing the around a few firehouses.
Fellow Townies Marie Hubbard and her sister, Marion Wood, contributed a few stories. “My sister asked if I could come along to the meetings,” she recalled. “ I like to write anyway, and the idea of writing about the past was very interesting.”
“They gave us subjects to write about and then they picked out which ones they thought would be readable,” recalled the lifelong Charlestown resident. “I thought a lot of it was very amateurish, but it was a lot of fun. It was really one of the funnest times I’ve had a in a long time, remembering the old history. We did it ourselves. For better or for worse it was our own stuff.”
As participants read their stories aloud, her fellow writers all chimed in with their own memories of growing up in Charlestown. “There was some people in the group who weren’t old townies,” she recalled. “They weren’t familiar with some of the things we were saying.”
For her, she traveled down sentimental lane. “I had the unfortunate instance of bursting out crying at one point,” she recalled. “I guess that means there were a lot of pleasant memories I had forgotten for a long time.”
She loved writing about the friend she’s had since she was little. “I am glad I had a chance to give her a little credit,” she said of her friend, “She loved it. We’re more like sisters than my sister. You’ll tell your friend something you won’t tell your sister. I’m going to see her next week I think. I just turned 80 and she just turned 80.”
Meanwhile, she and her sister had a little competition going. “I thought to myself, ‘I wish I had remembered to put this in. She wrote about the house we lived in on High Street for 10 years -- that’s where all the interesting things happened.”
She giggled when she pointed out that her son is a Harvard-trained writer, and she got published before she did. “He was impressed by his mother,” she said. “He said, ‘You’re published, mom!’ I felt good about that.”
“I hope they’ll do another class. I’d love to go again. It’s great for the history of the town. Charlestown is now nothing like it was when I was a child. My grandchildren, they just couldn’t get it how life was back then. It came as a surprise to them that people didn’t always had cars and televisions. It was a little history for them and that’s good. I think they looked up to us a little more. If they had a program I’d keep on writing. I write for myself, when something happens. I like to write so I can remember things – as you get older, you forget things. That’s what I should have been, a writer. All my children write pretty well, it seems to be a family thing.”
“Some of the seniors have told me they are still writing,” said Rizzuto. “One woman, from Roxbury, said she just kept going and wrote a whole memoir.”
That’s created a new project for Grub Street, to figure out how to keep the writing program going in local libraries.
“Probably the real high point of the project is when the seniors see themselves in print for the first time,” said Rizzuto. “They are so absolutely thrilled. It affirms that they are important, and people want to hear what they have to say. The teachers are very interested in their stories, but when they see themselves in print it’s a whole new ballgame.”



 

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LOOKING AT THE NEWS: Waiting to exhume by Joshua Resnek

Saturday afternoon on a warm and sunny day, Charlestown’s Simon Ringrose was seated on a bench in front of his 1839 Concord Street home, reading a book and minding his own business.
However, minding his own business may become somewhat more difficult now that historians have apparently indicated that Ringrose’s backyard may hold the remains of as many as two dozen British soldiers who died at the Battle of Bunker Hill.
What’s more, some historians are apparently hoping that the Ringroses will allow their backyard to be dug up in order to locate the remains, which were tossed into a deep trench the British dug before the all-day battle ending with the British routing the Americans on the third charge up the hill.
Then the British burned down Charlestown and buried their dead.
Mr. Ringrose, who is British, didn’t seem at all fazed by all the fuss a front page Boston Globe story raised, detailing the possibility that his backyard may hold British remains.
When asked whether he felt it was necessary to dig up the yard to unearth the remains, he was circumspect.
“What for?” he said.
And perhaps he has a point.
If the remains are there in his backyard on Concord Street, under 10 feet of soil as indicated by diagrams that date back to 1775, would the Ringroses permit the possible exhumation of British grenadier remains?
“I don’t know,” he added.
His wife had earlier that day told a reporter that she opposed having her garden torn up.
“Everything we plant grows well in the garden,” Mrs. Ringrose said.
“We have even buried in the garden our pet cats who died.”
The protocol for digging for the remains of Revolutionary War dead British soldiers is uncertain. A grenadiers’ grave was allegedly found in 1845 on Concord Street when well diggers were excavating the backyard of the Ringrose home.
Fast forward 164 years.
British remains have not been found in Charlestown during that time.
What remains there are likely resting in peace 10 feet below the ground in the Ringroses’ backyard.
In February, it was announced by British and Australian officials that 400 British and Australian dead from the First World War would be exhumed from a battlefield in France, returned to both countries, and be given individual burials.
Exhumations, in fact, take place all over the world.
Charlestown historian Chris Anderson, one of many local historians like Bill Foley, who knows the history of the battle, agree.
Perhaps some signage and memorials honoring the dead might be the most useful way to honor the sacrifice of their lives and, more importantly, to pinpoint for visitors to the Bunker Hill site, the place where some of the fiercest fighting took place that fateful day.
The Ringroses will probably accept that, but right now, they aren’t going to accept the destruction of their backyard to exhume the remains of British soldiers who died during the Battle of Bunker Hill.



 

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Proposed Transportation Bill to increase Tobin Bridge resident discount program by Tim Conway

Buried in Section 43 on page 41 of Gov. Deval Patrick’s Transportation and Economic Security Plan is an item that directly affects Charlestown residents. The plan calls for an increase to the 30-cent residential discount program to a rate of 50 cents above a one-way fare on the MBTA to $2.20 on the Tobin Bridge and would be directly linked to any future MBTA fare increases.
At last week’s Charlestown Neighborhood Council (CNC) meeting, City Councillor Sal LaMattina expressed his outrage with the increase. “It’s not fair to raise the discount on the residents of Charlestown who earned it through mitigation,” he said. LaMattina also expressed his concern about possible traffic ramifications in Charlestown if the resident discount is raised for East Boston, Chelsea and Charlestown residents. “Drivers would be cutting though Chelsea, Everett and Charlestown to get into Boston,” he said.
The CNC agreed with LaMattina and unanimously voted to send a letter to Gov. Patrick stating the CNC is vehemently opposed to the proposed residential discount increase. The CNC also asked for the Charlestown community to join them in sending letters to their elected officials opposing the increase.
“It is important that Charlestown residents continue to receive their significant discount in the cost of tolls,” Sen. Anthony Galluccio told the Patriot-Bridge. “The Charlestown community has been substantially impacted by the existence of the bridge and ongoing construction and renovations. I will continue to advocate for the preservation of the existing discount.”
The Charlestown community has been affected for years by noise, pollution and traffic as the direct result of infrastructure projects, and has been living in the shadow of the Tobin Bridge for 59 years.
The following is a list of elected officials and their addresses:

Your elected officials:
Governor Deval Patrick
Massachusetts State House
Room 360
State House
Boston, MA 02133

State Sen. Anthony Galluccio
Room 213A
State House
Boston, MA 02133

State Rep. Eugene O’Flaherty
Room 136
State House
Boston, MA 02133

City Councillor Sal LaMattina
1 City Hall Square, Suite 550
Boston, MA 02201-2043



 

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