Friday, April 16, 2010

Soon....

Now that the weather has turned to something more agreeable, expect some boot scrapes in the near future.

Friday, January 22, 2010

Pine Street Boot Scrapes

Pine Street. Ahh, yes, Pine Street.  I once knew a girl on Pine Street. Long time ago, when I was a young man.  Not a day passes I don't think of her and the promise I made, which I will always keep. That one perfect day on Pine Street.

A cold and blustery weekend a couple of weeks ago I braved the frigid air for three blocks in my quest for boot scrapes.  I gave up after my fingers and face lost all feeling.  But not before I captured all the boot scrapes that the 500, 600, and 700 block of Pine Street had to offer.  In front of one scrape I was waiting for a lady to pass.  When she approached I removed my hand from my pocket with my camera.  I think I gave her a scare.   Here I was, a dude wearing a ski mask and a leather jacket, waiting for her and then taking my hand out of my jacket just as she was near.  So, I offer my apologies to you, lady pushing your bag buddy. I am no mugger.  Just an enthusiastic capturer on film of things people wipe poop on.

Without further ado, I present the Pine Street Boot scrapes of that day.


500_600_700 Pine

I've created a web album, via Picasa for Google, who also hosts this site.  How's this work out for a way to view the images?  Ctrl+click will open the web album in another tab and not take you away from this page. Comments and suggestions are welcome. I'm not terribly savvy when it comes to web editing.  I'd like the viewing of these things to be as easy and hassle free as possible.

Thank you and may you never need a boot scrape.

-D

Monday, January 4, 2010

The Boot Scrape: An un-authorized biography

I feel that it should be necessary to go into, as much as my meager knowledge allows, the history of the boot scrape.  Here goes the Cliffs Notes version of what I know (which is in fact all I know):

Long ago, in times of yore, when the roads were not paved and there wasn't such a dearth in horse manure as there is now, people would accumulate mud and other foul things on their boots.  Remember when you were little and your mom yelled at you to not track mud through the house? Yeah, well, the founding fathers didn't like it either.  Remember when you did track mud through the house and got beat?  That was just your parents beating patriotism into you with the long arm of history.  Etiquette dictated that one should not track rubbish through a host's house - what you did in your own house was up to you.  Ever see the inside of Thomas Paine's house?  Filthy.  Rabble rousing doesn't leave one much time for the wiping of feet.  The only person that didn't mind visiting him was Franklin. That was because Paine was the only founding father who could tolerate Franklin's prancing around, giggling like a schoolboy, and saying, "would somebody, anybody puhhh-leeaasse pull my finger!" when he was drinking.

Despite Paine's general disregard for tidiness, most people wiped their feet off before entering their homes and the homes of others.  The boot scrape was installed by the front door for immediate access.  It has been said that people leaving Paine's house would have to use the scrape too.

A friend, who shares my penchant for the old timey architecture of Old City and old Philadelphia imparted this knowledge unto me. I quote her (this is the un-authorized part, ... I didn't ask her, thanks Jen):

"...they can be very, very fancy. The real fancy ones aren't as old as the blah ones, although they're all almost assuredly from the mid-19th c or earlier. The man who made the railings of the house, also made its boot scrape, and they should match each other. Sometimes the boot scrape is even IN the railing..."


So, that's about all I know and some of what I made up. Enjoy.

I'm still working on the best way to show all my findings on this blog.  Until then, which will be soon, I will leave you with this scrape I found on the 500 block of Pine st. The railing and scrape do match each other!




Thursday, December 31, 2009

The beginning seems like a good place to start... (The long story)


This, the first installment of this blog will be by far the longest of any I will post.  For the faint of heart, I will post the goods first.

The boot scrape is one of my favorite things about Philadelphia and the charm of Old City.  I have seen them and sought them out and have shown them to people times too numerous to count over the past 15 plus years.  It amazes me that so many people have no idea what they are and are even a little surprised that they exist.  This blog will be dedicated to documenting the boot scrapers of Philadelphia.  I will post a picture and the address of each boot scrape I find, and maybe a short anecdote.






This ornate boot scrape is located at 3rd and pine.  I happened upon it while searching for one to show an out of town friend who happily took a picture of it and posted it on Facebook for all to see.  I then took a picture of her, thumbs up, foot in the scraper, all smiles, with her very first boot scrape.  Have I another convert? I think so.  


And now for a trip down memory lane...


Setting:

A little over fifteen years ago I made my first trip to South Street by myself.  The South Street I remember in the early to mid  1990's was one full of head shops, skate shops, tattoo and piercing parlors, art supply stores, and a book store where you could find the less coy of pervert riffling through adult nudie magazines in the front window.  This was before the internet was what it is now, before porn was a stroke of a touchpad away, and let me tell you, I envied the hell out of those brazen son's of bitches.  But I digress.  South Street used to have a few decent taco and burrito joints.  My favorite was on 4th st, across from the now closed Hocus Pocus.  Tower Records once boasted a line out front on Saturday mornings, full of anxious concert goers waiting to buy a ticket when they went on sale at 10.

This was before Starbucks.  Before XandO (now Cosi). Before Auntie Annes and Pizza Hut.  When there was only one gum tree.  Hell, when there was a gum tree.  There used to be a thrift store that sold you a bag for $5 - you walked out of the store with whatever you could fit in the bag.  Back when Manic Panic hair dye was the shit.  When everyone's wallet was attached to their belt by a chain.  When you were a cool fucking kid if you had a pack of clove cigarettes (even though no one I knew could actually smoke a whole one).  Back when J.C. Dobbs was J.C. Dobbs the first time, before it turned to The Pontiac Grille. I used to walk past that place and wonder what it'd be like to play there - I finally did when it was in its Pontiac Grille incarnation back in 02. It was pretty cool to be playing my music in the same space, against the same walls as so many great bands.  But I digress again - it's not my fault; memory lane is full of many digressions.

I remember stores like Soho (still there), Rock n Roll, and Zipperhead.  There was a pharmacy, a used book store, Condom Kingdom was a year or two from opening.  The South street I remember was one where an adolescent kid with a hard on for rock and roll and the left of center could find an outlet, and more importantly, people much, much weirder than himself.

The story:

How I came upon a boot scrape...

I was 14 and Kurt had killed himself a few months before in the spring.  I didn't really care at the time, but whatever was in the air hung around for a long time and for an angst-y boy it was inviting.  South street seemed like a place where I could go and feel part of the "scene".  I didn't think of it that way then, it was a place that some of the cooler kids had talked about.  Where people had tattoos and piercings, and I could buy a Led Zeppelin or Doors T-shirt, or maybe a black light poster.  It was a place I wanted to be.  My sister was going to South st with me, or rather I with her as she was a year and a half older.  We had never taken the bus downtown from Roxborough/Manayunk before.  We dug out the many bus schedules one had who lived in our part of the neighborhood.  None of the buses went directly to South st and our knowledge of what was safe and what was not was limited.  For all we knew downtown was another country, a dangerous one at that, and we didn't want to stray far from (at all) from our destination.  The 35 was useless.  The 61 was no where near us.  The 32 went through North Philly - no way we were getting on that thing, you know 'cause of all the murders on the bus.  The 27 would have been a possibility if it wasn't a Sunday.  In the end we decided on the 9.  We could ride it all the way to the end of the line and not worry about where our stop was.  It would let us out at 4th and Walnut and pick us back up there too.  It was about 6 blocks to South st.  It was within those 6 blocks I saw my first boot scrape.

Olde City Philadelphia is full of many boot scrapers.  Back when the roads where not paved one would accumulate mud, dirt, and, well..., horse shit, on their boots.  It would be impolite to not wipe one's boots off before entering a house.  Outside the front of a house there would be a metal or iron scraper to rid your boots of debris.  At the time I saw my first boot scrape I had no idea what it was, yet I was drawn to it.  I never once thought it'd be something to wipe poop on.  Some of them were very ornate.  The best I could imagine was that you'd tie your horse to it, but no, it was too low for that.  I had the intimation that it did have some type of equine function.  O! If I knew how close I was to hitting upon the truth.  I can't remember how soon thereafter I found out or from whom, but upon subsequent visits to South st and feeling more comfortable with the area I found many more boot scrapes and knew them for what they were.