The Candy Kitchen
Poletown, Detroit
And Me, the Kid
Watercolor on paper (18 x 24) courtesy of multimedia artiste Michele T. Fillion
(Scanned image darker than beautiful original.)
(Scanned image darker than beautiful original.)
There is something waiting for you at the very end of this.
If you are not in the mood to wramble right now, so go there, please. But,
there are some other presents along the way. Guaranteed to please. And, hey, I
didn't write this for my health. Reading is good for your brain.
I grew up in a neighborhood of the Detroit inner city known
as Poletown, the famous community of Polish immigrants first settled in the
1870’s. Almost all of it was flattened in the early 1980’s to make way for
economic development. They paved paradise and put up a… Cadillac factory.
The whole of Poletown was razed to accommodate the new
Cadillac plant. Up until that time the existing factory in another part of town
was a very antiquated multi-story structure and the new plant was constructed
in the modern, more efficient single level design. At the time, the then mayor
planned placing the new factory in that spot as an urban development project
and as an important tax revenue source for the city.
[There’s the story of a low wage working stiff in Detroit who
saved and scraped up his whole life to buy a brand new Cadillac when he
retired. On that happy day as soon as he took ownership and drove it off the
dealer’s lot, a persistent irritating knocking noise developed. He brought the
shiny behemoth back to the dealership to fix, but nothing could be found. After
many more visits and not a little expense, the exasperated fellow had the
service center literally tear the car apart. They finally found it. There
inside the door was a loose nut, but not a piece that was part of the car. Tied
to the nut was a note: I hope you have a hard time finding this, you rich
sonofabitch!]
I recently learned in looking into the history of the demise
of Poletown that the church of my Baptism, Immaculate Conception, was the site of
a sit-in protest against the razing of the neighborhood and all the forced
relocations. None other than Mr. Ralph Nader joined the campaign to save
Poletown.
"On Bastille day, July 14 1981, the police assembled an
armada of forces and at daybreak began to seal off the neighborhood preparing
to evict those occupying the church.”
The Immaculate Conception Church was a small gem in my old
neighborhood. My grade school was directly across the street and we went to
Holy Mass every school day. I was an altar boy there and even had to serve at
Mass during the summer months. There is a lot of church deep in my blood. Read
Why Can't I Be Good for more of my Catholic school daze.
The centerpiece of the altar was a most beautiful and
graceful life sized statue of the Blessed Mother. I visited Detroit recently
when we had a funeral service for my mother. Saint Hyacinth is the church where
my mother was married and it seemed fitting to have her Detroit family and
friends congregate there for her memorial service. A very nice surprise I found
there was a small chapel niche where the statue of Mary from Immaculate
Conception is installed. Along with her flanking angels and some sections of
the communion rail from the demolished church.
The side altar including statues of the Blessed Mother and
angels from Immaculate Conception.
Saint Hyacinth Roman Catholic Church 3151 Farnsworth Detroit
(Poletown) Michigan
But, when I was a boy, Poletown was also my hood. And a
certain candy shop was my church of sweet refuge. There are so many other
deeply felt and precisely recalled memories of that neighborhood. But I want to
remember one that was for me as a boy an integral part of the richness of life,
and particularly so during the Easter season: The Candy Kitchen.
The Candy Kitchen of my youth is also gone. I don’t know if
it closed when the owners retired, but I do know that it is buried somewhere
under the Cadillac Poletown factory. It was located on a corner at the
intersection of Chene and Trombley streets. Across the street from the Chene
and Trombley Lanes where I learned to bowl, when school boys worked as pin
spotters, and on Friday evenings there was an excellent fish fry on the
restaurant menu.
And just down a few doors was the barber shop where most of
my preteen hair was shorn. I mention that place because of some vivid memories.
I recall how it was lined with mirrors on each side of its length. The effect was
psychedelic, you could look and see a progression of reflections out to
infinity. Do you ever wonder what is there when one mirror faces another? Kind
of like... if a tree falls in the woods and you're somewhere else (or, a bear
is in the woods and does something, who would know what is was like?). My
brother's friend Bob had this ultra cool flat top brush haircut. His was
particulary excellent because he had this major widow's peak at his front
hairline and it made the flat top look, well, really cool. Bob said he went for
his hair cut at a shop that was the mecca of flat tops, specialized in them. My
own barber could never quite get it to my satisfaction. When you say flat top,
you want FLAT on top. Capiche, Italiano? Once out of his own exasperation with
me, and taking advantage of his adult status, he embarrassed me in front of all
the waiting clientele by putting, really plopping, a telephone book on my head
to guage the flatness. I didn't have the nerve to press further to tell him
that a telephone book doesn't lay flat, on your head anyway.
The last thing about the barber shop — I promise to get you
along to the end of this soon—was the magazine selection. Where else but the
barber shop could a boy get a glimpse of what we now call, adult content. I
remember Terry Moore and her tight angora sweater; so nicely filled out all
pert, perky and pointy. Just to recall how those were simpler times, I also
remember myself handling a tabloid that claimed the front page headline was
impregnated with LSD, and all you had to do was to go home and place the page
in some ethyl alcohol and drink it to get the effect. Holy Cow! Those were the
days. Psycedelic, for sure. (The newspaper was later denounced for giving bad
instructions about the kind of alcohol to use. Something about it being
poisonous. Nothing that I recall about the LSD. Hey, kids. Just say NO to
babershop reading material!)
Continuing along... When I was a grade schooler we lived on
the East Grand Boulevard near Trombley. The Candy Kitchen was a short four
block hop from my house on Chene Street. After schoolwork on many an evening I
would trek through the night — even in the dead of winter, snow up to here — to
enjoy a delicious banana split at the mecca of wonderful sweetness.
The Candy Kitchen must have been there from the early
1900’s. A lot of towns have a shop called the Candy Kitchen. In St. Louis still
chugging along there is the Crown Candy Kitchen that dates back to 1913.
At a place with that name you can expect to find all kinds
of goodies, but mainly a wide variety of homemade chocolates. There’s probably
an owner operator, some old timer in the back who’s been at it for a lot of
years. And, unless someone from the new generation steps up to take over, the
place will probably close when the maestro retires.
My Candy Kitchen was a big brick corner building, with
display windows on either side of the center door. The left window usually
featured colorful candies of all kinds, but it was the window to the right that
was the showstopper. Come Easter the display on the right side was the zenith
of the chocolatier’s art. More on that in a moment.
Inside was a huge space with a high tin paneled ceiling and
floors covered in those old fashioned glazed ceramic hexagonal white tiles with
black borders and accents. On the right as you entered were the oak and beveled
glass cases filled with an assortment of all types of handmade chocolate
bonbons. On top of the cases and on the shelves in back were huge jars filled
with a rainbow of colorful sugary treats. One jar that I visited often was the
one with rock candy. One of my favorite fascinations, rock candy, translucent
crystals of pure sugar formed around thin white strings. How’d they do it?
The back of the store was separated by a white lattice
gazebo style partition. Potted palms, here and there. In the center back there
were tables and along the walls booths painted white and in the same gazebo
motif. I never ever saw anyone sitting there and I imagined there were ghosts
from an earlier time when bobby soxers would come in after school and hang out
nursing a soft drink and listening to bebop on the juke box. The kind with the
real bubble lights and actual vinyl discs. Or, in an even earlier time, when a
fella would take his gal for a date and linger over a shared milk shake with
two straws and some innocent flirtation.
On the left side of the shop in front was a small showcase
with packaged items such as gums and Life Savers and such and the cash
register. But the crown jewel of the whole shebang was the soda fountain. About
eight or so floor-mounted high stools set before a bar of solid swirled gray
marble. Right behind was the usual wet bar set up replete with sweet condiments
and syrupy flavorings. Naturally, there was a fancy dispenser tap with plain
water and fizzy soda. Not the flavored soda like now, just (2 cents) plain
seltzer. The syrups were added to order.
And, finally, up against the wall an elaborate carved wood
built-in of dark mahogany done in the art nouveau style. A counter set up with
glassware, a milk shake blender, and a dispenser of malt powder for those
malted milk shakes. Straws and the ever present jar of foot long pretzel
sticks. And behind it all, 3 large expanses of mirrors framed in finely carved
wood. A palace. An altar?
Whenever I visited the Candy Kitchen there were two people
in charge who I would always see there. Besides the piรจce de rรฉsistance front
Easter window, those two were amazing to behold. From my young point of view
both the man and the woman were in their early 30’s. Both had jet black hair,
well groomed, and always dressed in black and white. He with black slacks and a
crisp white shirt, sleeves rolled up to do serous ice cream scooping. She with
a close fitting long black skirt, a tight belt, and frilly white blouse
buttoned right up to the neck. He had a barrel chest, a swarthy mustache, and
the large hooked nose of a sinister swashbuckling pirate. Her luxurious dark
hair was done up flamboyantly with fancy combs, ruby red lips, and lots of dark
eye makeup. Also, quite a chest, herself. Woof! I imagined they were a married
couple. It’s just that they didn’t look like the sort that you would find in a
quaint candy store. They were "muy" sexy and very mysterious. Adding
to the mystery, they never spoke to me (or to one another when I was there)
except to ask me what I wanted. And they always prepared my ice cream sundae or
banana split with meticulous care.
Particularly on those winter evenings that I remember going
there, imagine this young kid sitting at the counter making love to his ice
cream delight and these two theatrical figures waiting on me who looked like
they were right out of central casting in some Mickey Spillane pulp steamer. I
took due notice, but the dish in front of my face commanded my full attention.
So now to the Easter window at the Candy Kitchen.
After taking you by the long scenic route I am now
confronted with the task of paying off the reader’s expectation with a
description full of wonder and awe. My powers of painting with words have
limits. It would be helpful if you also summoned up your own feeling of wonder
and awe to supplement my attempts to recreate the excitement of a young lad
looking in on a window with what to my small eyes looked like a half ton of
chocolate. All done in the most carefully and artfully molded Easter shapes.
The display was set up in a stepped vertical arrangement so
that the whole impression was a wall of chocolate set against a waterfall of decorative
green plastic grass. Plenty of crisp white doilies under each group. There was
always a chocolate bunny so big that I couldn’t imagine ever being able to
deserve one that big. I don't know if it was solid chocolate through and
through, but I prefer to imagine that it was. We’re talking two foot high
rabbit here, easy! And a retinue of lesser bunnies in various sizes and poses.
Several typical colorful woven Easter baskets each filled with assorted
goodies, also in a variety of sizes. One for every pocketbook. Wrapped in
colorful cellophane with big satin ribbons.
But the main thing that I could never ever imagine getting
my hands on was the centerpiece basket. Made entirely of chocolate; the square
basket and the round handle, solid milk chocolate. Intricately formed to
resemble a real basket. And then filled with more chocolates. Have some
chocolate with your chocolate, why don't you?
I would many times just walk down to stand and gaze at the
spellbinding vision of that window.
Now, alas, it is only a bittersweet memory. Ah, yes.
But now, look what the Easter Bunny brought for you!
Notice below the sugar egg. When I was a boy we had a sugar
panorama egg as big as a football. It was kept in its own box and came out once
a year at Eastertime. Inside that egg were colorful paper cut outs of boys and
girls and bunnies and chicks on a green grassy field. Each year I looked
forward to have a peek. It never got old. Ever new. That's Easter for you.
Happy Easter 2011. And ... 2016
2 comments:
You're right! Easter is for new beginnings!
Great article I lived on the other side of Poletown area on Mitchell and Kirby.St.Hyacinth was down the street went to7&8 grade there.I liked growing up there.
Post a Comment