By Raanan Geberer
I never lived in Inwood, the northernmost
neighborhood in Manhattan. But we lived in Marble Hill, just over the bridge on
the Bronx mainland, and most of my learning-to-drive experiences took place in
Inwood. And what experiences they were – painful at the time, but sometimes
humorous in retrospect.
During senior year at Bronx Science, everyone was
learning to drive. Because Science didn’t have its own driver’s ed program, you
could take driver’s ed at any nearby high school and Science would give you
credit. The closest school to me that offered driver’s ed was the Academy of
the Sacred Heart of Mary, a Catholic girls’ school in Inwood. I was a little
nervous about going there, thinking I would be out of place, but I needn’t have
been. The class was co-ed, and there were several other non-Catholics. I was
one of three Jewish kids in the group – the other two were Jewish greasers from
George Washington High School who wore black leather jackets and looked like something
out of “Da Fonz.”
We first went out in the car in the “industrial area
of Inwood” east of Broadway, north of 207th Street. The neighborhood
was dominated by the subway yards, warehouses, garages and a pet cemetery.
There were few people on the streets and there was plenty of room to practice.
As we became more comfortable behind the wheel, the teacher, whose name I don’t
remember, took us into the nearby Bronx. We went to Jerome Avenue, as far as
Bronx Science itself. He also took us up and down the steep Kingsbridge Road
hill, which in retrospect was a foolish choice when dealing with inexperienced
drivers.
It soon became apparent that I was as klutzy as a
driver as I had been in sports. Making fun of the way I frequently took my foot
off the gas pedal, braked and then put it on the pedal again, the teacher
invented a name for me: “Herky-Jerky.”
Once, when he criticized me and I began a sentence with “I have,” he
yelled, “Here’s what you don’t have! You don’t have control of the car, you
don’t have awareness of the other cars, you don’t know how to turn…” When it
finally came time to take the road test, I went up onto the curb and failed.
“Okay,” my father said, “from now on, I’d better
start giving you some lessons myself.” Once again, I found myself in the
industrial area of Inwood, but this time with my father as the teacher. My
father had just bought a used ’64 Lincoln Continental. When this model car
first came out, it had been my favorite, but now it was 1971, seven years
later. Dad had bought the car for a ridiculously low price, but with gas prices
going sky-high, it still cost him more than it was worth. To top it off, the
car was so big, it was difficult to park.
When I was younger, Dad, who had once been sergeant
in the Military Police, had taught me how to play the piano. Now, behind the
wheel, I found that his teaching methods hadn’t changed: “You idiot! You’re
going to back right up into the curb! What? Don’t you signal before you turn?
You drive like a lunatic! There’s a car right in front of you—you want to get
yourself killed? What’s the hell’s the matter with you!....” In August, I took the test a second time, and
just like the time before, I failed.
My father apparently realized that a kinder, gentler
approach was called for. The next year,
I was up at the State University at Binghamton as a freshman, but in June he
took me over to a driving school, again in Inwood, owned by an acquaintance of
his, Jerry Kristol. I’m not sure how he knew Jerry – it may have been through
his job or at the synagogue – but Jerry was a good teacher. The fact that the
driving school was on 207th Street, next to Francesca’s Ice Cream
Parlor, didn’t hurt. After each lesson, I had a cherry lime rickey at
Francesca’s. The next time I took the test, I failed again, but only by a few
points.
My father, undaunted, sent me for more lessons with
Jerry Kristol during the winter and spring breaks. To augment these lessons, he
gave me a few lessons of his own, and actually let me drive part of the way to
and from Binghamton on Route 17 a few times. By the summer, our family had
moved to Co-op City, but I still took the long ride on the 12 bus to the
driving school on 207th Street. In July, I was ready. I took the
test again in the all-too-familiar industrial area of Inwood, and this time I
passed. Within a few months, I was the owner of a 10-year-old clunker, a
Pontiac Tempest. And that was how I learned to drive in Inwood.