3/8/2019
We went to Brockton City
Hall today to check on the zoning status of a house we were interested in. Brockton is a city that today is principally
known for its drug dealers and street shootings. But the City Hall recalls a day when it was a
prosperous, proud community, the capital of America’s shoe industry. During the 1980s and 90s Dominican drug
dealers carried on a lively trade in cocaine from the City of Brockton. Today the immigrant community is largely
dominated by Cape Verdeans who are generally hardworking and ambitious. They may be the salvation of the city if it
can be saved. The geologic feature that
gave birth to industry here was the small river that powered the shoe
factories. The river seems to barely
exist today. It is not a great
transportation hub or desirable city center for food, restaurants and theaters so
until something changes it may be destined to be a holding place for the poor.
We climbed the stairs to the
Mayor’s office off the central rotunda, and then another level, all was in
disarray. The elevator was being
rebuilt, there were a few workmen, a few office workers. Usually in town and city halls most employees
have gone home late on a Friday afternoon.
We were going to the top floor for the Building Department where a woman
helped us find the information we needed.
Going up the stairs, first we came to the main floor where the mayor’s
office is located. Here, around the
rotunda are the names of Brockton men who were killed or died in the Civil
War. There are marble reliefs of
marching armies with generals at their head. And to the left, opposite the
Mayor’s office is a hallway with grand pictures of scenes from the Civil
war. It is an imposing and awe-inspiring
room which gives you the feeling of the importance and centrality of that war
to the people of Brockton only a few generations removed, and it gives you the
feeling of the vitality of the city at the time.
I was introduced to Brockton
in 1978. I was 22 and I began working
for a young carpenter, the same age who lived in Duxbury but had graduated from
Brockton High. The city was going to the
dogs he said and they had moved east toward the coast and out of the city. His family had immigrated from Sweden for
work in the shoe factories. His
grandfather was a carpenter and had worked a lifetime in the city and taught
him enough so that he could start his own business barely out of his
teens. His father had gone the public
service route, probably beginning in construction and then becoming the
building inspector and finally retired as the Postmaster General of
Brockton. My young employer went on to
become a successful designer in Santa Fe, New Mexico. I, having just left the liberal institution
of Umass Amherst was horrified at his attitude to the poor people on welfare
who were moving into the city. The last
of the shoe factories were closing down then but many of his friends had jobs
or were just losing jobs at shoe factories.
I mentioned my Brockton
experience to another friend and he recounted how he had been doing survey work
within sight of city hall when a police officer came up to him and demanded to
know where his ‘detail’ was. It sounded
as if the officer was shaking him down for money, he said. The officer told him he had to have a f—ing detail
and that just the other day a man had been shot to death on the bar on the
corner of the street. My friend begged
off getting a detail but he remarked that the lot he was working on was
littered with spent hypodermic needles.
He re-emphasized, “in sight of City Hall”.
I have a few other memories
of Brockton. I was a substitute teacher
briefly at Brockton High School. It was
the most highly regulated school I have ever been in, and probably for good
reason. I also have bad memories of a
long ago divorce battle and the court house is something of a nightmare to pass
by.
Driving through downtown the
first thing you notice is that so many of the buildings are empty. Many ex-industrial cities have become
cultural meccas with trendy shops, restaurants, galleries and theaters. No such thing is evident on a drive down Main
Street Brockton. Over regulation, high
taxes, corruption, lack of good transportation into and out of the city, lack
of a pool of educated workers, lack of safe, clean neighborhoods to live in and
most of all lack of commerce and industry to create jobs all contribute to the
demise of a once great city. I do not
know what can be done, but there is the potential to bring the city back to
life if the right steps are taken and enough people are determined to make it
happen and I know there are people who still believe deeply in Brockton and are
proud of the city
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