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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Home away from home
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JC history: (of the bakeries I remember as a kid, yummy)
- On Newark Avenue between Five Corners and Tonnele Avenue. There was a Five Corners Bakery like Yvonne said kind of across from the library (great sticky buns) and a few good German bakeries. One had a huge brick oven in the back, it took up half the shop. Great Black and White?s and Cheese Cakes!! - The Five Corners Bakery also had a second store in the middle of Journal Square over by The Hotel on the Square. (now part of the big ugly lot, any news Healy?). I remember the great neon sign. It had a 5 layer wedding cake with a baker putting finishing touches on it popping out of the sign. I wish someone in JC preserved that sign. (someone should recue the old Joey Stars Bar sign at Newark and Tonnele ..a classic!) - Down on Westside and Duncan was Peterson?s Bakery. That was near the JC bagel factory that place was great. All it had was a counter and huge vats with bagel?s floating in them. Talk about hot bagels!!. No need for a fancy interior space with tables and chairs back then. Just bagel?s?salted or plain in a brown paper bag. Come to think of it I did hear the guy say ?NO bagels for you!? many a time..hmmm. ** **** Wild I also found a wedding anniversary piece about the owners of the Five Corners Bakeries. Hey zamery1 try and track down a family member and ask them about the cake..you never know. PENZINER Gertrude and Frederic Penziner of Somerset and Boca Raton, Fla., recently celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary. Mr. Penziner married the former Gertrude Kliman at the McAlpin Hotel in New York City on Jan. 6, 1951. They resided in Jersey City until 1972 and in Mountainside until seven years ago. Mr. Penziner graduated from Rutgers University; Mrs. Penziner graduated from New York University and earned a master?s degree from Kean College. They owned the 5 Corners Bakeries in Jersey City, which were established in the 1920s by Mrs. Penziner?s parents, Isaac and Rose Kliman. The couple have three children, Dr. Alan Penziner and his wife, Dr. Paula Marantz Cohen, of Moorestown; Rachel Morling and her husband, Eric Hirsch, of Fanwood; and Heidi Penziner of Scottsdale, Ariz.; as well as six grandchildren and two step-grandchildren. http://njjewishnews.com/community/anniversaries/lifecycle-penziner ** ******* I found the below NYT?s piece from 1987 about the coming JC rejuvenation.. that was the first wave of ?yuppies?. Two interesting things in the piece. It mentions the Journal Square Five Corners Bakery (the one with the cool sign) it must have just been getting ready to close in 1987. It also mentions how Newport was first called ?Newport City? and how JC old-timers did not like it. (including myself) This is the first time I caught it in print. I have sales flyers where it says things like Newport City, New York. The directions even left off Jersey City. Mayor Cucci wanted them to at least drop the ?City? and they did. ** **** As the evening rush hour fell on Journal Square, commuters carrying trenchcoats and canvas tote bags spilled out of the PATH train from Manhattan and hurried past the cracked window of the Five Corners Bakery. To the clerks who once stood behind the bakery's cash register, the well-tailored silhouettes outside symbolized the rising fortunes of Jersey City. But the bakery itself could serve as symbol. For more than 50 years, the landmark weathered the city's fall from prosperity, its race riots and its shuttered factories. Now that renewal has arrived, surging south from neighboring Hoboken, the Five Corners has closed, sold for development. ** **** But it is also feared that the young professionals and the upper middle class who make up the latest wave of immigrants will not join in the proud civic life. Last year, when a luxury development on the Hudson waterfront advertised itself as Newport City, residents took that as an affront. ''Newport City - it was like they were ashamed to say they were in Jersey City,'' said Mayor Anthony R. Cucci, one of many born and raised here who demanded the development call itself Newport. http://www.nytimes.com/1987/05/21/nyr ... tml?pagewanted=all&src=pm
Posted on: 2012/7/21 4:55
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Re: five corner baker
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Not too shy to talk
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Well, you probably mean Monteleone's. All their cakes are fabulous,but I don't know the name of the one you mentioned. And yes,they are still there on Newark Ave
Posted on: 2012/7/21 1:43
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five corner baker
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Newbie
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i used to live in jersey city when i was a kid and remember that bakery was so good ! the one cake I remember was sort of a log pastery cake filled with i want so a barvaran cream and topped with fruit omg it was so good. Is it still there and can anyone tell me what the name of that cake is? I would really appreciate it
Posted on: 2012/7/20 16:52
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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Not too shy to talk
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Quote:
The names Mars Liquors & High Pocket sound very familiar. If Mars Liquors was also a deli, it must have been one of the places where my DHS schoolmates would buy their hoagies at lunch time. I vaguely remember a Salvation Army store which was located near DHS also. I also recall the existence of an Army & Navy store which was located close to DHS. I remember that my friends at DHS would buy Army fatigue clothing from the store. The store where my friends & I bought snacks was next to the parking lot which had been next to Rands ice cream parlor.[/quote]
Posted on: 2012/7/1 6:53
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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Not too shy to talk
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Quote:
The Jordan Avenue Robert Hall store must have been another location of the store that had existed in addition to the Route 440 store. I'm not sure if the two stores existed at the same time.
Posted on: 2012/7/1 6:48
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Re: The Good , The Bad And The Ugly Of Old Jersey City
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Not too shy to talk
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Quote:
What you wrote is interesting. There were several people on FB's "We Grew Up in Jersey City" web page trying to convince me that ethnic relations in the '40s & '50s were great. I didn't believe them especially after reading Helen Stapinski's book "Five Finger Discount" in which she wrote about the ethnic division in JC in the early '60s & prior to this time. I had been trying to recall the name of the 5&10 store which was next to the State Theater. Fisher Beer was still at that location in the mid-'70s, wasn't it? I lived in JC from July of '74 to June of '75.
Posted on: 2012/7/1 6:45
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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Newbie
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Quote:
Wasn't there a great Nedick's in the Grove Street train station?
Posted on: 2012/5/9 1:28
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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Newbie
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Quote:
I remember when it was over on Jordan Avenue
Posted on: 2012/5/9 1:26
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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Newbie
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Quote:
The red poles are still around here and there.
Posted on: 2012/5/9 1:23
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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Newbie
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The Pix actually had a color TV on the second floor.
You couldn't pee crooked there and you'd be tossed out.
Posted on: 2012/5/9 1:13
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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Newbie
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I thought that area was known as the Island?
Posted on: 2012/5/9 1:09
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Re: Live Poultry & Long Gone Movie Theater
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Newbie
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Hey--some names from the Wayne, Mercer, Fremmont Factory street area:
Louie Mangieri Louie Cosenza Georgie Costa Freddie Cimo Joe Lazzaro Tommy Spidaletto Joe Spidaletto Maryann Costa Kathy Miller Joe Colarusso Richie Mauro Georgie Easterling Greg Rotella Allen Jenkins Frannie Spinello Anyone recall them? How about some St. Bridget names? Anne Durant Tommy Leong Jeannie Specchio Bobby O'brycki Bobby Reed Tommy Darpino Haroldine Sharrock Natalie Feehan JoAnne Ocone Richie Susak Mikey Tallerida Richie Lindsay Maureen Murphy Jean Hlavach Elizabeth Garabaldi Algernon Rose Paul Gough John Yurchak
Posted on: 2012/5/9 1:07
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Re: Live Poultry & Long Gone Movie Theater
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Newbie
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The poultry market was Vernese's. The daughter was my teacher at St. Bridget's for a while--a honey!!
Rich
Posted on: 2012/5/9 0:55
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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Newbie
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The Hilltop was a nice old family style pizza joint up near the Armory on Mercer or Wayne Street I believe.
I came from Factory Street down the hill from the Medical Center and across from Montgomery Gardens. Here's one for you real oldtimers: remember the viaduct that connected upper and lower Mercer streets? We used to ride our bikes and sleds down it. I still have two bricks from it. How about the railroad that existed with the trestles over Mercer and Montgomery street? The shacks on the railroad with the coal shutes? The project gang "The Seabees"? The rag shops on Wayne street? Rich
Posted on: 2012/5/9 0:53
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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Home away from home
Joined:
2006/11/13 18:42 Last Login : 2022/2/28 7:31 From 280 Grove Street
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I know I'm getting old when my nephew asked me to carry the lighter end of an object
Posted on: 2012/3/26 21:58
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My humor is for the silent blue collar majority - If my posts offend, slander or you deem inappropriate and seek deletion, contact the webmaster for jurisdiction.
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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Home away from home
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Quote:
I grew up on the Hilltop. Above Harsimus Cemetery are Henry Street, Waldo, Magnolia and Chestnut Avenues which is known as the Hilltop. I believe that it also encompassed Dickinson (old football cheer included "Hilltop, Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah"), Hudson Gardens, Baldwin Avenue, and the streets around the court house. Across the Waldo Avenue pedestrian bridge and Chestnut Avenue Bridge is the Island Section. It's an interesting little enclave that many in Jersey City don't know about. No, it's not surrounded by water, but the community is atop a plateau surrounded by steep cliffs. Below are railroad tracks and the PATH train yards
Posted on: 2012/3/26 12:11
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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Newbie
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Anyone else recall where or what The Hilltop was? I've seen it mentioned a few times...?
Posted on: 2012/3/26 3:17
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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Home away from home
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Quote:
Either a section of town near the back of the PATH and Dickinson H.S. or a cheap looking restaurant on either Baldwin or Summit Ave. going towards the Beacon.
Posted on: 2012/3/26 1:26
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Get on your bikes and ride !
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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Newbie
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What was The Hilltop?
Posted on: 2012/3/26 0:49
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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Home away from home
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What about the store ... Consumers on rt 440. It was where PC Richards is at now.
And Bradlees where Lowes is now. Or ShopRite which was next to Party City and now just the parking lot.
Posted on: 2012/1/24 2:40
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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Newbie
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Nedicks! My mom use to work there lol they had pinstripe uniforms, kinds like the Yankees. Great memories. Wasn't there another movie theatre around the corner from the Stanley? I recall going there as a kid and people smoking in the theatre.
Posted on: 2012/1/20 5:56
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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Newbie
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Nedicks! My mom use to work there lol. Great memories. Wasn't there another movie theatre around the corner from the Stanley? I recall going there as a kid and people smoking in the theatre.
Posted on: 2012/1/20 5:52
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Re: More Places Of Old Jersey City That Are No More
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Newbie
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That was for post 164 about the peddler.
And how about the watermelon guy?--Pete Moscatello.
Posted on: 2011/12/4 19:47
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Re: More Places Of Old Jersey City That Are No More
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Newbie
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His name was Yico, and he'd shout out the names of his vegetables. Another guy was Johnny Budenz. He had a little deli in the trunk of his car. When I could scrape up 35 cents I'd get a pound of pistachio nuts from him--Zenobias--that was heaven!!
Posted on: 2011/12/4 19:42
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Re: The Driftwood
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Newbie
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Got a confirmation that it was The Driftwood.
Posted on: 2011/11/29 12:14
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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Newbie
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Thank you JC,
I just can't forget the first nineteen years of my life in a great city. Unfortubately, urban renewal took our homes, and my parents left it all behind, but my wife and I still return. We do miss the old restaurants though--the Canton and IlVento's were wonderful. When I've got a rested mind, I'll do another list. Rich.
Posted on: 2011/11/29 12:13
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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Home away from home
Joined:
2011/11/28 22:22 Last Login : 9/8 19:51 From Jersey City yo!
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638
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Rich, are you sure you were not listening to Billy Joel's "We didn't start the fire" when you wrote this?
It's a pretty awesome list, and I am sure it fits BJ's music with some very minor modifications.
Posted on: 2011/11/28 22:36
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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Newbie
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How about The Hilltop,
the Paul Revere Boys Club, the viaduct that connected Mercer Street, Pippi's, The Pix, Twan's Hot Dog truck under the turnpike, riding the freights, Slim the cop and his nightstick, stealin' bike stuff from Rocket auto stores, stealin' anything you could because everybody you knew did too, Your father workin' on the trucks, sleddin' Medical center hill and past the projects, Louie Morris' candy store, Nick Marino and his punch boards and that stogie, Danny and Joe the barbers Oyster Bay, The Canton, Barrett's men's store, The third rail on the tracks, Wonder Bread and Bond bread and the machines that showed the bread being made on Montgomery street, Mastria's and the paper and rag shops, Pete's barber shop with the men's magazines, Railroad avenue before the trestle came down Ducky's and the Keyhole Whew!!!
Posted on: 2011/11/28 22:09
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Re: You know you're a JC old-timer if you remember...
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Newbie
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Wow--
The guy who came around to the bars with seafood was my uncle--Mike Pinelli. He's now officially a part of Jersey City History.
Posted on: 2011/11/28 7:01
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