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The lowland between
Duwamish Head and Pigeon Point was known as the Gulch, sometimes
Poverty Gulch (Willi)
or Garlic Gulch or Little Italy because of the large number of
Italian families who lived there. Nichols
remembers that the Seraphina’s, Bertoldi’s, Guntoli’s,
Scatina’s, and Valentinetti’s were mostly congregated
just south of the steel mill, “so I grew up learning to love
Italian food.” (Nichols)
“We were called Gulch Rats,” according to Darla Fox. “We
were always called Gulch Rats” while the kids living down on
West Marginal Way on the river were called “River Rats.”
Besides being poor, the Gulch could be an especially
rough neighborhood. In
the 1920’s, a single policeman (O’Neill, a “big
Irishman”) patrolled Youngstown. Every hour he would
call into the precinct in West Seattle from the police call box on
26th and Andover. There were taverns toward Spokane Street
and a whorehouse that children were warned away from. Bootleggers
operated from Youngstown, and there was an occasional violent death. The
druggist, George Holman, once shot a man who tried to rob him. At
Mike’s Meats robbers blew the whole side of the building out
and took the safe.
When Prohibition was repealed, Gino Lucchesini’s father,
Guido, converted his pool hall into a tavern, across from the entrance
to the steel mill on Andover Street. Lucchesini described the
tavern as a form of entertainment, with shuffleboard, pool tables,
and league play, serving steel workers, shipyard workers, and people
in the neighborhood.
There was more than one gang: a “cross-the-creek” gang,
the “east side of the creek” gang, and the gang south
of the school field. Lucchesini described slingshot wars between
the 26th Avenue Gang on the east side of the Longfellow Creek and
the 28th Avenue Gang on the west side. “I was too young
to have a slingshot—the older kids handled the slingshot—but
I used to carry rocks. You used to use garbage can lids for
protectors.” He remembers that dads intervened
to stop these wars after one boy got hit in the head with a cross-the-creek
shot.
In later decades, Davidson remembers a Gulch
Gang of young toughs, some of them really crooks, some not. “They stole cars,
things off of cars, had a theft ring going.” Because
of this reputation for gangs, the cops would patrol Youngstown and
would stop kids after 10 p.m., well into the 1950’s. “We’d
get back from a football game, and they would ‘roust us out’—make
kids get out of cars, spread-eagled, be searched. We were a
sure target for the cops.”
The community’s reputation was described by Richard Hugo,
one of the Northwest’s best-known poets. Hugo grew up
in White Center at the southern end of Delridge and wrote about the
communities of White Center, Youngstown, and Riverside in his autobiography,
The Real West Marginal Way. Riverside, Hugo wrote, was “a
cluster of drab frame houses,” with Slavic and Greek immigrants: “The
homes huddle together and climb the east side of Pigeon Hill, up
into alders and ivy.” Despite this drab appearance, he
found Riverside attractive. “The names, Popick, Zuvela,
Petrapolous, were exotic, and the community, more European in appearance
than any other in Seattle, always seemed beautiful to me.”
His description of the entire neighborhood was
less favorable: “the
filthy, loud belching steel mill, the oily slow river, the immigrants
hanging on to their odd ways, Indians getting drunk in the unswept
taverns, the commercial fishermen, tugboat workers, and mill workers
with their coarse manners.”
In contrast, the middle-class communities of
West Seattle towered above the gulch. To the west “sat the castle, the hill,
West Seattle where we would go to high school. What a middle
class paradise. West Seattle…was an ideal. To
be accepted there meant one had become a better person.“ (8)
“It was everybody’s dream, I think, to eventually get
to West Seattle,” said Mary Alice Willi.
Barbara Iacolucci recalls that everyone was pretty
much in the same boat. “We all lived in areas where…there really
wasn’t any snobbery because nobody had a lot. The
area wasn’t poor, but compared to West Seattle they probably
thought it was poor.”
In his middle school and high school years, Fred
Hansen became aware of the distinction between Delridge and West
Seattle. “This
was always considered a lower-class neighborhood. But then
we began to take pride in the fact that this was our neighborhood,
a tough neighborhood. And when we went to high school, a lot
of our kids from here were good athletes and did very well at the
high school. Even at the high school we hung around together
at the radiator. They called us the Radiator Gang. We were
the Youngstown or Cooper Radiator Gang. But it was fun because
no one gave you any trouble….”
8. Richard Hugo. The
Real West Marginal Way: A Poet’s Autobiography. (W.W.
Norton, 1986). |
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