Isabel’s
Prince St. Laundry, A Community Friend In Boston’s North End
Originally appeared on NORTH END WATERFRONT.COM Link: North End Laundromat Fosters Community
The most
important community spots are often the least celebrated.
When I first moved to the North End in 1991, the Italian section
of Boston had largely gone unchanged for decades. It was the affordable
part of Boston back then. My street level two-bedroom apartment at 4A Prince
(currently the location of the restaurant Artu) was $625 per month. The
European, Florence’s, and Felicia’s were the go-to restaurants. Pizza
could be had at Regina’s, Circle Pizza, Café Pompeii, and Umberto’s (although
every pizza in the North End has its own distinct style and taste).
Though Mike’s Pastry was already a local stop for tourists,
traditional family-run bakeries like Parziale’s and Boschetto’s were the local
haunts of those in the know. There was no Rose Kennedy Greenway, only the green
expressway separating the historic Italian enclave from the rest of
Boston. There was no CVS, no Dunkin’ Donuts, although one eventually
came and went on Salem Street, and Starbucks had yet to invade the East Coast.
Over the past three decades, the city of Boston has changed. And
while many businesses in the North End have gone the way of the New World Bank
that once operated on Hanover Street, there is a laundromat at 22 Prince that
is still going strong, and in doing so has deservedly become one of the
standard-bearers of this post-Big Dig North End neighborhood.
I first walked into Prince St. Laundry (informally known as
Isabel’s to the locals) one night during the summer of 1991. On any given visit
you could expect to see Isabel, her mother Rosa, and/or Anna—the three making
up the entire staff. Isabel was young, motivated, hard-working, clearly in
charge, and would gladly tell you that she was Portuguese and not Italian.
Watching me from the corner of her eye, she once took it upon herself to use
her own quarters to buy extra detergent and then promptly push me aside, pour
the extra detergent forcefully over my laundry, close the lid of the machine,
push the requisite buttons to set it into action, and then turned to me saying
something like, “How are your clothes ever going to get clean, Jay, if you
don’t use enough detergent?” Enough said. I have not done a load of laundry
since without thinking of Isabel’s subtle recommendation.
Isabel and I became fast friends. She convinced me on more than
one occasion to get more active in community events, including a rather heated
meeting at the Nazzaro Center with city planners trying to convince North End
residents that it was time to dig up Columbus Park alongside the Marriott Long
Wharf citing that the trees there were well past their age of maturity
evidenced by the fact that the park had been built in 1982. In response, an
older Italian man stood up finally silencing the city planner suggesting that
Boston should then also tear up the Public Garden, the trees there being
hundreds of years past their age of maturity.
Isabel’s laundromat was the hub of the neighborhood in our corner
of the North End. It was the place where you often ran into the same people,
and because everyone in the process of doing laundry is usually
dressed comfortably, certainly without style in mind, you were left
feeling the same way you might if casually hanging around in your living room
wearing an old pair of jeans or pajamas.
Doing laundry at Isabel’s was an enjoyable ritual usually
resulting in conversation with people, catching up on what was happening in the
North End. I almost never went back to my apartment while doing laundry, for
instance, even though it was only a short walk away. One morning people were
sharing stories about a Salem Street butcher that was suspiciously robbed hours
before. Another day, I recall chatter about some break-ins by way of fire escape
at which point a local man decisively interjected that it would be taken care
of (insinuating that police would not be called upon to settle the problem). I
was also at Isabel’s years later during the morning of the 9/11 attacks, a
customer curiously asking what movie we were watching as we all stared in
disbelief at the laundromat’s low-volume television as it re-played footage of
the first plane tragically hitting the World Trade Center which was sadly that
morning’s news.
The North End is fortunate that Isabel did not sell her business
during the mid-1990s, a possible direction she once suggested to me in
conversation. Both the neighborhood and the city have changed a great deal
since then. It would have been unthinkable at the time to suggest that not only
would Florence’s, the European, Felicia’s, and Circle Pizza soon be gone from
the North End, but also landmarks like Anthony’s, the No Name, Durgin-Park, and
Jacob Wirth’s from the city itself.
It is good to know that despite inevitable changes to this historically
entrenched area of the city, Isabel’s Prince St. Laundry continues to not only
be relevant, but is now a surviving business emblematic of the North End from
years gone by, helping to carry the torch of this community forward.
I was tempted to stop in a few years back after having dinner at a
restaurant across the street from Prince St. Laundry with an old friend who
encouraged me to walk over to say hello when I saw Isabel step outside. I chose
not to. There would not possibly be enough time for the two of us to catch up
on everything that has happened over the past twenty years. That kind of a
discussion will require a return to the North End and a gigantic load of
laundry.
Jay Gillespie is
a writer, singer/songwriter, and local historian.
This is Isabel! Thank you for the great memories.
ReplyDeleteI'm really looking forward to you coming in with that big load of laundry so we can catch up on the last 20 years!