Niagara Gazette

Columns

December 18, 2012

BRADBERRY: Good old fashioned Christmas shopping spirit

Niagara Gazette — Not too many years ago when I was a kid, the joy of Christmas shopping began with the arrival of the giant Sears Christmas catalogue. My siblings and I would pour over that book until the pages faded and fell out as we pointed out the dozens of toys we wanted Santa to carry down the chimney to us.

This time of the year seemed to take forever to get here; a year was a heck of a long time to wait back then, but the older we get, the faster this season comes around probably because nowadays, Christmas starts to show up in some stores on Halloween.

I can remember when all of Niagara Falls was lit up like a huge Christmas present with beautiful wreaths and ribbons streaming from the street lights; gigantic banners stretched across the streets wishing everyone a Merry Christmas.

Most of the churches in my neighborhood back then had large congregations (there were officially 43 churches in the city in the 1950s representing 20 denominations), and many of them built life-like mangers scenes out in front of their buildings.

Most of the parochial schools celebrated the season with plays produced by the faculty, staring the youngest students, all fully costumed and completely made up for their parts by their proud parents.

I was pretty much guaranteed a role in the annual Christmas play as one of the Three Kings, a character generally accepted as mine since one of the three magi was supposedly black. I was a shoe-in as the only black boy in my school at the time.

Christmas time was a fusion of Santa Clause lore and religious observance, not just the purely commercial enterprise it is now. There was a genuine Christmas Spirit and it was genuinely reflected in the decorations not only on the city streets but throughout the neighborhoods too where most of the homes were decked out in some way that reflected the content of the neighbors hearts more than the special effects of the flashy commercial high tech decorations we see today.

A Christmas shopping spree in 1950 Niagara Falls might have taken one of the 90,000 city residents along Falls Street where a cup of hot chocolate at the Main Restaurant might have been followed by a stop at Meyers & Deckers Gifts and the Madeira Linen Gift Shop, the Cataract Cigar Store and Roxy Jewelers, the Strand Dress Shop, Harvey & Carey’s Drugstore, the Betty Ann Hat Shop, the Frontier Camera & Photo Supply Store, S.S. Kresge’s and of course, Sears.

After shopping and meeting friends and neighbors in those fine establishments, city residents and throngs of tourists would likely find a seat at a table for lunch at Walgreen’s, the Falls Luncheonette, the Colonial Restaurant, the Lido Grill, the Star Restaurant, or the Ideal Coffee Shop before they went on to spend their hard-earned Christmas Club dollars at Biers, the Cataract Song Shop, Reed’s Jewelers, Kayes Dress Shop, Betty Dixon’s Candy Shop, JN Adam’s Department Store, Nisley Shoes, Amberg & Company Men’s Clothes, Fanny Farmer’s Candy Shop, Yasen’s Jewelers, Esquire Men’s Shop, or Mack’s Men’s Shop, just to mention a few.

And Main Street also had its share of wonders garnished with Season’s Greetings decorations including Thom McAnn Shoes, the Lerner Shops, Ray’s Clothes, Krausmann’s Department Store, Kinney Shoes, Woolworth’s, Belbot’s, Singer’s Drugstore, Day’s of Niagara, Silberberg’s, Grant’s, Wolke’s and of course Jenss’ among many, many others that once served our once burgeoning population.

A lot has changed since those days, not all of it for the better. Much, but not all of what has happened to Christmas in Niagara was the result of forces far beyond our control.

The best of it could be recreated by reversing the total out-flow of local investment and spending in the surrounding suburban communities, and bringing some of it back to the city where smaller retail enterprises and the spirit of entrepreneurship could once again flourish if we can find a way, like so many other similar communities have, to recreate the excitement of unique “downtown” shopping experiences.

We need to find a way to focus more of our public and private sector resources on the development of our small, family owned and operated retail businesses. They were, 50 years ago, the backbone of our downtown retail commercial trade, and they are the real future if we are ever going to revive our local economy.

With a combination of good planning, some serious training by alliances and private-public partnerships with Niagara University, Niagara County Community College and the State University system and others combined with some serious relocation incentives, I’d bet many of those businesses who relocated to the suburbs (and others who’d like a chance to try) would be willing to consider coming back home to expand their business opportunities, to be a little closer to the millions of tourists and the thousands of local residents who’d be only to happy to do a little shopping with them all year round in a real downtown Niagara.

Perhaps if we can do that, we might also re-light some of the best of the good old fashioned Christmas Spirit that should go along with the commercial shopping season.

Wouldn’t THAT be nice?

Contact Bill Bradberry at bill.bradberry@yahoo.com

Text Only | Photo Reprints
Columns
  • NIA Hamilton, Ken mug HAMILTON: Mona - that little old woman who could Wrotniak's Highland restaurant was consumed in flames not long ago. Witnesses say that it was young children. Now all that remain is a charred hulk of brick and mortar that is fit for nothing more than the wrecker's ball. It not only reflects too many of the once vibrant buildings that lined the streets of a once-vibrant city that is now trading businesses and owner-occupied homes for subsidized government housing, wherein now lies the dreams of prosperity that are just as dark and bleak as the remains of Wrotniak's.

    May 24, 2013 1 Photo

  • • Glynn, Don mug GLYNN: Poll shows public upset with Albany scandals Area state lawmakers including a few Republicans who like to bask in Gov. Andrew Cuomo's reflected glory should take a closer look at the latest Siena College Poll results. Those coattails may not help in the next election, unless there's a dramatic reversal in the way state government operates. While Cuomo is hardly to blame for all the embarrassing mess on Capitol Hill, he still is the state Chief Executive of the system becoming more dysfunctional every day, according to the Siena findings. (In the words of a famous American, shouldn't the buck stop at the governor's desk?)

    May 23, 2013 1 Photo

  • NIA Tom T mug TOM'S CORNER: The Gazette has partnered with local automotive expert Tom Torbjornsen to publish his weekly national column. Tom's Corner will appear in Thursday's editions.

    May 23, 2013 1 Photo

  • NIA Bradberry, Bill mug BRADBERRY: Peaceful place to learn, to think More famous as the birthplace of "I Love Lucy's" Lucille Ball, and NFL Commissioner, Roger Goodell, Jamestown, New York is a well preserved vestige of rural Americana.

    May 22, 2013 1 Photo

  • images_sizedimage_095145826 DELUCA: Poetry, in motion

    Bob Baxter sent me his new book of poems the other day and I promised to read them. But, when I tried to open the book, I couldn't. I've always been prejudiced against poetry.

    He knew of my dislike, but as a retired creative writing professor, had hoped the poems from “Niagara Lost and Found” might soften me toward one of his favorite art forms.

    Sadly, my disdain was set in place long ago, in reaction to teachers who could not help me understand.

    May 22, 2013 1 Photo

  • • Confer, Bob mug CONFER: When will the college bubble burst? The bursting of the housing bubble was the unquestioned cause of the Great Recession. After years of unprecedented growth in the housing market that saw home ownership and home values rise dramatically, the collective bad decisions of homebuyers, banks, and government finally caught up to the economy at large.

    May 20, 2013 1 Photo

  • • Scheer, Mark mug CITY DESK: Buffalo bears, oh my! It's bad enough those "secretive" Buffalo interests are always trying to co-op our city and our good name with all their grant money and what not.

    May 20, 2013 1 Photo

  • NIA Higgs, Norma mug HIGGS: Still in high school Local Architect Clinton Brown recently described the style of the 168,000-square-foot building housing the Niagara Falls High School at the corner of Portage Road and Pine Avenue as "a three-story structure with concrete and steel structure, cut stone and masonry façade and classical inspired details. These include the hierarchical and symmetrical main and secondary facades, a central porch with six two-story engaged columns and the balustrade main staircase to the front doors and upper porch. The original four-over-four hung windows have been replaced with shorter aluminum sliding windows with

    May 20, 2013 1 Photo

  • • Glynn, Don mug GLYNN: 'Bums Park' short walk from falls

    Shame on those for allowing a couple of properties within walking distance of the nation's oldest state park to deteriorate to skid row status. There's plenty of blame to share.

    May 19, 2013 1 Photo

  • NIA Smith, Doug and Polly [Duplicate] LETTERS FROM THE ISLAND: The 'write' way to do things In memory of the late grammarian and linguist J.J. Kilpatrick, Doug presents his quarterly roundup of sentence-structure demolition, as effected by people who oughta' know better. English finals soon? Pay attention:

    May 18, 2013 1 Photo

Featured Ads
House Ads
AP Video
Officials: Truck Hit Bridge Before Collapse Sheriff: No Sign Killing of 2 Kids Was Planned Obama Defends Drone Strikes, With Limits Raw: Jurors Deadlock on Jodi Arias Penalty Boy Scouts Decision "First Step" Say Activists Raw: Utah Teen Arrested in Death of His Brothers Closer Look at Okla. School Where Children Died Two Suspects in Murder Known to London Police Boy Scouts Mom Supports Gay Inclusiveness "Be Ready": NOAA Warns of Busy Hurricane Season SeaWorld: Penguins Are Coolest Thing in Florida Obama Renews Call to Close Gitmo Obama Offers Drone Strike Defense Raw: Heckler Interrupts Obama on Guantanamo A Slice of Apple History Up for Grabs
Seasonal Content
Opinion
House Ads
Night & Day
Twitter News
Follow us on twitter
Follow me on Twitter
Hyperlocal Search
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Front page
Helium debate
Helium
Seasonal Content