Please click on the photos to enlarge them.
I’ve been taking a course called “Night Photography” at the
Worcester Art Museum from photographer Norm Eggert, and our assignment on
Wednesday night was to transport our cameras and our tripods to Shrewsbury
Street, the “Restaurant Row” of Worcester, MA. and take pictures.
We who live in Worcester get rather sensitive when outsiders
refer to our city as “Wormtown” and call it a “sleepy industrial backwater”
long past its prime.
But on Wednesday, Shrewsbury Street was humming with life on
a balmy summer night. It was more
like a street in Europe. People
were sitting at tables on the sidewalk, deep in conversation, with not a cell
phone or I-pad in sight. Cars
rolled by with music blasting, kids hung out in Cristoforo Colombo Park, everyone
was friendly and no one was afraid.
The Boulevard Diner is the Queen of Worcester’s famed diners
(all manufactured right here by the Worcester Lunch Car & Carriage Company
between 1906 and 1957.) It was at
the Boulevard that Madonna and her entourage ordered a hearty spaghetti dinner
after a performance nearby.
And there are elegant restaurants with valet parking and
cuisines from every corner of the world.
At the end of Shrewsbury Street is a large rotary where the
restored Union Station stands, looking just as it did when it welcomed
thousands of immigrants to the factories of Worcester, in search of their American
dream. Finished in 1911, it was
called “A poem in stone,” and
considered one of New England’s primary architectural treasures. But in 1963 the last passenger train pulled out and for more
than 20 years the huge building was deserted and deteriorating, huddled in the
shadow of the wrecking ball. The twin towers had been removed in 1926 because
they were weakened and in danger of falling.
The city managed to restore Union Station to its former glory
with the help of alumni of WPI--Worcester
Polytechnic Institute. who created new towers out of fiberglass. It re-opened in 2000, once again a major
transportation hub.
On Wednesday night as I approached Union Station, half a dozen fire engines screamed by, and
then a huge pack of motorcyclists descended—there were dozens—reminding me of
the furies in the film “Les Mouches.”
I watched the traffic circulate in front of Union Station, with its new
mascot—a statue of Christopher Columbus--
overlooking the scene.
Eventually it was time to walk back up Shrewsbury Street, to find a
place for dinner and perhaps raise a toast to Worcester’s slow but steady renaissance.
4 comments:
Great photos and Norm is a great teacher!
Joan, your photos are wonderful and I love your commentary about Shrewsbury Street. Well done!
And thanks very much Andy.
these are wonderful... and I recognize a Shrewsbury St regular in front of Piccolo's - John Murphy!
This blog makes me miss Worcester!
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