by PolackTony » Sat Jun 20, 2020 6:26 pm
Snakes wrote: ↑Wed May 06, 2020 8:52 pm
funkster wrote: ↑Wed May 06, 2020 8:27 pm
It's very gentrified now. A lot of yuppies, bunch of legacy restaurants/businesses etc. Some but not many Italians left. Spina owns a lot of the property but i'm fairly certain he lives in the suburbs now.
I asked someone from Chicago that lives in that area and knows some of the history. He said that several places were referred to at the "Patch." Taylor Street area (Little Italy), Smith Park, and West Town, to name a few.
Just to clarify, Smith Park is part of West Town, its the triangle of the old Italian Grand Ave sub-neighborhood of West Town formed by Grand Ave's turn from and an East-West street to a diagonal street just west of Western Ave. I'm from the area, and heard people use the term "da Patch" to refer to both the blocks surrounding Smith Park as well as the entire Italian Grand Ave corridor (south of Chicago Ave, North of Hubbard St, from around the Kennedy Expy west to Smith Park area). I have additionally heard from older family etc that people also referred to Taylor St as well as old italian neighborhoods like Armour Square/eastern Bridgeport and the part of the city bordering Cicero by Roosevelt Rd (also called "the Island") as the "Patch" back in the days. My understanding is that the Patch was a generic term applied in Chicago to old school Italian inner-city ethnic enclave areas. I think this usage may have been adopted from longer standing references to late 19th century Irish slums in Chicago, referred to as Potato Patches or Cabbage Patches. By the 20th century it would seem that this term came to be applied specifically to Italian communities. The Italians followed in many ways earlier established patterns of ethnic succession forged by the Irish. So maybe when the Irish were the stigmatized immigrants the Patch term was first used, and then later applied exclusively to Italians when they were the new generation of despised immigrants.
Also FWIW I'll second the already posted info on Lombardo's relations to Joey A via Marion. The Nigro, Andriacchi, Spina, Roti, Tassione families are all related by blood and marriage. The Grand Ave Patch was a very insular community, distrustful of outsiders, for decades defended by force from the Puerto Rican and black neighborhoods surrounding it, and cross cut by extensive and tightly woven ties of family, marriage, and ethnic allegiance. Marion's family and extended fam (Andriacchi and Spina) lived already at 2210-2212 W Ohio when she married Lombardo in 1951 and they subsequently moved in together. The building is what we call a sixflat in Chicago, smaller three story apartment building with six units. Soon after Lombardo bought the building, which he eventually transfered to Marion when they were "divorced". So far as I can tell Marion still owns the building and I believe it remains occupied by family. I still have close family and friends in the neighborhood and my "eyes on the street" tell me the building hasn't been rehabbed or occupied by gentrifier types.
And yes there are still quite a few Italians around, although the neighborhood is NOTHING like what it was when I was a kid.
[quote=Snakes post_id=150563 time=1588823524 user_id=66]
[quote=funkster post_id=150562 time=1588822044 user_id=161]
It's very gentrified now. A lot of yuppies, bunch of legacy restaurants/businesses etc. Some but not many Italians left. Spina owns a lot of the property but i'm fairly certain he lives in the suburbs now.
[/quote]
I asked someone from Chicago that lives in that area and knows some of the history. He said that several places were referred to at the "Patch." Taylor Street area (Little Italy), Smith Park, and West Town, to name a few.
[/quote]
Just to clarify, Smith Park is part of West Town, its the triangle of the old Italian Grand Ave sub-neighborhood of West Town formed by Grand Ave's turn from and an East-West street to a diagonal street just west of Western Ave. I'm from the area, and heard people use the term "da Patch" to refer to both the blocks surrounding Smith Park as well as the entire Italian Grand Ave corridor (south of Chicago Ave, North of Hubbard St, from around the Kennedy Expy west to Smith Park area). I have additionally heard from older family etc that people also referred to Taylor St as well as old italian neighborhoods like Armour Square/eastern Bridgeport and the part of the city bordering Cicero by Roosevelt Rd (also called "the Island") as the "Patch" back in the days. My understanding is that the Patch was a generic term applied in Chicago to old school Italian inner-city ethnic enclave areas. I think this usage may have been adopted from longer standing references to late 19th century Irish slums in Chicago, referred to as Potato Patches or Cabbage Patches. By the 20th century it would seem that this term came to be applied specifically to Italian communities. The Italians followed in many ways earlier established patterns of ethnic succession forged by the Irish. So maybe when the Irish were the stigmatized immigrants the Patch term was first used, and then later applied exclusively to Italians when they were the new generation of despised immigrants.
Also FWIW I'll second the already posted info on Lombardo's relations to Joey A via Marion. The Nigro, Andriacchi, Spina, Roti, Tassione families are all related by blood and marriage. The Grand Ave Patch was a very insular community, distrustful of outsiders, for decades defended by force from the Puerto Rican and black neighborhoods surrounding it, and cross cut by extensive and tightly woven ties of family, marriage, and ethnic allegiance. Marion's family and extended fam (Andriacchi and Spina) lived already at 2210-2212 W Ohio when she married Lombardo in 1951 and they subsequently moved in together. The building is what we call a sixflat in Chicago, smaller three story apartment building with six units. Soon after Lombardo bought the building, which he eventually transfered to Marion when they were "divorced". So far as I can tell Marion still owns the building and I believe it remains occupied by family. I still have close family and friends in the neighborhood and my "eyes on the street" tell me the building hasn't been rehabbed or occupied by gentrifier types.
And yes there are still quite a few Italians around, although the neighborhood is NOTHING like what it was when I was a kid.