I’ve
written here about my boyhood adventures in the seventies at the Englishtown
Flea Market, an incredible outdoor bazaar where I found toys galore, comic-books, and
issues of Starlog Magazine.
Another
incredible market of my childhood was the U.S. Route #1 Indoor Flea-Market in
New Brunswick, New Jersey…which is now a Loew’s multiplex.
You
may have some passing familiarity with U.S. #1 if you watched Kevin Smith’s
Mallrats (1995). That comedy film featured a scene set at the famous “dirt mall.”
Alas,
by 1996, the dirt mall market was gone.
However, U.S. #1, near Edison -- in its hey-day -- was another incredible flea market. The market was housed in a 175,000 square foot building, and more than 100 merchants operated there every weekend.
You could find anything imaginable at U.S. #1 in those days, from fresh
produce dealers and cast-off military items, to a jeweler who traveled to Jersey
every weekend from Philadelphia. My family would typically visit U.S. #1 on the
way home from Englishtown, but on some Saturdays, it was the main event.
I
loved U.S. #1 for two reasons.
First, there was an amazing, extremely crowded booth there that served as an
ad-hoc used book-store, and featured great film and TV books. I have owned three or four copies of Gary
Gerani’s Fantastic Television (1977) over the decades, but if memory
serves, I found my first copy at U.S. #1.
It was a great day. I remember
reading avidly on the trip home from the market, my eyes never wandering from
the book's pages.
One
Saturday at U.S. #1 market, I also came across another item I’ve never
forgotten: a Space:1999 book that I didn’t even know existed at the time.
The book -- Phoenix of Megaron -- was
designed and colored in red instead of blue like the rest of the novel line,
and discovering it there, at U.S. #1 -- in a large bin --- was like finding a
lost treasure, or something from an alternate universe.
Secondly,
I loved U.S. #1 because was also a great comic-book dealer there, and I remember, in
particular, catching up with issues of Marvel’s Battlestar Galactica
comic series. In particular, I was trying to
fill out my collection (and get one missing issue involving “The Memory
Machine.”)
By
the mid-1980s, I guess we stopped going to U.S. #1, which is a shame, because I
understand that it displayed a De Lorean there, like the one in the Back to the
Future movies, for a time.
I was sad to
learn, in preparing this memory bank post that it isn’t there anymore...just another piece of childhood that exists now
only in the memory.
John,
ReplyDeleteThose are some really great finds and great memories!
Steve
I lived in englishtown and worked at the auction but loved us1 also. I remember the best Italian hot dogs there.
ReplyDelete