Michael’s Brooklyn Memoir: Rooting and Nesting in Brooklyn

Rosy_on_allen_street
Another installment of Michael Nolan’s Brooklyn memoir. This one, written 4 years ago, is about his daughter, who lives in Williamsburg.

Took the L Train to the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn yesterday.
Walked along Graham Avenue, where my daughter Rosy now lives, to Lola’s
Cafe where she works the counter. It’s her "living room." Young artists
and musicians like herself drop by for coffee, some breakfast, a bit of
neighborhood chatter, and today to meet Rosy’s Dad. On the surrounding
streets, alongside her young creative crowd lives, works and prays a
devoted Italian Catholic community with their chapel to St. Mary of the
Snow, men’s fraternal associations and card clubs, bakeries, grocery
stores, funeral parlors and annual patron saint processions.

Rosanna
Lowery Nolan turns 26 this Friday. She was destined to live in my
hometown of Brooklyn, I muse. Among the staff of midwives at the
Alternative Birth Center at San Francisco General Hospital in the
summer of ’78 was a handsome African American woman, pregnant herself
at the time, named Sharon Robinson. It was Jackie Robinson’s daughter. The
prospect of having my daughter’s birth guided by the daughter of legendary Brookyn Dodger’s player was exhilarating. In the end, she was not on duty at
the time and the glory of Rosy’s birth trumped everything anyway.

Last
year, I ran into Sharon Robinson at a book signing at Stacey’s on Market Street
in San Francisco. We had a delightful chat about both our children born
in the same year. Sharon now works for the Major League Baseball
Commissioner in New York.

Rosy is named after her paternal Irish
great-grandmother who also lived in Brooklyn on E. 2nd Street and gave
birth to 13 children, only 6 of whom survived. Blessedly one of them
included Harold Francis Aloysius Nolan, her grandfather.

This
Friday is also the birthday of our Jewish cousin, Lena Eisenson
Koblentz, who at 94 exhibits extraordinary good health and mental
acuity. I publish her reminiscences of growing up on the Lower East
Side and distribute them to the "gansa mishpuchah" via our family
website. On Monday, I sought out the address of her home birthplace,
listed in the birth certificate she sent me. The building still stands
at 122 Allen Street, between Delancey & Rivington. A recently
discovered draft card from 1918 showed that her father lived at 530 E.
11th Street. That building survives as well between Avenues A & B,
next to a former public bath house, now serving as a film studio.

Later
Lena’s family moved to The Bronx and then Williamsburg where her father
operated a candy store. The Rosy Nolan Band’s most frequent venue is a
"Billy Burg" club named Pete’s Candy Store on Lorimer Street. Who knew?
Just might be the same place.