Thursday, December 6, 2012

AT MARKET SQUARE, A STILLNESS IN THE AIR

By Juan Montoya
When I was a child my family used to live in the farmlands in the northern outskirts of Brownsville.
The land was a quilt work of cotton and citrus farms, green as they eye could see. Farmhands, many from Matamoros and northern Mexico, would flock to the Brownsville area to work on the cotton and citrus crops. In the spring, the workers would thin the interminable rows of the cotton fields by hand, spacing the plants so that when harvest time came, the plants would be able to yield their maximum yields of the valuable fiber.
During the winter months (January, February and March), the crews would be in the Bayview area harvesting the oranges and grapefruits that gave the area its fame as a winter paradise.
On Saturday, the work would stop at noon and the workers and their families would crowd on pickup trucks to do their week's shopping in downtown Brownsville.
There was La Casa del Nylon and Manitou's for the women to stock up on fabrics and other domestic goods. Hardware, clothing and other needs were all within a stone's throw from Market Square. El Kress, Woolworths, and other chains were available a street over on Elizabeth Street.
The Market Square area was virtually crawling with people. Roving bands of musicos would tread their way through the crowds on the sidewalks and congregate near its center. The Market Square cantinas did a rollicking business, as the men – after a week's worth of arduous labor under the hot sun – walked into their cool interior to slack their thirst.
If anything, it was a lively scene what with music blaring from the nickle jukeboxes or conjuntos playing corridos for the patrons. While the men indulged in their weekly bacchanal, the families would walk into one of the handful of movie theaters such as El Mexico, El Iris, La Reina, El Grande, and over at Elizabeth and Levee, the Majestic and El Capitol.
The crowds of weekend visitors would mix on the sidewalks with the "townies," in the days when everyone knew each other, if just by sight.
It would be dusk before the crowds clear and make their way home. Then Market Square would also fold up and enter into a slow rhythm over the week until the weekend cam and the excitement invaded the areas again.
This came to mind today when I had the chance to visit the El Tapiz building on some other chore. The Planning Department is there back again after a slight respite when the city administration was playing musical chairs with the offices.
I commented to a city administrator that Market Square seemed eerily quiet after the November 30 ouster of the cantinas after their landlord – now the city of Brownsville – evicted them once and for all.
What will be there after the cantinitas are gone?
"There is some kind of plan," said the administrator, reluctant to give out too much info. As for the silence, he said it was welcome for city employees at El Tapiz.
"Sometimes we would come in and there would be people by the fountain doing God knows what there," he would say. "You'd walk out at lunch and the loud music was blaring from the bars. It's actually nice now to enjoy the quiet."
Some of the cantina owners like Señor Limon over at La Movida or La Señora Marta over at El Domino said they are already negotiating with real estate owners downtown to set up shop and provide services to their customers.
Now we have Mercaditos, gentrification, and Better Block events attempting to infuse life into the 1840-circa center of Downtown Browntown.
But as far as Market Square, the days of the blue-collar cantinas and conjuntos are over.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Mr. Juan, please enlighten me by identifying the corner building you included in this article. I can't for the life of me, locate this building. Stories like these really catch my attention since I can remember so much of our Brownsville history in the good old days!

Southmost kid said...

juan the old market square was where the action was in the old days hustle and crowds all the time, at all of these stores, but then came the mall development amigoland and then sunrise and downtown started its decline. Wonderful days i remamber going to the downtown area as a kid with my mom. thanks for the memories

Anonymous said...

Corner of 11th and Adams

Anonymous said...

Walk in the direction the camera is facing and when you come to the next intersection, turn left and you will see the Immaculate Conception church.
El Wenceslao.

Anonymous said...

can the building owners please stop painting every building in downtown brown??? is it because our town is named brownsville that we have to have every building with brown paint..or brown trim???

Anonymous said...

(can the building owners please stop painting every building in downtown brown???)

LOL!
Wensley.

Anonymous said...

As a teen ager, my sisters and I looked forward to Saturday when we go to Fishers Cafe, shop for shoes at Thom McAn and JC Penney for the latest fashion. My mom would join us because zales downtown also sold china and porcelain. She would also put crystals on layaway.

Later years after I married my family and I would visit C and L drug store for some good old milk shakes. I still have a diamond pair of earrings my husband bought me at Whitman's, Brownsville's most interesting stores located in market squate. I have a certificate and all for my earrings. We have wonderful memories of downtown Brownsville but the fondest of all was when my husband asked me to marry him while we were attending TSC and after class we walked downtown to Weldon's and picked out our rings

For some reason everything was so much easier back then.

rita