The Wopajo Says . .
Surviving the 1930'3 in Old Albuquerque
by: f. g. lopriato y lopez

Chapter Four - Union Bakery

      I close my eyes and visualize the Union Bakery on South First Street.. I smell the sweet yeasty perfume its freshly baked bread and taste that special mixture of vanilla, lemon, and cinnamon on the giant rolls and hear the echo of Italian voices, happily  singing, joking, and planning their week-end  and  conversing in the most poetic language this side of heaven, Italian, as they end another work week. 
      Not everyone has a safe, secure place to which they can retreat when life gets as hectic as it is today. The lucky few that do will not go mad  with worry over the economy, the political mess, and a million other things that are really beyond our control.
      My safe place is an island in time., the l930's, right in the middle of that churning, angry ocean of despair, the Great  Depression.  It was  the worst of times for the  rest of the country, including many parts of our state. But for Old Towners, and Albuquerque, as a whole, It was a time of real hope, and  they were  better off than they had ever been. The city  was growing, grocery stores  began popping up in almost every neighborhood, and in  the business sector, General Stores, that  carried  every type of  merchandise you can imagine,  dry  goods, feed, groceries meats, and poultry products, wholesale and retail. 
On the 300 block of North First alone , from Tijeras to  Marquette  street, Franchini and sons,  Dino Bonaguidi, M. Vaio and Sons, the Tartaglias the Masaglias, , and The Bachechi's had large general stores but throughout the entire town, Italians names were prominent in businesses ranging from a  Ferraro's cigar store, to Bachechi's Paris Shoe Store. Bars, Pool halls, Service Stations, Garages, hotels, bars repair shops, and more were all owned and managed by Italians, and staffed by their families, who advertised in Spanish to attract a Hispanic clientele , whom they served in the Spanish language. 
      If Albuquerque had changed it's nickname from "The Duke City " to "La Piccola Italia" in the l930''s no one would have objected. It was an Italian Town. The Priests were Italian, teachers were Italian, Politicians were Italian, businessmen were Italian. Nurses were Italian and Italians began to come here as patients because of the high and dry climate.. 
       A more complete history of the Italian Community is forthcoming when we get to the series dealing with La Colonia Italiana  di Albuquerque, right now, the important point we want to make is that both Albuquerque and New Mexico survived the great depression without too much permanent damage  by 
cooperating ,  the immigrant populations, The Italians were not the only first generation of immigrants to New Mexico, there were others, but not as numerous and not as motivated as the Italians. The Jewish community, who also had a dog in the  fight, because of the Jewish roots in the Spanish community, instance, and it's difficult to tell about the Greeks, Lebanese, etc.,  but this writer is more familiar with the Italians than any of the rest. 
Jewish immigrants also  fared better in Albuquerque, and , like the  Italians  treated the Natives and the Hispanic Communities differently, partly because of the already established Spanish-Jews, and Jewish owned trading posts , and  pawn shops catered to "Indians" both on and off the reservation and bought from or  hired Indians as their silver smiths and to do various  other jobs. One full-blooded Jew  even became a tribal chief. Pawn Shops and Indians had a different kind of business going for them, Silversmiths would pawn their work to a shop, who would store it and, with the craftsman's permission sell whatever would sell at a commission , The craftsman would pay interest on the pawn but could use it for special rites and return it., secure in the fact  the jewelry he left at the pawn shop would not be stolen but it was, it was insured.  Costs that the average craftsman cannot afford.
      The Town and the Town in Old Town grew closer and closer, now there was not only a linguistic and cultural tie to the Italian Priests but  a genealogical relationship developed. Families  that been assumed to be Spanish or Mexican  were traced back to  Italian origins.  Italian priests and monks   who became extra curricular MENTORS  and advisors of boys who actively  sought out the and companionship  in hopes of some day becoming priests or monks themselves also helped them to find not only  themselves., but long forgotten family roots  that led them to Sicily and other Italian cities and towns. 
 Many of these young Old Towners grew up and served in the armed forces during World War Two, and found information about Italian history after the fall of Rome, the Unification, Geribaldi, and  Southern Italy, useful to both their own interests and those of the United States. 
       Because of its isolation New Mexico was the last of former Holy Roman Empirical bastions to fall. And since  Spain owed  both it's rise and fall too Catabolism, the l930's  saw the last desperate struggle of Bishop  Lamy's struggle to maintain  Roman Catholicism in the center of everything in New Mexico. The railroad had come in, and with it Protestantism had invaded Catholic territory, New Mexicans who had existed for centuries without the need of money and luxuries now had  need of both. ////fglyl
 
 

 

-Netscape Navigator Gold -
Website by Pat Hostetter-Lopez @ H&L Enterprises-Updated 6/29/2009
Albuquerque, New Mexico -USA 505 296-5805 COPYRIGHT © 1996