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Every picture tells a story

Local sites figure prominently in an interactive Web site that brings memories to life and records them for future generations.

By Lorraine Gennaro
Add Comment Add Comment | Comments: 1 | Posted Feb. 4, 2010

A photo and story shared on www.philaplace.org includes Vietnamese immigrant Thoai Nguyen’s, who was co-editor-in-chief of South Philadelphia High School’s newspaper in 1984.

Photo by Historical Society of Pennsylvania

Just off South Street before Bainbridge, an old synagogue at 615 S. Sixth St. has been home to the South Street Antiques Market for the last couple of decades — or more.

A little further south, a storm-window/door business now occupies the site once used by Primo Beverages Soft Drink Manufacturing Co., founded in 1900 by Italian immigrant James “Giacomo” Esposito, at 812-814 Washington Ave.

These are just two of nearly 90 local haunts that have supplemental pictures, audio and/or video that can be viewed at PhilaPlace’s interactive Web site, www.philaplace.org. The site connects histories to places, as well as memories, across time and neighborhoods.

“Even though the landscape has very much changed, it can be preserved from this digital record. A lot of the buildings that still exist had a different life in the past,” PhilaPlace Executive Director Joan Saverino, who also serves as director of education and community outreach for the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, said.

 

Presently, the site’s content is focused on two of the city’s oldest immigrant neighborhoods: South Philly and Northern Liberties.

“These were always immigrant, working class neighborhoods. Those neighborhoods have continued to be immigrant and working class neighborhoods even as they gentrify. We wanted to continue telling that story,” Saverino said, adding additional neighborhoods will be added in the future.

About 90 of the 200-and-counting stories on the site already, as well as 145 media images out of 1,100 and counting, are locally rooted.

Anyone can add their story and/or images to the site, like Donna Meidt, a native of Camden, N.J., who now lives in Tempe, Ariz., did.

In 1910, her great-grandparents, Maria and Salvatore Siciliano, opened a boarding house at 505 Catharine St. for just-arriving Italian immigrants. The house operated for about a decade, but the couple lived at that address for 11 more years. A photograph of Maria and some boarders on the dwelling’s steps can be viewed on the site.

Meidt said she felt compelled to tell her ancestors’ story because, growing up, her grandfather Antonio was big on family history.

“In my family, family history reigned supreme. My grandfather was the one really into history and the importance of remembering,” she said.

When he died in ’79, Meidt inherited all of his family documents.

“Then I had this mission of ‘what was I going to do with everything I have?’” she said, adding she did a Web search and found PhilaPlace and Saverino, who encouraged her to contribute.

Another local tale is Thoai Nguyen’s, executive director of Southeast Asian Mutual Assistance Associations Coalition.

In ’75, Nguyen was 9 when his family left war-torn Vietnam. An American resettlement agency relocated them to Seventh and Wolf streets, where the 44-year-old still lives.

Nguyen arrived with his mother, Sau Thi, who spoke only Vietnamese, his father Albert, who spoke Vietnamese, English and French, and siblings Jeannie, Janet, Anna, Pauline, Thomas, Boone and Jacqueline.

“The adjustment wasn’t so difficult for me. At that age your mind is still very flexible. My ability to learn the language and to learn the culture was easier. I couldn’t say the same for my older siblings or my mom,” he said.

Growing up, Nguyen recalls three major market areas — Fourth Street, the Italian Market and the Seventh Street Corridor, which spans Oregon Avenue to McKean Street and Sixth through Ninth streets.

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1. Donna Meidt said... on Feb 4, 2010 at 12:27PM

“Thank you very much for including my contribution to PhilaPlace.
I would encourage others to do so as it is a very rewarding experince.”

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