This blog entry is different from many of the past ones and I hope the beginning of a new chapter here. After reading my article about the Butchers of Trenton, Stanley Saperstein, who I met at the first meeting at Adath Israel in March, sent me an e-mail, promising that he was going to work on a history of the Saperstein family and that it would take him about a month to put it together. That was on October 19th. On October 21st, I received the family history. That’s fast turnaround, but it wasn’t all that surprising to me.
Which leads me to a personal tribute before we move on to Stanley's family history.
Once you set your mind to doing something like this, the words just seem to fly on to the computer screen. It wasn’t always that way for me, but if you’ve followed the news at all, you know that Steve Jobs of Apple fame passed away a couple of weeks ago. I used to struggle to write. Sitting at a typewriter was absolute torture. Where to start? Where to end? what to put in the middle? I was haunted by the need to organize your thoughts and then type them, almost perfectly, or rip up the paper and start over. Sure, we had onion paper and then White-Out, but to produce a relatively neat final draft was almost impossible. It wasn’t as much writer’s block as it was the incredible waste of trees and the mechanics of putting word to paper. That all changed in 1984. I was working at the CBS Morning News and one of my responsibilities was to work with Dr. Bob Arnot, who was incredibly young, very smart, but didn’t know much about writing video scripts. He had one of these new computers called a Macintosh. I watched in awe as he was able to highlight, then drag and drop letters, words, phrases paragraphs. I remember asking him if I could touch the mouse and try it for myself. My sister was in college at Penn and she was the real impetus for me to buy a computer of my own. For $1700, I bought a Macintosh Plus. It was a small one piece unit, with an even smaller black and white screen, 1 MB of internal RAM memory (today's come with at least 2,000 times more memory), a floppy disk drive (a relic), and no hard drive (today you can buy a terrabyte of memory-1,000 x1,000 megabytes for about $70). By today's standards, that little computer is the equivalent what a Model A is to a brand new Mercedes-Benz. It came with a word processing program and it worked. I still have that Macintosh Plus at my office (along with a few newer models). After Steve Jobs died, I took the old computer and plugged it in. I wanted to see the smiling Mac that displays at start up.
Of course, I didn’t have the system disk, so all I got was the question mark on the screen. But it was still enough for me. It was my homage to the man and the device that really changed the way I write. I throw words on the screen as fast as I can, then move them, remove them, edit them, drag them, organize them and no trees die in the process. It’s a freeing experience to write now and all I can say is thank you, Steve Jobs.
I trust that Stanley wrote his family history on a computer and that the speed with which he was able to write it had something to do with word processing software.
The Saperstein Family
Here are all the brothers and sisters minus Albert, who had died of diabetes. From left to right. Sam, Sol, Joe, Ester, Jack, Si and Ed |
Trenton Auto Parts was taken over by my father and Jack after Meyer died in 1950. Both of them entered the business at a young age. My father at 16 and Jack around the same age. The business did well in the 1920s. Both my father Sam and Jack learned how to rebuild parts. How they did this I never figured out. Jack specialized in transmissions and rears. He could fix any kind. Sam rebuilt carburetors generators alternators and other small parts.
During the thirties they almost starved in the great Depression. My father used to tell stories of how they ate spaghetti every day and were lucky to get it. WWII led to boom years with scrap metal bringing big prices and with no cars being manufactured, the parts business boomed. From that time on the business did well.
My father opened Five Points Auto Parts on Warren St. but it was destroyed in a fire in 1957. In the sixties the Urban Renewal Project of Trenton took the business on New Street which by that time was half the block and part of the alley that ran perpendicular to New Street.
Left to right: Bob Saperstein, Stan Saperstein (the author), and his father, Jack Saperstein 1961 |
The Saperstein Brothers; Top: Jack, Joe, Sam Bottom: Si, Sol "Spotty" |
When I was old enough to go the Yard short for Scrap Yard and get filthy playing among the old wrecks I was in heaven. My cousin Jean Finkle, Jack’s Daughter, said she did the same thing. She is about 15 years older than me. Jack had four daughters.
Jack and my father were business opposites Jack was a no nonsense business man and my father would give the store away. Between the two they tempered each other. Jack was very generous to the family. He would do anything for his daughters and treated my brother and I like sons. He took me fishing many times ( see photo) and when my brother Bob showed an interest in pool Jack took him under his wing. Jack played pool on a pro level learning in his brothers Al’s pool hall. Jack was also a antique glass collector. My father was a table tennis champion and taught my brother who to this day is a national ranked player. He also coached all our sports teams at the JCC and was voted Man of the Year.
Bob and Stanely Saperstein-Akiba Team Basketball-JCC Photo-1957-1958 |
My Uncle Spotty took over Kalen’s Fine Arts with his wife Estela when her parents passed on. The store was on South Broad Street. They sold high end art and did much of Trenton’s framing. They expanded the store to Princeton at Palmer Square and to Morrisville. As Trenton deteriorated they closed the Trenton store. They closed the Princeton location as they got older and ended up with the Morrisville store just before they retired. My brother learned framing from Spotty and I learned to restore Gesso frames.
Thank you Stanley for taking the time and effort to write this family history and find these pictures. Stanley also reports, "I am encouraging my brother –in-law do a similar article on the Popkin Brother Fruit and produce business. His grandfather started it and his father and uncle continued it. On his mother’s side his grandfather had a grocery store and were involved in the Workmen’s Circle." I hope this entry has also inspired others to sit down, right what you know about your family and share it with your family and with us.