I’ve been a rolling stone all my life,
so I’m understandably haunted sometimes by the different lives I've had,
their flavors and fragrances found lingering in familiar places
encountered up and down the "road" (Ha! Jack Kerouac had nothing on me).
It's sad when “touchstones” from another era are gone, because they are touchstones from my story as well.
I’m sorry to say that this time around the bend on NY 17, I found the Red Apple Rest lying desolate by the side of the road, a hulking ruin.
I can't help but feel the Rest deserves a little requiem, because she represents to me the loss of a landscape I've seen all over the country, as the unique identities of American towns are continually replaced by Walmarts and Home Depots and Starbucks. I would go so far as to say that most American towns look much the same - a decrepit downtown, with empty store fronts and thrift shops, and then, at the edges of town, the exact same Walmarts, Home Depots, and Burger Kings.
I can't help but feel the Rest deserves a little requiem, because she represents to me the loss of a landscape I've seen all over the country, as the unique identities of American towns are continually replaced by Walmarts and Home Depots and Starbucks. I would go so far as to say that most American towns look much the same - a decrepit downtown, with empty store fronts and thrift shops, and then, at the edges of town, the exact same Walmarts, Home Depots, and Burger Kings.
It's ironic that popular American culture is so preoccupied
with "rebel chic", and "no boundaries" individualism.
"No boundaries" or "no limits" seem to be buzzwords that can sell
anything almost as well as a blonde woman with a low neckline. Yet a
good look around shows a remarkably conformist culture, whose tastes and
goods seem to be determined by the interests of
global corporate entities instead of the local "spirit of place". Gone is that unique individualism that only local small businesses can offer to their communities, along with, frankly, the prosperity that once circulated from business to business within those communities. The money does not circulate when Walmart replaces the many jobs that once made those goods, nor does MacDonalds replace the flavor and love of small town cafes and diners.
I've
seen the same thing everywhere I go - from Bythe, California to
Beatrice, Nebraska to Herkimer, New York - the old downtown sucked dry, and the same megastores on the
peripheries of town, sucking up the local economy and character. Anyway, my story...........
In 1980 I rolled onto the old NY Route 17 just before the town of Tuxedo (that’s where “tuxedo” comes from), and discovered the Red Apple Rest Diner. Before the interstate was built, Route 17 was the highway everyone took out of New York City ("the Borscht Belt") as they headed for the cool summer resorts of the Catskills and beyond. In the 40's and 50’s, station wagons filled with restless kids stopped at the Rest for hamburgers, and teenagers in fast cars had cokes on their way to dance halls up the road.
The Red Apple Rest
was a unique building in it’s time – a diner that could accommodate
busloads of people bound to and from the city, with lots of room outside
for souvenirs, hot dog stands, and an ice cream stand as well. It
was pleasantly decrepit by the time I discovered it, much of its
business having disappeared, but the Greek couple who owned it still
served eggs and toast and rice pudding.
It was
full of stories and friendly ghosts, and a potted vine that grew for at
least a mile across the ceiling, perhaps reminding the owners of their
Mediterranean homeland. I was there every summer to live and work at the New York Renaissance Festival as a craftswoman and a tarot reader. Peter named me "Sophia" and for all my appearances of 15 years he always greeted me with “hey, Sophia”. The Rest was staffed with his children (who kept growing up) and any number of odd relations he seemed to import from Greece.
In other words, the Rest was full of human eccentricity and the passage of generations, including, of course, those before Peter and his family bought it. It was a unique, warm, welcoming place you became a part of by walking in the door. There
was no “take-out” - disposable was long before its time, and both
Peter and the spirit of the Rest wouldn’t permit that wasteful (or perhaps just plain unsociable)
sensibility.
me at the NY Renfair, ca 1989 |
Red Apple, R.I.P. |