Friday, December 20, 2024

CRUISING THE LOOP


When we turned sixteen,
my best friend, Butch Johnson,
was the first kid in the tenth grade 
to have his own car, 
a 1939 Ford coupe,
seating three in the front seat, 
three in the rumble seat, 
and two on the running boards. 
Our gang cruised the loop 
on weekend evenings, 
circling the main streets 
of twin cities Menominee and Marinette, 
starting at Electric Square, 
so named because it was Menominee’s first intersection 
to have electric lights. 
We’d pass the churches and the courthouse 
on Ogden Avenue, 
whistling at the girls out for a walk. 
Talking about teen stuff, 
mostly sex, which nobody
knew anything about 
though it was still more than I knew. 
When we stopped 
at Menominee’s sole traffic light 
and another kid drove up 
a drag race was obligatory, 
with the two cars accelerating 
down Ogden Ave. 
up to fifty miles per hour. 
Then we’d stop for gas at the 
Zephyr station next to the Interstate Bridge, 
nineteen point nine cents per gallon 
except when a local gas war was on 
and it dropped to nine-point-nine. 
Each rider chipped in a nickel or a dime, 
plenty to cover fuel expenses
for the evening. 
The half-mile Interstate Bridge 
spanned the Menominee River, 
connecting the two towns,
terminating at its south end 
in downtown Marinette at Dunlap Square 
where we’d see our twelfth-grade high school 
social studies teacher, Ferdie Davis, 
strolling with a fellow teacher 
and discussing literature or philosophy. 
We might stop at the A&W in Marinette 
for a root beer float. 
Passing my grandpa’s drug store, the Dew Drop Inn, 
and the Salvation Army on Main Street 
we entered Menekaunee, 
originally a fishing village 
and now notorious 
as the region’s toughest neighborhood, 
including a strip 
of six rough-and-tumble bars 
where it was rumored 
that someone would get murdered 
almost ever weekend. 
Then we drove across the Menekaunee Bridge, 
a drawbridge that opened when sailboats 
left Green Bay and headed for their river harbor, 
an irksome nuisance for impatient teenage drivers, 
and headed north on Sheridan Road, 
passing Menominee’s finest homes along the bay shore, 
and returning to Electric Square 
where we would start our trip all over again. 
Now, some seventy years later, 
each time I visit my home town 
the first thing I do is to 
cruise the loop.