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Post by dave on Jun 15, 2012 7:34:19 GMT -5
At Lourdes, I quickly became lost in an ocean of children. Fourth grade teacher Sister Clementia managed 56 children in a classroom built for 26. That’s not a typo; fruitful Catholic parents, heeding their Church, were hard at it procreating in those years and the schools were bursting at the seams. Mothers were worn out and fathers worried about money, but the Bishops were evidently happy.
Up until I lost it years ago, I had a photo of our fourth grade class, Sister Clementia sitting up front near the camera and myself way back on the horizon of the fifth row, my finger just coming out of my nose. The nun looks pensive as she sits there under a huge Flying Nun hat called the Cornet, dressed in a cute little French outfit from the 15th century. She may be wondering if a jungle outpost in Borneo would be more to her liking than bronco-busting tens of boys and girls each day.
I think the photo may have been taken on a Tuesday, and if it was the third Tuesday morning of the month, Father Fudzniak, who absolutely hated children and cared even less for nuns, was probably then walking from the rectory over to the school to preach at us. Without asking, Father always chose his topic with no regard to what we were studying in our Religion lessons. He might lecture us nine year olds on the evils of birth control or he might summarize the major points of the Third Lateran Council, which took place about two hundred years before Sister Clementia's clothes were designed. Father Fuddy was an overly serious man, having lost his sense of humor in the war while assigned to an outpost in Borneo.
Still, I was relieved to be back in a more militarily crisp environment where the order of the day was set by the nuns rather than the ping-pong precepts of modern child psychology. Little man that I was, I appreciated someone being in control. Whatever weapons were used …. rulers or blackboard pointers or “the back of me hand”….. it didn’t matter to me. What did matter was a predictable environment I could enjoy for six hours each weekday.
NEXT: Conclusion of "Nowhere"
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Post by chris on Jun 15, 2012 10:40:51 GMT -5
Mt Carmel is on Catherine Street, Rectory and School on Jay St near Mohawk Street. Remember the St Cormo feast on Mohawk Street between Bleecker and Catherine...those were the days. Now I think MtC has the feast on its grounds.
BTW...I had 1st Communion, Confirmation and even the dirty deed...M-a-r-r-i-a-g-e there. Divorce was at the Court Bldg....LOL
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Post by dave on Jun 15, 2012 12:12:10 GMT -5
Oh, yeah. Now, I remember. Chris, have you been back lately? To the church, I mean.
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Post by clarencebunsen on Jun 15, 2012 16:49:19 GMT -5
I was at Mt. Carmel for a wedding last fall. The interior is very ornate. What is the story there?
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Post by dave on Jun 15, 2012 20:41:24 GMT -5
A rather nice story. By the way, it's official name is St. Mary of Mount Carmel Church. See: www.mountcarmelblessedsacrament.com/?p=2048And this from Wiki: Italians in UticaThe largest nationality group of the great migration to America between 1880 and 1920, Italians trace their presence in Utica to the arrival of Dr. John B. Marchisi in 1817. A prosperous pharmacist, he was the first of thousands of Italians to arrive in Oneida County over the next century. Centered around the parishes of St. Mary of Mount Carmel and St. Anthony of Padua, Italian life and culture flourished, spreading throughout the county to cities, towns and small villages alike. While the immigrants arriving in the great migration usually found jobs in the local textile mills, brickyards, construction companies and unskilled manufacturing occupations, numerous entrepreneurs soon began small businesses running the spectrum of economic activity from push-cart peddlers and olive oil merchants to haberdashers, bankers and insurance agents. Italian language newspapers such as Il Pensiero Italiano, La Luce, and Il Messagero dell'Ordine, along with the humorous Il Pagliaccio and various organizational and cultural publications reflected the richness of Italian life in Oneida County. The Italian population was also served for more than ten years by the "Italiannaires Program", hosted by Rena Bonapart, on WIBX radio.[7] From a small group of early immigrants, the Italian community rapidly grew to political prominence, forming an important voting block in elections as early as 1888. By 1910 Italians were being regularly elected to office in Utica, while some historians credit the East Utica Italian community as the spark that ignited Franklin D. Roosevelt's campaign for governor of New York in 1928. From the early 1940s the Italian community has played a dominant role in Utica and area politics.
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Post by chris on Jun 15, 2012 23:01:24 GMT -5
yes ...once for mass and once for a wedding. Not sure which was last cause it's been a long time since I was back in Utica. The church still looks the same inside as my first time. The church I go to now looks alot like Mt.C inside.
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Post by dave on Jun 16, 2012 7:06:58 GMT -5
Chris, you're lucky to have aesthetically pleasing surroundings in your church. We have folding chairs and a rather dance hall feel here at St. Michael's. Same deal at St. John's where we lived in NY. "Multi-purpose buildings," they were called when built. Since it's his house, I wonder if anyone let God know.
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Post by dave on Jun 16, 2012 7:07:34 GMT -5
Here's an article from 1966 that gave me a chuckle when I read the paragraph about UCA's new biology lab and remembered what we had to work with in the old UCA building prior to 1960. Not much. Sister Mary Joseph did all the Bio experiments while we stood around her at the tiny workbench/sink station that in any other high school would have probably been one of a dozen such stations. In fact, mostly what I remember from Biology in my high school years was memorizing Regents Review books. www.windsweptpress.com/images/new biology lab.jpg[/img]
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Post by dave on Jun 16, 2012 7:08:07 GMT -5
You can't say I don't know how to exaggerate. Here's an example, brought on by memories of UCA.
Dragon Breath
We were in trouble so often that year that it is hard to remember which imbecilic prank got us suspended from school for 2 days, leaving us to roam around downtown Utica trying to avoid our parents. But I think it was the flash in the urinal trick that George and I immediately conjured up in our General Science class when we witnessed Sister Mary Anthony throw a pinch of pure magnesium … a small pinch … into a beaker of water. The most brilliant, beautiful flash of purple lit up the lab and George and I were immediately electrified with the promise of mayhem. I remember looking over to him. His eyes shone a bright and manic comprehension of the possibilities. All we needed to do was get some pure magnesium powder … just a pinch.
A fellow student named Burton was Sister Mary Anthony’s pet and the keeper of all the locked-up chemicals in the lab. I can’t really tell you how we bribed him into giving us a pinch of the powder because, even years later he would be so embarrassed by the subject of the blackmail that he would probably sue me for writing about his crime of nature.
Suffice it to say that we obtained a rather large pinch and were able to keep it in a stolen test tube overnight. The next day, just before lunch, by which time the boys’ bathroom urinals were always dry, we carefully poured the magnesium powder toward the rear inside of one of these ancient porcelain monuments that looked like upended bath tubs, built wide for boys with impaired aiming ability.
Next: conclusion
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Post by dave on Jun 17, 2012 9:30:17 GMT -5
I had meant to post this before. The kids in the following article were in the UCA class of '59, and I believe they were coming back from an informal class picnic. Even though this group came way almost without injury, one of the tragic aspects of high school has always been friends lost to car accidents. The night before my daughter's graduation, four of her classmates hit a tree and were killed. A tragedy for the parents and the class. Click once or twice to enlarge. www.windsweptpress.com/images/UCA car crash.jpg[/img]
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Post by dave on Jun 18, 2012 6:44:22 GMT -5
This has nothing to do with UCA, but while researching the old newspapers, I came across the article, below, which tells of pilot having to land his plane in a farmer's field near Utica because he couldn't see through the snow. I was struck by the primitiveness of the art of flying barely 25 years after the Wright Brothers flew their first powered airplane down Kill Devil Hill in North Carolina's Outer Banks. A lot of the aerodynamics had been worked out for improved flight by '28, and radio was in use for air to ground communications, but basically you were hanging up there in the sky on a wing and a prayer and you had to come down when you couldn't see. Or when snow ever so slightly changed the shape of your wings and you lost the lift that held you above the ground. From the Sunday OD of December 30, 1928. Click once or twice to enlarge. www.windsweptpress.com/images/plane down 1928.jpg[/img]
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Post by dave on Jun 18, 2012 6:48:43 GMT -5
I was just thinking ..... I suppose it's possible that the Canadian pilot first tried to land near Blessed Sacrament school in Cornhill, but was scared off by this group of women in the Home Guard. (Their Habit is very similar to the Franciscans who taught at B.S. Could be them!)
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Post by dave on Jun 18, 2012 6:59:39 GMT -5
And I don't know where these nuns are from, but their attitude seems more in keeping with my experiences with nuns these days. www.windsweptpress.com/images/nun fun.jpg[/img]
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Post by dave on Jun 18, 2012 6:59:58 GMT -5
And as long as we're on the subject of nuns, here's a piece of art of Sisters of Charity (or Daughter's of Charity) at work in a convent. They wear the wimple, the piece that wrapped tightly around the head and covered the neck and top of the shoulders, surmounted by an older style of cornette, which was more like a hat and not as starched or stylized as those that survived into the 1950's. www.windsweptpress.com/images/nuns at work.jpg[/img]
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Post by dave on Jun 18, 2012 7:07:26 GMT -5
Here, finally, was the end of the UCA that graduates from the 1800's through 1960 remembered. The building next to St. John's Church had certainly worked itself to death producing Catholic scholars and mothers and dads and workers and professionals and religious for over 125 years, most of them remaining in Utica to contribute to the life of the city. A year after this article ran in the OD in June of 1959, my graduating class (1961) was scattered to the winds. Or so it felt. Click once or twice to enlarge. www.windsweptpress.com/images/UCA The End.jpg[/img]
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